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Kingpin 1:10 Scale Statue
Kingpin 1:10 Scale Statue by Iron Studios (Sideshow #914829)
If you’re looking for a centerpiece villain with real presence, the Kingpin 1:10 Scale Statue from Iron Studios brings Wilson Fisk’s intimidating power to your shelf in a compact, display-friendly format. This piece is part of Iron Studios’ Art Scale 1/10 line and is inspired by Daredevil: Born Again, capturing Kingpin’s imposing build and cold, controlled menace in a pose that feels like he’s already taken control of the room.
What you’re getting
Before writing this, I double-checked the product listing to ensure this is the correct item: Marvel Kingpin 1:10 Scale Statue by Iron Studios on Sideshow (item #914829). It’s a 1/10 scale, hand-painted polystone statue and stands about 8.3 inches (21.1 cm) tall, designed for collectors who want premium sculpting and paint without committing to a larger scale footprint. The statue is produced primarily in polystone, with some components potentially using mixed materials depending on the manufacturer’s build needs.
Iron Studios’ sculpting emphasizes the character’s signature elements—Fisk’s tailored, high-status look, a heavy, grounded stance, and a facial expression that communicates calculated authority rather than cartoon villainy. On display, that matters: Kingpin should feel like a boss figure, even when he’s not in motion.
Display value for Marvel collectors
Kingpin is one of those rare Marvel villains who instantly elevates a street-level display. He pairs naturally with Daredevil, Spider-Man, and other New York–anchored characters—making him an easy “anchor” piece for a Hell’s Kitchen or Spider-Verse corner of your collection. Because this is a 1:10 Art Scale format, it also plays nicely alongside other Iron Studios 1:10 pieces if you like a consistent lineup on a shelf, bookcase, or display case.
Looking to build around him? Browse more pieces in your Marvel statue collection.
Who is Kingpin? (Comic history in a nutshell)
Wilson Fisk isn’t a costumed villain with cosmic powers—he’s something scarier: a criminal strategist with wealth, influence, and the willingness to crush anyone who stands in his way. Kingpin first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man #50 (1967), created by Stan Lee and John Romita Sr. In his earliest stories he was introduced as a major underworld figure for Spider-Man, but over time he became one of Daredevil’s defining enemies—helping shape the darker, more grounded tone of Marvel’s street-level corner.
Across decades of comics, Kingpin’s story has expanded into power struggles, political maneuvering, and personal vendettas that blur the line between “crime boss” and “shadow ruler.” He’s a character who doesn’t just fight heroes—he attacks their lives, reputations, and the systems around them.

















