Transformers Action Figures
Jim Shooter and Dennis O'Neil were hired by Hasbro to form the backstory, the second of whom christened Optimus Prime. Afterwards, Bob Budiansky made almost all of the Transformers characters, giving names and personalities to several nameless Diaclone figures. The first concept of G1 is that the heroic Optimus Prime, the villainous Megatron, & their best infantrymen crash land on pre-historic Earth in the Ark & the opponent before awakening in 1984, Cybertron speeding through the heavens as an effect of the war. The marvel comic was originally part of the main wonder Universe, with appearances from Spider-Man & Nick Fury, and some cameos, as well as a trip to the Savage Land.
Generation One ( G1 ) is a retroactive term for the Transformers action figure characters that appeared between 1984 & 1992. The Transformers began with the 1970s Eastern toy lines Microman & Diaclone. The previous utilized varying humanoid-type figures while the latter presented androids in a position to transform into everyday automobiles, electrical items or weapons. Hasbro, fresh from the success of the G.I. Joe : a real Yankee Hero toyline, which utilized the Microman technology to great success, purchased the Diaclone toys, & partnered with Takara.
Sideswipe is one of the hip new autobots who will appear in the Vengeance of the Fallen movie. According to the packaging he likes close combat and is a foil expert. For children : this bloke is a sweet ride. He is a silver Corvette idea with blue windows and is maybe one of the sportiest autos in the line. He transforms reasonably simply but has tons of small bits and parts that move and come apart and go together.
Due to this he does not appear quite as sturdy to me as some of the others. His foils are one of the coolest "mech-alive" features I have seen yet though and he has a pretty cool looking robot form. I suspect he would thwart younger children but most youngsters will like both the car and robot forms. For adults : This guy is still a sweet ride. I even need to drive him around and make engine noises. He's painted silver rather than just molded in a certain color and this makes him pop visually. The downside is that over time I see this painting chipping round the edges and rubbing off on corners. Another down side is usually because his is an involved alteration and he is such a bright color there are plenty of plain seam lines. His alteration isn't hard but it is complicated with many pieces of the body of the auto that move and swivel and break apart. He feels a bit fragile but up to this point has proved sturdy. Still, if somebody went a little nuts on him he'd break straightforward. Once in robot mode he looks pretty cool with a swish head, his shoulders that are the rear fenders of the automobile and two neat points of articulation action. He has pistons and sliding knee covers in his legs that move as you bend it at the knee and he has 4 hydraulic rods connecting his leg to his body that slide up and down as you move his legs. The rods are a soft material so they will not snap. That is all pretty neat. He does have a bit too a lot of the auto stuck onto his back though to look fully streamlined.
But the largest complaint is his feet. They look fine but the wheels are at bottom ( as in his feet don't sit flat on the ground ) which makes standing him up a little bit of a chore as you've got to shake him and his feet around to find balance. His foils are 2 thin strips of the doors attached to each elbow. The cool part is if you grab one of the 2 and pull it around in an arc toward the front of his arm the other one swings in the other direction mechanically thru a cool tiny gear set up. They meet straight in front to form the sabre on each arm. It is a cool mechanism and works very well. And you can take the 2 parts of the sabre part way to make double epees or scissor like weapons or 1/2 way to make a shield like weapon.
It's flexible and may be employed to modify up the look.
This is a difficult one, I'll rate him 4 but 3 and a half would be fair too thanks to his incapability to stand well, many seam lines, his chipping painting and his fragile nature. Then again he looks cool and has those swords... I had been interested by the Sideswipe figure since seeing him in a dep. store for the 1st time two months back, but I latterly found my old G1 figures packed away at my parent's house and those had briefly taken my attention away from purchasing any of the new ROTF figures. I eventually acquired Sideswipe when I found him on sale a pair of days back, and he's now one of my favourite figures from either of the 2 realtime Transformers pictures.
Firstly, the sculpt of this figure is fantastic, both in auto mode and in robot mode. Though he does not look very like the Sideswipe I grew up with, I would not change this figure's appearance in any way. He's very graceful looking in robot mode, and just has a great design, all the way from his head sculpt to the arms and legs.
The blades in his arms look good, and have a particularly cool way of moving from front to back. As others have claimed, there are some pretty large seams in vehicle mode, but when transformed properly, this is still a good looking car mode. It takes just the right "snap" here and there to get the arms and feet into place for car mode, but when done right it is a solid looking Corvette idea vehicle. Eventually , the metamorphosis is excellent. It's not as good as the transformation for the ROTF Film Leader Optimus Prime or Final Bumblebee, but it is one of the better transformations of all the flick figures I own, particularly in the luxury class line. If it were not for the big seams in automobile mode and the chest / torso issue I discussed above, I'd give this figure five stars. Those are minor failings compared to the fantastic design and fun of this figure, so I might highly suggest purchasing it if you are thinking about adding it to your collection.
There have been other incarnations of the story based totally on different toy lines during the 2000s. The first was the androids in Disguise series, followed by 3 shows that consist of the "Unicron Trilogy" ( composed from Armada, Energon, and Cybertron ). A live film was also released in 2007 and a sequel has after that been released in 2009, again distinct from prior incarnations, while the Transformers Animated series merged ideas from the G1 story-arc and the 2007 realtime film.
Transformers : G1, includes both the animated television series The Transformers action figures and the Marvel Comics comic-book series of the same name, which is further split into japanese & Brit spin-offs. Sequels followed, like the Generation 2 comic & Beast Wars television series which became its own mini-universe. Generation one characters underwent 2 reboots with Dreamwave in 2002 and IDW Publishing in 2006.


US $17.77








