CONQUERORS, part 3! It all comes down to this… the fate of the AUTOBOTS, the survival of the human race, and the existence of a post-war CYBERTRON depends on the two greatest heroes in TRANSFORMERS history: BUSTER the dog and D.0.C. the drone.
IDW The Transformers #48 Discussion Thread
Posted by Va'al
Nov 19, 2015 at 2:09am CST
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Re: IDW The Transformers #48 Discussion Thread
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Comment by Bounti76
Nov 19, 2015
Ha! D.0.C and Buster together are cute. 
Va'al, are you (or someone else) going to be doing a review of issue 47? And any idea when #48 is coming out? Seems odd to get a preview of the next issue the same day a new one is released.

Va'al, are you (or someone else) going to be doing a review of issue 47? And any idea when #48 is coming out? Seems odd to get a preview of the next issue the same day a new one is released.
Re: IDW The Transformers #48 Discussion Thread
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Comment by Va'al
Nov 19, 2015
Review for #47 is indeed coming. My schedule just seems to be getting worse by the week!
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Comment by padfoo
Nov 19, 2015
So much cuteness in the face of impending doom. Thundercracker is played as kind of dopey and why is DOC so confused until recently Thundercracker Starscream and Skywarp all had different alternate modes. I have to remember, just enjoy....
Re: IDW The Transformers #48 Discussion Thread
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Comment by D-Maximal_Primal
Nov 19, 2015
Such cuteness and innocence in these 3 pages. Wow... I love it! I look forward to DOC saving the day with Buster 

Re: IDW The Transformers #48 Discussion Thread
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Comment by Windsweeper
Nov 19, 2015
Firstly we were getting just Transformers in this series albeit mainly ones I hate: Bumblebee, Arcee, Wheeljack, Metalhawk, Jetfire, Ratbat and Kup.
To say nothing of turning Prowl and Needlenose into jerks.
Then we got the annoying humans Blackrock and Spike whose every storyline tends to be among the worst.
Now it's T-BOB from Mask's spark brother and a slagging dog!
Why did Hasbro continue to give their licence to Idw and Michael Bay?
To say nothing of turning Prowl and Needlenose into jerks.
Then we got the annoying humans Blackrock and Spike whose every storyline tends to be among the worst.
Now it's T-BOB from Mask's spark brother and a slagging dog!
Why did Hasbro continue to give their licence to Idw and Michael Bay?
Re: IDW The Transformers #48 Discussion Thread
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Because IDW is great at humanizing the big clunking robots and give them personalities beyond GOOD and BAD. (You got me on the M. Bay angle though).
Comment by ebonyleopard
Nov 19, 2015
Windsweeper wrote:Firstly we were getting just Transformers in this series albeit mainly ones I hate: Bumblebee, Arcee, Wheeljack, Metalhawk, Jetfire, Ratbat and Kup.
To say nothing of turning Prowl and Needlenose into jerks.
Then we got the annoying humans Blackrock and Spike whose every storyline tends to be among the worst.
Now it's T-BOB from Mask's spark brother and a slagging dog!
Why did Hasbro continue to give their licence to Idw and Michael Bay?
Because IDW is great at humanizing the big clunking robots and give them personalities beyond GOOD and BAD. (You got me on the M. Bay angle though).
Re: IDW The Transformers #48 Discussion Thread
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Because they do provide entertainment and great personality to the characters. Needlenose really didn't get much before IDW, as did several other characters. And they have worked things out very well and interesting. There is always a surprise for you. Just like MTMTE 43 with Swerve: that injury dates back 4-5 years in our time! things you never would have thought of
Comment by D-Maximal_Primal
Nov 19, 2015
Windsweeper wrote:Firstly we were getting just Transformers in this series albeit mainly ones I hate: Bumblebee, Arcee, Wheeljack, Metalhawk, Jetfire, Ratbat and Kup.
To say nothing of turning Prowl and Needlenose into jerks.
Then we got the annoying humans Blackrock and Spike whose every storyline tends to be among the worst.
Now it's T-BOB from Mask's spark brother and a slagging dog!
Why did Hasbro continue to give their licence to Idw and Michael Bay?
Because they do provide entertainment and great personality to the characters. Needlenose really didn't get much before IDW, as did several other characters. And they have worked things out very well and interesting. There is always a surprise for you. Just like MTMTE 43 with Swerve: that injury dates back 4-5 years in our time! things you never would have thought of

Re: IDW The Transformers #48 Discussion Thread
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Comment by Va'al
Nov 28, 2015
Looks like a woof week ahead for the smallest dynamic duo currently around in IDW Publishing's The Transformers - check out below a full preview for the next issue of the ongoing series, as D.O.C. and Buster take centre stage and try to save the universe. We will be bringing you a review, as always, once the book is released, so stay tuned!
Transformers #48
John Barber (w) • Andrew Griffith (a & c)
CONQUERORS, part 3! It all comes down to this… the fate of the AUTOBOTS, the survival of the human race, and the existence of a post-war CYBERTRON depends on the two greatest heroes in TRANSFORMERS history: BUSTER the dog and D.0.C. the drone.
FC • 32 pages • $3.99
Bullet points:
Dogs and robots—can they save the day?
Woof! Wooff grrrrrrrrr… ARF!
Beep! Fweeeeeeet-boop!
Featuring a tribute cover Celebrating Archie’s Anniversary by Andrew Pepoy!
Variant cover by Alex Milne!
Re: IDW The Transformers #48 Discussion Thread
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Comment by Moody magpie
Nov 28, 2015
I wonder what Griffith's reaction was to having to draw a dog peeing on the floor?
Re: IDW The Transformers #48 Discussion Thread
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Probably thought it was... piss funny.
Comment by Mindmaster
Nov 28, 2015
Moody magpie wrote:I wonder what Griffith's reaction was to having to draw a dog peeing on the floor?
Probably thought it was... piss funny.
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Comment by D-Maximal_Primal
Nov 29, 2015
I'm trying to decide if this issue is gonna make a serious or funny impact on me. It really does look amazing and I look forward to it, and it has to be a bit serious, but I love Buster and D0C in this and how they are being portrayed. I love it! 

Re: IDW The Transformers #48 Discussion Thread
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Synopsis
CONQUERORS, part 3! It all comes down to this… the fate of the AUTOBOTS, the survival of the human race, and the existence of a post-war CYBERTRON depends on the two greatest heroes in TRANSFORMERS history: BUSTER the dog and D.0.C. the drone.
Story
We've had two parts of this new storyline already in the ongoing The Transformers series from IDW Publishing, and John Barber has chosen to take a peculiar type of break while not putting anything on hold. At all. But how does the strange POV issue work, you might ask? Find out some thoughts below.
It's impossible to escape the similarities with the Eisner-winning Fraction/Aja Hawkeye issue of Pizza Dog with this chapter of The Transformers series, and for a comics fan, this works suprisingly well without falling too much into heavy-handed homage. (Much like Redemption and Fury Road, really.)
Having two points of view, undoubtedly, helps the narrative to flow, and switches between two characters that have found their way into the fandom and the new followers of the series. Buster, as an Earth dweller close to Thundercracker, and D.O.C. as a Cybertronian AI close to the Autobots do both bring a new perspective on the characters surrounding the otherwise main cast.
Which leads quite nicely to the crux of the story, really, and something that I am obviously not going to spoil here, but has a lot to do with several theories that many fans have been speculating on for a while now, revolving around long-established lore and recent developments in ..well, everything.
Art
I have to commend Griffith on the clear work on an otherwise extremely hard script to master in terms of layout. The smaller amount of dialogue and narration means that most of the story has to be told with the visual component of the medium, and he does a stellar job with the frames and angles from both character perspectives.
The same perspectives are maintained, solidly, throughout their different takes in the book, by the magnificently subtle (though not that much once you realise) colour palettes and coding for the two. In the case of Buster in particular, Josh Perez' chromatic contrasts and blending of greys is just really well done, and makes the foreground even more prominent and incisive.
Also to be commended is the work of letterer Tom B. Long, as Buster and D.O.C. occupy two very different styles of font, tone and voice, which are worked incredibly well with a truly complex script for human dialogue during the Buster segments. The covers, on the other hand, have very little to do with the issue, though are pretty excellent in both the Archie tribute by Andy Pepoy and the Alex Milne/Perez triumphant Starscream (thumbnailed).
Thoughts
Spoilerish ahead
Is the reveal present at the end of the book that surprising? No, not really, not at this point in the series. Is it pleasing? Yes, actually. It's brought about in a satisfying manner, with some good power and attention grabs, and a sustained if lighthearted narrative throughout the whole issue.
The real treat, however, is how the book looks, from the layouts and art to the colours and lettering. Griffith, Perez and Long work wonders together to really convey the multiple angles and pairs of eyes/optics through which we're looking at this small world growing bigger and smaller in equal measure. If you take anything from this, it's a treat for your own image processors.
Comment by Va'al
Dec 2, 2015
Bleep Bloop Woof
(Spoiler free-ish)
(Spoiler free-ish)
Synopsis
CONQUERORS, part 3! It all comes down to this… the fate of the AUTOBOTS, the survival of the human race, and the existence of a post-war CYBERTRON depends on the two greatest heroes in TRANSFORMERS history: BUSTER the dog and D.0.C. the drone.
Story
We've had two parts of this new storyline already in the ongoing The Transformers series from IDW Publishing, and John Barber has chosen to take a peculiar type of break while not putting anything on hold. At all. But how does the strange POV issue work, you might ask? Find out some thoughts below.
It's impossible to escape the similarities with the Eisner-winning Fraction/Aja Hawkeye issue of Pizza Dog with this chapter of The Transformers series, and for a comics fan, this works suprisingly well without falling too much into heavy-handed homage. (Much like Redemption and Fury Road, really.)
Having two points of view, undoubtedly, helps the narrative to flow, and switches between two characters that have found their way into the fandom and the new followers of the series. Buster, as an Earth dweller close to Thundercracker, and D.O.C. as a Cybertronian AI close to the Autobots do both bring a new perspective on the characters surrounding the otherwise main cast.
Which leads quite nicely to the crux of the story, really, and something that I am obviously not going to spoil here, but has a lot to do with several theories that many fans have been speculating on for a while now, revolving around long-established lore and recent developments in ..well, everything.
Art
I have to commend Griffith on the clear work on an otherwise extremely hard script to master in terms of layout. The smaller amount of dialogue and narration means that most of the story has to be told with the visual component of the medium, and he does a stellar job with the frames and angles from both character perspectives.
The same perspectives are maintained, solidly, throughout their different takes in the book, by the magnificently subtle (though not that much once you realise) colour palettes and coding for the two. In the case of Buster in particular, Josh Perez' chromatic contrasts and blending of greys is just really well done, and makes the foreground even more prominent and incisive.
Also to be commended is the work of letterer Tom B. Long, as Buster and D.O.C. occupy two very different styles of font, tone and voice, which are worked incredibly well with a truly complex script for human dialogue during the Buster segments. The covers, on the other hand, have very little to do with the issue, though are pretty excellent in both the Archie tribute by Andy Pepoy and the Alex Milne/Perez triumphant Starscream (thumbnailed).
Thoughts
Spoilerish ahead
Is the reveal present at the end of the book that surprising? No, not really, not at this point in the series. Is it pleasing? Yes, actually. It's brought about in a satisfying manner, with some good power and attention grabs, and a sustained if lighthearted narrative throughout the whole issue.
The real treat, however, is how the book looks, from the layouts and art to the colours and lettering. Griffith, Perez and Long work wonders together to really convey the multiple angles and pairs of eyes/optics through which we're looking at this small world growing bigger and smaller in equal measure. If you take anything from this, it's a treat for your own image processors.
.
out of










Re: IDW The Transformers #48 Discussion Thread
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Comment by Bounti76
Dec 2, 2015
Am I the only one who's having trouble getting it to download?
Re: IDW The Transformers #48 Discussion Thread
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No, it won't download. I have reported it to comixology. Wonder how long it will take to fix this time...
Comment by Allenspurs
Dec 2, 2015
Bounti76 wrote:Am I the only one who's having trouble getting it to download?
No, it won't download. I have reported it to comixology. Wonder how long it will take to fix this time...
Re: IDW The Transformers #48 Discussion Thread
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Comment by Starsaber468
Dec 2, 2015
Why is buster speaking.....
Re: IDW The Transformers #48 Discussion Thread
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Panels with a grey outline translate what buster is saying and the yellow ones translate d.o.c
It's a comic about sentient robots from another planet and a talking dog is questioned?
Comment by Allenspurs
Dec 2, 2015
Starsaber468 wrote:Why is buster speaking.....
Panels with a grey outline translate what buster is saying and the yellow ones translate d.o.c
It's a comic about sentient robots from another planet and a talking dog is questioned?
Re: IDW The Transformers #48 Discussion Thread
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Comment by Randomhero
Dec 2, 2015
This was good! This was really good! I had doubts a third way through that this was going to be all buster and doc not because I didn't find it fun but because this was a 4 part story that's leading into something huge but boy did it turn around!
The twist was well executed too! I was wondering how this was going to go with All hail optimus coming especially with this decepticon alliance going on but I think it was done very well.
The twist was well executed too! I was wondering how this was going to go with All hail optimus coming especially with this decepticon alliance going on but I think it was done very well.
Re: IDW The Transformers #48 Discussion Thread
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Comment by Allenspurs
Dec 2, 2015
Finally working!!!
Great issue, especially the frame with Jetfire and Thundercracker conversing with their counterparts.
Someone better than me really need to make a buster and D.O.C on shapeways..
Great issue, especially the frame with Jetfire and Thundercracker conversing with their counterparts.
Someone better than me really need to make a buster and D.O.C on shapeways..
Re: IDW The Transformers #48 Discussion Thread
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Comment by ctrlFrequency
Dec 2, 2015
It was cute! But not in a 'I want to kill someone for making TFS cute" way
however I read it just before I fell asleep to take a nap... and had surreal dreams damnit.
Blackrock was a little predictable though

Blackrock was a little predictable though

Re: IDW The Transformers #48 Discussion Thread
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Comment by BumbleDouche
Dec 3, 2015
I thought this issue was great, an interesting change if nothing else. However, I'd be remiss to ignore another opportunity to slag off Livio Ramondelli lol. Andrew Griffith has done a fantastic job on this issue. Period. Limited dialogue meant that the story was largely being told via illustrations. This issue is a perfect example of artwork that is clear, unambiguous & contains an easy to follow progression, something I always consider vitally important in the comic medium. My point here is that this is exactly what Ramondelli consistently fails to do, even when he is given a more dialogue-heavy script. Figuring out what is supposed to be happening on the page when Ramondelli is behind the artwork can such a chore sometimes & I dread to think what kind of horrendous, incomprehensible mess we'd get if he was tasked with providing the artwork for an image-heavy issue like this.