A Rare Boba Fett Action Figure That Once Sold for $1.3 Million USD Is Up for Auction Again
The Boba Fett Rocket Firing/J-Slot prototype action figure by Kenner first came around in 1979.
Summary
- A highly coveted 1979 Boba Fett Rocket Firing / J-Slot prototype action figure by Kenner has hit the auction block, carrying a prestigious NM+ 85+ grade from Action Figure Authority
- The unreleased toy remains one of the rarest collectibles in pop culture history, existing as one of roughly 30 known J-slot models to survive a massive factory recall
- Prices for vintage galactic memorabilia continue skyrocketing across the secondary market, with newly surfaced 49-year-old archives and rare theatrical posters fetching tens of thousands of dollars
Kenner’s 1979 Rocket-Firing Boba Fett prototype is both a masterclass in vintage toy engineering and a legendary piece of Star Wars cultural history. Setting a staggering new standard for the collectibles market, the unreleased J-slot action figure recently sold via Goldin Auctions for a record-breaking $1,342,000 USD. The massive seven-figure sale instantly shattered multiple world records, officially crowning the piece as the most expensive toy and the most expensive action figure ever sold at auction.
The astronomical value of the 1979 Kenner Rocket-Firing Boba Fett is deeply rooted in its technical variations and its tragic, halted production cycle. Originally designed as a promotional mail-away figure ahead of The Empire Strikes Back, the toy famously featured a spring-loaded backpack capable of launching a small plastic missile. However, as competitor toys faced safety recalls over choking hazards, Kenner executives swiftly scrapped the firing mechanism before the figure ever reached retail shelves. The vast majority of the pre-production samples were subsequently destroyed, turning the few surviving prototypes — often saved by former employees — into the ultimate grail for collectors.
Among these surviving relics, the specific model sold by Goldin Auctions represents the pinnacle of Kenner’s prototyping process. Dubbed the J-Slot (Version 2), the figure features a more mechanically complex firing channel on its back shaped like the letter “J”. This updated mechanism was engineered to be far less prone to breaking over time compared to earlier iterations, but its complexity meant incredibly few were ever produced. Today, only roughly 30 of these J-Slot prototypes were created, and the $1.34 million USD specimen stands as one of the highest-graded examples known to exist, boasting a clean chain of custody that never saw a toy store shelf.



















