If you've read any of my reviews of Wonder Woman issues, you'll know I don't fancy the idea of 'Agent Diana Prince' - the purpose of Princess Diana having the identity is supposedly to put her in touch with how ordinary humans live, yet being a DMA super-agent, working alongside Nemesis and Sergeant Steel, is no more 'ordinary' than being part of the Justice League, alongside relatively human heroes like Red Arrow. Still, there's no denying that Diana Prince looks good, with a combination of Diana's beauty and her secret agent persona's striking white bodysuit, so I certainly wasn't going to pass up this figure.
Compared to her sisters in the Wonder Woman like, Prince is quite natural-looking (unlike the awkward Donna Troy), but fairly static visually - she can't do much but stand there like a statue, looking around. Her white costume is rendered in pearly white plastic, a la Mary Marvel, but this time there's a bit of discolouration in some of the pieces, which combined with the plastic's reflective qualities at various angles makes her limbs look darker and less pure-white than her body. It's not something that leaps out at you on looking at the figure, but it's there, and irksome when you spot it. My Diana Prince also suffers from some sub-par detail paint work, on her shoulder harness, and the silver insignia on her collar - spots of silver have actually turned up on her chest and hip, which is very sloppy work. I've had the chance to look over other figures, and the problems aren't universal, so if you get the chance to choose from multiple figures before you buy, pay close attention to which has the best paint job.
That's not to say she looks bad - the overall effect of the costume is quite striking, and her face is lovely work. Putting her side by side with the Wonder Woman figure there's no doubt she's the same woman, yet she gives a very different impression thanks to her hair, the glasses, and her expression - while Diana as Wonder Woman is calm and confident, Diana as Agent Prince is stern and all-business. The glasses are good work, fitting snugly over her face almost exactly where they're meant to, with her eyes visible through the red lenses.
Prince is on the narrow end of DC Direct's limited articulation curve, though her hairstyle gives her neck joint free range in all three axes, which is a rarity for female figures. She has the usual ball joint shoulders and peg elbows, but the design of her bracers means she has no wrist joints. Her legs have peg hips and knees, and her default stance is straighter and tenser than the Wonder Woman figure - indeed, Prince is slightly taller as a result of her posture. One oddity is the inset panels in her costume - the ones on the sides of her thighs don't quite line up properly when she's standing straight, though her belt hides this. The panel on her inner thighs and bottom is way out of alignment, only matching between the leg and hip pieces if she's leaning drastically back.
Since she's not allowed to use her superpowers while pretending to be a secret agent - and, following the end of Heinberg's run, is actually depowered as Agent Prince - she has a couple of weapons to aid her in a fight. These take the form of two batons, cast in transparent plastic and painted silver around the middle, leaving the tips clear - they look like some kind of high-tech shock stick crossed with flare lights, and have been used now and then in the comic. Only one hand is sculpted with a hole through the fist though, so she can only hold one of the two batons, and sticking the other in her belt looks a bit awkward, so I just dumped it in the bits box.