Transformers and More @ The Seibertron Store
Details subject to change. See listing for latest price and availability.
dinojack86 wrote:TF:WFC the game is interesting because it covers something we never really saw in Transformers, the war before the war you know?
Wigglez wrote:Just remember. The sword is an extension of your arm. Use it as if you're going to karate chop someone with your really long sharp ass hand.
RhA wrote:Why has this never been a problem then? Simple: there's a new audience who have not seen those themes in a cartoon yet. In twenty years, when they devote an insane amount of time of their adult life to one of those cartoons, they'll see what we see.
RhA wrote:Beyond that, maybe the actual point here is that in Prime we don't really see a load of really new faces. It's a compilation of popular characters from previous series. A cast of fresh faces would have been nice.
Wigglez wrote:Just remember. The sword is an extension of your arm. Use it as if you're going to karate chop someone with your really long sharp ass hand.
Shadowman wrote:RhA wrote:Why has this never been a problem then? Simple: there's a new audience who have not seen those themes in a cartoon yet. In twenty years, when they devote an insane amount of time of their adult life to one of those cartoons, they'll see what we see.
That's a good point, actually, and one that a lot of people tend to forget. We're the periphery demographic at most, the shows are meant for the ones who didn't exist when older series did.RhA wrote:Beyond that, maybe the actual point here is that in Prime we don't really see a load of really new faces. It's a compilation of popular characters from previous series. A cast of fresh faces would have been nice.
It was the same with Animated, which went out of it's way to reuse characters, names, and designs from G1.
Blackstreak wrote:I speak mostly of Japanese cartoons, and the Japanese cartoons ad-libbed for American tv.
Blackstreak wrote:@BeastProwl: I don't think Animated faded away. I think Hasbro decided it was time to move on. They do that ever couple of years now. Not only do they flood the market w/ 3 or 4 toy lines, they keep each one for like a year or two. I never cared for Animated but from what I've seen of people's responses it had plenty of life in it. Hasbro killed it so they could move on.
Wigglez wrote:Just remember. The sword is an extension of your arm. Use it as if you're going to karate chop someone with your really long sharp ass hand.
This isn't an anti-Prime thread. This is a very valid question regarding originality in the Transformers franchise.deathy wrote:These I don't like Prime threads make no sense.
Armada was only one season.deathy wrote:Because the cartoon isn't even done with season one yet. some TF cartoons had a dull first season like beastmachines & armada & winded up bouncing back with a high energy plot filled superb awesome second season.
No one said that they hate the toys.deathy wrote:Saying I hate the TF Prime toy line doesn't make sense either. especially considering the toys aren't even on store shelves yet & won't be till a few months from now.
Even if some TF fans know what the TF Prime wave one toys looks like. that's just wave one. all official sources indicate this will be a full blown toy line.
What's wrong with just reviewing individual episodes?deathy wrote:Please lets show some PATIENCE,Wait till the TF Prime toys & cartoon is done/finished/over before we pass final judgement on it. whether it was good mediocre or horrible in your opinion.
No one's gotten mad in this thread.deathy wrote:REGARDING the same old. some of us actully like unicron & combiners like myself & we welcome unicron in the TF Prime cartoon series. some of us are wishing another 100% new mold supreme unicron toy & more combiners toys gets made for the TF Prime toy line.
For those of us we actually bothered to watch the TF Prime cartoon series. this TF Prime cartoon is nothing like the 3 TF movie verse stories/chratacters.
Sure I would have preferred a classics/generations styled cartoon/toy line instead. but that's not we got. so theirs no sense getting overly mad & ranting everythere.
Over 60 or 70? do you really think the G1 cartoon was watched by mostly 30-40 year olds? No, it was watched by children. Grade school/middle school children. The franchise is only 27 years old.deathy wrote:most TF cartoons with a toy line attached barely last 18 months. so we might as well wait it out & see what comes next. the average TF fan is over 60 or 70 years of age,so were not going anywhere. the average TF internet fan's age ranges from the 2o's thru the 40's, so we can afford to wait 18 months & see if the next thing we like or not.
Shadowman wrote:This is Sabrblade we're talking about. His ability to store trivial information about TV shows is downright superhuman.
Caelus wrote:My wife pointed out something interesting about the prehistoric Predacons. I said that everyone was complaining because transforming for them mostly consisted of them just standing up-right. She essentially said, 'So? That's what our ancestors did.'
Sabrblade wrote:This isn't an anti-Prime thread. This is a very valid question regarding originality in the Transformers franchise.deathy wrote:These I don't like Prime threads make no sense.Armada was only one season.deathy wrote:Because the cartoon isn't even done with season one yet. some TF cartoons had a dull first season like beastmachines & armada & winded up bouncing back with a high energy plot filled superb awesome second season.No one said that they hate the toys.deathy wrote:Saying I hate the TF Prime toy line doesn't make sense either. especially considering the toys aren't even on store shelves yet & won't be till a few months from now.
Even if some TF fans know what the TF Prime wave one toys looks like. that's just wave one. all official sources indicate this will be a full blown toy line.What's wrong with just reviewing individual episodes?deathy wrote:Please lets show some PATIENCE,Wait till the TF Prime toys & cartoon is done/finished/over before we pass final judgement on it. whether it was good mediocre or horrible in your opinion.No one's gotten mad in this thread.deathy wrote:REGARDING the same old. some of us actully like unicron & combiners like myself & we welcome unicron in the TF Prime cartoon series. some of us are wishing another 100% new mold supreme unicron toy & more combiners toys gets made for the TF Prime toy line.
For those of us we actually bothered to watch the TF Prime cartoon series. this TF Prime cartoon is nothing like the 3 TF movie verse stories/chratacters.
Sure I would have preferred a classics/generations styled cartoon/toy line instead. but that's not we got. so theirs no sense getting overly mad & ranting everythere.Over 60 or 70? do you really think the G1 cartoon was watched by mostly 30-40 year olds? No, it was watched by children. Grade school/middle school children. The franchise is only 27 years old.deathy wrote:most TF cartoons with a toy line attached barely last 18 months. so we might as well wait it out & see what comes next. the average TF fan is over 60 or 70 years of age,so were not going anywhere. the average TF internet fan's age ranges from the 2o's thru the 40's, so we can afford to wait 18 months & see if the next thing we like or not.
It was one season of 52 episodes. There were four 13-episodes story arcs, but only one 52-episode season.deathy wrote:1-Armada had 52 episodes. season one had 26 episodes & season 2 had 26 episodes. combined it was 2 seasons worth of 52 episodes.
deathy wrote:2-a- I never said the average age of the TF fans were in their 60's nor 70's in age.
deathy wrote:the average TF fan is over 60 or 70 years of age,
Shadowman wrote:This is Sabrblade we're talking about. His ability to store trivial information about TV shows is downright superhuman.
Caelus wrote:My wife pointed out something interesting about the prehistoric Predacons. I said that everyone was complaining because transforming for them mostly consisted of them just standing up-right. She essentially said, 'So? That's what our ancestors did.'
Burn wrote:Actually people ARE entitled to express their dislike of TF Prime.
Season 1 may not have ended, but there's been enough episodes for people to form THEIR opinions. Same goes with the toys, you don't need to hold something in your hand to say "I don't like the look of that".
I detested the aesthetic of Animated, still do. When pictures first emerged I was extremely put off Animated because of how it looked. I watched it, but my opinion didn't change. I simply could not get past the look of it. It's just not a style I liked.
Will this franchise suffer from lack of originality? In time it will. Sure they can keep rehashing the same old "Autobots -vs- Decepticons, end up on earth searching for some power thingy to tip the balance of the war" blah blah blah ... and as it's aimed at a younger generation who haven't seen previous incarnations it's all well and good.
But realistically, they're playing it safe, they're not taking chances. Kids get bored very quickly these days and you have to stay on the ball to keep their attention. Keep doing the same thing over and over and those kids are going to get bored very quickly.
deathy wrote:
Personally If I had my way. they'd be a whole Transformers cartoons series & toy line built around combiners. everything in the toy line would combine with some & merge with something else. example: optimus,bumblebee,rathct,sunstreaker & jetfire would be the 5 core autobots in the cartoon & they's merge to form a combiner. the 5 core decepticons like megatron,starscream,ravage,wildrider & tidalwave will merge to form a combiner. the minicons would connect to ports on the bigger robots. the basics sized toys would be combiner limbs or weapons. the deluxe,voyager,ultra & leader sized toys would be combiners. they'd be 2 base/city transformers that act cities & smaller bots like basics or deluxes would transform into armor or weapons for the city bots to use.
Sabrblade wrote:deathy wrote:.deathy wrote:2-a- I never said the average age of the TF fans were in their 60's nor 70's in age.deathy wrote:the average TF fan is over 60 or 70 years of age,
BeastProwl wrote:deathy wrote:
Personally If I had my way. they'd be a whole Transformers cartoons series & toy line built around combiners. everything in the toy line would combine with some & merge with something else. example: optimus,bumblebee,rathct,sunstreaker & jetfire would be the 5 core autobots in the cartoon & they's merge to form a combiner. the 5 core decepticons like megatron,starscream,ravage,wildrider & tidalwave will merge to form a combiner. the minicons would connect to ports on the bigger robots. the basics sized toys would be combiner limbs or weapons. the deluxe,voyager,ultra & leader sized toys would be combiners. they'd be 2 base/city transformers that act cities & smaller bots like basics or deluxes would transform into armor or weapons for the city bots to use.
So you basically want a cross between Armada mcdonald's toys and power rangers?
But they have expanded the Movieverse with the comics, video games, Cyber Missions, etc.Burn wrote:The thing is, they don't need to play it 150% safe.
They could ride the success of the movies and EXPAND the universe instead of continuing to centre it around the same core group of characters.
EXPAND the universe, introduce new characters, make them the central focal point and have the current core group as background characters, let them interact now and then, but put the focus on other characters.
It allows Hasbro to easily retain their trademarks as well as produce toys for the core group of characters, but it allows them to expand, to bring in new characters, a chance to try something different.
But what's wrong with using comics as the medium of expansion? A lot of times, comics can do things that movies/cartoons can't do. Just look at the G1 cartoon vs. the Marvel comics. Marvel G1 had a solid overarching story with a richer history and wider cast of characters than the cartoon had.Burn wrote:Remember the days of G1 and Beast Wars when there were a lot more toys produced than what were given characterisation in the cartoon? (Yes I realise a lot of them have since received characterisation via comics) Similar to that only they get the toys AND the characters.
Yes the do.deathy wrote:but where'd u get Mcdonalds armada from? non of those toys combined with each others.
Shadowman wrote:This is Sabrblade we're talking about. His ability to store trivial information about TV shows is downright superhuman.
Caelus wrote:My wife pointed out something interesting about the prehistoric Predacons. I said that everyone was complaining because transforming for them mostly consisted of them just standing up-right. She essentially said, 'So? That's what our ancestors did.'
Burn wrote:The thing is, they don't need to play it 150% safe.
They could ride the success of the movies and EXPAND the universe instead of continuing to centre it around the same core group of characters.
EXPAND the universe, introduce new characters, make them the central focal point and have the current core group as background characters, let them interact now and then, but put the focus on other characters.
It allows Hasbro to easily retain their trademarks as well as produce toys for the core group of characters, but it allows them to expand, to bring in new characters, a chance to try something different.
Remember the days of G1 and Beast Wars when there were a lot more toys produced than what were given characterisation in the cartoon? (Yes I realise a lot of them have since received characterisation via comics) Similar to that only they get the toys AND the characters.
And if they're worried about creating new characters being too much work ... then cut back on the gimmicks. Keep them simple. Toys that transform from one thing to another, no need for keys or other little figures that unlock special features, no need for big bulky weapons that do nothing other than they're big and bulky, just keep it simple, take it back to the basics while expanding the universe.
Sabrblade wrote:Burn wrote:Yes the do.deathy wrote:but where'd u get Mcdonalds armada from? non of those toys combined with each others.
deathy wrote:Originality will only get you so far. not everything original sells. lately the latest trend seems to be taking everything from the 1980's & bringing it back. like HE-man,G.I Joe,thundercats,Voltron,pund puppies,terminator,smurfs & so forth.
deathy wrote:Personally If I had my way. they'd be a whole Transformers cartoons series & toy line built around combiners. everything in the toy line would combine with some & merge with something else.
Wigglez wrote:Just remember. The sword is an extension of your arm. Use it as if you're going to karate chop someone with your really long sharp ass hand.
These ARE official modes, not fanmade.deathy wrote:Neither,Mc donalds nor hasbro ever documented these as combiners in their advertisement nor instructions.
most of the hidden fan modes or creations the fans find/create are be considered Un-official. thus they don't count in the companies & some fans eyes.
That happened. It was called "Beast Wars Neo".Shadowman wrote:Short version: Star Trek, but with Transformers.
Shadowman wrote:This is Sabrblade we're talking about. His ability to store trivial information about TV shows is downright superhuman.
Caelus wrote:My wife pointed out something interesting about the prehistoric Predacons. I said that everyone was complaining because transforming for them mostly consisted of them just standing up-right. She essentially said, 'So? That's what our ancestors did.'
Shadowman wrote:I had an idea, reading this thread, it's still Autobots vs. Decepticons, but with a twist; now it's set a good 500 years in the future. Humanity has mastered space flight and has a decent number of colonies, and has interacted with a good number of alien species, but Cybertron has remained isolationist until recently, realizing they need to branch out to, as usual, collect Energon, though they keep hiding themselves because of that isolationism. (By turning into, you guessed it, a variety of vehicles) This allows for not only futuristic vehicles (Like WfC or War Within), but allows for interaction with more species and civilizations than just humans, along with visiting a variety of planets that aren't Earth or Cybertron. So it not only enhances the science fiction aspect, but also adds in a theme of exploration and interaction.
Short version: Star Trek, but with Transformers.
Return to Transformers General Discussion
Registered users: Bing [Bot], Bumblevivisector, Glyph, Google [Bot], Google Adsense [Bot], MarvelMan87, MSN [Bot], Silver Wind, Yahoo [Bot]