And thus the great cataloging of my collection continues.
The Transformers 2010 toyline is primarily made up of two sublines. The first of these was Hunt for the Decepticons, which was heavily infulenced by the Movieverse lines and indeed contained quite a few redeco’s of figures from the Revenge of the Fallen toyline. Reveal the Shield was its successor, harking back to the Classics line with new versions of classic G1 characters – even bringing back the beloved rubsigns!
Neither of these two sublines of Transformers 2010 were ever specifically classified as belonging to either the Movieverse or the Generations line, so fans were free to decide whether the individual characters belonged in one universe or the other. So if you think that HFTD Seaspray is a bitchin’ update to the G1 figure rather than an alternate Movieverse incarnation then you roll with it!
The first Transformers continuity created by IDW comics is regarded by many as the best Transformer comics that have ever been made. Kicking off in 2005, it ran for an impressive 13 years with hundreds of issues and took the G1’esque universe to places it had never been before, culminating in a climatic battle against Unicron himself.
In 2019 IDW rebooted the Transformers comic universe and it was….. not well received. Many fans had become very attached to the universe of old, especially the adventures of the Lost Light which introduced genuine comedy into the franchise, something it was sorely lacking. One could argue that the first continuity had done so much there was nothing left to do so a reboot was required, but many fans still mourned it’s loss.
But can the fact that the 2019 reboot was not well loved be solely attributed to the affection fans felt for the old universe? Personally I didn’t know as at that stage I had ‘comic fatigue’ and was not up to investing myself into a new series, especially after I read the first few issues. The new series only lasted 3 years, as opposed to the 13 of its predecessor, and perhaps was a hundred issues give or take all together.
Over the past 3 weeks I have binge-read the entirety of the IDW 2019 Transformers continuity. Below are my thoughts on what was good, what was bad, and why ultimately it failed.
The Bad
First and foremost – it started too slooooow.
There is some good action to be found in the 2019 universe, but it takes so many issues to get to it. The majority of the first dozen issues are characters walking down hallways talking to one another. And the banter is boring. Yes, they were trying to establish that this was a pre-great war Cybertron, and show Orion Pax and Megatron travelling inevitably towards their fates, but Transformers fans don’t primarily read comics for the political discourse – they want to see giant, shape-changing alien robots fighting each other! There was so much blah-blah-blah that when they finally got to the good stuff a lot of fans had tuned out and were no longer interested.
The characters lack character
Lets use Sixshot as a comparison. When introduced into the 2005 continuity it showed him destroying a whole civilisation single handed! And he showed all 6 of his modes in his very first issue! He has a rich backstory of being a one-percenter that gets augmented to become a phase-sixer and after arriving on Earth, it took the combined firepower of Optimus and a whole squad of Autobots to even slow him down. In the 2019 continuity, even after 3 years he still hasn’t used all of his modes, he spends more time talking that fighting, and the first battle between him and Windblade is frighteningly dull. That’s right, they managed to make a fight that involved Sixshot boring.
Sixshot is just one example. Megatron never does much except plot and has a total of one brief punch up with Optimus over the entire 3 years – he doesn’t even rant that well. Swindle is always grumpy and talking about percentages rather than being the cheery swindler we all love. The banter between Strongarm and Sideswipe is supposed to evoke their love-hate relationship from the RID2015 continuity but falls flat. None of the characters really evolve or change or grow and their personalities are the same from the first issue they show up in to the last. Very few characters ever display any real passion or panic about anything. I’ll have to note there are a few exceptions such as Flamewar, who is at least goofy enough to be mildly entertaining, as is Skywarp.
Cybertron is artistically dull
Cybertron is a robot alien world, full of wonders and marvels, created from the body of Primus himself. So why does it seem to consist of nothing but corridors and barren landscapes? The background always seems to be mutely coloured in shades of tan and bronze, the buildings are very basic rectangles and nothing pops. There are no interesting details to note, there is not a lot of anything really. Even when huge events happen like an orbital tether collapsing so that a giant cable cuts a swath of destruction across all of Iacon, its unimpressive. As is when the Titan’s fall from the sky. It’s Titan’s falling out of the sky and crashing into Cybertron, and it still looks boring, just rectangular brick looking things hitting empty ground. Given the rather less than awed response from the observing bots, they were not impressed either.
The robots also look dull
The artist Angel Hernandez was obviously not a fan of strong colours as even the bots look washed out. There is the occasional pop of colour such as at Swindle’s casino, but not much. The bots are often as blocky as the landscape, with detail only ever given to some of the more major characters such as Bumblebee’s face or Orion’s body. Not a lot of size difference either, everyone is roughly similar heights and shapes, even the Micromasters, with just the odd detail like wings and faces to differentiate them. If you don’t know the characters already, you are hard pressed to tell with many who is male and who is female. Yes, I know that we are all supposed to be ‘blind to gender’ now, but would it really be insulting to let the female characters look female? I had to look up if the character Glyph was male or female as I couldn’t tell from the art, and the likes of Road Rage are only able to be identified as female when you see they have slightly fuller lips. With blocky bodies and little to set them apart from muted colour schemes and a bit of altmode kibble, the alien mechanoid populace of Cybertron have rarely looked so boring. The Wreckers mini-series set on Velocitron is worthy of mention for being the exception to this.
Barely a Transformation
To be fair this is an issue I had with the 2005 continuity as well. Transformers are supposed to, well, transform. But they hardly ever do it! The Seekers showcase the ability the most in order to go into battle, but most other characters, even major ones, either hardly ever transform or never transform at all!. And even when they do, most of the time its just to get from point A to point B, they don’t really use their altmodes for anything but transport. Way to remove a quintessential concept from a franchise. One must wonder if perhaps this is done on purpose as despite Earth never being visited, there are plenty of characters with Earth vehicle modes occasionally on show (based on the then current Siege toyline) – the artists obviously not bothering to come up with Cybertronian modes for them – so the less the audience saw of the altmodes the less they would say ‘Hang on a sec…’
The Good
(yes there is some!)
As mentioned, the 2019 continuity eventually does come into its own. Whilst many of the negatives above such as bland landscapes and characters that rarely show strong emotions persist, the storyline starts to move faster, disparate story arcs begin to overlap and intertwine, and we even get a few interesting battles. These are not the only positives:
Overlooked characters getting their shot.
The Lost Light comic series set a great precedent, elevating minor characters to places of prominence, and giving characters who have barely appeared over the last 30 years a chance to briefly shine. The 2019 continuity may not do it as well, but it does do it. Chainclaw works security, Howlback works infiltration, Hydrahead and Rage use their liquid weapons to try and assassinate the Insecticons, Redwing leads Seeker attacks. It’s always interesting to see someone different from the main cast get their turn upon the page.
Action Masters are cool!
It’s nice to see the Action Masters done right! At the time the most reviled of the G1 toys – Transformers who couldn’t transform – Action Masters now experience the same love of much of the old toyline simply due to being G1. In this series they haven’t been retroactively been given altmodes like in others, they are all mode locked and yes, like the original storyline from the G1 toys its due to overuse of Nucleon. The best part is that many seem to come with their accessories: the likes of Axer and Circuit drive their vehicles, whilst characters like Treadshot and Charger have their animal sidekicks. And Charger with Fire Beast – talk about including obscure characters!
Interesting-ish Subplots
Oh, if only the characters were given some more, er, character and the graphics a bit of oomph, these could have been great. We see interesting subplots explore the origins of the Constructicons and the Insecticons, how they came to be and where they are going. The Constructicons are, not officially, banished from Cybertron because the populace fears the power of Devastator, and the Insecticons go from walking garbage disposals to cannibals who feast on organics and fellow bots alike. Both these early story lines have a profound affect at the series conclusion, particularly the Insecticons.
Characters actually fulfilling their tech spec functions.
With so many characters, Transformers comic writers often ignore what they are supposed to do and simply make them one of a multitude of soldiers, especially on the Decepticon side. Not so with this continuity. Sparkstalker for the first time in his existence is actually functioning as a hacker instead of simply breathing fire. Bumblebee is working espionage instead of smiling and being the Transformers poster boy. For a Transformers geek like me, this was a level of detail greatly appreciated.
No Earth, No Humans!
Well, nearly. The only Humans that appear are in the King Grimlock miniseries, a shoutout to the G1 episode Madman’s Paradise. Even then it’s not on Earth so they get a pass.
Too little, too late
So yes, there were positives to be found in the IDW 2019 Transformers Continuity. Unfortunately for them, the first year was so lackluster that most fans (myself included) had tuned out and were no longer buying by the time it started to get halfway decent. Having binged the entire continuity over the last 3 weeks I can say it turned out not as bad as I thought, but it’s nothing I will revisit and am glad I saved my pennies by reading them online rather than purchasing the comics themselves. How did IDW go from making the best Transformers comics ever to the worst? Was it a case of the new writers and artists making bad decisions, them not caring, or did perhaps IDW feel it was done with the franchise and therefore organised a lackluster effort to get them out of their contract with Hasbro? Who knows. But like the cartoon series –Transformers Robots in Disguise 2015 – it seems destined to forever be referred to by fans in the tone of ‘meh, bits were ok, but it was never really that great’.
And thus the great cataloging of my collection continues.
Transformers Universe was… it was…. it was a bloody mess to be honest!
Starting out in 2003, it was intially a way to milk existing moulds. It took figures from G2, Beast Wars, Beast Machines and theUnicron Trilogyand released them as their original characters with new colour schemes, or else repainted them into different characters completely.
Then it moved on to new characters and toys, such as making Micromaster combiners out of classic teams, and limped along for several years, releasing a smattering of figures here and there, even pulling other toys under its umberella that really should be classified under different toylines such as figures from G1, Titanium, Robot Heroes and even Masterpiece.
Then in 2008 they revamped the line, with many new toys of existing G1 characters, picking up where the Classics line left off, making it quite popular until the line came to an end in 2010. Some of the figures were also released under the Takara banner Henkei! Henkei!
Toys and characters from almost every continuity, Micromasters, Targetmasters, Combiners, Autobots, Decepticons, Predacons, Maximals, Mini-Cons, Spychangers, repaints, retools – the line had everything while at the same time specializing in nothing, and making it damn hard to keep track of for collectors.
So check out what I deemed worthy to grab with my personal Transformers Universe collection below!
My Transformers Universe Collection
Universe Autobot Figures
*Item #UNA001: Transformers Universe 25th Anniversary Autobot Optimus Prime (MISB)
There are certain debates that run in fandoms, sometimes for decades.
Star Wars:Why didn’t Anakin’s rich princess girlfriend ever buy Anakin’s mother out of slavery for him, and why when he was a powerful Jedi did he wait so long to go back for her?
Star Trek:How was it Kirk could spend decades surviving every danger in the galaxy, even getting into a fight with God, yet was killed by a rickety bridge on some backwards planet?
Harry Potter:If Voldermort had no nose, how did he smell?
In the 1986 filmThe Transformers: The Movie, amongst numerous other animation errors, there was at one point two ofCyclonus. One seeming to be reformatted from Bombshell, the other from Skywarp. The second Cyclonus (sometimes called ‘Armada’) quickly disappeared.
So fans have been arguing for decades – Who became Cyclonus? Bombshell or Skywarp?
Well truth be told, there is no real answer. In the original script, just like how Scourge (reformatted from Thundercracker) had a slew of identical looking bots to him called The Sweeps, so the script called for there to be multiple bots that looked like Cyclonus.
This idea was dropped from the script, but not before the animation had been produced and included, which resulted in there being two of Cyclonus on screen.
So no, there is no official answer. It’s an animation error, plain and simple.
So perhaps the question should be. Which bot does it make more sense for to be turned into Cyclonus – Bombshell or Skywarp?
Some fans argue vehemently that it should be Bombshell as he was the closer one to screen during the reformatting. Bombshell was most prominent, so therefore it should be Bombshell. There have also been a few pieces of ancillary media, such as the Transformers Universe comic and a 2003 video game that state Bombshell became Cyclonus.
But at this risk of irritating these fans, and thus reigniting a geek-war which has never truly died, I argue that it should be Skywarp. In fact, I argue that Bombshell should not even be considered as it makes more sense for it to have been an Insecticon Clone. Let’s look at why.
Vehicle Symmetry
Thundercracker, the blue jet, was reformatted into Scourge, a blue Cybertronian flying craft. Therefore it makes sense for Skywarp, the black jet withpurple accents, to be reformatted into Cyclonus, a purple Cybertronian flying craft.
Toy placement
In the 1985 catalog there were 6 Decepticon jets, Starscream, Dirge, Ramjet, Thrust, Skywarp and Thundercracker. In the 1986 catalog, Skywarp and Thundercracker were replaced with Cyclonus and Scourge.
Loyalty
Skywarp was never shown to betray Megatron, whereas the Insecticons were famous for it. Cyclonus is intensely loyal to Galvatron, showing none of the disloyalty the Insecticons did.
DVD Releases
In several DVD releases of the movie, in special features it states that Skywarp becomes Cyclonus.
Japanese Continuity
Unlike with many western audiences, the Japanese take on the continuity has always been relatively free of debate. Indeed in the story Macrocosmic Seekers Cyclonus regresses and rediscovers the teleportation ability he once possessed as Skywarp. The bio for the latest Masterpiece Skywarp also states that he eventually becomes Cyclonus.
Replication
The Insecticons Clones have been shown to replicate. The Sweeps are also assumed to replicate, since no matter how many get destroyed (only 3 were initially created by Unicron in the movie) there always seems to be more. In the episode ‘Call of the Primitives’ one is heard to say ‘Sweeps 6 & 7 coming in for a strike’. Skywarp had a teleportation ability, not a cloning ability, so it makes no sense for him to have become a Sweep.
InsectiClones, not InsectiCons.
To muddy the waters even more, in my opinion, it makes much more sense for it to have been Insecticon Clones rather than the original trio. This is based on the Insecticons showing up further in the movie at later stages, as well as season 3 of the cartoon. Since Insecticon clones have never been shown to exist without in some way being connected to their projinators, it makes sense that it was Clones, not the Insecticons themselves that were reformatted. This again ties into the idea that this is why the Sweeps can replicate. From a sales standpoint, the Insecticons were still being sold in 1986, whereas Thundercracker and Skywarp had been discontinued, so it makes sense for the characters to have not been killed off before thier toys were.
Now I am aware that there are counterarguments to much of what I have cited, such as S3 of the cartoon is infamous for its animation errors. Kickback was shown getting gravely injured by Kup, so it only makes sense for him to have been thrown out of Astrotrain etc. Skywarp was way off in the background, so he is the one that became ‘Armada’. I’m sure a dedicated fan with some spare time could pick holes in much of what I have said. Like mentioned earlier, remember – there is no real answer, the whole debate is based on an animation error in a 38 year old movie designed to sell toys!
But Cyclonus becoming Skywarp? That makes the most sense to me 😉
Do you agree, or are you adamant that it was Bombshell that became Cyclonus? State your theory in the comments section below!
And thus the great cataloging of my personal collection continues.
Transformers Robots in Disguise (15) was very much an “Eh – it was ok” entry into the Transformers multiverse. Set in the Aligned Continuity, it was meant to be the sequel toTransformers Prime and run cocurrent to Transformers Rescue Bots. However whilst Prime impressed fans with its ongoing mature storyline, impressive graphics and excellet figures, Robots in Disguise was far more simplistic and considered a downgrade. The cartoon became a The Tick like show where the team battled a differently themed bad guy each week, and the toyline introduced Warrior-class and 1-step changer toys – simplistic toys with simplistic transformations.
Whilst never hated like Kiss Players, Robots in Disguise (15) failed to impress anyone, and will remain a cartoon and toyline that the majority of fans feel ambivelent about. At least we got some better figures from other toylines RID crossed over with such as Adventure and Go!
Transformers Robots In Disguise (15)/Adventure Action Figure List
Autobot Figures
*Item #RID150001: Transformers Robots in Disguise Autobot Mega Optimus Prime
*Item #RID150002: Transformers Robots in Disguise Autobot Optimus Prime
*Item #RID150003: Transformers Robots in Disguise Autobot Drift
*Item #RID150004: Transformers Robots in Disguise Mini-Con Jetstorm
*Item #RID150005: Transformers Robots in Disguise Mini-Con Slipstream
*Item #RID150006: Transformers Robots in Disguise Strongarm
*Item #RID150007: Transformers Robots in Disguise 9 (1-step) Strongarm
*Item #RID150008: Transformers Robots in Disguise Sideswipe
*Item #RID150009: Transformers Robots in Disguise Activator Sideswipe
*Item #RID150010: Transformers Robots in Disguise Mini-Con Great Byte
*Item #RID150011: Transformers Robots in Disguise Twinferno
*Item #RID150012: Transformers Robots in Disguise Bumblebee
*Item #RID150013: Transformers Robots in Disguise Blurr
*Item #RID150014: Transformers Adventure TAV23 Jazz
*Item #RID150015: Transformers Robots in Disguise Stormshot
*Item #RID150016: Transformers Robots in Disguise Windblade
And so the great undertaking of cataloging my massive collection continues!
Armada was a really fun Transformers toyline. It introduced a whole new race of Transformers – Mini-Cons, who could attach to larger Transformers to unlock new abilities. It also gave fans what we had been waiting for for nearly 20 years – a Unicron toy!
Transformer Armada Autobot Figures
*Item #ARA001: Transformers Armada Autobot Optimus Prime
*Item #ARA002: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Sparkplug
(Reference: Photo #P00163)
*Item #ARA003: Transformers Armada Autobot Jetfire
*Item #ARA004: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Comettor
(Reference: Photo #P00164)
*Item #ARA005: Transformers Armada Autobot Red Alert
*Item #ARA006: Transformers Armada Autobot Red Alert (2nd unit)
*Item #ARA007: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Longarm
(Reference: Photo #P00165)
*Item #ARA008: Transformers Armada Autobot Scavenger
*Item #ARA009: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Rollbar
(Reference: Photo #P00166)
*Item #ARA010: Transformers Armada Autobot Overload
*Item #ARA011: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Headmaster Rollout (combined with Overload)
(Reference: Photo #P00167)
*Item #ARA012: Transformers Armada Autobot Hot Shot
*Item #ARA013: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Jolt
(Reference: Photo #P00168)
*Item #ARA014: Transformers Armada Autobot Smokescreen
*Item #ARA015: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Liftor
(Reference: Photo #P00169)
*Item #ARA016: Transformers Armada Autobot Blurr
*Item #ARA017: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Incinerator
(Reference: Photo #P00170)
*Item #ARA018: Transformers Armada Autobot Sideswipe
*Item #ARA019: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Nightbeat
(Reference: Photo #P00171)
*Item #ARA020: Transformers Armada Autobot Laserbeak
*Item #ARA021: Transformers Armada Autobot Laserbeak (2nd unit)
(Reference: Photo #P00172)
*Item #ARA022: Transformers Armada McDonald’s Autobot Hot Shot
*Item #ARA023: Transformers Armada McDonald’s Autobot Hot Shot (2nd unit)
*Item #ARA024: Transformers Armada McDonald’s Autobot Hot Shot (3rd unit)
*Item #ARA025: Transformers Armada McDonald’s Autobot Hot Shot Smokescreen
(Reference: Photo #P00173)
*Item #ARA026: Transformers Armada Optimus Prime (keychain)
(Reference: Photo #P00174)
Transformer Armada Decepticon Figures
*Item ARD001#: Transformers Armada Decepticon Megatron
*Item ARD002#: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Leader-1
(Reference: Photo #P00175)
*Item #ARD003: Transformers Armada Decepticon Thundercracker
*Item #ARD004: 9ransformers Armada Mini-Con Zapmaster
*Item #ARD005: Transformers Armada Decepticon Starscream
*Item #ARD006: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Swindle
*Item #ARD007: Transformers Armada Decepticon Skywarp
*Item #ARD008: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Thunderclash
(Reference: Photo #P00176)
*Item #ARD009: Transformers Armada Decepticon Tidal Wave
*Item #ARD010: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Ramjet
(Reference: Photo #P00177)
*Item #ARD011: Transformers Armada Decepticon Demolishor
*Item #ARD012: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Blackout
(Reference: Photo #P00178)
*Item #ARD013: Transformers Armada Decepticon Cyclonus
*Item #ARD014: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Crumplezone
(Reference: Photo #P00179)
*Item #ARD015: Transformers Armada Decepticon Thrust
*Item #ARD016: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Inferno
(Reference: Photo #P00180)
*Item #ARD017: Transformers Armada Decepticon Predacon
*Item #ARD018: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Side Burn
*Item #ARD019: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Skid-Z
(Reference: Photo #P00181)
Transformer Armada Unicron Figures
*Item #ARU001: Transformers Armada Unicron
*Item #ARU002: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Dead End
(Reference: Photo #P00182)
*Item #ARU003: Transformers Armada Sideways
*Item #ARU004: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Rook
*Item #ARU005: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Crosswise
(Reference: Photo #P00183)
Transformer Armada Mini-Con Team Figures
*Item #ARM001: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Destruction Team Dualor
*Item #ARM002: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Destruction Team Drill Bit
*Item #ARM003: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Destruction Team Buzzsaw
(Reference: Photo #P00184)
*Item #ARM004: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Road Wrecker Team Dualor
*Item #ARM005: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Road Wrecker Team Drill Bit
*Item #ARM006: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Road Wrecker Team Buzzsaw
(Reference: Photo #P00185)
*Item #ARM007: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Sea Team Waterlog
*Item #ARM008: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Sea Team Oceanglide
*Item #ARM009: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Sea Team Stormcloud
(Reference: Photo #P00186)
*Item #ARM010: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Air Military Team Gunbarrel
*Item #ARM011: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Air Military Team Terradive
*Item #ARM012: Transformers Armada Mini-Con Air Military Team Thunderwing
For a bit of fun and a bit of comparison I pulled out of my storage crates a lot of my Decepticons. In particular, toys that were updates of classic characters, mainly (but not exclusively) from G1. I was amazed and how many characters have gotten new toys!
So enjoy this short video I made of the display. Also below you will find some screenshots and a full list of the Decepticons on display along with links to reviews of many of the figures displayed here – have fun!