Tarn-Hauser Gate

From MediaWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Tarn-Hauser Gate, presumably located near Tarn, is an ancient Cybertronian edifice, standing a silent vigil throughout the many paradigm shifts that the planet has weathered.

Fiction

[edit]

War for Cybertron Trilogy cartoon

[edit]

In the era before the Great War, Ultra Magnus and Megatron fought together at the Battle of Tarn-Hauser Gate. Siege episode 2 The battle resulted in the largest mass-grave in Cybertron's history. When the sage Alpha Trion fell, a monument to him was erected at Tarn-Hauser Gate. Siege episode 4

During the Great War between Autobots and Decepticons, Ultra Magnus had been captured by the Decepticons, tortured for the location of Autobot Central Command. Siege episode 3 Realizing he would never be free again, Magnus bluffed that the Autobots were based beneath Tarn-Hauser, leading the Decepticons there where he was executed when Megatron discovered his deception. Siege episode 4

2019 IDW continuity

[edit]

Prior to the War of the Threefold Spark, the tabernacle of Tarn-Hauser Gate held a compendium of wisdom from the ancient Cybertronians. When Alpha Trion regarded it, Ultra Magnus noted that, in a time of war, the tabernacle, and other cultural artifacts, would be the first to fall to the conquering army, leading to a discussion about cultures in warfare. Years later, Ultra Magnus would come to appreciate that Trion had been attempting to educate him on sympathy for the enemy. Storm Horizon Part 2

Trivia

[edit]
  • "Tarn-Hauser Gate" is most assuredly a Transformerized reference to the "Tannhäuser Gate", mentioned in Roy Batty's [[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}Tears in rain monologue|{{#if:famous death monologue|famous death monologue|Tears in rain monologue}}]] from the film [[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}Blade Runner|{{#if:||Blade Runner}}]]. Showrunner F.J. DeSanto also confirmed in an interview with Rodimus Primal it was also a nod to Hasbro Studios exec Mike Hauser.