“Street Sharks” is a U.S. animated series produced by DIC Productions and Bohbot Entertainment that ran from 1994 to 1997 for 40 episodes. It debuted in syndication on the Amazin’ Adventures block and, in 1996, shifted to ABC under the temporary title Dino Vengers Featuring Street Sharks, paving the way for the 1997 spin-off Extreme Dinosaurs. The premise follows four brothers—John, Clint, Bobby, and Coop Bolton—mutated into half-man, half-shark heroes: Ripster (great white), Jab (hammerhead), Streex (tiger shark), and Big Slammu (whale shark). Their archenemy is scientist Dr. Luther Paradigm (aka Dr. Piranoid), the mastermind behind the gene-slamming tech that created them.
Stylistically, the show bottled several ’90s currents: attitude-heavy animal heroes, superhero action, slapstick gags, and a high-energy soundtrack. Storywise it mixed aquatic chases, gizmos, and Fission City’s urban backdrops, plus allies like Bends, the tech genius who equips the Sharks, and Lena Mack, a student who questions Paradigm’s ethics. Short arcs (like the Dino Vengers crossover) foreshadowed the franchise’s expansion.
Like many contemporaries, “Street Sharks” rose alongside a Mattel action-figure line, cementing its cultural footprint across TV spots and toy aisles. A pop-culture milestone that still circulates online is the 1994 Toy Fair video of a young Vin Diesel enthusiastically pitching Street Sharks figures—a time-capsule clip that keeps the brand alive in nostalgia feeds. The 1996 shift to ABC brought the brief Dino Vengers Featuring Street Sharks rebrand and introduced extraterrestrial dinos who soon headlined their own show, Extreme Dinosaurs (52 episodes in 1997). That broadened “universe” captured the ’90s appetite for transmedia brands, with characters crossing toys, comics, and TV.
Recently, the franchise showed fresh momentum: in 2025, Mattel and IDW announced a five-issue comic-book return, proof the Sharks still bite in the nostalgia era. Between impossible mutations, cheeky humor, and iconic merchandising, “Street Sharks” holds its place as a quintessential ’90s phenomenon.
Rox (Melvin Kresnik), voiced by Lee Tockar, is an up-and-coming musician who’s accidentally mutated and winds up an ally of the Sharks. In his debut, Dr. Paradigm’s scheme targets Rox’s audience; after foiling it, Rox continues his career by passing off his look as a stage “costume,” which smartly fits his rock persona. On screen he’s described as a bull shark, though the toy line labeled him a mako shark—a fun quirk that fuels fan debates. He fades from the main cast after season two. His key episode is “Shark ’n’ Roll” (1994), which ties his music background to Paradigm’s sci-fi chaos; some fandom guides add color about the mutation setup and mind-control hijinks, very much in the series’ tongue-in-cheek vein. Traits & abilities. As a mutant, Rox blends aquatic power with showman charisma—a literal frontman whose look (vest, tee, street-rock vibe) reinforces the “urban hero” tone of Fission City.
This figure of Rox -Street Shark' comes with 05 STL files.
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Disclaimer: By purchasing this product, you can print and collect the pieces. This does not include a commercial license, if you want to sell them, you must contact with us to expand reproduction rights. Although this collectibles are inspired by an existing series, the characters that here we are giving you are a complete reinterpretation of the ones you see in action figures or tvseries. We are not in the business of doing exact replicas.
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STL (Stereolithography, filesize: 179 MB)