T-60 Power Armor Model Kit Costs $57.99, Ships Mid-2027 for Fallout Fans

Photo of author

By TGT Staff

Brotherhood of Steel // Field Requisition Terminal

T-60 Power Armor Build Spec: What $57.99 Actually Buys You

Good Smile and Max Factory are letting fans assemble the Brotherhood’s signature suit at home. Here is the full spec sheet before you commit to the pre-order queue.

US Retail Price

$57.99

Japan Retail Price

9,800 JPY

Assembled Height

200mm / 7.87in

Japan Launch Window

April 2027

Loadout Inventory // Tap Each Crate

Assembly MethodNo Glue
The kit relies on snap-fit connections, so no adhesive is required to put the armor together. Good Smile and Max Factory built the PLAMATEA line around this kind of fast assembly, which is why the kit is positioned for first-time model builders rather than veteran hobbyists only.
Weapon & Wasteland Accessories5 Items
Builders get a minigun, an assault rifle, a fusion core, a bottle of Nuka-Cola, and a set of swappable hands for different poses. Together they cover the standard look of a Brotherhood of Steel knight on patrol in the wasteland.
Paint & DecalsPre-Painted
Some parts arrive pre-painted out of the box. Water-slide decals are included to recreate the look worn by Brotherhood of Steel Knights, and the armor can still be hand-painted or weathered afterward for a more battle-worn finish.
Sculpting CreditMax Factory
The kit is sculpted by Nobuhiko Asahina at Max Factory, with Good Smile Company handling manufacturing and release under the PLAMATEA assembly model line, a series built around game, anime, and pop-culture mecha designs.

From Pre-Order to Shelf

Now

The T-60 Power Armor kit is open for pre-order through Good Smile US at $57.99, and through Good Smile Company’s Japan storefront at 9,800 JPY tax included.

April 2027

Good Smile Company has listed an April 2027 commercial launch for the Japan market release of the kit.

Mid-2027 Onward

US retail listings place the shipping window in the middle of 2027, after which the assembled armor can join a shelf still waiting on a new mainline Fallout game, even as other franchises keep their pre-order pipelines moving, including Cyberpunk 2077 merchandise.

Physical Fallout merchandise keeps arriving even as the games stay quiet. Bethesda’s last mainline single-player Fallout release was Fallout 4 in 2015, leaving Fallout 76 as the only current entry while Xbox sorts out its broader lineup, a stretch of franchise downtime that has played out elsewhere in gaming too, including the closure of a long-running Zelda fan remake project. Console-side momentum for older titles continues in the meantime, shown by reports of Black Ops and Black Ops 2 PlayStation ports arriving alongside other 2026 catalog moves, while newer releases like Once Human’s console beta and pre-order activity around GTA 6 show the rest of the industry moving at a different pace than Bethesda’s Fallout pipeline.

Leave a comment