Blackstreak wrote:I've never caught on to Blitzwing being a clone whether in cartoon or comic.
GEEWUN wrote:Blackstreak wrote:I've never caught on to Blitzwing being a clone whether in cartoon or comic.
No blitzwing wasn't a clone but in the intro of the season 3 cartoon there is a bunch of blitzwing tanks standing there and one shoots toward the screen
Bumblevivisector wrote:I love mosaics that try to rationalize something inexplicable, and calling them his Dia-Clones was just too perfect, especially given the "5-Faces of Darkness" connection. Could the Quints have built the pre-Car-Robo Diacone guys as non-sentient mechs to be sold to other alien races, like Waruders for example, before they learned how to bring them to life with Vector Sigma? Only time and fanfic will tell...
Shadowman wrote:This is Sabrblade we're talking about. His ability to store trivial information about TV shows is downright superhuman.
Caelus wrote:My wife pointed out something interesting about the prehistoric Predacons. I said that everyone was complaining because transforming for them mostly consisted of them just standing up-right. She essentially said, 'So? That's what our ancestors did.'
Sabrblade wrote:Cybertron had not yet been conquered by the Decepticons in 1995 or any years prior to 2005. Because in the late 1990s, the Autobots and Decepticons were busy taking part in The Stargate Battles on Earth, and then all of them either go missing or are deactivated at the conclusion of its massive climax. Which gives leeway for the events of the Car Robots (but not RiD) to occur in 2000.
And after those characters depart Earth, some of the G1 cast returns to begin construction on Autobot City in 2003. It is here that Megatron, after returning from his disappearance following the Stargate Battles, begins his campaign to conquer Cybertron for good.
However, around this time, Megatron goes missing again and, by 2004, the Decepticons are led by the time-displaced (and enlarged) Beast Wars Megatron, who, along with several other time displaced characters like Optimus Primal and Star Saber, arrived in this time via the Blasty Zone. And thus began a brief war over the energy known as Solitarium.
G1 Megatron himself didn't return until early 2005, in the form of Reverse Convoy's body. At some point towards the end of this whole conflict, Optimus Prime managed to rid the Earth of all Decepticons, and then the Autobots used the Solitarium to return all the time-displaced individuals back to their respective time periods.
However, G1 Megatron seemed to have gotten his old body back and apparently succeeded in conquering Cybertron right around this time. I guess it was a bad move on Prime's part to remove all Decepticons from Earth, as that must have increased the Decepticons' numbers on Cybertron enough to then finally take it over. Whoops.
Iskander wrote:Now, using the Waruders, that's an idea we hadn't thought about, and it's a pretty good one, we'll have to do somehting with them.
Bumblevivisector wrote:Iskander wrote:Now, using the Waruders, that's an idea we hadn't thought about, and it's a pretty good one, we'll have to do somehting with them.
If you do, make sure you do your homework on some other toylines that appropriated Diaclone molds: Warudaros (the 3-bug combiner, Waruder command weapon) actually turned up in at least 3 different properties after Diaclone: In Kronoforms he was the Wargon Terminator (Terminator seems to be specifically the name of their combined form) who had the best box art BTW, and he also showed up as Siclonoid in Europe's Grandstand Convertor's line; in both cases he seems to be sentient rather than piloted. Grandstand Convertors technically have nothing to do with Select's American Convertors line, but his bio kind of sounds like theirs:
http://www.toyarchive.com/Diaclone/Gran ... dMIB1.html
Read the one below his on the Diaclone page for Sigmatron too: apparently the leader of the GC bad guys was Omegatron, the red and gray Omega Supreme! A Quintesson venture in loaning out their Guardians? While the European Convertors had a lot of licenced Diaclones, the American ones had a lot of molds simplified from other lines TF licensed, like Macross Valks, and Beetras Ransack and Barrage. (I think their Cassette/Walkman spy is Maccadam, of Oil House fame: look at his face!)
Getting back to Warudaros, at least 4 of a piloted version of him called "Paras B" showed up fighting Diaclone Battle Buffalo, alias "Diatron 5" in a cheap Korean cartoon of the same name, better known on youtube and in Dollar Castles as "Space Transformers".
Not sure Hasbro will take kindly to mosaics referencing all this quasi-legal non-TF stuff, but that is the background of the toys. Subtle references shouldn't piss off too many execs. For example, if you wanted to address the other pre-Insecticons by including the Kickback mantis and Bombshell scorpion, say the Quints sold those to some aliens in in a solar system that orbits a quadruple star...cause those elaborately remolded KOs were made by Four Star. The right people will get it; Transfans do their homework. That way, even for the non-toy-collectors, it's still a hobby.
Sabrblade wrote:Cybertron had not yet been conquered by the Decepticons in 1995 or any years prior to 2005. Because in the late 1990s, the Autobots and Decepticons were busy taking part in The Stargate Battles on Earth, and then all of them either go missing or are deactivated at the conclusion of its massive climax. Which gives leeway for the events of the Car Robots (but not RiD) to occur in 2000.
And after those characters depart Earth, some of the G1 cast returns to begin construction on Autobot City in 2003. It is here that Megatron, after returning from his disappearance following the Stargate Battles, begins his campaign to conquer Cybertron for good.
However, around this time, Megatron goes missing again and, by 2004, the Decepticons are led by the time-displaced (and enlarged) Beast Wars Megatron, who, along with several other time displaced characters like Optimus Primal and Star Saber, arrived in this time via the Blasty Zone. And thus began a brief war over the energy known as Solitarium.
G1 Megatron himself didn't return until early 2005, in the form of Reverse Convoy's body. At some point towards the end of this whole conflict, Optimus Prime managed to rid the Earth of all Decepticons, and then the Autobots used the Solitarium to return all the time-displaced individuals back to their respective time periods.
However, G1 Megatron seemed to have gotten his old body back and apparently succeeded in conquering Cybertron right around this time. I guess it was a bad move on Prime's part to remove all Decepticons from Earth, as that must have increased the Decepticons' numbers on Cybertron enough to then finally take it over. Whoops.
How is it confusing? In a nutshell it goes like this:RK_Striker_JK_5 wrote:Yeah... that's just confusing, even for TF.
Shadowman wrote:This is Sabrblade we're talking about. His ability to store trivial information about TV shows is downright superhuman.
Caelus wrote:My wife pointed out something interesting about the prehistoric Predacons. I said that everyone was complaining because transforming for them mostly consisted of them just standing up-right. She essentially said, 'So? That's what our ancestors did.'
Sabrblade wrote:How is it confusing? In a nutshell it goes like this:RK_Striker_JK_5 wrote:Yeah... that's just confusing, even for TF.
G1 seasons 1 & 2 --> Scramble City --> The Stargate Battles --> Car Robots --> RobotMasters --> 1986 G1 movie.
He only disappears alone once. The first time, everyone went missing because of how catastrophic the Stargate Battles ended. I'm amazed that none of them died from that battle and were only deactivated.RK_Striker_JK_5 wrote:Sabrblade wrote:How is it confusing? In a nutshell it goes like this:RK_Striker_JK_5 wrote:Yeah... that's just confusing, even for TF.
G1 seasons 1 & 2 --> Scramble City --> The Stargate Battles --> Car Robots --> RobotMasters --> 1986 G1 movie.
The whole Megatron bit, for one.
Shadowman wrote:This is Sabrblade we're talking about. His ability to store trivial information about TV shows is downright superhuman.
Caelus wrote:My wife pointed out something interesting about the prehistoric Predacons. I said that everyone was complaining because transforming for them mostly consisted of them just standing up-right. She essentially said, 'So? That's what our ancestors did.'
Everything released by or under the license of Hasbro and/or TakaraTomy is canon. "Persoanl choice" is fanon.RK_Striker_JK_5 wrote:Still odd, as well as the whole Stargate thing. I've never read them beyond wiki pages and don't really care about them. Not canon to me and probably a lot of people, too.
Then again, this is TF, where canon is more a... personal choice.
Shadowman wrote:This is Sabrblade we're talking about. His ability to store trivial information about TV shows is downright superhuman.
Caelus wrote:My wife pointed out something interesting about the prehistoric Predacons. I said that everyone was complaining because transforming for them mostly consisted of them just standing up-right. She essentially said, 'So? That's what our ancestors did.'
Bumblevivisector wrote:I just read that link, and that was a pretty cool explanation of Trypsie's name. As for how he got his dino mode/got screwed up, I once read some fanfic-er's timeline that apparently tried to reconcile Trypticon's appearance at the end of Scramble City with the Constructicons basically hotwiring a human city in FFoD: that he appeared in 1987 via giant underwater space bridge, which the Autobots abruptly destroyed, warping him under that city and mixing his molecules with it, permanently brain-damaging him (also implying this is why his eyes lit up in Scramble City, but were dark forever after, his head being so badly messed up he had to see through that sinus cannon). Is your follow up story something close to that?
So Doctor Arkeville will feature prominently in sequels to this mosaic, hmmm? Perhaps he'll mention some fellow mad scientists that dabbled in creating their own TFesque robots, like Professor...Don? I'm not sure; can anyone understand the name they're saying here?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EQCUrRHb_Bk
Dr. A can then mention how they escaped his lab and ran away to South America, adding, "If you ask me, that incompetent hack went Bat-Robo-insane!"
And then he'll name drop his old "BUDDY" Doctor "L", who made three weaker clones of the Dinobots that became mercenaries in the war between the rival princes of Planet Robotron, turning the tide since the native robots there were of vastly inferior quality
Sorry, way too much info; I've been on a big obscure '80s robot toyline kick lately. I'm not about to suggest mosaics start including lines with a strong story or retconning GoBots into TFs, just acknowledging the almost forgotten ones that need some love. I have no idea how to find out who even owns Select's assets now; for all I know, Quick Change might be using those Avarian and Insector molds legally, if robot designs become public-domain after years of disuse or the demise of a company.
Bumblevivisector wrote:I just read that link, and that was a pretty cool explanation of Trypsie's name.
Lord Manhammer '74 wrote:Nice little reveal there about that little bit of Transformer lore. The Bliztwing Drone Brigade goes right up there nicely with the Aerospace Extermination SquadMegatron utilized in the sadly uncompleted TRANSFORMERS:THE WAR WITHIN III:The Age of Wrath:BOOM:.
Top it off, you also throw in the criminally underutilized Dr. Arkleville as part of the BDB's genesis. Great job all around.
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