Leroy Jenkins...LMAO.
Do you know the definition of "blasphemy?"
Beastformers.
They are blasphemy.
Loki wrote:Your friend is about to get shot by a guy he got in a fist fight with. But your friend doesn't see the gun. You do. You have less than 3 seconds to react. How calm and focused are you? Or do you just jump in and react?
The point you're trying to make is very good, but it's not that simple. Prime was not only a friend, he was also commanding officer, mentor and all around good guy. So of course, any Autobot worth his spark would jump in and take a bullet for The Bot. So Hot Rod's mind, already bombarded with the circumstances of a devastating battle, could process this simply: "Megatron+hidden gun=dead Prime. What to do?" He had 4 options: 1, stand there and watch Prime get blasted, or 2, jump in front of the gun, taking the hit for Prime, for which I wouldn't have blamed him, live or die, or 3, shoot at Megatron as N_V pointed out, or 4, do what he did.
N_V wrote:hot rod could have, oh i dont know, SHOT megatron, rather than gone all Leroy Jenkins. last I heard those things on his arm double as lazer guns
A damn good and foolproof counter point. Only one thing can negate it. If he was out of ammo. But it being a laser gun, I doubt that was the case.
So, the bottom line is, Hot Rod acted as he was labeled earlier: a "turbo-revvin' young punk." He didn't choose the best option for the situation, and made a costly mistake. And had to live with it until TRoOP.
Which brings me to Rodimus Prime.
Let me get this out of the way first, I also think that the flaming Winnebago sucks. Hot Rod's car mode was pretty cool, being futuristic and all, but I never pictured it translating into a Winnebago. I always thought his Super Link (Energon) alt. mode kicked ass. A truck without a trailer. If G1 had that, it would have still been a good connection to Optimus and a symbol of being a Prime, but at the same time without the trailer it would have shown that not only was the character different as far as personality traits went, but also he was not quite in the same league as Optimus. (But, who is?)
Now, Rodimus Prime's character. I do get most people's intense dislike, or even hatred, for Rodimus Prime. He got the burden of leadership as a "turbo-revvin' young punk" and season 3 seemed to be devoted to him developing and growing into a leader, all the while being branded as one and having to live up to it, because certain others "can't deal with that now." As a kid, of course having a conflicted and second-guessing leader for your favorite TV show is a bummer. And the attempted character development was probably too much for 99% of kids watching Transformers. But it was not pointless or without merits, and it definitely was not blasphemy. (Which still doesn't fit according to definition.) Most kids just didn't get why their beloved hero was taken away and replaced with someone like that. But he did have one thing going for him over Optimus: he never died.