These were something no one asked for. And I when I say “no one”, I mean that exactly zero people asked for them. I can prove this scientifically. I know you can’t see me right now - if you can, I apologize for the lack of pants - but I have spreadsheets of polling data here on my kitchen table, and nowhere does anybody say “Yes, we want these sets!” This is a fact, and unless you actually want to come to my kitchen to see if I really have these spreadsheets, you’ll just have to take my word for it.
Having reviewed several of these Celebrate the Saga sets already, you’ll know that I usually do individual quick takes on each figure. In this case, there’s not much to say about the clones that are worthy of individual notes. Obviously the 501st and Shock Troopers are paint variants of themselves, while the Phase 1 trooper has its own helmet sculpt, and Cody has some different body tooling along with a different helmet sculpt. The figures can possibly serve as backgrounders in your collection, but there have been so many opportunities to own these clone variants in SA form, there’s very little to be gained here.
As a 501st focus collector, I can even safely pass on this set because I already have the figure when it was previously released as a 2-pack with Anakin in the Creepy Vader ROTS3D line.
As for OOM-10, (and for the Clone Wars impaired), it is included in this Republic set because the droid was commandeered by the Republic for a covert operation in one of the story arcs. It’s just…awful. It should be the major draw for collectors, as the character is unique to this set. However, the sculpt is horribly out of balance. It took all my self control to not light it on fire while trying to take these pictures. I suppose your mileage may vary, but my sample couldn’t meet the most basic requirement of being able to stand unassisted.
This set, while forgettable and easily passable, does come close to being the type of offering that Hasbro should be making by the boat load in TVC. A set of army builders like this in TVC would be instantly gobbled up, no matter what the source material. Any of the trilogies, anthology films, or TV shows would be a successful inspiration for such sets that contained repacked, repainted, or slightly modified retools. They would help new collectors catch up on older sources, while allowing all collectors to world-build from media sources that are currently badly underrepresented in TVC.
As it stands, you should probably ignore this set, unless you really wanted that unique OOM-10 that barely stands on its own.