The name or term "Timeline" refers to more than one character or idea. For a list of other meanings, seeTimeline (disambiguation). |
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Transformers Timelines is the banner under which much ofFun Publications'Transformers fiction was published from 2005 to 2016. The stories were told across a wide variety of media and continuities -some pre-existing,others created from scratch. Roughly half of the content was published in theclub's magazine (not technically under theTimelines banner) and half was published as online prose stories andBotCon-exclusive comics.
Unlikethe lengthy stories with complex ties toexistingfiction published by the previous convention organizers,3H Productions, Fun Publications promised more standalone stories starting witha short comic accompanying theBotCon 2005 boxed set.
While the BotCon issues were traditionally self-contained, most of the club's stories ended up being just as convoluted and referential as 3H's work ever was. The release order and chronology of all these sources is uniquely complicated, with many plot threads and characters across a multitude of universes being suddenly dropped only to get picked up again years later. When Fun Publications learned they'd be losing their fan club and convention license in 2016, they stepped up their fictional output, and were successfully able to resolve the majority of their storylines by midnight on December 31 that year.
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The only stories released under theTimelines banner to receive any kind of numbering system were the hard-copy-published comic book issues. Ironically, these self-contained issues generally benefited least from such a system, usually having no continuity from one to the next. When Fun Publications started selling mass-retail editions of their comics via Diamond Publishing, with alternate covers and additional profiles for convention-exclusive toys, they started their numbering system over from #1.
Transformers Timelines issues: | |||
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Vol. 1: Vol. 2: |
Thirty-eight illustrated online prose stories were published by the club. They varied in length, mostly in the region of ten to thirty pages - thoughthe longest consisted of a whopping 179 pages. Like the BotCon issues, these stories usually starred characters with exclusive toys being sold by the club.
Transformers Timelines text stories: | |||
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2007: 2008: 2009: 2010: 2011: 2015: 2016:
Unpublished: |
A bi-monthly magazine titled theHasbro Transformers Collectors' Club was published throughout the club's tenure, with each issue containing at least six comic pages, adding up to a complete 36-odd page story over the course of each year. These were supplemented by full-page profiles for characters appearing in the comic, usually two per issue, in the style ofDreamwave Productions'Transformers: More than Meets the Eye series. Some issues also included a one-page tie-in prologue or comic for upcoming online prose stories. Other recurring features of the magazine included interviews, previews of upcoming toys, and fan art.
The first two years' worth of comics were produced for the club byIDW Publishing, and as such received a trade paperback release once complete. Beginning in 2007, the magazine comics were taken in-house under the "Fun Pub Comics" brand, first introduced the previous year onBotCon 2006'sTimelines vol. 2 #1
Hasbro Transformers Collectors' Club issues: | |
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2005 "Balancing Act" | 2006 "Revelations" |
#01 |#02 |#03 |#04 |#05 |#06 | #07 |#08 |#09 |#10 |#11 |#12 |
2007 "Crossing Over" | 2008 "Transcendent" |
#13 |#14 |#15 |#16 |#17 |#18 | #19 |#20 |#21 |#22 |#23 |#24 |
2009 "Reunification" | 2010 "The Coming Storm" |
#25 |#26 |#27 |#28 |#29 |#30 | #31 |#32 |#33 |#34 |#35 |#36 |
2011 "Battle Lines" | 2012 "A Flash Forward" |
#37 |#38 |#39 |#40 |#41 |#42 | #43 |#44 |#45 |#46 |#47 |#48 |
2013 "Beast Wars Shattered Glass" | 2014 "Alone Together" |
#49 |#50 |#51 |#52 |#53 |#54 | #55 |#56 |#57 |#58 |#59 |#60 |
2015 "Another Light" | 2016 "Of Masters and Mayhem" |
#61 |#62 |#63 |#64 |#65 |#66 | #67 |#68 |#69 |#70 |#71 |#72 |
The rest of the content produced by the club came in the form of script readings, online mini-comics, pack-in bio cards (one for eachTimelines figure), YouTube videos, and Facebook pages. Most BotCons featured a panel in which the voice actors present would perform a brand-new story (except the two readings at BotCon 2011, which were adaptations of other stories), often tying into the rest of the club's main continuities (albeit with a more comedic tone). "The Return of Blurr" was later adapted as an illustrated storybook. The mini-comics were occasionally printed as back-up features in the magazine or in the BotCon issues which they tied into ("Legacy" was only released as a pack-in one-page comic art print; "Epilogue Two" was released in the Diamond Edition of the GIJoeCon 2016 comic). Aside from theBeast Wars prologue "Theft of the Golden Disk", the videos were generally comedic fourth-wall-breaking advertisements for the convention. Finally, the Facebook pages often directly interacted with readers and responded to events in other ongoing fiction.
BotCon 2005's comic, "Descent into Evil", and its follow-up script reading "Intimidation Game" were set between "Generation 1" and theBeast Era.BotCon 2006's comic, "Dawn of Future's Past", and its immediate prequel (BotCon 2007's exclusive short animated film, "Theft of the Golden Disk", based on a fan-animation), collectively formed an immediate prequel to theBeast Wars cartoon - with the 2007 prose story "The Razor's Edge" (advertising the club's exclusiveAirazor figure) intended to tie these two pairs of convention-exclusive stories back together.
More than Meets the Eye-style profiles forOptimus Primal andMegatron were released in the Diamond Edition of "Dawn of Future's Past" along with short bios forCheetor and theMaximal Command Security Force. The individual MCSF members9K,Overshoot,Switchblade,High Beam,Shatterpoint andGetout received similar bios inissues #13and #14 whileStopgap was given one on the Club website.[1]More than Meets the Eye-style profiles were also published online forCryotek and his minions from "Theft of the Golden Disk"Backslash,Dirge andBuzzbomb.[2]
In 2007, to offer some final closure to3H Productions' stories, the last part of the cancelledThe Wreckers comic was released, with the four-page "The Wreckers: Finale Part 1" appearing inissue #16 and the prose story "Wreckers: Finale Part II" being released online. This story contained mild references to both "Dawn of Future's Past" and "Theft of the Golden Disk". Similarly, Cryotek's profile referenced bothDeathsaurus from "Descent into Evil" and, vaguely, Cryotek's activities in 3H's stories. Collectively, these connections suggested all of these newBeast Wars-related stories to be part of the existing3HBeast Wars continuity, and versions of these events were later incorporated into the backstory for theWings Universe.[3]
The first two years/arcs of the club magazine comic were"Balancing Act" and "Revelations", which tied into theCybertron cartoon and wrapped up loose ends from 3H'sUniverse andDreamwave Productions'Energon storylines. 2007's "The Dark Heart of Sandokan" (advertisingTimelinesAstrotrain) and 2008's "Force of Habit" prose stories were also set in this continuity.[4] Setting a trend that continued throughout Fun Publications' tenure, these stories mainly featured toys with very limited roles in previous fiction.
The magazine soon started including profiles for the characters appearing in the comic, which further filled the gaps between storylines.Skyfall,Vector Prime,Ramjet,Nemesis Prime,Sentinel Maximus,Optimus Prime,Ultra Magnus,Optimus Primal,Soundwave,Downshift,Unicron, theMini-Con Council of Sages,Landquake and theStreet Action Mini-Con Team all received full-size profiles by issue#12. A bio forQuickslinger was included in issue#6. Short profiles for theGiant Planet Mini-Con Team (Deepdive,Longarm andOvercast),Rapid Run'spartners andtheir combined form,Heavy Load,Stripmine andDrill Bit were published in issues#13,#14 and#15.
A large amount of short profiles for various other Mini-Cons were released in the members-only section of the club website: these included a load of Mini-Cons from theTransformers PlayStation 2 video game (Aftershock,Jumpstart,Buildup,Flashbang,Hawkeye,Highgear,Kickback,Smackdown,Claymore,Overwatch,Covert,Highjump andLookout) and their combinedMatrix Cannon form, a bunch of Japan-exclusive Mini-Cons (theExtreme Competition,Noble Force,Steel Reinforcement,Aerial Extermination, andApocalypse Brigade[5] teams, along withDrop-Test,Heavy Barrel,Road Rebel, and the Dead EndGeneral/Drones), the fourClassics Mini-Cons re-released with aWalmart exclusiveCybertronPrimus (Strongarm,Offshoot,Knockdown andNightscream), Astrotrain's Mini-Cons (Starcatcher and theSabotage Team), the unreleasedAttacktix Mini-ConBunker-Buster, andFlashbox (a generic seen in an episode oftheArmada cartoon). Similar profiles forWings UniverseCop-Tur,EnergonSnowblind andClassicsLiftor were later published in issues#31,#32 and#33 respectively.
Many years later, the club'sArmadaSkywarp figure came with "Armada Volume 5", a mini-comic in the style of those packed with figures in the originalArmada toyline.
The third year/arc of the club storyline, "Crossing Over", was the first in a series ofClassics stories set after the end of the Marvel USThe Transformers comics (but ignoring the UK continuity,Generation 2 andRegeneration One).BotCon 2007's comic "Games of Deception" brought more characters toEarth and included a prologue to the prose story, "The New World", which focused on theClassicsMini-Cons onCybertron.[6] A "Spring Special"Classics comic ("Cheap Shots") was released in 2008 withTimelinesNightbeat, starring him, Siren, Slag and Sludge.[7] The last prose story of 2009, "At Fight's End", seemed to be an attempt at closure for the universe and included an in-fiction appearance of theTimelinesSeacons.
Profiles forClassics characters continued to be published in issues#13-#18:Grimlock,Mirage,Astrotrain,Skywarp,Rodimus,Ramjet,Breakaway,Cliffjumper,Megatron,Optimus Prime andStarscream. The Diamond Edition of "Games of Deception" included profiles forSpringer andBug Bite. All twelveClassics Mini-Cons got short profiles in issues#16,#17 and#18.[8] Profiles forSlag and theHeadmastersLug,Minerva,Muzzle andQuig were published in issue#22 as a "Cheap Shots" tie-in.
The fourth year/arc of the magazine introducedAxiom Nexus, the world ofTransTech, taking the concept of interdimensional travel up to eleven, with characters from countless continuities interacting on-panel. Many characters used their designs from the cancelledTranstech series, which would have been a sequel toBeast Machines, but the setting and story were wholly original, a first for Fun Publications. To give the impression of a vibrant metropolis, all five stories released during this time (the "Transcendent" comic arc, "Gone Too Far",BotCon 2008's "Bee in the City" script reading, "Withered Hope" and "I, Lowtech") took place roughly concurrently, with minor plot threads tying them together.[9] The magazine's back-up humour stripAround Cybertron also tied into various events in those stories. An additional story titled "Crankshafts", was also pitched, and would have had fewer direct ties to the events of the otherTransTech stories of this era, but was never published.[10]
SixTransTech characters (Cheetor,Shockwave,Prowl,Starscream,Optimus Prime andMegatron) were given profiles in issues #22-24 of the magazine as part of "The World of... TRANSTECH," a feature which sported a unique design and layout but was textually almost indistinguishable from the regularMore than Meets the Eye-style profiles. Two lowtechs,Blackarachnia andTopspin, got normal profiles in issue#25.Beta Maxx, who initially went unnamed when he was released at BotCon 2007, was given a full profile online.
BotCon 2008 introduced Fun Publication's most iconic setting: theShattered Glass mirror universe. As anApril Fools' Day prank, what were supposedly the first three pages of that year's convention comic, "Shattered Expectations", were "leaked" online. Upon seeing the overwhelmingly positive reaction to this, Fun Publications got the pages' writers to punch up the script for theactual comic (simply "Shattered Glass"), which was originally much more serious in tone. From there, the story split in two simultaneously published branches. The writers of "Shattered Expectations" continued their campier approach across a series of prose stories: "Dungeons & Dinobots", "Do Over", the preview comic "The Desert Heat!", "Eye in the Sky", "Blitzwing Bop", and 2011's "Transhuman". Taking place after the prose stories, the magazine's 2009 comic arc, "Reunification", maintained the tone of the BotCon comic and continued the interdimensional plot threads from previous arcs, withAround Cybertron also making the jump to the new universe.[11]
More than Meets the Eye-style profiles forShattered Glass characters were published in issues#25 to#30, though for the first time the amount of space given to each character varied.Abominus,Aquarius,Computron,Cyclonus,Dirge,Galvatron,Heatwave,Hound,Ratbat,Ravage,Sky Lynx,Steeljaw, theTechnobots, theTerrorcons,Whisper, andNexus Prime all got profiles during this time.Rodimus andStarscream were each given a profile in the Diamond Edition of "Shattered Glass". In 2011, a contest was held on Twitter to decideScourge's bio, and the winning submission was expanded into a full-sized online profile. Jesse Wittenrich created six profiles to complement hisAround Cybertron strips -Andromeda,Countdown,Esmeral,Mirage,Monstructor and theWireless Automated Sales Person - but these were never printed.[12][13]
Having concluded stories set in most major continuities of the time, the club turned to the distant past ofthe original "Generation 1" cartoon, before "War Dawn", recounting one ofKup's earliest missions inBotCon 2009's "Wings of Honor". Pete Sinclair made sure to explain that these so-calledWings Universe stories would deviate from the cartoon in several ways, some cosmetic and some not, and more so as they progressed. 2010's comic arc, "The Coming Storm", was set ten years later, with the prose stories "Flames of Yesterday" and "A Team Effort" taking place between parts#2-#3 and#4-#5 respectively.A prose story starring Lyzack was planned to lead into 2011's comic arc, "Battle Lines", but wasn't finished in time.Around Cybertron continued for another ten strips set in this universe.
BotCon 2010's "Generation 2: Redux" comic jumped forward in time to 2010,[14] and 2012's comic arc "A Flash Forward" picked up from there, leading intoBotCon 2013's "Termination" and its immediate sequel "A Common Foe", which told a "G1"-cartoon version of theMachine Wars and advertised the third series of theTransformers Figure Subscription Service. A single-panel "Interlude..." was given in the customization class handbook for that convention. As a prelude toBotCon 2014, a Facebook page was created for "Tornado - Decepticon Saboteur", with his journal entries leading into the convention comic "Hoist the Flag".[15] This celebration of BotCon's 20th anniversary took another time-skip to post-Beast Machines, incorporating some version of 3H's stories into theWings Universe. Apack-in comic released with the "BotCon Legacy Collection", simply titled "Legacy", further strengthened these ties.
Profiles were published at a steady rate of two per issue throughout those three years (issues#31 to#48). The characters to receive profiles wereRunabout,Jetstorm,Magnum,Over-Run,Onslaught,Moonracer,Deathsaurus,Metalhawk,Sentinel Major,Ricochet,Ironfist,Bruticus,Landshark,Starscream,Outback,Ironhide,Side Burn,Prowl,Thunderclash,Lyzack,Gyronian Sentry,Sprocket,Hauler,Devastator,Ultra Magnus,Runamuck,Sizzle,Jhiaxus,Windbreaker,Flamefeather,Hubcap,Nightracer,Blaze,Soundwave,Sideswipe andFrenzy. The Diamond Edition of "Wings of Honor" contained profiles forKup,Banzai-Tron,Flak,Leozack andDion; "Generation 2: Redux" included profiles forClench,Rapido,Slicer andScorch; "Termination" included profiles forStrika,Obsidian,Megaplex,Thundercracker andMirage; "A Common Foe" included profiles forKrok,Serpent O.R.,Carzap andTarantulas; and "Hoist the Flag" included profiles forAlpha Trizer,Apelinq andFlare-Up.Thundercracker was to receive aWings Universe bio card for hisAction Master form, but when that figure was released asShattered GlassThundercracker instead the bio was shelved and later published in non-canonical form in issue#42. A series of features titled "The Transformers Menagerie" were released in issues#49 to#54 and provided information on thePrimitives.[16] As a tie-in to "Hoist the Flag", profiles were published in issue#56 forSquirm andOlin Zarak and in#58 for theDread Pirate Crew andFlamewar.
A two-page online comic, "Moving Violations", was the firstTimelines story to be entirely set in theAnimated universe. It doubled as both an advertisement forCheetor's exclusive toy and as a prologue toBotCon 2011's comic, "The Stunti-Con Job". Both stories were set after "Endgame, Part II". A live script reading of "The Stunti-Con Job" was performed at the convention, along with a script reading of thePrime episode "Shadowzone". Both performances included extra scenes not present in the original versions. BotCon 2013's script reading, "Unreliable Narratives", hadPrime Kup tellHot Shot a tale (taking place betweenWar for Cybertron andFall of Cybertron). The 2014 script reading "Prevenge", starringRescue BotsBlades, plucked characters from a wide range of continuities for aUniverse-style battle royale. BotCon 2015's script reading, "The Return of Blurr", proved to be the lastAnimated story, and was later re-released at BotCon 2016 as an illustrated storybook.
Supplementary material forAnimated came in the form ofThe AllSpark Almanac Addendum, printed in the Diamond Edition of "The Stunti-Con Job" and issues#43,#44 and#45 of the magazine. A series ofTech Specs were published: ten in issue#24, two each in issues#25 to#30, and six (plus four reprints) years later in issue#71. All twenty-eight of these plus twenty-four extras were also released as a BotCon 2011 exclusive lithograph. A singleMore than Meets the Eye-style profile for theAnimatedHeadmaster Jrs. (Nightbeat,Siren andHosehead) was published in issue #71.
BotCon 2012 returned to theClassics andShattered Glass universes with its "Invasion" crossover. A six-page "Invasion Prologue" comic was released online during the build-up to the convention and reprinted in the Diamond Edition of the convention comic, while the convention's script reading "Bee in the City 2: Electric Bugaloo" saw theMegatron of BotCon 2008's script capitalise on events of the crossover. A two-page "Invasion: Epilogue" later followed online and in issue#48 of the magazine,[17] leading into 2013's comic arc "Beast Wars Shattered Glass", which focused on two temporally-displaced teams ofClassics refugees on the prehistoric Earth of theShattered Glass universe. The seven-pageTransTech comic "Timeless" spun out of this arc, advertising the second series of subscription figures.
The three-page online comic "Collections" starredPackrat,[18] leading into his appearance in theBotCon 2015 comic "Cybertron's Most Wanted" and following up on threads from "Timeless". SeveralFacebook pages sprang up during this time, building on the success of Tornado's journal:Andromeda - Axiom Nexus News Reporter,Rook - Axiom Nexus News: Investigative Journalist andAxiom Nexus News Editor all ran in parallel and were soon joined byAsk Vector Prime,Spacewarp's Log andRenegade Rhetoric. Three back-up features in the magazine,Transformers I.Q.,Hot Shot's Bot Thoughts andBot on the Street, were generally set in theTransTech universe but often touched on events from other continuities.TransTech Rhinox featured in "The Beast Wars Road Map", a flowchart published in issue#70 explaining the chronology of the various Beast Era stories until then, along with theRhinox,Rattrap andAirazor from the JapaneseTransformers Legends comic (another ofHayato Sakamoto's stories, theKre-O Transformers webcomic, received a tie-in with 2015's "The Brick List: Earth's Most Wanted").
In the aftermath of "Invasion",Classics Earth was brought into theShattered Glass universe. TheRecordicons backup strip, starringShattered Glass Ravage and the otherMini-Cassettes, had been running in the magazine since issue#34 alongside theWings Universe stories, and the 2012 strips played around with the post-"Invasion" status quo. This premise was further explored in "Solar Requiem", a comic collaboration between Fun Publications ande-HOBBY packed in with theShattered Glass Soundwave and Blaster set, and in the 2016 four-partSpatiotemporal Challengers series of prose stories ("Sunrise", "High Noon", "Journey's Eve" and "Last Sunset"), which starred theGoBots from "Withered Hope".[19]Recordicons ran until issue#63, before being replaced bySD SG for issues#65 to#71. The "Beast Wars: Shattered Glass" survivors returned to the present day just in time for 2015's comic arc "Another Light", which served to wrap up most of the major plot threads left dangling since the club's very inception.
Profiles for a variety of characters were published during this time.Optimus Prime ("Hero Prime") andDepth Charge got profiles in issue#49, andRhinox got one in issue#54. A Tech Spec for theINSIRT was published on Facebook. The Diamond Edition of "Cybertron's Most Wanted" included profiles forGeneral Optimus Prime,Battletrap andZaptrap withBeet-Chit.ClassicsGrimlock,Dirge,Scylla,Autojetter,Ultra Mammoth,Megatron,Magnaboss,Autolauncher andGod Neptune got profiles from issues#50 to#54;Prowl later received his own profile in#62 andGrimlock later received athird in#63.Shattered GlassSoundwave finally got a profile in issue#65, and artwork forNova Prime andGalvatron was published in#66's feature.
The universe first glimpsed in the bios for Blackarachnia and Depth Charge was finally given a dedicated story in "Alone Together", 2014's comic arc (starringRampage andTrans-Mutate in theirTimelines forms). Then, from 2015 to 2016, twelve prose stories written byJim Sorenson andDavid Bishop were released: "Broken Windshields", "Head Games", "Burning Bridges", "Micro-Aggressions", "Intersectionality", "Trigger Warnings", "Identity Politics", "Not All Megatrons", "Cultural Appropriation", "Safe Spaces", "Derailment" and "The Inexorable March". Unlike the vast majority of Fun Publications' stories, which often dealt heavily in interdimensional shenanigans, this new continuity was much more isolated and grounded (despite the best attempts of "A Change to the Agenda", a screen-capture comic published in issue#70). A small set of profiles forRampage,Trans-Mutate,Jawbreaker,Bigmos,Medusa,Lord Imperious Delirious andLio Convoy were released in issues#55,#57,#59 and#61.
TheBotCon 2016 comic was originally pitched as aBeast Wars: Uprising story, but once IDW Publishing was brought on-board plans changed to ostensibly focus on their ownBeast Wars continuity, resulting in "Dawn of the Predacus" and its associated script reading "The Hot Rod".
The last new continuity to be created by the club saw the relocation of the humans andClassicsPretenders from theShattered Glass universe in the aftermath of "Another Light" and served to advertise the fourth and fifth series of theTransformers Figure Subscription Service. It also saw the return ofRamjet - last seen in "Revelations" - who receiveda new figure from the club. Five prose stories ("The Truth We Make", "Life Finds a Way", "The Toxic Transformer", "Deadly Aim" and "Lively Pursuit") supplemented the main "Of Masters and Mayhem" comic arc.
Partially following on from theShattered Glass scenes in the comic arc, "Coalescence" - the long-awaited sequel to "Transhuman" - was finally written and released, with its epilogue offering some closure for Depth Charge. A single-page "Epilogue" published in issue#72 revealed the fates of someClassics characters left unaccounted for in the aftermath of "Invasion", while the two-page "Epilogue Two" published in the Diamond Edition of GIJoeCon 2016's comic "Project Downfall" (of all places) wrapped up theTransTech story.
Five profiles forRamjet,Lifeline,Impactor,Gnash andThrashclaw were published in issues#67,#68 and#70. On its last day, the club's Twitter released four profilesrepurposing the BotCon 2015Waruders as other characters:Bug Bite,King Waruder,Skywasp andShattered GlassWaspinator.
In its earliest years, the magazine included a variety of newspaper-style strips, none with a strict continuity:Another Con,Lil' Jerry,Robot Parade,Mini Mayhem! andLil Formers.
The club's official YouTube channel uploadedits first video to promote BotCon 2008, withbothparts of "Theft of the Golden Disk" being released on the channel after the convention.A teaser for 2008's membership figure, Topspin, was released which consisted of about seventy seconds of text and three seconds of stop-motion animation. From2009 to2013, the club teamed up with media professionalsRandall Ng andDR.SMOOV to produce several short promotional videos.The first of these was anElite Guard recruitment video, starring young Kup and advertising BotCon 2009.The second hadOptimus Prime,Megatron andStarscream making plans to go to the convention. Advertising BotCon 2010, the club releaseda parody of the originalGeneration 2 cartoon opening sequence along withanother video starring Megatron, the exclusive-toys-obsessed Starscream,Breakdown, Optimus, andPunch/Counterpunch. They also releaseda parody of an Old Spice commercial advertising club membership.Gregg Berger voiced G1 Grimlock ina video asking fans to vote for him in the 2011Transformers Hall of Fame.Another animated video was released to advertise BotCon 2011, in which Starscream finally foundsomeone to share his passion for exclusive toys with, andanother for BotCon 2012.The last animated video, advertising BotCon 2013, hadBlaster andSoundwave battle in a... dance-off. Fortheir promotional video for BotCon 2016, Fun Publications worked instead with voice actorDavid Kaye.
Despite the relative obscurity of mostTimelines stories, many of Fun Publications' concepts have cropped up again in more mainstreamTransformers media.
TheShattered Glass continuity in particular has proved quite impactful. Followingreferences by theTransformers Legends mobile game anda couple ofmass-retail figures, in 2021 it received a toyline of its own, withan accompanying comic book from IDW Publishing. Bizarrely, its prominence in JapaneseTransformers fandom led the creators of the animeSSSS.Gridman to base much of the show's cast onShattered Glass characters.
Ask Vector Prime ultimately had a large influence on some high-profile stories, most notably in the portrayal ofMaccadam inCyberverse.
You left a piece out! What's needed: explanation of exactly which concepts made their way into mainstream media.This article is astub and is missing information. You can helpTransformers Wiki byexpanding it. |