adamassc wrote:It's more than likely possible, several of the G1 transformers released by Hasbro belonged to other japanese toy lines. The deluxe Insecticons jump to mind. Jetfire is the most obvious usage, but Sky Lynx was also made by another company.
Yes, in 1985 Hasbro was surprised at the popularity of Transformers, and so they decided to beef up their assortments with molds licensed from other companies, mostly Bandai and ToyCo. Here's the list:
From Bandai:
Tokusou Kihei Dorvack (Special Armored Battalion Dorvack)
Whirl (VH-64 MR Ovelon Gazzette (1/55 Scale))
Roadbuster (VV-54 AR Mugen Calibur (1/55 Scale))
Kikou Chuutai Beetras (Armored Insect Squardon Beetras)
Barrage (Beet Gadol)
Chop Shop (Beet Gugal)
Ransack (Beet Vadam, unreleased in original line)
Venom (Beet Zeguna)
Macross (known as Robotech in the US)
Jetfire (VF-1S Valkyrie (1/55 Scale))
From ToyCo (later bought up by Tomy):
Omega Surpeme (Super Change Robo Mechabot-1)
Sky Lynx
Shockwave (Astro Magnum)
The Mini-Spies also fall under the list, but I forgot who made them. All but Shockwave were never released in Japan as Transformers as Takara and Bandai were fierce competitors.
When designing, they do take notice of some Japanese series that were made famous in the US, or have some connection with earlier series by Takara. Here are some examples:
Energon Mirage: His legs have a distinct Gundam feel to them.
Animated Safeguard: his method of combination as well as the fire and ice/wind theme of Jetfire and Jetstorm were both taken from Takara's Brave series,
Yuusha-Oh GaoGaiGar (1997) to be exact, from the robots Hyoryu and Enryu. The cartoon appearances of all the robots in the series were by a certain Gundam designer, most noticeable in the chin. The combination is not new or unique by the way, it debuted in
Yuusha Exkizer (1990) with Blue and Green Raker.
Cybertron Leobreaker: Another
GaoGaiGar reference, sorta. In the series the eponymous robot would sometimes finish off his opponent with the Goldion Hammer, an oversized hammer with an equally large hand. YouTube it sometime. Leobreaker is a reference to that.
One last thing: Bandai was also responsible for Machine Robo, the line that spawned the Gobots from Tonka. Tonka is now a part of Hasbro, and so is the Gobot franchise,
but not the molds: those are still Bandai's property.