I quite liked Ezri - after six years in which, aside from stand-alone episodes, it rarely seemed to matter that Jadzia was a Trill, suddenly there was Ezri, not getting along with Worf, getting along with Worf, standing on her head to relax, drinking raktajino even though she hated it because she remembered liking it, basically going quietly nuts due to having a whole bunch of other people inside her head all of a sudden. It's only a shame she turned up in DS9's final year - they could have gotten years and years of stories out of her psychological problems. Plus, she was very, very adorable.
In action figure form, she's not quite on the ball, but close. Her face is a good likeness of Nicole deBoer, but it's not spot on - the way her cheeks angle away from her jawline isn't quite right, and combined with oddly narrow hair at the sides of her head (to accomodate an accessory), it makes her face look longer than on TV. Still, there's no mistaking her for anyone else, and if the dimensions of her face aren't quite right, her expression is perfect, all youthful confidence with a hint of suppressed nerves. The neatly-applied Trill spots help, and the rest of her sculpt and paint is all very clean and consistent with the real Ezri. Appropriately she doesn't just use the same body as Jadzia - Ezri is shorter, more petite around the shoulders and chest, with more prominent hipe and a really cute butt.
She has the standard articulation allotment for Diamond Select/Art Asylum Star Trek figures: ball joint neck (excellent range of motion, since her short hair doesn't restrict it), ball shoulders, swivel biceps, peg elbows, swivel wrists, swivel waist, peg hips, knees, and ankles. She doesn't have the kung fu range of poseability of a Marvel Legends figure, but she's capable of a nice variety of stances, looks good in all the reasonable ones, and the ankle joints keep her fairly stable once she's posed.
DS/AA loves giving its Trek figures accessories, and they don't disappoint. From 'Field of Fire', one of several episodes centred on Ezri (and a pretty good one), she gets the massive TR-116 rifle, which she can just hold in both hands firing from the hip (sadly, a sniper posture is impossible), and the Exographic Targeting Sensor headset, which is soft plastic and fits around her head - not quite perfectly, but it's not difficult to get it sitting so the sensor is over her eye, and that's the important part. She also gets a DS9-style PADD displaying a generic techy graphic - looks like a navigation plan to me - a coffee mug of the angled style used on the show, and a baseball cap. Surprisingly, the cap fits on her head more or less well - not perfect, but it's a rare actin figue hat that is, and this is a good attempt. The logo is for the Pike City Pioneers - Sisko wore just such a cap on occasion, and though I don't recall Ezri wearing it (she, like everyone else, had a Niners cap when the station staff got formed into an amateur baseball team to take on a visiting Vulcan team), since they're good friends it's hardly impossible she might be wearing it on occasion. Of course, if you also get the Sisko figure (who has a Niners cap), the Pioneers cap will fit him as well.
This first DS9 series of figures has really impressed me - the sculpts and paints, the likenesses to the actors, the quality of build of the figures, and especially the range of accessories with each one. I liked them so much that, for only the second time, I'm making an exception to my girls-only rule for action figures, and have picked up Sisko and Odo as well, and plan to get the whole cast of DS9. Favourite show or not, I don't make exceptions to my girls-only rule lightly, so that should tell you how good these are.