There's being on his home planet which is technically "in space"compared to earth,
What I meant was, plenty of episodes of Filmation's show involved trips to moons, other planets, or other worlds.
Admittedly there was a slight context difference: Skeletor wasn't literally living on a space station shaped like a skull.
New Adventures is a weird show tho, and honestly kind of hard to watch. There's parts I like, but it really does watch like a badly dubbed anime at times.... and I will never understand Skeletor acting like Jim Carrey.
...............
Going with this theme of judging the later He-Man shows... so not long ago I revisited the 2003 Cartoon Network series. It wasn't as bad as I used to think, but its not exactly great.
For me its biggest failings are two things.
First, what I'll for the moment call "story economy." The original show PACKS its stories, but the 2003 one makes its stories feel shallow.
The best way to see for yourself is to watch two episodes: 1983 show's "Disappearing Act" and 2003's "The Courage of Adam." The latter is almost a remake of the former (Skeletor kidnaps Prince Adam to ransom him for He-Man, so Man-at-Arms has to make a He-Man robot to buy time), but the older story has a TON of side-elements and sub-plots going on, while the remake feels pared down to essentially the basic elements.
Second problem I had is... for as much as people like to call the old show a "toy commercial," Filmation would actually stand their ground on things. The 2003 series, on the other hand, was clearly under the thumb of Mattel. For the first season literally every episode ends by introducing one of the He-Man and Skeletor variant figures, then having "fight scenes" that always amount to "He-Man punches Skeletor, Skeletor flies and leaves an impression in a wall. Skeletor gets up, hits He-Man, who then also leaves an impression in a wall. Repeat until the battle just decides to end."
Actually its probably worst when the Snake Armor He-Man is introduced. there's no story leading up to it, its just Sorceress contacts him one day and says "hey I got new armor for you" and there it is. Like you can tell the writers were mentally checked out at that point.
I honestly had a third problem, similar to my issues with the reboots of Thundercats and something I said recently about Street Fighter--it feels like this show was trying hard to twist He-Man into something its not. Like treating the "Masters of the Universe" as if they're a superhero team. It always bugged me that often Man-at-Arms would be like "Summon the Masters!" as if they were always on-call... even though it establishes that Stratos, Buzz-Off etc. were, you know,
royalty in their respective nations and, presumably, have responsibilities. The old show at least acted like these characters had a life outside of fighting Skeletor.
....
I have not watched the Netflix stuff at all (except for Netflix She-Ra, if that counts).
I mean, why bother? Going back to the comparison I made earlier, I never even bothered playing Shadow of Mordor or Gollum because I know they're bad, the people who think they're good are probably shills, and even if they are "good" they're still an insult to the original creators (though offending Filmation is slightly less of a sin than offending Tolkien). And unlike most internet nerds I
don't like to watch trainwrecks in action.
I've heard there was a CGI He-Man show that was good, but when I read the descrption say that now he can share the Power of Grayskull so that his friends can form (sigh) a superhero team, I mentally checked out. While He-Man had
some capeshit tropes originally, it was still more firmly rooted in a Robert E. Howard-esque tradition. If Conan the Barbarian getting superpowers and forming a team to scour Hyborea and stop jaywalkers wouldn't parse, then it wouldn't parse for He-Man either.