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File:Transformers-geewun.jpg

Autobots wage their battle-to destroy-the evil forces of-the Decepticons!

Transformers: Generation 1 (originally simply The Transformers) is the original incarnation of Transformers, and regarded as the best incarnation by some - especially children of the '80s. If you say "Transformers", it's more than likely people will believe that you're talking about this one (or the live-action movies, depending on the audience). It began in 1984 as a way to advertise Hasbro's Transformers toy line, which was made from altering Takara's Diaclone and Microchange lines through redecos or retools (paint or mild alterations).

The original toys were not intelligent robots but remote controlled mechs used by human pilots. Under the Transformers brand every toy was a sentient robot, and the story was written to accommodate that. Characters were created that eventually became legend and are closely associated with further Transformers continuity lines. Such include Optimus Prime, Megatron, Starscream, Bumblebee and others who form general character types.

The Transformers cartoon[]

See main article: The Transformers

The show was initially written by Marvel Productions, and later Marvel in collaboration with Sunbow. Animation was done mostly in Japan by Toei Animation and in South Korea by AKOM (In one of their earlier projects), with one episode, Call of the Primitives, speculated to be animated by Tokyo Movie Shinsha[1] and several by an unknown Filipino studio (With help from feeder studios Sei Young, Dai Won, Sam Young and Trans Arts).

The show concerned the war between two factions of sentient robots - the heroic Autobots, led by Optimus Prime, and the evil Decepticons, led by Megatron. In the three-part opening, the Autobots fled their home planet of Cybertron after the war drained it of much of its energy. The Decepticons followed and, after a short space battle, they crash-landed on Earth, where they lay dormant for four million years.

When they were revived, the Transformers took on the appearance of Earth vehicles as a form of disguise. The Decepticons immediately set out to steal all of Earth's energy and the Autobots, being generally good guys, tried to stop them. Most episodes involved the Decepticons either coming up with a new Evil Scheme to steal Earth's energy, or coming up with a new Evil Scheme to destroy the Autobots forever. Naturally, they failed every time.

Season One And Two[]

The first season was broadcast on Saturday mornings, and followed the above formula to a T. When it proved extremely popular, the show was given a weekday afternoon timeslot for the second season . This season still followed established conventions, but also mixed things up occasionally with excursions to alien worlds. A large number of new characters were introduced in this season, with the result that very few episodes featured all the characters. Instead, each episode focused on a few Autobots and Decepticons as a way of giving exposure to all the toys without making the episodes confusing. During this period, many characters had Day in The Limelight episodes; these are often considered to be the best episodes made.

When the show proved popular in America, Takara cancelled its plans for a new Diaclone line in favour of importing the American toys and cartoon. The cartoon was rebranded as Fight! Super Robot Life Form Transformer! and made a few changes, most notably changing Shockwave from a very cool, calm and logical robot to an angry, psychotic being. Additionally, one minute of footage was cut from each episode to incorporate the longer opening theme.

Transformers: The Movie (1986)[]

See main article: Transformers: The Movie.

At the end of Season 2, an animated film was made, simply titled The Transformers: The Movie (1986), which was written so that it could be easily split into four 22-minute segments for subsequent TV broadcast. The movie skipped forward to the then far-off year 2005, by which time the Decepticons had conquered Cybertron. The plot concerned the Autobots' struggle to liberate their home planet and later save it from the planet eater, Unicron.

The movie introduced several plot elements which would go on to become important to the whole Transformers mythos — Unicron; and the Quintessons, a race of incredibly sinister and evil tentacled aliens who originally created the Transformers and were still bitter about being kicked off Cybertron after 11 million years, though their role with the creation of the Transformers has changed depending on the continuity. The movie also brought the Autobot Matrix of Leadership, an artifact carried by the Autobot leader which grants power and great wisdom, into the cartoon continuity.

The movie is infamous for killing off a large number of characters in order to give screen time to new toys. The deaths of Optimus Prime and Starscream in particular caused such consternation among fans that both characters were brought back in season three, after a fashion. And the replaced characters/toys such as Hot Rod and Ultra Magnus are subsequently disliked by some for being inferior copies of the older characters. Interestingly, both of the aforementioned characters' deaths and revivals established now-time-honored traditions in Transformers fiction--that Starscream has an immortal spark (in G1 and related continuities) or is immortal by some other token (for example, in Animated, where he manages to stay alive because of an Allspark shard lodged in his forehead), and that Optimus Prime is prone to making Heroic Sacrifices from which he will fairly quickly return.

The movie would not be released in Japan until 1989, and so an OAV by the name of Scramble City was made to introduce the new characters. When the movie was released, it was edited slightly to take place in 2009 rather than 2005.

Seasons Three and Onward[]

The third season (rebranded as Fight! Super Robot Life Form Transformer! 2010 in Japan) was released in 1987. This followed on where the movie left off, and focused on the new characters. In this season, the Autobots had reclaimed Cybertron, while the Decepticons had been exiled to the dead planet of Chaar. It began with a Five Episode Pilot in which the Quintessons manipulated the Decepticons into attacking Cybertron as part of an Evil Scheme to destroy all Transformers, during which several new toys made their screen debuts.

They failed, and after that things settled back into the generally episodic format from the first two seasons. While the Decepticons were still a major threat, the Autobots tangled with the Quintessons just as often as their traditional enemies. This season also departed from the previous two by not having any faction restricted to Earth. Instead, the characters' adventures took place all over the galaxy, incorporating many strange alien worlds. At the end of the season, Optimus Prime was resurrected following fan complaints.

After this, the American and Japanese continuities diverged. In America, a fourth season began, and pretty much ended, with a three-part episode entitled "The Rebirth". During these episodes, the action moved to the planet Nebulos and introduced the new Headmaster and Targetmaster toys as partnerships between Transformers and the native Nebulans. However, this season was aborted after the introduction despite some promising new characters and plot details.

General Features[]

Like most shows made in the 1980s, Transformers: Generation 1 did not have especially strong continuity, which was at least partly due to the short production time per episode. However, there was a light storyline, with a few episodes building on events from previous ones. This continuity was strongest in season 3, which made the fact that episodes were routinely aired out of order all the more frustrating.

In 1992, selected episodes of the cartoon were re-edited and aired as the Generation 2 cartoon (which gave birth to the Generation 1 name). They were identical to the G1 episodes, save for the fact that instead of the classic "Autobot symbol zooms in and flips over to reveal Decepticon symbol" (or vice-versa), scenes were transitioned between by the "Cybernet Space Cube".

What made the show really special was the incredible quality of the voice acting. The huge number of characters made it difficult to firmly establish a distinct personality for each one. However, each character had a distinct, very fitting voice, which subtly indicated their personalities without needing to devote an entire episode to them. In fact, Peter Cullen's role as Optimus Prime was so respected that, when it was announced he would be reprising his role in 2007's live-action Transformers movie, fans immediately stopped complaining and started supporting the film.

Most episodes were produced in a very short space of time, with the result that a large number of animation errors crept in. Characters were often drawn the wrong size, sometimes for effect or by accident. Another constant problem was characters being drawn in the wrong colours, which was very confusing as many of the characters were identical save for different colours (they were often simply repainted toys). This problem was particularly bad in season 3, as some of the episodes were animated by AKOM, a Korean animation company which, while cheaper than Toei, was also considerably sloppier.

Japanese Continuity[]

In Japan, after the show ended in America, they continued the story and rebranded into Transformers Headmasters, which was essentially a Spin-Off. This gave a completely new origin story for the Headmasters. They also continued with Transformers Super God Masterforce, Transformers Victory and Transformers Zone.

The most infamous addition to the Japanese continuity is Kiss Players, set between the movie, and Season 3, where Optimus Prime has been revived by Marissa Faireborn (who looks about 8 even though she's 20) kissing him. It's worse than it sounds.

Comics[]

As well as the cartoon, there have been several comics published over the years.

Marvel[]

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The first of these was published by Marvel Comics. It is sometimes stated that the comic came before the cartoon; while issue 1 of the comic hit the newsstands quite some time before the first episode of the cartoon aired, the cartoon went into production long before the comic.

The comic was initially set in the main Marvel Universe, but soon moved to a separate Alternate Universe along with the G.I. Joe comic to prevent Executive Meddling from Hasbro interfering with Marvel's own characters. It was initially written by Bob Budiansky; he and his successor, Simon Furman, would end up having more influence on the overall Transformers mythos than anyone else. During this time, instead of simply telling the artists what to draw, the writers simply gave them a plot outline and let them draw a strip. Budiansky and Furman then took the strip and added Speech Bubbles; this arrangement meant that the artists had much more influence on the story than is common nowadays.

In America, the comic was published fortnightly, then weekly, then fortnightly again. It was printed on higher-quality paper than most other comics, and as a result was also more expensive. While it used the same characters, setting, and premise as the cartoon, it told a significantly different set of stories. In particular, while the Transformers in the cartoon were built by Quintessons, in the comic, they were created by the god Primus, a part of canon later cartoon series adopted.

In the UK, the comic was published weekly for most of its run, and the American comics were commonly split in two in order to stretch the material. To make up for the dramatically shortened length, the UK comic also featured a secondary, backup strip in black and white, written by Simon Furman. These stories usually fit in with the American continuity, albeit with occasional twisting. After Budiansky suffered Creator Breakdown as a result of trying to keep Hasbro happy, Furman was brought on to write both the US and UK comics. His focus on Story Arcs and Character Development was considered the high point of the comic's run; however, due to a communications breakdown, the UK comics at this point drifted out of sync with the US publication.

It finally ended after 80 issues (in America) or 332 (in Britain) due to declining interest in Transformers, though Marvel would later publish the short-lived Generation 2 comic.

Dreamwave[]

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In 2002, a new comic was published by Dreamwave Productions, alongside an adaptation of the Unicron Trilogy (Armada, Energon, and Cybertron); this is the first to officially use the title Generation One. Simon Furman was brought back to write parts of it, as well as several lesser-known writers. It began as a set of mini-series which gave rise to a short-lived ongoing title. Ideas were taken from both the cartoon and the Marvel comic.

The main draw of the Dreamwave comic was the highly detailed, Manga-influenced artwork of Pat Lee - which, as it turned out, included a lot of Dull Surprise and vaguely sexual poses. However, most of the actual drawing, colouring, and inking was done by uncredited and frequently unpaid guest artists while Lee was buying fast cars and sponsoring his girlfriend's Miss World campaign. Following a series of unethical business practises, scandals, and outright crime, Dreamwave declared bankruptcy, leaving both the G1 and Unicron Trilogy stories unfinished.

For better or for worse, this was the first American Transformers comic to be published in Japan.

IDW[]

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In 2005, IDW picked up the license, and began by reprinting available stories originally published by Marvel and Dreamwave before branching into an Expanded Universe about Beast Wars, the live-action films and Animated.

IDW's biggest contribution to the lore was its original continuity. In a break with tradition, this series sees the Transformers as recent arrivals on Earth instead of having been in stasis for several million years beforehand.

The comic originally consisted a series of Limited Series, primarily written by Simon Furman. In this continuity, the disguise aspect of transformation was emphasised for once, as Transformers use it to infiltrate the societies of other planets and manipulate governments to their own ends. Combat was much more cloak-and-dagger than usual, with both sides going to great measures to avoid detection - at least, that's the plan.

As well as the limited series, there have been a number of 'Spotlight' issues, which follow the adventures of a single Transformer. These usually occur elsewhere in space or time, and tie into the main plot in some way. They tell a side story about the expanding Dead Universe, which eventually took over the main story.

Furman's stories were followed by All Hail Megatron!, a 16-issue maxi-series. The first twelve issues were written by Shane McCarthy and take place on an Earth under Decepticon control. This was an attempt to draw in new fans who were put off by the complexity of Furman's series, though sales have been largely unchanged and fan reaction has not been kind to some of the changes introduced. For example, many 80s characters in this series were given modern altmodes as part of the whole "stealth" aspect, but reverted to 1985 designs for All Hail Megatron. A particularly egregious case is Astrotrain--under Furman's run, one of his altmodes was a modern train, but McCarthy reverted him to the steam train he had used in the cartoon, which was anachronistic in 1985!

After all "All Hail Megatron", an ongoing set three years later. The series was written by Mike Costa, and featured the return of Don Figueroa as artist. However, the And the Fandom Rejoiced aspect of Figueroa as an artist was quickly diminished when he revealed a new, vaguely movie-ish art style that has been the subject of very violent Internet Backdraft. The main series was accompanied by several concurrent mini-series, such as solo stories focusing on Bumblebee and Ironhide, Transformers Last Stand of the Wreckers and the Cross Through Infestation.

When the ongoing ended with the rebirth of Cybertron, the series diverged in two directions. Following the return of the neutral Cybertronians, who held contempt towards both Autobots and Decepticons, Optimus Prime left the planet in exchange for letting the numerically superior neutrals allow the Autobots to remain on Cybertron. From here, the story split in two directions.

Under the command of Rodimus, roughly 200 C and D-list Autobots (and a handful of A and B-listers) left Cybertron aboard the starship Lost Light to search for the mythical Knights of Cybertron, believing that these Precursors could help bring about a new Golden Age in Transformers More Than Meets the Eye. Meanwhile on Cybertron, Bumblebee tried to rebuild Cybertronian society alongside the neutrals being forced to contend with Starscream's increasing popularity in Transformers Robots in Disguise.

In 2014, the two series crossed over in the Dark Cybertron Crisis Crossover, focusing on the culmination of Shockwave's Evil Plan from Simon Furman's era. The crossover then shook the Transformers fanbase when Megatron defected to the Autobots as penance for his crimes.

With Bumblebee seemingly dead, Robots in Disguise shifted focus to Optimus Prime and new character Windblade as Cybertron's Lost Colonies were found, colonies that revered any Prime as a Physical God. Seemingly bolstered by this political power, or corrupted by mental contact with Prowl, Optimus began using his title to expand Cybertron's galactic reach but was stymied every step by the looming threat of Onyx Prime, one of Cybertron's original Thirteen Primes. When Onyx returned though, he revealed himself to be the thought-dead Shockwave, having been sent back in time after Dark Cybertron and micro-managed history to prepare his species for the greatest threat in the galaxy: Unicron, a battle that ended that ended in Cybertron's destruction and the Transformer race relocating to Earth.

Off in space, the Lost Light continued its adventures, increasingly divorced from its sister series, eventually culminating in a fight against the Grand Architect, one of Cybertron's original deities, Adaptus, who sought to enhance his species through the crucible of endless war while revealing that crewmember Rung was this timeline's version of Primus. The story ended with the Lost Light disassembled while a parallel duplicate of itself was shunted into a new universe, free to journey forever.

In 2019, IDW launched a new continuity, this time starting just before the Great War broke out. Set largely on Cybertron, the series focused on the Autobot government being caught flat-footed by Megatron's Decepticons and his coup against the government, all the while facing a Cybertron on the verge of an ecological disaster and the return of an ancient warlord, Exarchon, seeking to posses the AllSpark and become Cybertron. Sadly though, thanks to IDW ultimately losing the license to Transformers comics, this continuity ended in a "And the Adventure Continues..." manner, lasting only three years compared to its predecessor's eighteen.

Making full use of the Transformers license, IDW released several miniseries starring the robots in disguise. This included several crossovers with other properties IDW had the license to; such as Ghostbusters, Star Trek, Back to the Future, G.I. Joe and even My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic; and the short-lived Hasbro Comic Universe which the Robots in Disguise comic formed the backbone of.

Other miniseries included another Sequel Series to the Marvel comic, Regeneration One, and a prequel Transformers '84: Secrets & Lies, along with reboots of Shattered Glass and Beast Wars.

When losing the license however, IDW decided to do so in style, releasing a hypothetical "last story" of the Transformers brand as a whole, Transformers: Last Bot Standing, a story focusing on an aged Rodimus in the far future, a future where energon is gone and the Cybertronian race is nearing its final end.

Fun Publications[]

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The official fanclub for Transformers has also on occasion created its own stories under its Transformers Timelines label which use Generation 1 series as a foundation for new continuities. Classics uses the US Marvel comic as a jumping point, ignoring Generation 2 and the UK issues and instead continuing the storyline from the events of issue 80. Wings of Honor, meanwhile, uses the cartoon as its source, with both prequel stories involving the new Elite Guard that take place long before the first episode, and "Generation 2 Redux" sequel stories which take place after season 3, ignoring "The Rebirth" and the Japanese series.

Toyline[]

The toyline was, to say the least, eclectic. Most of the toys were originally from Takara's Diaclone and Microchange lines of transforming robot toys. Diaclone was a series of vehicles that transformed into Humongous Mecha, to be piloted by the Diaclone action figures. When Diaclone was converted into Transformers, the story involved sentient robots, and the pilot figures were not sold outside Japan. This meant that a lot of early Transformers toys had mysterious cockpits which drove many young boys (and some girls) to madness as they tried to figure out the purpose of these. (An epic retcon planned for Beast Wars, the eventual sequel to G1, was that these cockpits were the locations of the Cybertronians' "sparks", their equivalent to souls, which would be shown as tiny glowing humanoid figures in the cockpits. Hasbro, the toy company, scrapped this idea due to fears that children would think that the sparks were people and that the robots were just regular, piloted mecha.)

The Microchange line was a line of robots which transformed into 1:1 scale household items and guns. They had far greater articulation than the Diaclone toys. When Microchange was combined with Diaclone to create Transformers, the result was guns the same size as trucks and bigger than tanks, who were supposed to transform in order to disguise themselves. The cartoon got around this potential Plot Hole by showing characters clearly changing size as they transformed, which ended up being a minor plot point in a few episodes. However, this usually just raised more questions than it answered. Even more disconcerting are the Minicars, part of the Microchange line as 1:1 representation of Choro-Q toys (also known as Penny Racers in America). This resulted in a military jeep (Hound) being larger than a Range Rover (Brawn), and Jazz and Cliffjumper (both Porsches) being wildly different sizes, even in vehicle modes in the cartoon (where Cliffjumper's proportions made him look more like Bumblebee).

As well as Diaclone and Microchange, quite a few other, completely unrelated transforming robot toys were brought into the Transformers line by Hasbro. For example, Jetfire is easily recognisable as a Valkyrie from Macross. This served to make the toys even more eclectic. As part of Hasbro and Takara's distribution agreement, toys not originally made by Takara could only receive limited screentime to avoid advertising rival products.

After the movie, HasTak started producing the first toys designed specifically for the Transformers line, such as Rodimus Prime and Galvatron. Plenty more of Takara's toys would be adapted into Transformers, but from then on, the majority of new toys would be designed as Transformers from the beginning.

In 1987, the Headmaster and Targetmaster toys were introduced. These were the first gimmicks originally designed for the Transformers brand. Headmasters consisted of two robots, a small robot that transformed into a head and a larger, headless robot that transformed into a vehicle. These had to combine to form the complete robot. Targetmasters were small robots that transformed into guns; each gun could be used by most Transformers, but was generally associated with one particular full-sized one.

In 1988, the Powermasters (known as Godmasters in Japan) and Pretenders were introduced. Pretenders were simple but well-articulated Transformers who came with an outer humanoid or monstrous plastic shell for disguise. Powermasters, like Headmasters, comprised two robots. The small robot transformed into the engine of the bigger one, which could not transform without its smaller partner. A few of the American toys were missing from the Japanese Transformers Masterforce line, which in turn had its own group of exclusive toys.

The 1989 line introduced increasingly complex Pretenders, as well as the very small Micromasters, who were primarily sold in teams. Few American toys from this year were sold in Japan, which got its own mostly eclusive Transformers Victory line. The European release also got the Motorvators, redecos of the Japanese Brainmasters which were not released in America. This was another two-robot gimmick; in this case, the smaller robot fits into a compartment in the bigger robots chest, and when the compartment is closed, a face concealed inside the smaller robot is pushed up into the larger robot's head.

In 1990, the Action Masters were introduced; since these didn't transform at all, the line did fairly poorly. (Yes, Transformers that didn't transform.) The Japan-exclusive Transformers Zone line introduced Transformers with motors, but also did fairly poorly. New Transformers would not be seen for two years, with the appearance of the Transformers Generation 2 comic, though G1 toys have continued to be re-released right up to the present day.

Commercials[]

Yes, the show and comic themselves were basically commercials. But there were also much, much shorter, animated commercials that aired, usually with original animation, showing the next cool toy. The Generation 1 commercials are fondly remembered, although the Generation 2 commercials are mostly remembered for their (early) (bad) CGI and raps. Example:

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 New Dreadwing

Is punishing

His Gatling gun

Is illin'!

This Decepticon bomber's

A transformer-rama!

A three-in-one villain

That's chillin'!

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A note on the title: Both the cartoon and comic were originally just called The Transformers. However, when the Transformers: Generation 2 comic was published, fans began using Generation 1 or G1 to refer specifically to the original cartoon and comic as opposed to Transformers as a whole. After a while, Hasbro and Takara started using the term themselves, making it official.

Later cartoons[]

After RiD 2015 killed the Transformers Aligned Universe, combined with the glory days of IDW's first continuity, Hasbro opted for a rebirth of G1-styled cartoons. The first was the Prime Wars trilogy followed by The War for Cybertron trilogy. Both released to a tepid reception, ones that seemingly ended this brief experiment.


Tropes used in Transformers Generation 1 include:
  • Action Girl: Carly, Marissa Faireborn, Elita One
  • A Day in the Limelight
  • Affably Evil: Swindle. Also, Lord Chumley.
  • Alien Kudzu: The Morphobots in Quest For Survival
  • Alternate Universe: The core foundation for the animated series, Marvel U.S., Marvel U.K. and neo-G1 incarnations, such as Hearts of Steel all co-existing as "Generation One". The Binaltech storyline resulted in the creation of a new parallel universe.
  • Always Chaotic Evil: The Quintessons.
  • Ambiguously Gay: Tracks and his human friend Raoul.
  • A Mech by Any Other Name
  • Asskicking Equals Authority: Galvatron
  • Authority Equals Asskicking: Receiving the Matrix of Leadership usually results in the new Prime receiving a much stronger body (Orion Pax/Optronix becoming Optimus Prime, Hot Rod becoming Rodimus Prime).
  • Ax Crazy: IDW Arcee
    • Ax Crazy doesn't even begin to describe Galvatron.
  • Beard of Evil: Scourge and the Sweeps (and Unicron).
  • Big Bad: Megatron, Unicron, Galvatron
    • In the comic, the role was also taken at different points by Shockwave, Lord Zarak (A.K.A. Scorponok), Bludgeon and (believe it or not) Ratbat.
      • Soundwave and Starscream got in on the act once or twice too.
  • Bizarro Universe: G1 Cliffjumper finds himself in the Shattered Glass universe, which is primarily (but not entirely) derived or influenced by G1.
  • Came Back Wrong: Optimus Prime in the 3rd season episode "Dark Awakening". Type II, since his chassis was recovered by the Quintessons and reprogrammed into a Manchurian Agent.
  • Cassandra Truth: Starscream falls victim to this numerous times. He'll warn Megatron that his latest Evil Plan is doomed to fail, and even though he ends up being right most of the time, Megatron continues to ignore him.
  • Cast Herd
  • Chekhov's Gun
  • Chuck Cunningham Syndrome: Many of the original Transformers who weren't killed off in the movie (or said/implied to have died before or immediately after) ended up being eligible for this trope.
    • Spike's father, Sparkplug, is never seen again, or even mentioned after the last episode of Season 2.
  • Clingy Costume: Circuit Breaker, from the Marvel G1 comic book series.
  • Co-Dragons: Megatron's chief lieutenants are Starscream (the most iconic) Shockwave (the most powerful) and Soundwave (the most loyal).
  • Colour-Coded for Your Convenience - Autobot guns fired yellow energy bolts, while Decepticon guns fired purple energy bolts. In addition, Autobots had blue eyes, and Decepticons red. And of course, the traditional colour for Autobots, is red, whereas for Decepticons it is purple, as shown in their insignias.
    • Averted in the Marvel comic book series, which tended to have eyes matching whatever color was on the toy... except when colorist Nelson Yomtov just didn't seem to care.
  • Combining Mecha The various combiner teams.
  • Cool Car: most of the Autobots.
  • Cool Plane: most of the Decepticons
  • Cool Train: Astrotrain is a Decepticon who can transform into a steam train or a space shuttle.
  • Corrupt Corporate Executive: Lord Zarak as his "Mr Z" alias in the Marvel comic run.
    • Abraham Dante of the Machination is this as well, working with Skorponok to expand his business empire...which he and Skorponok both intend to become a far more LITERAL empire.
    • Shawn Berger in Megatron's Master Plan.
  • Cosmic Horror (Unicron)
    • The Dead Universe is a living sentient death...an all consuming darknesswith shades of Eldritch Abominations that acts through the luckless Cybertronians that stumbled into it
  • Crossover: The Transformers comic book had several crossovers with G.I. Joe and one with Spider-Man, not to mention the appearance of several characters in other continuities, like Death's Head and Octus.
  • Death Is Cheap: Optimus Prime
  • Deadpan Snarker: Gears and Huffer are both unceasingly grouchy because they frankly couldn't care less about the war and absolutely hate the lush, green landscape of Earth almost as much as they hate the people who live there. They're the good guys, by the way.
    • It's worth noting that, according to his tech specs, Gears does this intentionally as a form of mood-leavening. A satire of Huffer and Mirage's own apathy towards organics?
    • The Decepticons have Crankcase, who is basically exactly the same except more actively malicious.
  • Depending on the Artist: In the Marvel comic, Jose Delbo would draw Soundwave with an actual face. Not to mention color him purple, as opposed to being blue.
  • Depending on the Writer: Several, but most notably Shockwave; comic writers tend to portray him as being a cold-blooded usurper who constantly is plotting against Megatron AND SUCCEEDING, while the Gen1 cartoon portrayed him as super-loyal servant of Megatron.
    • Speech patterns for characters also depend on writer; Blurr, the various Dinobots and Weirdwolf most notably.
  • The Dragon: Cyclonus is this to Galvatron, oh so very much, in the cartoon.
  • Dropped a Bridget On Him / Gender Bender : Arcee, who was a test subject to Mad Scientist Jhiaxus. By messing with Arcee's CNA, Jhiaxus introduced gender into a previously genderless race. This explains why Arcee is so Ax Crazy
  • Dumb Muscle: Most combined robots, but also the Dinobots, Slugfest, and Overkill. And Headstrong, Tantrum, Rampage, the Firecons (except for Sparkstalker), Beastbox, Brawl... (Note that almost all of these are Decepticons, by the way.)
    • Computron is a strange inversion. He's got too much brains and tends to overthink even when the smartest move would be to open fire immediately; thus he appears plodding and slow-witted to the outside observer.
    • Although it is claimed that Menasor (the combined form of the Stunticons) would be the ultimate Decepticon weapon if it wasn't for the fact he is an unholy combination of a pessimist, a psychopath, a schizophrenic, a win-at-all-costs egomaniac, and a tyrannical bully (who the other four utterly despise).
  • Early Installment Weirdness: In the Three Episode Pilot More Than Meets The Eye the Autobots were consistently shown to be capable of independent flight without the use of jetpacks, something that would never happen again. Skyfire and The Aerialbots come into the story much later on, but they are shown to only be capable of flight in their vehicle mode (even when the location of their jets in robot mode would logically make it possible).
  • Enemy Civil War: Starscream was constantly trying to usurp Megatron, and never succeeded. In the Marvel comic, it was even worse, with Megatron, Starscream, Shockwave, Soundwave, Ratbat (yes, one of the tape guys), Scorponok, Thunderwing, and Bludgeon all vying for leadership.
  • Enemy Mine: Blitzwing's cooperation in The Five Faces of Darkness.
  • Even Evil Has Standards: Doctor Archevil, who happily enslaves human beings by the hundreds with his hyno-chip implants draws the line at cold-blooded murder, and is visibly horrified by Megatron's callous proposal of leaving them to die in favor of gathering energy, showing clear concern for the safety and welfare of his slaves over his conquest of Earth.
  • Everything's Better with Dinosaurs: The Dinobots, obviously, but also Trypticon and Sky Lynx.
  • Evil Laugh: Megatron and various other Decepticons. Soundwave laughs on one occasion, and it's downright chilling.
  • Evil Poacher: Lord Chumley in Prime Target.
  • Evil Versus Evil
  • Excited Episode Title
  • Executive Meddling
  • Expy: Daniel is an expy for his own father, Spike.
    • Likewise, Jetfire's an expy to Macross' VF-1 fighter.
  • The Faceless: Several Transformers lack human facial features. They have a faceplate instead of a mouth (like Optimus), or a kind of "visor" instead of individual eyes (Trailbreaker). The prize winner is Shockwave, who only has a hexagonal cylinder for a head with a single yellow eye.
  • Family-Unfriendly Death: In the UK Time Wars comic, there were plenty. Galvatron gets sucked into a vortex and we watch as his metal skin is torn clean off his skull and his eyes pop out and he screams in pain. And Cyclonus gets his head pulled off... by Megatron! Fizzle burns, then drowns, and Shockwave has his arm shot off, collapses to the floor and is shot point blank in the face. After that his brain chip is pulled out and crushed, just to make it clear that he's dead for good.
  • Fate Worse Than Death: In the IDW continuity: Sunstreaker and Hunter.
  • Faux Action Girl: Arcee. Touted as "a forceful female Autobot", but she only fires her gun twice, and misses both times. Still, that's better than what Headmasters did to her.
  • Fictionary: The universal greeting. "Bah-weep-Graaaaagnah wheep ni ni bong!"
  • Five Episode Pilot
  • Flying Car: Tracks
  • Frank Welker: He voiced many, many characters, but most notably Megatron/Galvatron, Soundwave and all of his cassette minions.
  • General Failure: Megatron, although this was averted in Transformers: The Movie when he Took a Level In Badass and actually managed to kill Optimus, among other things.
  • The Generalissimo: Abdul Fakkadi.
  • Genius Cripple: Chip Chase. Ultra-genius and mysteriously immune to acid. Also, Josie Beller/Circuit Breaker (see below).
  • Gladiator Revolt: Megatron Origins
  • Green Rocks: Literally. Cybertonium in Desertion of the Dinobots.
  • Grievous Harm with a Body: Rare case of it being done intentionally by the body. Broadside transforms to aircraft carrier mode and flattens Devastator in Carnage In C-Minor. It's not uncommon for many transformers (especially Optimus and Motormaster) to ram into things in their vehicle mode. Bonus points for Ramjet, who's a plane and is reinforced to allow him to do it a lot without seriously hurting himself.
  • Hammerspace: Prime's trailer.
    • Omega Supreme's Entire Body: This is no better illustrated then in Key to Vector Sigma when Prime orders him to rocket mode and he fires his arms (leaving the rest of his robot mode body on Cybertron) but lands on earth, creating the full platform and returning to robot mode. You know the massive robot he left on Cybertron when he fired his arms.
  • Handicapped Badass: Circuit Breaker. She's an Ax Crazy chick whose Berserk Button are giant robots. Also, she wears a Stripperiffic Powered Armor. Which she designed IN HOSPITAL! WHILE PARALYZED!
  • Hate Plague: Trope Namer
  • Heterosexual Life Partners: Red Alert and Inferno, Hoist and Grapple, Thundercracker and Skywarp, Dreadwind and Darkwing.
  • "Hey You!" Haymaker: Optimus loves doing these to Megatron.
  • Hoist Hero Over Head: Megatron does it to Optimus in the comic.
  • How Many All of Them
  • Humongous Mecha
    • Taken to greater and greater levels with the Gestalts (combiners), the fortress robots Metroplex and Trypticon, the even larger city Transformers Fortress Maximus and Skorponok, and the final ridiculous level with Unicron, a robot the size of a planet.
  • Idiot Ball: Starscream plays with the idiot ball regularly. In fact, the only reason the war continued on Earth was because he was trying to assure the Autobots were trapped and opened fire on the mountain the Ark was trapped in. The resulting tremors then awakened the ship's computer, and managed to reactivate Optimus.
    • Megatron is no flawless leader either simply for letting Starscream stay on the team. While it's been said Megs admires ambition from his troops, and respects conniving behavior, he only really admires smart conniving behavior. The only reason he does keep Starscream around is because of how good he is at his job when he actually does it (though Megatron'll never admit it).
  • I Don't Pay You to Think: Scourge says this to one of his Sweeps in Five Faces of Darkness, Part 3
Cquote1

 Sweep 1: "I think that plasma bath fried Galvatron's circuits."

Scourge: "It's not your place to think! Where he leads, all Decepticons must follow!"

Cquote2
  • Insistent Terminology: Death's Head is not a Bounty Hunter. He is a freelance peacekeeping agent.
  • International Coproduction - America/Japan
  • I Warned You: Starscream does this a lot in the first two seasons. Scourge is prone to it in Season 3.
  • Jerkass: Sunstreaker and Slingshot.
  • Jobber: Devastator in later episodes of the cartoon. One notable example from the comic is when Omega Supreme, one of the strongest Autobots, is defeated in a single shot by the comparatively small Buzzsaw.
  • Joker Immunity: Starscream. Even killing the bastard didn't keep him down.
  • Kibbles and Bits: Prowl has door wings hanging off his shoulders, Scavenger has a shovel "tail", Hot Rod has a big spoiler on his back. It's easier listing characters who don't have kibble.
  • Kid Appeal Character: Usually, but not always, Bumblebee.
  • Killed Off for Real: If your name isn't Optimus Prime or Starscream, consider yourself dead.
  • Kill'Em All: The movie was made to off the old characters to the soundtrack of the '80s. The comic also had an extremely high death toll, particularly in "Dark Star!". In both cases the motivation was to clear space for new toys.
  • King of Beasts: Razorclaw and Steeljaw.
  • Kitsch Collection: Pipes' love of Earth culture lends itself directly to this. He collects everything of Earth's fascinating technology he can find (nose hair clippers, patent rulers, compasses) and proudly displays his collections to his fellow Autobots, who humor him because he's an alright guy besides all that.
  • The Korean War: Sparkplug is a veteran.
  • Lady of War: Elita One, the leader of the female Autobots and Optimus Prime's girlfriend.
  • Lawyer-Friendly Cameo: Not so much a cameo as an expy, but Jetfire somewhat counts as his character model was modified from his first appearance to his in-show appearance (most likely for Takara to avoid a lawsuit from Tatsunoko Production). This is subverted as not only was Hasbro immune to this (they were given the license for the mold), but all of the character's appearances were either cut from various episodes or moved to towards the end of the series in Japan.
  • Loads and Loads of Characters-after all, it did serve to advertise an extremely large toyline. Often characters appeared out of nowhere--and vanished just as mysteriously.
  • Lolicon: Kiss Players.
  • Lower Deck Episode
  • MacGuffin: Sometimes called in the fandom an EI/AD - Evil Invention/Alien Device.
  • Mad Scientist
  • Meaningful Name: Jazz is the guy who loves music, Starscream has No Indoor Voice, Astrotrain is a robot going from a train to a shuttle, Mirage can make himself invisible. This is actually subverted in "Enter the Nightbird", where one Autobot who can't jump over a cliff is the guy named "Cliffjumper".
    • "Prime" was eventually retconned into being the title of the Autobot leader, and it shows.
  • Mechanical Evolution: The first issue of the original Marvel comic book series (briefly) describes the Transformers as evolving from "naturally-occurring levers and pulleys."
  • Mechanical Lifeform
  • Mecha-Mooks: The Insecticon clones. Later, the Sweeps.
  • Medieval Stasis: In four million years, nothing has changed on Cybertron.
    • Justified Trope. It seems when Shockwave told Megatron that "Cybertron will remain as it is until your return," he wasn't kidding.
  • Merchandise-Driven: To an even more ludicrous degree than G.I. Joe. Apparently, Hasbro wanted to repeat the formula used for the latter, but on an even lower budget (hence the importation and repurposing of existing Japanese toys to form the Transformers line).
  • The Movie: You got the Touch! You got the power! YEAH! *guitar solo*
  • Mr. Fanservice: Starscream, as has been mentioned, although during and after the movie Spike was quite muscular.
  • My Master, Right or Wrong: Cyclonus, in Season 3 of the cartoon.
  • Mythology Gag: Dreamwave's War Within comic has Grimlock accidentally call Swoop "Divebomb". Divebomb was a prototype name for Swoop, and was given as being his original name in the Marvel comic.
  • Name's the Same: Why does a teenage girl have a Decepticon leader's name as a nickname?
    • Actually, the book came a few years earlier.
  • Near Villain Victory: Megatron's Master Plan
  • Never Say "Die": At least partially justified, since we're talking about robots, albeit sapient ones. Infamously and brutally averted in The Movie: "DIE, AUTOBOTS!" And four of them do in less than a minute. Also subverted in the series itself on several occasions.
  • New Powers as the Plot Demands: really all over the place, but Ironhide is the king of this. He would use a random power that had never been seen before and then never use it again. See also Forgotten Phlebotinum.
    • There are also characters as the plot demands. They need to be ferried around space? Well, that's why Cosmos is there. Is this its own trope?
  • Ninja Pirate Zombie Robot: Before Optimus was fully resurrected the first time, he was sort of turned into a zombie by Sufficiently Advanced Aliens. And then there was that Ninja Robot built by the Japanese.
  • No Gravity for You
  • Nostalgia Filter
  • Notable Original Music
  • No Waterproofing in the Future: One issue of the comic featured a fight for Decepticon leadership between Megatron and Shockwave. The fight ends when Shockwave attacks with a water tower, short-circuiting Megatron. Possibly justified in that Megatron was not fully repaired from severe damage incurred earlier.
    • Averted with the Scraplets; water was the best way to kill off the tiny robotic parasites, but Transformers treated with water are completely fine.
  • Off-Model: Nearly every episode of the cartoon (even the larger-budget movie) had various kinds of animation errors. In the comics, some characters used older models throughout much of its run instead of revised models that came later on. The toys also have this issue due to their background of being from different Japanese toy lines, with the most glaring example being Jetfire, whose toy is a repackaged VF-1 from Super Dimension Fortress Macross, and Ironhide & Ratchet, both of whom had figures made without proper heads due to their Diaclone heritage.
  • The Original Series
  • The Other Darrin: Due to Actor Existence Failure (upon the death of Roger C. Carmel), Jack Angel took over as the voice of Cyclonus.
    • Voice director Wally Burr has substituted for various voices including Ratchet in Masquerade, and Thundercracker in War Dawn.
  • Our Ghosts Are Different: Although ghostly vehicles have precedent in folklore, Starscream was probably the first case in which this trope was ever applied to a sentient robot.
    • Mindwipe's tech specs state that he'd rather try to contact the electromagnetic essences of long-dead Decepticons than speak to a living one.
  • Parental Abandonment: We never hear about Spike's mother/Sparkplug's wife.
  • Perfect Pacifist People: The first issue of the Marvel comic series says Cybertron was a pacifist utopia; Megatron forms the Decepticons to overthrow their decadent lifestyle. Ret Conned away in later stories.
    • The Autobots of Paradron in the Season 3 cartoon episode "Fight or Flee"
  • Planet of Hats: Planet of the giant mechs who would make a rather awesome toy franchise.
  • Princesses Prefer Pink: A princess in Daniel's dream world wears a pink medieval-like outfit.
  • Product Promotion Parade: Happens several times in both the original Marvel comic book series and the Marvel/Sunbow animated series.
  • Quirky Miniboss Squad
  • Race Lift: Raoul.
  • Red Eyes, Take Warning: The Decepticons. (Except Shockwave. His eye is yellow.)
    • As well as the "destabilized" Autobots in "Attack of the Autobots."
    • Also, in "Auto Berserk", when Red Alert's logic circuits are damaged, his blue eyes flash red.
  • Refused the Call: Rodimus Prime is tired of leading the autobots and allowed the Decepticons to steal the Matrix of Leadership in "The Burden Hardest to Bear". A human kendo sensei convinced Rodimus to take his responsibilities more seriously.
  • Remaster: The cartoon is notable for having had two DVD-release remasters. The first, by Kid Rhino, was a botched job, containing more goofs than the original versions. The second, by Shout Factory, is a marked improvement.
  • Rhino Rampage: Headstrong and Ramhorn.
  • Ridiculously-Human Robots
  • Robo-Family: Sideswipe and Sunstreaker are considered brothers.
    • Popular Fanon states that Starscream, Thundercracker, and Skywarp are brothers. This is the case in some of the comics.
  • Robo Speak: Soundwave: superior. Rumble, Laserbeak, Ravage: Eject. Operation: Sell toys.
    • Mention of Omega Supreme: not immediately visible. Problem: rectified.
  • Robot Buddy: Inverted Trope - the Transformers have human buddies.
  • Screams Like a Little Girl: Soundwave.
  • Sesquipedalian Loquaciousness: Perceptor and Sky Lynx.
  • Shared Universe: The third season of the cartoon strongly implied that it was set in the same universe as G.I. Joe, and in fact the writers eventually confirmed the popular fan theory that Marissa Faireborn, a character in the post-movie season, was indeed the daughter of Flint and Lady Jaye. Then, of course, there were the full-blown crossovers in the comics.
  • Shout-Out: The original three Microchange cassette toys that became the first Cassetticons were a bird, a panther & a humanoid robot.
  • Starfish Aliens: The Quintessons.
  • Stealth Pun: Warpath is a tank who randomly makes exclamations. Looks like he has Tourette's. ...which is a homophone for Turrets.
  • Strange Bedfellows
  • Super Speed: Blurr again.
  • Take That: The comics by IDW and Dreamwave feature a lot of jabs against the forgotten competitor Challenge of the Go Bots, mostly in the form of background characters resembling the Go Bots being killed in various ways. A few wrecked Gundam bodies can also be seen during a scene in The Movie.
    • Somewhat inverted recently, as the Go Bots have started coming into the Transformers universe from theirs to seek either help or a new home (their universe is being destroyed as a result of one of Unicron's "deaths").
  • Tank Goodness: Warpath, Blitzwing and Brawl.
    • Megatron's Cybertronian alternate mode, derived from his Generation2 alternate mode.
  • The Starscream: Trope Namer
    • Several combiner teams have at least one member who also behaves this way internally; Particularly, Hook of the Constructicons, who gives Starscream himself a run for his money as far as "being The Starscream" goes.
    • According to the More Than Meets The Eye profile books, there are at least two Micromaster teams that consist entirely of one leader and three Starscreams.
  • Teen Genius: Chip, Carly
  • The Renaissance Age of Animation
  • Through A Face Full Of Metal: Blushing is used as a visual device for robots; a simple example would be Seaspray's humanoid love interest noticing him blushing at her in "Sea Change."
  • Time Skip: To The Movie.
  • Transforming Mecha
  • Twenty Minutes Into the Future
  • Unlikely Hero: brash "teenager" Hot Rod becomes the new Autobot leader, Rodimus Prime
  • Verbal Tic: several
    • Me Grimlock and other Dinobots speak like cavemen.
    • Shrapnel repeats the last word of every sentence, sentence.
      • sometimes even the last two syllables of every sentence, whether they form a single word, or two.
    • Wheelie speaks in rhyme every single time.
    • Blurr talks really fast and often repeats himself because he's so fast and the speed at which he talks reflects the speed at which he moves and by speaking so fast he gets a lot of words in due to speaking so fast but he often doesn't have a lot to say so he ends up repeating himself while speaking real fast.
    • Omega Supreme: giant. Favorite punctuation mark: colon.
    • Talk in backwards Yoda speak Weirdwolf loves to.
    • Warpath is BAM!! fond of putting loud POW!! exclamations into his BOOM!! sentences. This could be considered Robo-Tourette's syndrome.
    • Seaspray sounds like he's permanently underwater. Or gargling.
  • Vocal Evolution: Going back and watching the three-part premiere of the Generation 1 series, Optimus Prime's and Starscream's voices seem almost unrecognizable. (Optimus had a softer, smoother tone compared to the iconic, deep-sounding voice that is typically associated with the character. In a similar twist, Starscream had a lighter, more easy-on-the-ears rasp (even when screaming), than the sharp, grating and loud voice provided in earlier episodes.
  • Who Names Their Kid "Dude"?: Sparkplug and Spike Whitwicky.
  • Word of Gay: Sunstreaker was outed by Matt Moylan, no matter how illogical this may have been for a genderless robot.
  • The Worf Effect: Starscream, using the power of the Underbase, kills many Transformers (Autobot and Decepticon alike!) effortlessly.
  • You Keep Using That Word: The comic has a character named Emirate Xaaron. An emirate is not a person, but a place that is ruled by an emir. (No, Xaaron's not one of the "big enough to be a Genius Loci" bots.) That, and the are any number of instances of made-up Techno Babble accidentally using actual scientific terms in a way that's hilarious if you know what they really mean.
    • In the episode Child's Play, the Authorities on Aron's planet say they want to "dissect" the Autobots and Decepticons, when they really mean vivisect.
  1. other sources like 2cChan claim it's Production Reed
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