When did THAT happen?

Good day all,
Here are are some questions for your historians.
I was watching some very old Transformers toys ads, and just the other day I was looking at my old Powermaster Optimus, Piranacons and Metroplex.
And I just wondered. What in your opinions was the turning/ starting points for...
1. Equally nice modes
The one thing that really struck me even as a kid was that you often had one mode that looked decent to good, and one mode that looked crap. The bot modes often looked so forced and their proportions so off, that it didn't quite me so excited as some of the other guys every time a new figure came out. In fact, I think one of the few I felt looked quite decent in both modes were the Predacons.
When I started collecting again with the 2007 movie line, I was immediately struck by the great difference. Many of them had fantastic looking modes in bot or vehicle. Granted, some like Barricade still weren't perfectly proportioned (and DOTM Goblin Barricade is even worse). But the difference is immense.
2. Better articulation
I remember years ago how excited I was with Powermaster Prime. But looking at him now, I'm puzzled. The bot mode looking fugly is one thing, but the whole thing is, in essense, a brick. And likewise for many of the other old toys too.
Yes, recently you still have stuff like Ultimate Prime and the movie Jetfire/ Prime combo (I still think they shouldn't have tried to be too clever and just make removeable Jetfire parts who could just be fixed onto Optimus) But in general articulation is now miles ahead of what it was.
When did having elbows, knees, wrists, and even waist articulation begin?
3. Self containment
Yet one more improvement I'm enjoying and even taking for granted a bit, is the self containment for weapons that many Transformers figures these day sport. I remember way back when if you lost the weapons that was pretty much it. Now most figures are designed to have the weapons stored in one way or another in the vehicle mode itself. Some are really nice, others not so (e.g. Transformers Prime Bulkhead) but in general still a very nice touch compared to the past.
When did this happen?
I'm really interested to know when did this good stuff happen. Which year/decade, which line? I suppose improved engineering and sense of aesthetic had a lot to do with it. I'm just wondering when this good stuff happened.
Cheers!
Here are are some questions for your historians.
I was watching some very old Transformers toys ads, and just the other day I was looking at my old Powermaster Optimus, Piranacons and Metroplex.
And I just wondered. What in your opinions was the turning/ starting points for...
1. Equally nice modes
The one thing that really struck me even as a kid was that you often had one mode that looked decent to good, and one mode that looked crap. The bot modes often looked so forced and their proportions so off, that it didn't quite me so excited as some of the other guys every time a new figure came out. In fact, I think one of the few I felt looked quite decent in both modes were the Predacons.
When I started collecting again with the 2007 movie line, I was immediately struck by the great difference. Many of them had fantastic looking modes in bot or vehicle. Granted, some like Barricade still weren't perfectly proportioned (and DOTM Goblin Barricade is even worse). But the difference is immense.
2. Better articulation
I remember years ago how excited I was with Powermaster Prime. But looking at him now, I'm puzzled. The bot mode looking fugly is one thing, but the whole thing is, in essense, a brick. And likewise for many of the other old toys too.
Yes, recently you still have stuff like Ultimate Prime and the movie Jetfire/ Prime combo (I still think they shouldn't have tried to be too clever and just make removeable Jetfire parts who could just be fixed onto Optimus) But in general articulation is now miles ahead of what it was.
When did having elbows, knees, wrists, and even waist articulation begin?
3. Self containment
Yet one more improvement I'm enjoying and even taking for granted a bit, is the self containment for weapons that many Transformers figures these day sport. I remember way back when if you lost the weapons that was pretty much it. Now most figures are designed to have the weapons stored in one way or another in the vehicle mode itself. Some are really nice, others not so (e.g. Transformers Prime Bulkhead) but in general still a very nice touch compared to the past.
When did this happen?
I'm really interested to know when did this good stuff happen. Which year/decade, which line? I suppose improved engineering and sense of aesthetic had a lot to do with it. I'm just wondering when this good stuff happened.
Cheers!