The name or term "Classics" refers to more than one character or idea. For a list of other meanings, seeClassics (disambiguation). |
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When thelive-actionTransformers film was pushed back from November 2006 to July 2007,Hasbro needed to create a filler line to bridge the gap in their product offerings. That bridge was a revisitation of the original "Generation 1" characters, dubbedTransformers: Classics. The line featured many original toy designs, as well as someMini-Cons which were originally meant for the tail-end of theCybertron line. A handful ofredecoedLegends Class figures rounded out the selection.
Classics has a Japanese counterpart inHenkei! Henkei!, and later gained spiritual successors in the2008Universe line, theGenerations line, and theReveal the Shield segment of the2010Transformers line.
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In order to fill out the line with more "Generation 1" characters, eight redecos of"Legends of Cybertron" toys were released across two waves, withBumblebee andJetfire being the only ones to also receive larger toys in the line. The third wave, titled "Cybertron Collection", consisted of straight re-releases ofLeo Prime and threeCybertron figures. | |||||||||
Wave 1 | Wave 2 | Cybertron Collection |
Six brand-new teams of Mini-Cons were released as part ofClassics, though they were originally intended forCybertron two-packs. Nothing is known about the original pairings, but it resulted in three-bot teams that were noticeably looser in their themes than was the convention inArmada. These Mini-Cons were also noticeably shorter than those released as part of the "Unicron Trilogy", with more intricate parts andPowerlinx ports in strange places. | |||||||||
Wave 1 | Wave 2 |
Six brand-new Deluxe Class molds were released, along with a third wave of two retool/redecos (a tiny number of figures by today's standards). Some aspects of this lineup's scale would carry forward into later lines -Seekers utilizing theClassics Starscream mold andAutobot Cars would remain under this size class, while laterTriple Changers andGrimlocks would generally get Voyager Class figures. | |||||||||
Wave 1 | Wave 2 | Wave 3 |
As the line was a short-term one, the largest mass-retail figures released were Voyager Class, though each one was considerably complex for their size. Naturally, this was limited to the leaders of each faction and the traditionally-larger-than-normal Jetfire, who also featured a large amount of add-on parts. | |||||||||
Wave 1 | Wave 2 |
While the regular retail line was limited, Hasbro was able to release more "Generation 1" characters in "updated" forms through store and conventionexclusives. As there were a limited number ofClassics molds available, the line was further filled with "Unicron Trilogy" redecoes, aMasterpiece redeco, and even some vintageoriginal toyline molds. | |||||||||
BotCon 2007
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ToysЯUs | Walmart | (w/Giant Planet Mini-Con Team) |
Although no cartoons or comic books were planned for the line by Hasbro,Fun Publications picked up the ball for theirOfficial Transformers Fan Club Magazine comic, makingClassics the basis of their 2007 story-arc, "Crossing Over". The story uses the oldMarvel USThe Transformers comic as backstory, but disregards theMarvel UK material and theGeneration 2 comic that followed, taking things in a new direction instead. TheClassics fiction has since been expanded by several exclusive on-line prose stories, single issue comics available through the club or at BotCon, and through profiles available on the club website or in the magazine.
A brief timeline of theClassics universe includes:
The Classicsverse has always been tied closely to theShattered Glass universe, withClassicsCliffjumper travelling there after the events ofCrossing Over. The two universes collided in BotCon 2012's "Invasion" comic, whereUltra Magnus's interdimensional tampering resulted in the destruction of the Classicsverse. Various shortTransTech comics were released online, acting as a framing device for the event.
Not everything from the Classicsverse would end up destroyed in this event.Classics Earth would be transported into theShattered Glass universe to end up orbiting its Cybertron, and later stories would feature these refugees interacting with their alternate-universe counterparts. Ultra Magnus and Megatron's ships would also survive into this new universe, only to end up in its prehistoric past.
The term "Classics" is universally accepted and used by both fans and Hasbro, but it appears with surprising irregularity around the toys themselves. The first year of packaging only labelled them "Transformers" (with the tag line "Robots in Disguise" occasionally being mistaken for a secondary title), with "Classic" appearing solely as a prefix to some of thesize classes, such as "Classic Deluxe" or "Classic Voyager".Aaron Archer indicated at various convention appearances that Hasbro did not want to use the term "Classics" on retail packaging because, despite originating the term in the first place, they didn't want kids to think the on-shelf "Classics" toys were old ("classic") product.
On the other hand, the photo gallery of the toy line included on theOptimus Prime vs Megatron: The Ultimate Battle DVD invited its viewers to "check out all the awesome TRANSFORMERS Classics figures!". Furthermore, Hasbro's official Transformers website prominently featured the name "Classics" in multiple places at the time, including a "Transformers Classics" overview page. The accompanying toy list included almost all the toys listed above, explicitly identifying assortments such as "Classic Legends" and "Classic Mini-Con 3-packs" by name. The Hasbro website also featured a variation of the toy line logo that included the secondary title "Classic", which can also be found, of all places, on the bottom of the packaging forTakaraTomy'sHenkei! Henkei! versions of all the figures that originated from the US Classics line, just like those figures whose Hasbro counterparts were released under theUniverse toy line sport a smallTransformers: Universe logo on the bottom of their packaging.
Some toys, such as the Magnus/Skywarp two-pack, have no "Classic" label at all. The one unifying factor was the distinctive design of the packaging, which spread to even theSoundwave re-release. This has become the commonly-accepted delineator of theClassics line, which brings the following toys into the fold even though they don't self-identify as such:
Complicating things further,Classics would later be subsumed by the relaunchedUniverse franchise (which also engulfedRobot Heroes). The line replaced the definingClassics packaging style with the newUniverse design. Only a small "Classic Series" label on their packaging maintained the connection to the previousClassics toys and separated them from other toys in theUniverse line, labelled "Beast Wars Series", "Armada Series" or "Cybertron Series". However, as the line progressed, "Classic Series" was eventually replaced with "Generation 1 Series", which appears to have been simply an attempt at more consistent labelling. The 2008Universe toy line and the2010Generations toyline are also sometimes informally referred to as Classics 2.0 and Classics 3.0.
The fan-created acronymCHUG serves as a general catch-all term for the follow-up lines to Classics that redesign and modernize old characters.