Toys Review – Legacy Motormaster & Drag Strip

It seems like only yesterday fans were swooning over finally getting an updated set of Stunticons in the Combiner Wars and Unite Warriors toy lines.  Fan favorites, the Stunticons were the second ever combiner group to be introduced in the G1 Transformers cartoon and their rebellious attitude and sweet alt-modes gave the Autobots a run for their money on the roads.  This has lead to them appearing in multiple toylines, from KRE-O to Bot Shots to even Robots in Disguise.

Toys Review – the Combiner Force Stunticons

Well the Stunticons are back again – well – two of them anyway, with more along later in the year.  Drag Strip was released several months ago and Motormaster – the latest Commander Class figure – has just hit stores here in Australia.  So without further ado, lets have a look at Legacy Motormaster & Drag Strip!

 

Drag Strip

Robot Mode

‘Yes I have a name like a bloke in a dress taking his clothes off – wanna make something of it?’

There is a lot of yellow going on here, like a lot.  The faux-engine in his chest and the guns and head break it up a bit, but this here fella is yella through and through I tell ya what!  But he still a nice looking figure with good proportions, a very cartoon-accurate countenance and no big ugly combiner peg in his chest.  Overall an improvement on what has come before.  His articulation is quite good, with ankle-tilts and a decent range of motion in all his limbs.

‘Draw pardner!’

His two pistols can be combined into one double-barreled gun and can also be stored on the backs of his thighs.

Vehicle Mode

NOW the name makes sense

A really beautiful and faithful rendition of the original toy, Drag Strip finally turning into a 6-wheeled racer again rather than a Mirage wannabe.  There is very little to fault here and kudos to the designers for making him look sweet as!

The pistols can be added to his vehicle form, giving it a battle mode.  Gotta say it is an improvement on the giant cannon that plugged into the back of the G1 toy.  Overall this is a really nice figure with an intuitive Transformation and perhaps the nicest official Drag Strip figure we have ever had.

Toys Review – the Combiner Wars Combaticons!

Motormaster

Robot Mode

Flares are back in fashion

The original Motormaster toy was quite different from his cartoon depiction.  The toy had its body made from the trailer so was therefore grey, whilst the entire cab made up Motomaster’s feet.  This made the toy a bit comical, although very easy to stand up admittedly, with his feet being the size of Prime’s alt-mode on their own!  The cartoon kinda skirted around this by making Motormaster predominantly black, as if he was made up from just the cab like Prime was.  This Motormaster comes with a trailer but the robot is made up solely of the cab, though they gave him little fake-cab feet, which are actually pretty cute, if quite odd.  The lower legs are disproportionately big compared to the rest of him, but that beautiful face-sculpt more than makes up for it.

Overlord eat your heart out

Motormaster has good range of arm motion, but very little swivel in the neck and the legs are too bulky to do much with.  Still very good overall however and more cartoon reminicent than the larger Unite Warriors version.

Vehicle Mode

The King of the Road is back baby!

Now this is what I’ve been waiting for – Motormaster with a trailer!  Just like I’ve often felt many Optimus Prime toys have been lacking when they come sans trailer, I was disappointed we got no trailer for any of the Motormaster toys subsequent to the original one.  Though it’s not as long as I would have liked, it is an extremely welcome addition and really makes the toy for me.  Motormaster doesn’t appear nearly as big as the other Commander-class figures in their alt-modes, but that is due to just how jam-packed with parts the trailer is.  This mode is what made me want to go buy the figure, and it has (except for the quibble of length) not disappointed.  Plus unlike the original toy the cab can detach too!

‘Suck a fat one Optimus and Ultra Magnus – I can do this now too!’

Base Mode

The original Motormaster toy had a sorta base mode, complete with a ramp for his little roller-drone to drive down.  This base mode is by far an improvement on the original, with the entire trailer partsforming into a big gun emplacement.  This helps make up for Motormaster’s lack of a rifle.  It actually looks pretty sweet in person, and while not as cool as Sky-Lynx‘s shuttle launch bay, looks a lot cooler than Rodimus Prime‘s gun trailer.  Given everything the trailer has to do to become both a gun-emplacement and parts for Menasor, the partsforming is forgivable in my opinion.  The one silly thing is that Motormaster has to put down the sight in order to actually use the gun.

Between robot mode, truck mode and base mode this is easily the best Motormaster figure we have ever had, and we haven’t even got to the gestalt gimmick yet!

Toy Review: Kingdom Rodimus Prime

Menasor

(thus far)

It’s a bit hard to do a review of Menasor at this stage since only two of his five components have been released, but I’ll give it a shot.

Drag Strip Component

Ouch!

While they fully made up the limbs of the original G1 toy, in the cartoon the four smaller Stunticons seemed to simply plug onto pre-existing limbs to give them more bulk, and that is apparently the route they are going with this rendition of the Stunticons.  Whilst I appreciate toon-accuracy, I’m not a big fan of this, and poor old Drag Strip has to literally split in half in order for Menasor to use his right elbow.  It might be screen-accurate, but personally it’s not my cup of tea.

Motormaster Component

Motormaster himself converts into the upper torso of Menasor, whilst his trailer becomes the chest, hands, feet and, er…., exoskeleton of the rest.  Once again partsforming is in play.  It’s actually quite cleverly done and this mode, like all the others of Motormaster, consists of lots of tab-slotting which gives a lot of structure stability to the figure.  I appreciate how the effect overall differentiates this Menasor from his CW/UW counterpart, who because of the design looked similar to many of his toyline gestalt peers.  I will reserve judgement on his good this Menasor is until I get the remaining three Stunticons.  The gun turret from the base mode stays separate to Menasor and is useable by him, though it does look a bit odd, with it being so big compared to Motormaster, and so small compared to the combined form.

Toy Review – Unite Warriors Computron VS Combiner Wars Computron

 

Overall – worth getting?

Buy us, you know you want to

Both Motormaster and Drag Strip are a significant improvement on their predecessors.  Both have smaller robot modes but this is far outweighed by both their visual appearances and the intricacy of their toys.  Both have good transformations, and despite the multiple configurations inherent in Motormaster there is never a point where one feels frustrated by the process and all the tabs lock tight and sweet! There is one issue however:

photodegradation

There have been many, many reports of yellowed parts on this first batch of Motormaster.  I lucked out that there was only one small panel suffering from it on mine, but there have been reports of much worse from many Aussie TF fans.  If you purchase a Motormaster and find many such panels, I suggest you try to swap for another.

As previously stated, I am reserving judgement on their Menasor mode before I fully review that mode.  Right now my plan for my Transformatorium is to have, regarding my Stunticons, my Combiner Wars in their combined mode, my Unite Warriors in their robot modes and the Legacy toys in the vehicle modes.  Then I have the best of all 3 worlds!

So yeah, Legacy Motormaster and Drag Strip – go pick them up!  Just watch for the yellowing, only that dang varmint Stripper should be yeller on his belly.

Got something to say about these figures?  Pop it in the comments section below!

Toy Review – Earthrise Sky Lynx

The Greatest 100 Songs Ever – Your Suggestions!

In March this year we had our Greatest 100 Songs of All Time competition.  Listeners were encouraged to not only vote for which songs out of the 110 listed they thought best, but also to make a suggestion of their own for a song they thought was worthy enough to be on the list.

Well a lot of people had a LOT of suggestions of songs they thought should be in the Greatest 100.  So many in fact that the suggestions outnumbered the list itself!  We received a whopping 145 suggestions of different songs to be played!

Since playing all these songs would result in the suggestions list itself getting its own months worth of shows, we will be playing one hours worth each show until we have worked through the entire list.  So tune in to The Big DJ Trev Show on Thursday nights from 6 to 9pm AEST from June onwards, and after the 8pm mark we will be playing through your massive list of suggested songs on KRRfm.

 

Artist Song
5 Seconds of Summer Youngblood
A-Ha Take On Me 2
AC/DC Back in Black
AC/DC Let there be Rock
AC/DC Shoot to Thrill
AFI Miseria Cantere
Alanis Morrissette You Oughta Know
Audioslave Show me how to Live
Baz Luhrmann Everybody’s free to wear sunscreen
Beastie Boys Intergalactic
Ben Folds Five One Angry Dwarf
Big Pig Breakaway
Billy Joel Angry Young Man
Blur Coffee & TV
Bobby McFerrin Don’t Worry Be Happy
Bom Funk MC Freestyler
Bon Jovi Bed of Roses
Bon Jovi It’s my Life
Boom Crash Opera Onion Skin
Bow Wow Wow I want Candy
Bruno Mars Just the way you Are
Butterfingers I Love Work
Choirboys Run to Paradise
Chris Cornell You Know My Name
Cindy Lauper I drove all Night
Counting Crows Big Yellow Taxi
Crazy Town Butterfly
Dance Monkey Tones & I
Dandy Warhols Bohemian Like You
David Bowie Heroes
Dire straights Romeo & Juliet
Earth, Wind & Fire September (2)
Elton John Candle in the Wind
Elton John Your Song
Elvis The Wonder of You
Eminiem Lose Yourself (2)
Evanescence Bring me to Life
Falco Rock Me Amadeus
Faith No More The Gentle Art of Making Enemies
Father John Misty So I’m Growing Old on Magic Mountain
Fat Boy Slim Weapon of Choice
Flesh and Bones Milo Manheim et al
Foo Fighters Everlong
Fountains of Wayne Stacey’s Mom
Franz Ferdinand Take Me Out
George Special Ones
Ghost Dance Macarbe
Gorillaz Feel Good Inc
Gorillaz Superfast Jellyfish
Guns & Roses November Rain 2
Guy Sebastian Battlescars
Hilltop Hoods The Nosebleed section
Huey Lewis Back in Time
Idris Elba Boasty
Jack Johnson Banana Pancakes
Jack Jones Hold me in your Arms
Jamiroquai All Good in the Hood
Jimmy Barnes Driving Wheels
Jimmy Barnes Flame Tree’s
John Farnham Age of Reason
John Farnham You’re the Voice
Johnny Cash Hurt
Joni Mitchell Both Sides Now
Limp Bizkit Nookie
Los Del Rio Macarena
Journey Don’t Stop Believing
Kaiser Chiefs Ruby
Kanye West Jesus Walks
Kasey Chambers Pony
Keith Sweat Twisted
Kings of Leon Sex on Fire
Led Zeppelin Immigrant Song
Living Colour Cult of Personality
Madonna Express Yourself
Mark Ronson Uptown Funk
Maroon 5 Moves like Jagger
Marvin Gaye Lets get in On
Massive Attack Protection
Meatloaf I’d do anything for Love
Metallica Nothing Else Matters
Michael Jackson Billy Jean
Midnight Oil King of the Mountain
Modest Mouse Float On
Monkees I’m a Believer
Muse Reapers of Madness
My Chemical Romance Welcome to the Black Parade
Nena 99 Luftballoons
No Doubt Hella Good
Otis Redding Dock of the Bay
Paul Kelly Leaps & Bounds
Peter Cetera Glory of Love
Pharrel Williams Happy
Phil Collins In the air Tonight
Portished Roads
Primus Tommy the Cat
Primus Wynona’s Big Brown Beaver
Public Enemy Fight the Power
Queen Another one bites the Dust
Queen Bohemian Rhapsody
Queen Somebody to Love
Queen Under Pressure
Radiohead Creep and Paranoid Android
Rage Against the Machine Renegades of Funk
Red Hot Chilli Peppers Blood Sugar Sex Magic
Red Hot Chilli Peppers Higher Ground
Regurgitator I will lick your As*hole
Rick Springfield Jessie’s Girl
Righteous Brothers You lost that Lovin Feelin
Robbie Williams She’s the One
Robbie Williams Supreme
Robin Thicke Blurred Lines
Roxette Paint
Rush Spirit of the Radio
Rush Tom Sawyer
Sarah Blasko Don’t You Ever
Savage Garden Truly, Madly, Deeply
Scorpions Winds of Change
Shakespeare’s Sisters Stay
Sia Chandelier
Simple Minds Don’t you forget about Me
Skibidi Little Big
Sound Garden Fell on Black Days
Stan Bush Thunder in your Heart
Stone Temple Pilots Interstate Love Song
Survivor Eye of the Tiger
Taxiride Everywhere You Go
The Bamboos Can’t Help Myself
The Brand New Heavies Shelter
The Cat Empire Down at the 303
The Cat Empire Sly
The Cult Fire Woman
The Cure Closer to Me
The Fray How to Save a Life
The Kava Kings Dreamin of You
The Killers Mr Brightside
The Rolling Stones Sympathy for the Devil
The Stone Roses Love Spreads
The Strokes Last Nite
The Super Jesus Gravity
The Tornadoes Bustin Surfboards
Things of Stone and Wood Hand Grenade
Tool Stinkfist
Underworld Underneath the Radar
Weird Al Dare to be Stupid
Wheatus Teenage Dirtbag

 

Voting Results of ‘The Greatest 100 Songs of all Time!’

Ask Trev – What’s it like being a Radio Star?