Personal tools

Aligned continuity family

From Transformers Wiki

(Redirected from Aligned)
Jump to: navigation, search

The Aligned continuity family launched in 2010 with the intention of being the foundation of the Transformers brand over the next decade.[1] Its core is the "Binder of Revelation",[2] a 354-page[3] brand bible co-written by Aaron Archer, Rik Alvarez and other Transformer experts from Hasbro and the fandom, charting billions of years worth of history for the Transformers.[4] Aligned encompasses a variety of interconnected franchises—most prominently Prime, Rescue Bots, Robots in Disguise, and Rescue Bots Academy.

Early on, Hasbro consistently referred to all Aligned fiction as one "continuity". However, various elements of the fiction have separate creative teams with distinct, sometimes conflicting, visions. Indeed, Hasbro has referred to the concept as "a bit of an animal to define",[5] and, for that reason, this wiki takes the more cautious route of calling it a "continuity family". The brand bible's description in Transformers Vault states it paints the Transformers history in broad strokes, so as to give creators the necessary flexibility when crafting their stories, a belief echoed by statements made at BotCon 2011: Archer spoke of a "squint test" where everything can be seen as one "family" of stories,[6][7] akin to the many different reinventions of the Generation 1 continuity family by the cartoon, Marvel, and IDW comics. Hasbro has not given this family an official title, but we have derived the name "Aligned" from Hasbro statements referring to this as a new "aligned continuity".[8][9]

Contents

Creative vision

(thumbnail)
Optimus Prime's depiction in Hasbro's brand bible at the center of the Aligned continuity family.

The Aligned continuity began as an attempt to synthesize a grand unified universe from of all of the previous lore that had preceded it. Indeed, early comments from Aaron Archer and Rik Alvarez suggested that the Aligned timeline was entirely separate from the rest of the Transformers multiverse and its many universal streams.[5] When asked about The Fallen and how his status as a multiversal singularity would relate to the new fiction, Hasbro replied "anything you know from past generations of the brand may or may not be factual in the new continuity".[10] Following a crossover with the live-action films in Rise of the Dark Spark, shuffling creative teams, (and probably the Aligned universe not going as planned) this conceit would be quietly dropped, and by 2015 The Complete AllSpark Almanac and Ask Vector Prime confirmed that Aligned occupied the "Uniend" universal cluster in the "normal" multiverse.

It is clear that the creative architects behind the Aligned continuity had a much more ambitious vision for their universe than what we ultimately got. At one point, for instance, Hasbro suggested that IDW Publishing could do a New 52-style "reset" of their current ongoing Transformers continuity to include Prime and War for Cybertron characters and backstories; IDW declined, arguing that they'd already laid too much groundwork for their upcoming "Phase Two" run to change their plans, and Hasbro dropped the issue.[11] A more outlandish concept would have seen the success of Prime kickstart Unit:E, a crossover franchise that would've seen the Transformers team up with various other largely-forgotten Hasbro franchises, including G.I. Joe, M.A.S.K., and, uh, Candyland. However, the inherent difficulties in trying to coordinate several different production houses, combined with Hasbro's general laissez-faire approach to the kind of long-form storytelling Aligned aimed to recreate, quickly led to different creative teams pulling in different directions. Hasbro promised that "reasons for the confusion will be revealed"[1] but this didn't really happen beyond some minor loose-end tying, the most notable of which being the amalgamation of "Sentinel Prime" from the novels and "Zeta Prime" from the War for Cybertron video game as the same guy, "Sentinel Zeta Prime".

According to Rik Alvarez, while High Moon Studios were on board with the idea, the Prime creators didn't want to be tied to previous material,[12] and had previously stated a desire to move away from the Binder of Revelation and do their own thing.[13] Between Prime quickly going overbudget, and Hasbro's Beast Hunters subline imprint forcing the creative team to throw out their proposed season three pitch and start over,[14][15] a combination of bad blood, mutual misunderstandings, and financial woes led to Prime's cancellation.

Other tie-in endeavors developed similar problems. Jagex's tie-in MMORPG, for instance, fell apart due to constant team changes, and by the time that Universe launched in 2014—well after Prime had ended—its creators claimed that it was no longer a direct prequel to Prime as originally intended. Rescue Bots was never intended to be a part of the Aligned continuity, but wound up there anyway at the studio's idea.[16] Meanwhile, Alvarez also claimed to have extensively rewritten the final draft of Transformers: Exiles to ensure that it lined up with other developments in the continuity; as the book revolved around the search for the Star Saber, which was slated to appear in Prime the following year, the book features a haphazard final battle that awkwardly dances around the still-missing Star Saber, instead referring to the artifacts Optimus had gathered as pieces of the "Cyber Caliber". Andrew Hall has confirmed that this lined up with what he'd heard from other people and that much of this is part of the big ball o' fun that comes from working for large corporations.[17]

With the departure of both Archer and Alvarez from Hasbro's Transformers division, future creatives have evidently felt less pressure to draw directly from the Binder of Revelation and more freedom to introduce characters and concepts as they see fit. Robots in Disguise chose to disregard auxiliary works of fiction such as the War for Cybertron games in favor of a new narrative based solely on the Prime cartoon. Most prominently, this led to the introduction of a Grimlock whose appearance and personality varied wildly from the Grimlock introduced in the video games, an irreconcilable dichotomy that carried over to other characters who reused names such as Sideswipe and Kickback (See Grimlock's page for more on this). While this change led to greater narrative freedom moving into the future, it also confused some fans, who had grown used to seeing Aligned as a single, more-or-less consistent universe.

Major continuities

Video games

War for Cybertron Next Gen Version Cover Art.jpg

Set towards the end of the Great War, War for Cybertron focuses on Megatron's quest to harness the mysterious substance known as Dark Energon, a quest that ends with the corruption of Cybertron itself, leaving it uninhabitable for millions of years. These events overlap with a large portion of the concurrently released Transformers: Exodus novel, but events diverge in ways both large and small. Two years later, War for Cybertron received a sequel, Fall of Cybertron; 2014's Rise of the Dark Spark featured a crossover of sorts with the movie continuity to promote the recently released Age of Extinction film.

Novels

Transformers: Exodus overlaps with the War for Cybertron video game, providing a more detailed account of life on prewar Cybertron and the factors that led to the rise of the Decepticons, but individual story beats and plot points diverge from the video game. Author Alex Irvine also wrote the War for Cybertron comic and the apocryphal short story "Bumblebee at Tyger Pax", then returned in 2011 to write Transformers: Exiles, which picks up immediately after the conclusion of Exodus (although 2012's Fall of Cybertron would, again, provide a differing account of how the Autobots escaped from a dying Cybertron). Finally, in 2014, authors David J. and Mark S. Williams penned Transformers: Retribution, a story intended to bridge the gap between the novels and the Prime cartoon.

Cartoons

TransformersPrimePremierePoster.jpg

Transformers: Prime debuted on the Hub Network in late 2010. Released five months after War for Cybertron, it also featured Dark Energon as a major plot point, but individual depictions differed—while War for Cybertron depicted the substance as merely a powerful, dangerous fuel source, Prime made it a quasi-legendary substance with explicitly supernatural powers, such as the ability to raise the dead. At BotCon 2011, the producers explained that this kind of leeway was allowed if it served the story;[18] as the show went on, however, the writers eventually incorporated backstory from the Binder of Revelation that helped reconcile some events with the books and video games, including Prime and Megatron's shared history.

A prequel comic written by Mike Johnson was itself adapted into a season three episode; Titan Comics also published a magazine tied in to the cartoon. Activision developed a tie-in video game for Nintendo gaming systems in 2012, which, with a little squinting, could slot somewhere into season two of the cartoon. The series wrapped up in 2013 with a direct-to-video movie, Predacons Rising. In Japan, episodes were edited to include Arms Micron Theater, showcasing the exploits of the larger robot's weapons, re-imagined as Mini-Cons to promote the exclusive toys in the Takara versions... but neither season three nor the Predacons Rising movie saw Japanese distribution (more on that later).

(thumbnail)
Let's save these primitive lifeforms from themselves.

Rescue Bots was originally not intended to be a part of the Aligned continuity family, but wound up slotted into the continuity at the idea of the show's head writers. Deliberately set on an isolated island town in Maine so that Prime could do its own thing, the two shows featured infrequent "crossovers" where Optimus Prime and Bumblebee would visit the protagonists.

Released two years after Prime ended, Robots in Disguise was a sequel-slash-spinoff focused on Bumblebee and his return to Earth to battle Steeljaw and a new group of Decepticons with the help of Optimus Prime and the Bee Team. This show featured several crossovers with Rescue Bots; Sideswipe visited Griffin Rock in a 2016 Rescue Bots episode, and Blurr returned the favor a year later.

Finally, Rescue Bots Academy is a direct sequel to the original Rescue Bots cartoon, which focused on the next generation of Rescue Bot recruits and their adventures on Earth, Cybertron, and several other planets. With its final episode airing in summer 2020, and the release of the Generation 1-inspired Siege cartoon in the same year, it seems likely that this is also the last franchise to see release in this continuity.

The Covenant of Primus

Released just after the conclusion of Transformers: Prime, The Covenant of Primus is an illustrated hardcover book that purports to be the in-universe "Covenant of Primus" alluded to several times throughout Transformers fiction. The book is notable for releasing the full roster of the Thirteen and presenting an abridged history of the Cybertronian race, from the tragic tale of the Thirteen, to the rise of Transformer civilization, the Autobot-Decepticon war, an abbreviated recap of the Prime cartoon, and, finally, Optimus Prime's sacrifice to reignite the Well at the very end of Predacons Rising.

Minor continuities

Hall of Fame profiles

In May 2010, before any Aligned franchises had launched, Hasbro announced a "Transformers Hall of Fame" honoring characters and people associated with the Transformers brand. The spot for one inductee was put to a fan-vote: Five character profiles were published on Hasbro.com, and users could cast a vote for one of them. Most of them were described with a combination of traits from various continuities; for example, Jazz is pictured in his Generation 1 form but described as a "Cyber-Ninja" like his Animated incarnation.[19] Soundwave, also looking like his Generation 1 self, is said to have a mysterious origin like his Cybertron counterpart, his partners are called "Mini-Cons" instead of "Mini-Cassettes", and he has his live-action movie incarnation's vulnerability to simultaneous sonic booms.[20] Later, a Hasbro Q&A answer stated that Jazz's entry is based on Aligned continuity.[9] The character does appear in War for Cybertron fiction, but with no particularly Cyber-Ninja-like attributes.

Generations toy bios

A handful of toys were created directly from War for Cybertron designs and sold as part of the Generations toyline. While lacking the phrase "War for Cybertron" on their packaging, the release of the first wave was timed within days of the games and novel,[21] and their on-package bios are basically in sync with that fiction as well. Megatron's, for example, focuses on his penchant for upgrading his body with "bleeding-edge" technology,[22] which may be an allusion to his lustful utilization of Dark Energon. Bumblebee's says he was once a "chatterbox" but is now a "silent warrior",[23] which appears to be a bridge between his War for Cybertron and then-upcoming Prime portrayals; however, it's not strictly accurate because in Prime he can still vocalize, just not in words. Later Generations toys made from Fall of Cybertron designs would feature the phrase "Fall of Cybertron".

Comic books

RotD1 cvrA.jpg

Unlike many other Transformers continuities, the Aligned continuity never had an ongoing comic series of any kind, but IDW Publishing did support its video games and television shows through several of miniseries and one-shots. The first of these was the Transformers: War for Cybertron, a loose adaptation of a chapter from Exodus; the Transformers: Prime graphic novel served as a prequel to the cartoon. The closest thing to a dedicated ongoing were the Transformers: Fall of Cybertron, Rage of the Dinobots, and the Beast Hunters miniseries, all of which focused on the adventures of Grimlock and the other Dinobots on Cybertron while the events of Prime played out on Earth.

Finally, the 2015 Transformers: Robots in Disguise tied into the ongoing cartoon by featuring a short, self-contained storyline that featured several returning Prime characters interacting with the Bee Team.

Between 2011 and 2014, the UK-based Titan Magazines reinvented its ongoing Transformers magazine to include original Prime comics.

Online games

The idea of an online game that would support the development of the Aligned universe had evidently been tossed around early in development; Jagex unveiled Transformers Universe as a Prime prequel in the form of an MMORPG at BotCon 2011. However, fluctuating creative teams took the game in a wildly different direction, and after years of delays and reinventions the game limped into open beta in 2014 as an online battle game—almost a year after Prime ended. The game never got off the ground and ultimately closed in December of the same year without ever having left beta; a similar fate befell the Universe's Chinese counterpart, Transformers Online, which launched in 2012 but only lasted a few months before NetDragon abruptly shuttered the game.

Transformers Go!

CCSwordbotSamuari Autobots and Isami.jpg

While the first two seasons of Transformers: Prime were dubbed and released in Japan, the third season was not, and the Japanese Prime cartoon ended on an ambiguous cliffhanger. Instead, TakaraTomy launched Triple Combination: Transformers Go!, which followed the adventures of the new Swordbots as they fought the revived forces of the Predacons, led by Dragotron for control of the Legendiscs throughout Japanese history. As it follows a backstory where the Autobots and Decepticons flee into space, it is incompatible with the events of Prime series 3 onwards, which did not air in Japan. Told purely through DVD releases in the TV Magazine and TV Kun, it has not yet been released outside its home country.

Notes

  • Instead of giving this continuity family an official name, Hasbro has instead referred to it with brief descriptors such as "new aligned",[9] "aligned",[8] "modern",[1][10] and "War for Cybertron/Exodus".[9] VP of Intellectual Property Development Aaron Archer said at a BotCon 2010 panel that he had considered naming it "Epochs", which is how the storyline is referred to in the Binder of Revelation, but then decided not to.
  • The subtitle-less Transformers toyline launched in 2010 and its companion line, Generations, share some of the Aligned spirit, since they likewise contain characters and concepts from previous franchises with little separation. But the only real connection between those toylines and Aligned material is the small number of previously mentioned War for Cybertron-inspired toys. Hasbro has referred to the Power Core Combiners subline as "exist[ing] in the modern world continuity",[24] but the context of that statement doesn't suggest a specific reference to Aligned.
  • The Hubworld Transformers: Prime TV special featured footage of BotCon attendees taking a Transformers quiz, with the questions being what Optimus Prime's original name was, what his job had been, and which soap opera was the Autobots' favorite. The soap opera (As the Kitchen Sinks) is from the original The Transformers cartoon, but the "correct" answers to the first two questions were said to be "Orion Pax" and "data clerk". Aligned continuity is the only source where both of those ideas are true. This seems to reflect Hasbro's current policy of treating Aligned material as the default Transformers "truth". Something similar occurred during the Dreamwave era, where DK's Transformers: The Ultimate Guide treated that continuity as the default "truth", so this is not a completely new phenomenon.
  • Although Hasbro's plans to have IDW's comic book universe rebooted to cover the Aligned continuity never came to fruition, certain concepts from Prime and other Aligned media did crop up in "Phase 2" of IDW Publishing's comic books, whether at Hasbro's suggestion,[26] from shared writers, or just by coincidence. James Roberts's work has featured concepts such as the Optimus-Megatron backstory, with Optimus as a public sector worker swayed by Megatron's rhetoric, and independently came up with ideas such as a Ratchet starting to feel his advanced age, and the idea of alternate mode determining social and racial position. In addition, both More than Meets the Eye and Robots in Disguise incorporated designs from the War for Cybertron video game to represent the character's Cybertronian forms, with the story having moved away from Earth.

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "The reasons for the confusion will be revealed in the stories that will be told over the next few years across all content formats, Dark Energon's mystery is part of the plan and not an oversight. Dark Energon is a newly introduced substance and will be a major factor in the coming conflict it should not be clear to fans as to what is going on as the final card hasn't been played. Continuity does not always mean a 100% connection rather a plan to avoid out right contradiction but we absolutly see most Hasbro Transformers projects connected to this modern continuity in the coming decade."—Aaron Archer, TFWiki, "Hasbro Q&A/January 2011: Answers", 2011/02/07
  2. "Hasbro refers to their Transformers "bible" as the "Binder of Revelation""—Seibertron, "Botcon 2011 Coverage: Hasbro Intellectual Property Panel", 2011/06/05
  3. "As overseers of the brand they work closely with all of the different internal departments as well, connecting the toys via the right looks and names to the market. As archivists they maintain the Transformers bible (currently at 354 pages), also known as the “Binder of Revelation.”"—Scott Rubin, Figures.com, "BotCon 2011 - Hasbro Panel Report", 2011 (archive link)
  4. Transformers Vault.
  5. 5.0 5.1 The Allspark, "Botcon 2011 Transformers Brand Panel!, Live coverage starting at 1pm PST!", 2011/06/05 (archive link) (dead link)
  6. "The final word was given on the aligned continuity. Each platform has its own story needs in order to be dynamic and successful. Therefore, not every detail will line up perfectly. Aaron talked about the “squint test” whereby everything can be seen to be one family of stories, but fans like us will see differences. The emphasis is on telling good, solid stories, not on making each version line up perfectly at the expense of the quality of the final product."—Sol Fury, TFW2005, "Botcon 2011 Hasbro Story Building Panel", 2011/06/05
  7. "The current combined “Modern Continuity” starts with the novel Exodus and includes the War for Cybertron game, films, Transformers: Prime, and the new Exiles novel. While Archer admitted that all will have slight differences that work for their own audiences, they pass the “squint test” to share one continuity."—Scott Rubin, Figures.com, "BotCon 2011 - Hasbro Panel Report", 2011 (archive link)
  8. 8.0 8.1 "A question was recently posed to Hasbro’s UK office asking if the Transformers Prime television series and the Transformers War for Cybertron video game were in a connected continuity. Unfortunately the wrong answer was delivered and that answer has made its way to the fan community. The TRANSFORMERS brand team would like to confirm that Transformers War for Cybertron video game, Transformers Exodus novel, and the Transformers Prime television show are in the same aligned continuity. Hasbro is creating a single continuity to tell the bulk of our TRANSFORMERS stories going forward. Please look for further details about the continuity plan and new projects over the next year."—Hasbro, The Allspark, "Hasbro: WFC, Exodus, Prime All Belong To Same Continuity", 2010/12/08 (archive link)
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 "Over the past 25 years there have been various interpretations of Transformers lore. In the original animated series, Orion Pax was best friends with Dion who subsequently dies at the hands of Megatron. In our mind Dion died during the war for Cybertron. Dion was never rebuilt into any other character. Jazz's Hall of Fame profile was based off the War for Cybertron/Exodus continuity, which Hasbro is going forward with as our new aligned continuity. We believe Orion Pax had many friends during the War for Cybertron."—Hasbro, TFviews, "Hasbro Answers to TFviews Questions #11", 2010/07/26
  10. 10.0 10.1 "The official story of the original 13 and specifically The Fallen has not been explored in the modern continuity that Transformers War for Cybertron, Exodus, and Prime are a part of. Anything you know from past generations of the brand may or may not be factual in the new continuity. Going forward in the modern continuity there is 1 Fallen."—Hasbro, The Allspark Forums, "Hasbro Transformers Q&A Answers returned!, Questions from 9/13 Answered", 2010/11/01 (archive link)
  11. "The Aligned Continuity PHASE THREE — NEVER HAPPENED. IDW had 5 years invested into their ongoing [Transformers comic series]. To introduce this new continuity would mean to start over [in a] Secret Wars/New 52 type event [but they] Already had a G1-esque story PLUS ReGeneration One was coming up [so it] Didn't make sense to have yet ANOTHER continuity so no new book was added ([too] confusing to readers). [We] Tried introducing [the Binder of Revelation] into IDW but many characters [had] already [been] introduced with different backstories."—Rik Alvarez, TFcon Charlotte, 2015 (archive link)
  12. "PRIME TV SERIES — Phase Two. Problems right off the bat... Heavily inspired by film series. Studio put up lots of resistance [regarding] art/story concepts/tie-ins. Creators didn't want to be [pigeonholed] by anything previous. [Studio's] knowledge was limited to the films. It fell onto HasLab/Binder Of Revelation to help populate their world and not have it conflict with previous stories. Moved the worlds around studio to have things make sense as best we could. Still allowed them flexibility — wanted the best for each incarnation of the brand."—Rik Alvarez, TFcon Charlotte, 2015 (archive link)
  13. "When we started on “Prime” we “inherited” a 300- or 400-page document. It was put together by Hasbro and it was sort of the combined mythology over the many iterations of “Transformers.” When we started “Prime” we knew in some ways we wanted to start over and introduce viewers into this world and not assume they’d had previous experience with “Transformers,” but we always didn’t want to contradict what had come before us. So we started with that document, and to their credit, Hasbro as a toy company tends to have that kind of IP on their products, especially their action figures. They create this world before you even get the toys. We got that 300- or 400-page document and a good chunk of our time was spent trying to figure out what we wanted to use and how we wanted to use it. At some point we wanted to be done with that and go on our own path. We couldn’t have predicted where we started to do that, and in some ways we’re still servicing that document even as we’ve spun off into our own storytelling."—Jeff Kline, Los Angeles Times Hero Complex, "‘Transformers: Prime’ producer talks Beasts, mythology, Michael Bay", 2012/10/25 (archive link)
  14. "New Design Director at Hasbro — Archer moved to VP. [He said that] Optimus should be GREEN! Disregarded HasLab — Pred Symbol. New team new rules: Previous team [said] NO BEASTS, NO FEMALES (Battle for Airachnid — FIGHT!) New team [said] WE NEED BEASTS!!! [as a] Way to reuse existing tooling [and] Keep costs down. [Beast Hunters] was a total curve ball to HasLab and Studio team. Design [gets] mad that Beast Hunters toys [are] not in [the] show. Studio [gets] mad that season 3 [is] scrapped and Beast Hunters is the new story. This lead to different designs — Studio vs Design — Beast Hunters Optimus. HasLab [was] stuck in the middle — Prime issues killed [the Binder of Revelation] and future show plans (Pirates/Season 4-ish). [The Binder of Revelation] — cost over $250K to produce — lives in the bottom of a drawer"—Rik Alvarez, TFcon Charlotte, 2015 (archive link)
  15. "Actual Maximals and Predacons were set to appear on a revitalized Cybertron in Season 3 ([at TFcon Charlotte] he [Rik Alvarez] described it as a ‘taming the wild west’ setting)."—sunnybutte, tumblr, 2015 (archive link)
  16. "WHY DID THIS ALL FALL APART? 1. Hasbro never had control of Prime. Studio didn't want anything to do with [War for Cybertron/Fall of Cybetron]. Left HasLab scrambling to change everyone else's projects. Studio claimed Rescue Bots was part of Prime story... Beast Hunters (we'll get into that later...). Prime had to end after 3 seasons [as the] Budget ballooned out of control, Hasbro dropped the ball on toys, NOBODY had the HUB... 2. No IDW tie in comic book. 3. MMOG disaster — team kept changing. 4. No cross branding marker."—Rik Alvarez, TFcon Charlotte, 2015 (archive link)
  17. "No, the aspects of it that people are seeing as complaining was pretty much stuff I heard after he had left. So I just wanted to say that it's definitely not fabricated. [...] I'm just sympathetic because I've seen very clearly that working in a large corporation can be like being wrapped up in a massive war, where you're only in control of your own little unit (if that), and not the entire battlefield. I know plenty of really talented people who had their careers swept away with the tide, due to no fault of their own. I'm not even being slightly dramatic here."—Andrew Hall, The Allspark, "Everything that went wrong with the Transformers: Prime show panel at TFCon Charlotte", 2015/10/19 (archive link)
  18. Sol Fury, TFW2005, "Botcon 2011 Transformers Prime Panel", 2011/06/05 (archive link) (dead link)
  19. Jazz's Hall of Fame profile
  20. Soundwave's Hall of Fame profile
  21. Allspark.com toy-sighting forum reports
  22. Cybertronian Megatron's on-package bio
  23. Cybertronian Bumblebee's on-package bio
  24. "Ultimately, Power Core Combiners are meant to exist in the modern world continuity. They are based on realistic vehicles, jets, helicopters, etc. all of which could exist today. So while they are not meant to be part of the "movie" universe, they are meant to exist with the modern world which we have seen come to life in the live-action films."—Hasbro, TFWiki, "Hasbro Q&A/November 2010: Answers", 2010/12/02
  25. "Siege is this dark war thing, and Prime is going to throw the AllSpark into the Space bridge, cause they had already done that in Cyberverse. They wanted that aligned continuity they'd call it."—YouTube, 2021/08/07
  26. "“Combiner Wars” is a great example of Hasbro and IDW working together and building a huge storyline that goes between toys and comics and into other media. We on the comics have worked very closely with Hasbro’s Transformers brand team, especially Mark Webber and Sarah Carroll, plus Director, Global Publishing Michael Kelly—there’s pieces that come straight out of the comics (like the new Megatron toy for next year that gives you the option of giving him an Autobot symbol, like he has in the Transformers: More Than Meets The Eye comics) and some new things coming from the toy side that we get to debut in the comics."—Newsarama, "Big Boys Come To Play in TRANSFORMERS’ COMBINER WARS Crossover", 2014/08/13 (archive link)
Advertisement
TFsource.com - Your Source for Everything Transformers!
pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy