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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: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.'
Oh, now there's a thought with some potentially darker implications that I bet the writers never even conceived of, hehe.Gauntlet101010 wrote:And where are these toddlers getting teleportation technology anyway? Why are they giving toddlers experimental energy sources (Gobrillium)?
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.'
I just remembered another RBA episode that was out of order. I've added it to the previous post, and will continue making amendments to it should I find some more (I'll keep you posted on updates to the post).Gauntlet101010 wrote:Yep, I'll have to remember that for later.
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: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.'
Use the TFWiki order as a base along with my notes, as they are to be used in conjunction with the TFWiki order, pointing out which particular episodes should be rearranged and where. Any episodes I don't point out should be fine sticking to how they're arranged on the wiki.Gauntlet101010 wrote:Are the episodes on TFWiki in order? Or should I keep in mind your own notes and forget TFWiki?
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: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.'
Going through several of these RBA eps to figure out which go where has actually been easier said than done, to my surprise. I've actually had to rearrange a number of them multiple times and just shrug off some minuscule continuity issues as simply unavoidable.Gauntlet101010 wrote:This is really helpful! I may create a playlist to help watching these. Although it may not be possible with kid's videos, I have yet to try.
It's way better than MOST other shows in its whole demographic!Gauntlet101010 wrote:So far so good with Rescue Bots, BTW. You weren't kidding. It's WAY better than GoBots, lol.
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.'
Funnily enough, it originally wasn't supposed to be.Gauntlet101010 wrote:Although I think a weak point is the fact that it's a part of the Aligned continuity at all.
This is a recurring thing throughout all Aligned media, as not only do Optimus and Bee look different between Prime and RB, but also between those two and RID 2015. Yet, all three shows act as if each body they appear in are the same bodies. This was further reinforced in the IDW-made tie-in comics for RID 2005 that showed a flashback to TF: Prime in which Optimus was depicted in his RID 2015 body with the other members of Team Prime, who all still looked just like their Prime designs.Gauntlet101010 wrote:The different designs for BB and OP can be jarring. You have to sort of assume they "change clothes" every time to enter the show. I suppose I can live with that.
This point actually was addressed by Nicole Dubuc, co-creator/story editor/writer for RB, who was asked this very question at one point and gave an explanation for why Optimus never used his T-Rex mode in Prime: Optimus doesn't look to use his T-Rex form because how hard it is to control without giving in to its more feral instincts.Gauntlet101010 wrote:But, then, you have to account for the fact that OP can become a T Rex at any time after a certain point and you have to ask yourself why he never does! Like ... that never would have came in handy? He's fighting Predaking or something and he never thinks to become a T Rex?
Purely by complete coincidence as both shows were made by entirely different people many years apart.Gauntlet101010 wrote:Speaking of which the show handles multiple toys the same sort of way Go Bots does
Yeah, and that was probably a marketing decision. By which I mean, by the time the show decided to incorporate other altmodes of the characters from other toys, the first-body robot forms of the 'Bots had become too iconic to replace. To the young viewers, those forms were how the 'Bots looked and how they're supposed to look, so the additional altmodes were handled much like how the Cybertronian altmodes of Wheeljack, Bumblebee, Jazz, and the Seekers were handled in the first episode of the G1 cartoon: Familiar-looking bodies merely morphing into new forms.Gauntlet101010 wrote:they just have the one character transform into the different alt modes without a care in the world. So Heatwave is a quad changer -he can turn into robot, fire truck, boat, and dinosaur. Of course this just means he has four toys featured on the show, but you get it. The main cast are all triple changers, at least, with a robot, vehicle, and dino mode. And, if I were a real fan of the series, this would bother the living Hell outta me. Because there's no way I'd be able to own a "true" version of any of these characters! It's worse than Astrotrain - at least they try with this. But there's no attempt here to even pretend these guys are real triple or quad changers.
The island setting is also helped by the fact that Griffin Rock is a government-sanctioned testing ground where all the new technology is confined entirely to said island.Gauntlet101010 wrote:The world itself is a lot more high tech than in Prime or RiD. I get that it's on an island (mostly), but still. If I had seen this at the same time as the other shows I probably would have asked why OP didn't tap Doc Green in for any given problem.
Yeah, this was back when Hollywood was trying to appeal more to the Chinese market, like how Age of Extinction set its final act in Hong Kong, or how Iron Man 3 got an alternate ending scene exclusive to the Chinese version of the movie.Gauntlet101010 wrote:The China glazing in Season 4's last couple episodes also comes off differently now.
The show actually does poke fun at that. In Doctor Morocco's debut episode, Mayor Luskey states point-blank to Chief Burns, "Your bots replaced dozens of vehicles, Chief. Progress marches on." In other words, the Burns family basically monopolized the entire emergency response industry for the whole island once the 'Bots came to town, putting several rescue workers and their vehicles out of jobs and out of action, which is actually crazy when you realize that.Gauntlet101010 wrote:Heck, now that the rise in AI is a whole thing the entire technological wonderland hits different. How many jobs do the Rescue Bots take just by being on that island? But that's overanalyzing, lol.
Oh, all four are fan favorites. Heatwave for all the reasons you said (he's basically the "Grumpy Bear" of the show, to use a Care Bears example), Chase for his rule-stickler deadpan demeanor that makes him unwittingly hilarious, Boulder for his kindhearted gentleness, and Blades for being, well, the Fluttershy of the show, with many finding his shy and awkward nervousness adorable.Gauntlet101010 wrote:My favorite Autobot is Heat Wave. I think he's probably a lot of people's favourite. I like his bad attitude and character growth. Of course Blades is kinda ... much and Chase is a bit too boring. So there's that.
Heh, back when the show first debuted, everyone was comparing Boulder to Animated Bulkhead, saying he was more like Bulkhead than the actual Bulkhead in Prime.Gauntlet101010 wrote:Boulder reminds me of a much nicer Rhinox. He even has the same colors and a similar face!
IT's because he's the oldest of the Burns siblings and thus has the most experience.Gauntlet101010 wrote:Kade is a giant asshole and I have no idea why he's left in charge when Charlie is away.
He does have character flaws, but I feel that's what makes him interesting. On the surface he comes across as a typical arrogant jock type who's all cocky and full of himself, but deep down is a much more complex character with layers and nuance. His jerky attitude does feel off-putting to his siblings, but there's never any outright malice behind it. And when the chips are down, he knows when to drop the act and take charge of the situation.Gauntlet101010 wrote:He can be funny, but he he's a jerk.
I can't recall if this was stated outright at some point or just went without saying, but there seemed to be a sort of "no military" rule when it came to Rescue Bots. Not just in terms of imagery but terminology as well. They really wanted to avoid such titles for the preschool demographic in spite of the fact that the crew making the show was writing for a much older audience than toddlers. It was probably a decision made from higher up rather than by the show crew themselves.Gauntlet101010 wrote:Why isn't Dani lieutenant? She seems like the best fit for it among the humans.
The only two humans who could understand Bumblebee's beeps, as it turns out (really shows how nonsensical it was for Raf to understand him for no reason over in TF: Prime).Gauntlet101010 wrote:I guess Dani or Cody would be my favorite humans.
I think we're just supposed to assume that most of the episodes take place on weekends, as we only ever see Cody in school in just one episode (which had a Ferris Bueller in it, no less).Gauntlet101010 wrote:They give a lot for Cody to do, of course. Sometimes I wonder how he passes school. But we're not meant to think about that!
And a Cyclone Mini-Con for one episode, and a few other recurring human antagonists. In particular, I really liked Colonel Quint Quarry and wish we could have gotten more of him outside of his three appearances. Especially since he was wonderfully voiced by the ever-talented Jim Cummings, who brought his A-game to the role.Gauntlet101010 wrote:There's no Deceptions, but there are two main human antagonists.
Who doesn't love a good Tim Curry-voiced villain? Though, Curry sadly had a stroke in 2012 (which he survived, thankfully), so he only voiced him in Season 1, succeeded by Johnny Rees in the following seasons.Gauntlet101010 wrote:Dr Morocco - I actually wound up really liking him.
And quite literally a 19th-Century mustache-twirling villain.Gauntlet101010 wrote:He's a charming tech-stealing long-lived evil scientist who wants to rule the world.
There is one, and I happily own a copy.Gauntlet101010 wrote:They make him have a friendship with Jules Verne and go off into the future, rehabilitated, but they just couldn't quit him so they made an evil virus copy that eventually becomes the closest thing this show gets to a "Decepticon" in the final episode. Actually kinda makes me want a toy of it.
At least we got an Ocean's Eleven homage, of all things, out of her final defeat.Gauntlet101010 wrote:Madeline Pynch - Another human antagonist, but less important than Morocco. I think she was meant to replace him and has largely the same MO - stealing technology, but this time to get a lot of money. She gets the better of him in their encounters. I find her less interesting ... but when you compare her to a time-spanning villain who creates his own "Transformers" and mind wipes our heroes it's really hard to measure up. But they did need SOMEBODY else because, as much as I like Morocco, he was getting overplayed.
Yeah, I remember not liking Priscilla back when the show was still new, but I'm pretty that was the point. Everyone, both the viewers and the characters, found her annoying. Yet, I'm glad they didn't make her irredeemably bad and instead gave her something of a conscience at times, which showed that there was at least potential for her to not go down the same path of corruption as her mother.Gauntlet101010 wrote:She has a daughter who, I guess, was supposed to be an antagonist to Cody, but didn't really feature. and that's a good thing because, even in the show's context, she was insufferable.
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.'
It all goes back to the original literary source that all these fictional big-game hunter villains (including Lord Chumley from the G1 cartoon) are based on: the 1924 short story "The Most Dangerous Game" by Richard Connell.Gauntlet101010 wrote:I forgot about Quint Quarry in my writeup. You know what? I don't like him, lol. Ugh, what is it abut big game hunters that fascinate cartoon and comic book writers? So many franchises have them! I kinda hate all of them! Maybe I need to read Kraven's last hunt to have some respect for that guy because I hate him too. I just don't get the appeal of this archetype.
Heh, it's funny how people used to rag on Challenge of the GoBots for having character models that looked really toy-accurate when compared to The Transformers, when the main reason the Transformers character models looked cooler was specifically because they didn't look like the toys.Gauntlet101010 wrote:There were things my childhood toys did that always bugged me. Namely ... not looking like the show I liked! lol. Why was that such a thing?
Oh, those were just the ones I remembered off the top of my head. I'm sure there were many more, but it's been a hot minute since I last watched the series in full.Gauntlet101010 wrote:I get that Kade was the leader because he's oldest, but that's hardly a real qualification. I remember those times you mentioned, but they don't outweigh all the other times he just showed no leadership qualities.
*shrug* Maybe Charlie trusts his son the way he does because he knows him, the real him that lies beneath the outwardly cocky facade, better than we do.Gauntlet101010 wrote:I feel like leaning on "oldest being leader" is actually the one bad message this show sends. Leadership should be based on the person who has the best leadership qualities.
Meh, after seeing how much of a jerk Animated Sentinel Prime was, Kade's a saint by comparison. Even Kade would probably think Sentinel's too much (or even think, "I don't like this guy. He reminds me of me!").Gauntlet101010 wrote:I don't think he's a bully, but he's a jerk. I don't think he ever shows he has what it takes to be second in command material. There's glimmers of it here and there, but that's despite himself.
Something else I forgot to mention before (which also ties into you previous inquiry about why Optimus wouldn't just call Doc Greene over from Griffin Rock to assist him with Cybertronian tech in TF: Prime) is that, according to Nicole Dubuc, Optimus wants to keep the Rescue Bots, their allies, and the island of Griffin Rock itself a secret from the Decepticons. He doesn't want to involve the 'Bots in the war because they are considered his "Plan Z", the last line of defense for humanity should Team Prime ever fail in the war and be permanently defeated by the Decepticons. Should that happen, Heatwave and his team would then be called upon to step up and focus their attention on rescuing as many human lives as they could from the Decepticons, not directly engaging in combat but deploying far and wide to perform rescue operations wherever they would be needed. Ultimately, though, this last-resort measure did not happen, as we saw Team Prime ultimately victorious against Megatron's forces by the end of TF: Prime.Gauntlet101010 wrote:It would be hard for Prime to connect with this show. It has such a gritty atmosphere. It's hard to imagine OP going from this fun adventure with flobsters or something and then truck on over to the very serious world of Prime. I think Blur and Ransack work out better. The tone of RiD is a LOT lighter.
Which was yet another instance of "same body, different viewer lens".Gauntlet101010 wrote:I didn't find the model switching from Prime to RiD too bad; I can assume they had switched bodies. Except for when they found one of BB's old videos. That should have been his Prime body.
I think it also had to do with how Boulder comes across as more of a younger, less experienced 'bot like Animated Bulkhead, while Rhinox was more of a wise old man full of lifelong experience.Gauntlet101010 wrote:I can sorta see why people think there are similarities between Bulkhead and Boulder. Green lantern jawed gentle giant types that are down to Earth. But Rhinox also shares those qualities and he's also a techie (which Boulder was until Salvage came along) and he loves Earth's nature. If you put him in this show I think you'd get a guy a lot like Boulder while Bulkhead would wind up a lot like a less tech focused Salvage. Heck, a Rhino isn't too far off from a triceratops if you want to compare beast modes.
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.'
I think it also had to do with how Boulder comes across as more of a younger, less experienced 'bot like Animated Bulkhead, while Rhinox was more of a wise old man full of lifelong experience.
To be honest, I never played them, myself, either. Since I didn't own the consoles they were released on (and since they came out at a point when life got too busy for me to really play games anymore), I only ever watched complete gameplay walkthroughs of them on YouTube in order to experience their stories (which are indeed very cool stories. Save for Rise of the Dark Spark, that game's two stories were severely undercooked and nonsensical even if one of them does bridge the gap between WFC and FOC).Gauntlet101010 wrote:I never got into the games.
Yeah, this was back when Aaron Archer was in charge and, after having gotten to meet him at some conventions in recent years, it's clear that he had approached Transformers more from a business perspective than a nerdy one. He wasn't at all geeky about this kind of stuff like we are, and told me up front that he had had very little reverence for or familiarity with Generation 1 back during his tenure at Hasbro, and didn't care to gain more familiarity or reverence for it at the time since he was far less interested about catering to older fans and was more interested in reinventing and innovating the brand in order to grab new fans of younger ages. He was always focusing on the next big thing instead of trying to cohesively build upon the old. But of course, that's the difference between those who are storytellers and those who aren't, and he certainly wasn't.Gauntlet101010 wrote:To me, this lack of visual consistency is a real dent in the armor when it comes to the aligned universe. It's easy to say "they're all connected," but if it falls apart when you need a visual model.
Not to mention that fact that each component of Aligned media was being made by different people working separately from each other (who wouldn't have been able to share the same design assets with each other anyway) with different goals in mind. Like, the folks making the games had originally wanted them to be G1 games, while the crew making the Prime cartoon originally wanted it to be in line with the live-action movies (or even, bafflingly, The Sopranos). It was Hasbro playing the middleman between all these disparate groups that eventually helped to weave everything together as best they could, but the demands were really taxing and at times futile, which just made everything such a mess behind-the-scenes that it's a miracle that we got as many of the connections and alignments between all the various mediums that we did.Gauntlet101010 wrote:Let's be honest here: they just didn't want to take the time to make a real model. Each product is it's own thing ... and they also don't want to waste any budget money by translating a video game - level model into a TV show level model. Or make a new one-off model when they may never use it again. And people who watch the show may not play the game (like me).
Well, they actually did change Bumblebee to look more like his Prime design compared to how his RB toys looked.Gauntlet101010 wrote:But the crossovers in Rescue Bots and in RiD should definitely have used the right models.
Ratchet's guest appearance in RID 2015 was actually based on his RID 2015 toy.Gauntlet101010 wrote:I mean, why use Prime Ratchet, but not the right BB model? Nobody would get confused.
It's also probably because a number of fans were a little bummed by how Prime Bulkhead had been stripped of the lovable goofball charm of Animated Bulkhead that when Boulder came along people gravitated more towards his lovable charm that reminded them of good ol' Animated Bulkhead.Gauntlet101010 wrote:Maybe it's just because Animated as closer in terms of airing than Beast Wars when RB came out and I've seen all of them relatively close together.
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.'
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