sto_vo_kor_2000 wrote:How does that exclude the possibility its a new G1 issue?
Admittedly, it's not a
strong argument, but I tried. Still, it's an element that goes against G1 by using a non-G1 iteration of a G1-named character as the basis for this new version of the character. Instead of making WFC Scattorshot look like his G1 version (as nearly every other character in this game does), they instead based him off his vastly different Cybertron version.
sto_vo_kor_2000 wrote:Thats all debatable.
They may just have used a different name for energon.
In the first episode, Hound referred to them as being "some kind of cube", indicating that the Autobots were unaware of them until their reawakening on Earth in 1984. The "Traitor" episode makes it clear that the Autobots do not use Energon Cubes during this time in the war either, opting to use Recharging Chambers instead, as seen in “Attack of the Autobots”. They don't appear to start fully using them until some point closer to 2005. Though, the "War Dawn" episode does show the Autobots storing what look to be Energon Cubes during the flashbacks to Cybertron's Golden Age, but this could be explained in two ways. One, it could be another of the G1 cartoon's many continuity errors and nothing more. Or two, since the word "Energon" is never actually used in these scenes and only the word "energy" is spoken, it could instead be considered an animation error.
Regarding the "Traitor" episode, when Cliffjumper tells Prime and Ratchet that he saw Mirage carrying two Energon Cubes, Ratchet is completely baffled as to where and how Mirage could have gotten Energon Cubes from. If the Autobots used them, it would have been simple to assume that Mirage got them from the Autobots' own supply, yet Ratchet is very confused as to how Mirage could have acquired Energon Cubes at all. Not simply the fact that he has them, but that he was able to get them from somewhere period.
While the above "War Dawn" notion could be debated, this isn't the only time that the animators used the look of Energon Cubes for something that wasn't Energon. The Combaticons' Personality Components, for example, were drawn as Energon Cubes when the script for "Starscream's Brigade" called for a different design for them (glowing green cubes with words of warning written on them, and then later colored ebony). Not to mention that, despite looking exactly like Energon Cubes in the episode "Starscream's Brigade", the "B.O.T." episode drew them looking significantly more detailed and gadget-like.
Plus, the opening narration of the first episode says that the planet had been drained of its "once rich resources of
energy", not specifically energon. And the glowing orange conductors Wheeljack and Bumblebee steal are said to hold "
energy", not "energon". Coupled with Hound's unfamiliarity with energon, we cannot say that Energon had been the sole source of energy used by the Transformers before coming to Earth in the G1 cartoon. If it had been, then it's
really stretching to say that Hound never knew the name of the very stuff he had lived on for all of his life.
This is also supported by the Marvel G1 comics, which were written around the same time as the cartoon was, and, for the majority of its entire run, the word "energon" was barely ever even mentioned, with the words "energy" and "fuel" appearing more commonly. They even made it a point to note that the energy fluid that runs and powers a Transformer is called "Transformer Fuel", not "Energon". The only times energon itself was ever brought up was when it was being used as simply a more efficient way to store and convert fuel/energy for certain special occasions, which didn't happen often.
sto_vo_kor_2000 wrote:Wing Saber II wrote:Jetfire
In G1, Jetfire/Skyfire was a scientist who crashed on earth before the war
Not in WFC
Jetfire may be a different character all together.
G1 cartoon Skyfire uses the modified animation model for G1 Jetfire. It's only the name that was changed for the cartoon. The Marvel Comics G1 Jetfire uses the same character model that was used for Skyfire, but his name was kept as "Jetfire". Skyfire was inspired by the G1 Jetfire toy just as other G1 cartoon Autobots and Decepticons were inspired by their own G1 toys, with only some extra enhancement made to his look due to legal reasons.
sto_vo_kor_2000 wrote:also,
In the begining of G1, there's no Dark Energon covering Cybertron
as far as we know.
its still possible dark energon existed in g1.
In WFC, the infected planet Cyberton was seen from afar to have a
purple radiation aura, while in the G1 cartoon, this purple aura was
not present.