I disagree, but only on minor points. It's a nice figure, it's got loads of details and gear, but it has flaws. I have two of them and they share the same problems.
One--being that the forearms on the figure are too bulky to properly use the included sniper rifle. They make holding the rifle very awkward and the wrist articulation is affected inside the bulkier forearms.
Two--the rifle itself is flimsy and prone to falling apart. Marauder John makes a much nice, much more solid sample of the same rifle.
Three-- if there was one figure in the line that demanded an additional articulation point designed into the figure, it's POC Lowlight. He NEEDS an additional neck joint/POA point so he can look up while prone. It would have been the perfect feather in the cap for this figure.
Four-- the backpack and gun bag do not hold securely while on the figure's back. Again, owning two figures says to me that this is a fairly common design problem, and it can make posing the figure with all the gear on very fussy.
That said the figure has incredible detail and tiny parts. The single round, the handset and antenna for the radio, the spotter's scope.......all are just awesome inclusions. If Hasbro had been fore-thinking on this, they could have given us that neck POA I mentioned previously, and then re-used that idea with another figure ( say, Barrel-Roll) later on.....and then you'd have the makings of a sniper-team pair. One shooting and the other spotting....and BOTH able to pose prone and realistically.
Still Lowlight is a nice figure, and a good example of what Hasbro is really capable of when they pull out most of the stops.