Results 1 to 10 of 15

Thread: what do you love about transformers that makes you collect them

Hybrid View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. #1
    Join Date
    5th Nov 2008
    Location
    Crystal Brook SA
    Posts
    176

    Default what do you love about transformers that makes you collect them

    so I was just really interested to hear other peoples stories about why they collect transformers and what makes them so passionate about them.

    I grew up dealing with health issues and saw Transformers as something that helped me get through an unconventional childhood of hospitals ,doctors and stuff and it has just stuck with me over the years because Transformers was the toy everyone had so I guess it helped me feel more like all the other kids when most of the time I was so different.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    24th Jun 2014
    Location
    Little mountain
    Posts
    47

    Default

    I loved the fiction that accompanied the figures, and I always found my younger self going back to playing with Transformers when my other phases dwindled out. There's just this magic that cannot be explained when you know the characters, personality traits and weaknesses, and can use that for a dramatic self-produced story line.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    27th Dec 2007
    Location
    Chadstone, Vic
    Posts
    15,772

    Default

    I was 5 years old when TFs came out and once I became a fan I was diehard. Nothing else came close, and those that stood a chance were other transforming robots (Voltron, Machine Men).

    I think the key thing that hooked me was the aspects of creativity and imagination. The toys are a puzzle but they were also characters in way toy cars or generic robots weren't, and that made them more 'alive' to me. I still call them he (or she) when I think I should be calling them "it".

    As a kid I'd study the toy catalogues and work out in my mind how each toy transformed (some in later years I was right about and some I was wrong on). I'd draw Transformers, write stories about them, play with them, play as TFs at school lunchtime, and create my own characters by imagining how things could turn into robots.

    And many years later I still do these things - well not much playing as TFs but very occasionally I'll might out a transformation sound when standing up.

    The comics kept me going longer than some of my childhood friends, because they were stories I could revisit in a way I couldn't with the cartoon (and the UK comics were great!) and when the comics stopped I kept imagining the continuing stories. I still find the expanded TF fictional universe so diverse and interesting that even though I'm extremely well versed in it, I can't get enough of it.

    And I still enjoy getting a new toy and seeing how it converts. And if it's a toy with vague characterisation I enjoy giving them characters or doing a digibash or two.

    tl;dr:

    Transformers inspire creativity and my imagination and that's why I'm still a fan 30 years later

  4. #4
    Join Date
    2nd Oct 2014
    Location
    Brisbane
    Posts
    798

    Default

    As a kid, I thought the G1 TV show was awesome. Having a representation of what was on screen in toy form was very cool. In the early 1990s I remember seeing huge quantities G1 Bumblebee, Seaspray, Beachcomber etc at the local shops in a 'bin' for $3.95 each. If only I had the foresight and the money at the time... The post-movie theme tune was very catchy, especially with it being set in the future.

    As an adult, I prefer the pre-movie 1980s G1 era. I'm into TFs because of the nostalgia factor.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    27th Jan 2008
    Location
    La Face Cachée de la Lune
    Posts
    6,821

    Default

    They transform. Most other toys you can just look at them and go - yep, that's pretty much it. Transformers have to be enjoyed in four dimensions.

    Quote Originally Posted by kovert View Post
    the early 1990s I remember seeing huge quantities G1 Bumblebee, Seaspray, Beachcomber etc at the local shops in a 'bin' for $3.95 each. If only I had the foresight and the money at the time...
    Those were Chinese reissues, but yes they have definitely multiplied in value. That said, I suspect there are better twenty-five-year investments than Minibots, so not worth kicking oneself over.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    14th May 2008
    Location
    Back in Brisbane
    Posts
    2,477

    Default

    The characters - varied, powerful, yet all flawed

    The puzzle - pick them up after years and work them out again. Some have the genius of elegant design.

    The imagination - i look at released figures and dream of recolours or improvements and curse (imo) missteps and wasted opportunities. The epic battles and stories of childhood are now mostly 1 v 1 deady encounters.

    The business - reading about the how and why things are done for toys and collectables is very interesting to me (though Fun Pub is just plain infuriate me )

    The toys - at their best, the colours and shapes absolutely rock! When i see some collections and photography (thank T.B-L for the internet) i can be breathless.

    The fiction - so many stories and interpretations of characters exist that i can use the cool moments to overshadow the lame ones. E.g. I love Wheelie because of The Story of Wheelie, the Wild Boy of Quintesson. Also have to mention the '86 TFTM is amazing
    "I am not a gun. I'm hitting people with a hammer. On Mars."
    The Iron Giant / David Wildgoose

  7. #7
    Join Date
    2nd Oct 2014
    Location
    Brisbane
    Posts
    798

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Sky Shadow View Post
    Those were Chinese reissues, but yes they have definitely multiplied in value. That said, I suspect there are better twenty-five-year investments than Minibots, so not worth kicking oneself over.
    Not necessarily as an investment. As a kid, getting the ones I didn't have (to actually play with) would have been pretty cool. No money I didn't realise they were Chinese reissues. The only one I ended up getting had Hasbro 1985 stamped on the toy with original G1 grid pattern, sunburst and was packed in robot mode. Were there non-Chinese ones? More info would be great.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •