Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12
Results 11 to 18 of 18

Thread: Hypothetical - Factions Re-Imagined

  1. #11
    Join Date
    27th Dec 2007
    Location
    Sydney NSW
    Posts
    37,637

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Dan View Post
    What does ‘Destron’ mean anyway?
    It's the Japanese term for Decepticons and Predacons up until 2007 when Takara started using the Anglophone term "Decepticon" (beginning with the Japanese translations of Bayformers).

    Quote Originally Posted by Dan View Post
    The ‘hidden curriculum’ of the 1984 Transformers did make an impression on youthful me, with the evil side as military and surveillance, and the good side as basically civilians resisting oppression. That may have played into the hands of my parents, who had anti-authority tendencies.
    Hhmmm... even in G1 who was the authority shifted. In the G1 comics the Autobots were originally the authorities on Cybertron until Megatron led the Decepticons to conquer each Autobot city-state except for Iacon. At the behest of Councillor Xaaron, Supreme Chancellor Traachon vetoed himself out of office, allowing Commander Optimus Prime to gain supreme executive command over all Autobot forces. This allowed Optimus Prime to mobilise the Autobots without needing permission from the Council and he was no longer held back -- and this in turn led to the Autobots not only successfully defending Iacon, but also liberating the other city-states from Decepticon occupation. But something that the IDW comics have touched upon is that this level of supreme executive command in the hands of a Prime makes them a tyrant, and in the eyes of some, a practical god (absolute power corrupts absolutely). We know that in the IDW universe that Megatron was initially more like Mahatma Gandhi or Martin Luther King Jr. in that he believed in peaceful non-resistance and demonstration to achieve equality for the masses who suffered oppression under the Cybertronian regime. Other species saw how brutal the oppression was among the Transformers and had come to mockingly refer to them as "automated robots," or "Auto-Bots" for short. This came to be used as an insult for those who supported the regime.

    Back to the G1 Marvel universe and we know that power shifted quickly after Optimus Prime's crew left Cybertron aboard the Ark (and likewise Megatron's 'Cons aboard the Nemesis). The Autobot Council reformed itself but was brutally executed by the Decepticon Warlord Trannis (except for the Council's sole survivor, Xaaron). Trannis was then overthrown by Straxus and Xaaron went all John Connor and became leader of the Autobot underground resistance. The Decepticons ruled Cybertron from their capital of Darkmount. In the G1 Sunbow cartoon we know that the Autobots initially ruled during the Golden Age and it was Megatron who led the Decepticon uprising. Eventually neither side gained control and Cybertron was nearly depleted of fuel, forcing Optimus Prime and his Autobots to seek a new source of energy, followed closely by Megatron's Decepticons and thus the war came to Earth. In Megatron's absence Shockwave was left in charge... over a pretty dead and barren world. He didn't seem to do much other than... shoot at corners? Later the cartoon showed us that Alpha Trion was leading an underground resistance of female Autobots who, uh... did hit-and-run fuel heists. Nothing significant like Xaaron's resistance who had missions like Operation: Volcano and attempted to destroy the Decepticon Space Bridge etc. Oh, and Xaaron's resistance had the Wreckers. Alpha Trion's elite squad (his only squad?) couldn't even sneak out of a building without tripping the alarm.

    Quote Originally Posted by Dan View Post
    Still, it influences how I look at Transformers, and as such I was a bit rankled by the new Protectobot, Rook, as I felt that armoured vehicles like that shift the image of the police from emergency service to paramilitary.
    Paramilitary police can still be considered emergency rescue, such as if there's a hostage crisis. These police are far more likely to stop acts of terror than outlawing imitation firearms (or the theatrics of airport security). Most terrorist plots are thwarted by special police before the bad guys can even execute their plans. So yeah, while Groove and Streetwise are your regular civilian police, Rook is the cop who stops buildings from being blown up before it ever happens and you'll never hear about it. He's the unsung hero.

    Quote Originally Posted by Dan View Post
    (admittedly, I have opinions on cassettes - I feel that Buzzsaw was superfluous, and would have rather seen Soundwave packaged with the Auto-Scout).
    The Auto-Scout toy that we saw in the G1 cartoon never existed as a Microman toy, and obviously the first year of Transformers was about Hasbro trying to make as much money as possible while investing as little as possible. There were no new moulds in the first year, and even the 2nd year had very few (if any - it's possible that the new Autobot Mini-Vehicles were unused designs from Microman).

    I suppose the alternative would be to include the Battle Bike with Soundwave, but a rider-less motorcycle is, quite frankly, a really lame robot mode and hard to pass off as a sentient 'bot to kids. Yeah, I know that they actually did this with Grand Slam and Raindance... and let's face it, that was lame! Do they have a robot mode or 2 alt modes? We all hated on Mutant Beasts for lacking a robot mode. The only reason I even got Grand Slam and Raindance was because of their pretty forgettable role in the Underbase Saga (if you're opening a new tab/window to Google it, then it just proves my point about how forgettable they were ).

    Quote Originally Posted by Dan View Post
    Another way of factionalizing beasts would be carnivores versus herbivores. It seemed odd to me when the Zoids toys were factionalized, with the good leader a T-Rex and the evil leader a Triceratops. I would have reversed that!
    Here's the tricky thing, and this is just looking at the first year alone...

    Herbivores
    Rhinox

    Carnivores
    Terrorsaur
    Snapper
    Optimus Primal (bat)
    Megatron (croc)
    Megatron (T-Rex)
    Dinobot
    Cheetor
    Wolfang
    Blackarachnia
    Buzz Saw
    Tigatron
    Polar Claw
    Scorponok
    Tarantulas
    Waspinator

    Yeah, one herbivore against fifteen carnivores! Where are the rest? Well, we would also have a third faction...

    Omnivores
    Iguanus
    Rattrap
    Razorbeast
    Armordillo
    Insecticon
    Optimus Primal (gorilla)

    6 omnivores. Even you lumped all the non-carnivores together, they would still be outnumbered more than 2:1!

    One really cool thing about Beast Wars was how they made the goodies and baddies are evenly split. Looking at the first year alone we can see that straight out of the gate, Beast Wars gave us 11 Maximals vs 11 Predacons. A perfect 50:50 split of goodies and baddies. And we know that Takara released their Beast Wars toys either individually or in Versus Sets. A far cry from the first year of G1 which gave us 18 Autobots vs 10 Decepticons! The Beast Wars cartoon never had to resort to random repaints of characters to flesh out the vastly outnumbered bad guy ranks. We didn't see every colour of the rainbow repaints of Terrorsaur as nameless generic Preds. For every Maximal there was a Predacon. If HasTak were to release all of the Season 1 Beast Wars TFs as CHUG and MP figures then we would see an even split of Maxies and Preds. Yet with G1 we know that there are way more Autobot MPs then Decepticons. Takara have done all of the first year Decepticons as MPs -- they finished that about 5 years ago with the release of MP Soundwave and the Cassettes. TakaraTOMY may release new versions of these first year 'Cons (as they've already done with MP36), but the fact is that the characters are all done. We still don't have MPs of:
    Brawn
    Cliffjumper
    Gears
    Hound
    Huffer
    Jazz
    Mirage
    Trailbreaker
    Windcharger
    So while all the Decepticons have been done, there are still 9^8 Autobots remaining. And in TakaraTOMY's defence, the remaining Autobots are relatively harder and costlier to do since they're all new moulds. In terms of number of moulds we only had SIX Decepticons (gun, walkman, robot cassette, condor cassette, jaguar cassette & jet). Except for the Datsun Fairladies and Nissan Cherries, none of the Autobots are repaints. You could argue that parts of Bumblebee could be reused for Cliffjumper, but it'd be less than what some people might think because I reckon if Porsche ever does come to the table and allow HasTak to purchase the vehicle licence, a condition of that licence would be a realistically scaled vehicle mode, not a super-deformed Penny Racer style car. We've already seen this with MP Bumblebee who is a realistically proportioned VW Beetle, not a cartoon-accurately super deformed punch buggy.

    But yeah, with Beast Wars I think it was "warm and fuzzies" vs "creepy creatures." I suppose 'warm bloods' vs 'cold bloods' more in a metaphoric sense rather a biological one. It gets even more confusing considering that the bloodedness of dinosaurs is still a contentious issue with paleontologists - some believe that they were endothermic (warm blooded) while others believe that they were ectothermic (cold blooded), but yet others think that they might have been mesothermic (warm and cold blooded!) Mind you, the endothermic and mesothermic hypotheses are more recent and weren't around in the 1990s when Beast Wars came out - so as far as they were concerned, dinosaurs were ectotherms. This is also why I don't blame Hasbro (well, Kenner) for not giving Dinobot feathers. It simply wasn't known at the time. Although other parts of Dinobot's raptor mode isn't accurate, and his massive size in the cartoon is grossly inaccurate... but you can blame Jurassic Park for that. Dinobot is based on JP's raptor rather than the real one - and JP have admitted that their raptor is based more on Deinonychus because it just looks cooler on screen than the tiny actual velociraptors, but they gave Deinonychus velociraptor's name because it just sounds so awesome. Seriously... the first time I watched JP and heard the name "velociraptor," was like, "Wwwwhhhooooaaaa!"

  2. #12
    Join Date
    17th Jul 2018
    Location
    Melbourne
    Posts
    182

    Default

    Paulbot

    Those 35 years of conditioning are difficult to get passed, but we all seem to be doing a pretty good job of it.

    Your system is pretty comprehensive. It’s also interesting that some of your new Decepticons, like Ironhide and Brawn, had a tendency to act like bastards, even as Autobots.

    An evil VW beetle character might work better if it were given a different colour. Something like purple with pink ‘go-faster’ flames. Bumber could always be the cute yellow character.

    FatalityPitt

    I like the underdog aspect of Autobots. Even now I try to get aircraft Decepticons that are bigger than car Autobots, but it’s quite difficult to do with the Generations line.

    I’d agree to a Nazi-made handgun as being evil, but what if that gun has Man From UNCLE extensions?

    I always found Windcharger underwhelming, but it’s amazing what a cool personality can do for a toy, and having him as the POV character might have been interesting.

    I like the idea of Prowl as an Autobot leader, and having a ‘crooked cop’ off-sider is inspired. Mind you, I’ve sometimes thought of Inferno as an alternative leader figure. Firefighters are pillars of the community and heroic by definition, and there’s something appealing for kids about those big red engines.

    I could totally see the Battle Convey toy as the ‘non-leader but last line of defence’ character, more like a ‘Little John’ than a ‘Robin Hood’. You could also give the Powered Convey that role, or even make it the same character who can simply choose between two different trailers.

    Metroplex as a neutral force fits nicely with the toy having attachment points for the various Scramble City leaders. You could even have all those teams as his minions. Another variation on the idea would be for the citadel to be the objective of conflict for both sides, like a kind of Castle Greyskull.

    Also, I more generally like the idea of a third faction. This slides into the ‘non-transforming Transformer’ problem, but if they’d made a few Quintesson toys, they could then have assigned the Sharkticon to that faction, made an Alicon toy, and even aligned the Predacons and Terrorcons with them, given that both teams were seen working with the Quintessons now-and-then.

    GoktimusPrime

    I had been wondering if there was a meaning behind Destron, as I was looking for something to call an evil faction, who were not remotely into deception but rather open conquest.

    I guess my youthful impression of the cartoon Autobot-Decepticon divide was like the scenario of an historically legitimate civil authority supplanted by a military junta. However, one day I might have to delve into the far more mature story-telling of the various comics, which really seem to do justice to the complexity of power and ethics.

    Also, I should acknowledge that SWAT services have their place, and the Rook toy itself looks like a nice design.

    Somehow the Auto-Scout made a big impression on me. I understand there is a third-party toy of it, which looks cool. I agree that just two alt-modes is usually a pathetic thing, but more forgivable in a mere accessory.

    The huge disparity in faction numbers has always bothered me and, in what may be an overly fussy way, I’ve done my best to keep my sides even. I tend to wait till I can see both an Autobot and a Decepticon in shops that I like, and maybe look like they could take each other on, before I buy. This has slowed the growth of my collection over the years, and I’ve only started to relax this standard recently.

    As for Velociraptors, I'm just impressed how a movie took one or more obscure dinosaurs and made them a household name.
    Last edited by Dan; 9th September 2018 at 10:30 PM.

  3. #13
    FatalityPitt Guest

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Dan View Post

    I always found Windcharger underwhelming, but it’s amazing what a cool personality can do for a toy, and having him as the POV character might have been interesting.
    I think another reason I picked Windcharger was because he was cheap. Maybe it's my inner socialist talking, but I always felt that the main character in a toy line should be a character that any kid (or their parents) can afford. Also, I don't think G1 ever established a POV character that had a toy. Spike Witwicky was the closest they had to such a character, but he only got represented in toy-form in 1987, and he was a component of the Fortress Maximus toy (a very VERY expensive toy back in the day).

    I think the problem with Optimus Prime back in the day was that even though he was the main hero of the franchise (I can't think of anyone else), he was a very expensive toy that few can afford. A lot of kids I knew who played with Transformers who didn't have Optimus Prime would pick a random Autobot they owned (say Inferno for example) and assign him as the main protagonist and defacto leader. Later on there were other cheaper Autobot toys, like Rapido, who had the role of Autobot Commander, but they weren't as well-known as Optimus.

    I think one of the cool things about the Legion class (formerly Legends class) toys was that they were smaller and cheaper representations of popular characters. It meant that any kid could now buy Optimus Primes and Megatrons without needing to save their pocket money for a whole year.

    Quote Originally Posted by Dan View Post

    Metroplex as a neutral force fits nicely with the toy having attachment points for the various Scramble City leaders. You could even have all those teams as his minions. Another variation on the idea would be for the citadel to be the objective of conflict for both sides, like a kind of Castle Greyskull.

    Also, I more generally like the idea of a third faction. This slides into the ‘non-transforming Transformer’ problem, but if they’d made a few Quintesson toys, they could then have assigned the Sharkticon to that faction, made an Alicon toy, and even aligned the Predacons and Terrorcons with them, given that both teams were seen working with the Quintessons now-and-then.
    When I was a kid, I always wondered who was the ruler (or highest authority figure) on Cybertron in the G1 lore. Even though Optimus Prime and Megatron were the commanders of their respective factions, I couldn't imagine either of them as rulers. They're both very combative and hands-on (for a lack of better terms). I think to fulfil that role, it'd have to be someone (or something) that is not only very powerful, but someone who thinks of "good and evil" as a trivial notion and only cares about the survival and prosperity of the whole Transformer species. Sunbow and Marvel Comics eventually expanded the G1 lore, and the role described above was eventually filled by Vector Sigma or Primus. But I think if we were to represent the Transformer king as a toy, it would have to be a toy that transformed into something big and majestic, like a building or monument. Definitely not a truck or gun. Metroplex seems like a good candidate.

    One thing I notice about Transformers is that they're always assigned factions (Autobots, Decepticons, Maximals and Predacons). I don't think I've ever seen a factionless Transformer. I don't think there's been any lore that described the Junkions as Autobots, and yet all Wreck-Gar toys are always labelled as Autobots. Titans Return Gnaw is labelled as a Decepticon too, even though Gnaw's loyalties mainly lie with whoever feeds him regardless of their faction. I think if Hasbro created a third faction early on in the franchise to represent the factionless/neutral characters, probably the likes of Junkions, Sharkticons, Unicron and the Primes (Solus Prime, Alchemist Prime, Prima, etc) might be assigned to that faction.
    Last edited by FatalityPitt; 10th September 2018 at 04:52 PM. Reason: Typos

  4. #14
    Join Date
    2nd Jun 2011
    Location
    Rylstone
    Posts
    8,382

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Dan View Post

    Trev

    The ‘considerate and disguised’ versus ‘blatant invaders’ concept is cool, placing ethics and strategy at the centre of the story, and resulting in lots of surprising re-alignments. The ‘deceptive’ part of the name ‘Decepticon’ would no longer make sense, but inventing different names is never a problem.
    They can still be deceptive:

    Razorclaw: Hey, look over there, isn't that Alpha Trion?
    Ironhide: Where?
    Razorclaw punches him in the back of the braincasing


  5. #15
    Join Date
    27th Dec 2007
    Location
    Sydney NSW
    Posts
    37,637

    Default

    Wheelie was a cheap toy that was established as a POV character.
    Of course, it worked out TERRIBLY, but nonetheless that was the intent.

  6. #16
    Join Date
    17th Jul 2018
    Location
    Melbourne
    Posts
    182

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by BigTransformerTrev View Post
    Razorclaw punches him in the back of the braincasing
    Ha! It makes me wonder, though, why do Transformers keep their brains in their heads? As a teen I did some anatomical drawings for them, and I stuck the brain deep inside the chest.

    Quote Originally Posted by GoktimusPrime View Post
    Wheelie was a cheap toy that was established as a POV character.
    Of course, it worked out TERRIBLY, but nonetheless that was the intent.
    They never really followed through with it, not as much as they had with Bumblebee and Spike as POV buddies, which is just as well. The character is beyond annoying, and the toy is dodgy (I rate as the worst Autobot Mini-Vehicle, with Windcharger as the second worst).

    Quote Originally Posted by FatalityPitt View Post
    I think the problem with Optimus Prime back in the day was that even though he was the main hero of the franchise... he was a very expensive toy that few can afford.
    I like leaders to be a bit special in size or features, and think there’s something to be said for saving or waiting several months till a birthday or Christmas (since these are not necessities we are talking about). However, Prime and Megatron could have been cheaper without their trailer or extensions. Or, toys like Inferno and Starscream could have been decent leader characters, maybe packaged with a companion toy to enhance their status.

    Having said that, I’m not a fan of leaders necessarily being huge. The UK concept of Jetfire as Autobot leader seems odd to me.

    Quote Originally Posted by FatalityPitt View Post
    One thing I notice about Transformers is that they're always assigned factions (Autobots, Decepticons, Maximals and Predacons). I don't think I've ever seen a factionless Transformer.
    Yes, it seems like the toys must be squeezed into two rival factions, and I think we miss something as a result. In Star Wars you had non-aligned creatures and bounty-hunters, while in Masters Of The Universe you had The Evil Horde and Snake Men. It definitely makes things more interesting.

    Junkions seem like loyal allies of the Autobots, and more reliable than an Autobot team like the Dinobots. However, I like the notion of recognizing groups like Junkions or Lithons as independent and distinct.

    I got two Titans Returns Sharkticons (my only foray into ‘army building’) and the first thing I did was cover over their insignias. My Sharkticons will mess with anyone less menacing than they are!

    Speaking of obscuring insignias, if I owned the Guardian Robot re-deco of Omega Supreme (and what a toy that would be to own) I would cover the Autobot symbol still on the toy: https://tfwiki.net/wiki/File:Ehobby_...ardian_Toy.JPG

  7. #17
    FatalityPitt Guest

    Default

    I think they tried to make Wheelie the POV character by making him a kid (i.e. "relatable" to the audience). Problem I had with Wheelie was that I couldn't understand most of what he said, and he didn't seem to display a wide enough range of emotions that fit the situations he was in. Most of the time he seemed either happy or confused. One thing I can give him credit for was that he often asked good questions which helped define or move the plot forward.

    I think if I had to choose another toy to play the role of POV; I think Hot Rod would have been relatively more appropriate (thinking about the 1986 movie and some season 3 episodes like "The Ultimate Weapon" and "Hardest Burden to Bear"). Problem is that Hot Rod wasn't as cheap as Wheelie, and he spent most of his time in Season 3 as Rodimus Prime (which was even more expensive).

  8. #18
    Join Date
    17th Jul 2018
    Location
    Melbourne
    Posts
    182

    Default

    I imagine Hot Rod as POV character for many of the adventures we never saw between the end of Season 2 and the Movie.

Posting Permissions

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