NewFoundStarscreamLuv wrote:wow, really? you do realize the original toys, were..toys..and the fact that they had small arms was likely more of a design constraint than on purpose.
Who knows what the original intent of the designers was? If it was a design constraint, then how come other G1 toys such as, say, Tracks and Inferno had perfectly proportioned arms whereas Scourge and Apeface did not?
NewFoundStarscreamLuv wrote:This is clear as later and more acurate versions of the original Transformers came out ie masterpiece and binaltech.
I don't see what your point is here. These later Transformers are all based on the 'idealised' versions of the G1 characters as seen in the comics and cartoons. They're intended as a homage to the characters as they appeared in the fiction (such as, for example, Universe Ironhide and his proper head). As such they are bound to lack the alien sensibilities of the original toys.
NewFoundStarscreamLuv wrote:As opposed to Bayformers, which are malporportioned on purpose
Are they really that bad? Look at the deluxe Arcee toy from the first movie line. It's an amazing design feat to have such a human silhouette transforming into a realistic-looking motorbike. Sure, Starscream had his chicken-legs and Brawl was a bit stumpy-looking, but Optimus Prime had no such faults, did he?
NewFoundStarscreamLuv wrote:Also, do you really think the level of disporpotion of say, six-shot, Ultra magnus, or Optimus Primal is even close to Bays Devastator or Starscream?
Well, aside from the fact that RID Ultra Magnus has enormously long legs...
I don't see how you can cite Bay for betraying the aesthetic look of the G1 line, and then use Optimus Primal as an example. The Beast Wars design ethic was the biggest single departure from the core Transformers ethos
ever, and I include Bayformers in that.
In fact, your post reminds me of some of the 'Truck not Monkey' posts that were all over the 'net in the BW days. Just like you are overreacting to the Movieverse, so too did many vocal fans back in the 1990s when Beast Wars first started.
But now we look back on those days and laugh at the nay-sayers because, despite the big change, Beast Wars gave us the best Transformers TV show to date, and some of the innovations introduced at the time (increased articulation, standardised toy size/price categories) are still in use today.
NewFoundStarscreamLuv wrote:Leaving the brand name alone, Bays robots dont even look like robots, they look like monsters without character from a Sci-Fi channel film. And I say that in all honesty.
Well, you brought up Optimus Primal in your post as a bastion of normalcy. Did the Transmetals look like proper robots? Did the Beast Machines look like proper robots?
Note the word 'Robots' here. Not 'android' (which is a word to describe a human-shaped machine). Those big articulated arms they use in car plants - well, they are called 'Robots' too, and they clearly aren't humanoid at all. NASA use non-humanoid robots in space missions all the time. You'll find non-humanoid robots everywhere from science-labs to deep-sea missions.
Remember, Transformers are supposed to be ROBOTS in disguise, not ANDROIDS in disguise.