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{{disambig2|the end of life|the Horseman of Unicron|Airazor (Armada)}}
[[File:TFTM-DeathofOptimusPrime.jpg|thumb|right|upright=2|And lo, the children did weep.]]
[[File:Battleofautobotcity.jpg|upright=1.77|thumb|And lo, the children did weep. They wept hard too.]]
''Transformers'' is a children's franchise, but at its core, it's a story of war. This means that the '''death''' of major and minor characters sometimes figures into the fiction.


Given the ambiguous nature of [[Transformer]] physiology, there is very little consistency regarding what is fatal to a Transformer, even within a single storyline. Damage that one Transformer might shrug off can prove fatal to another, or even to the same character in a different story. Sometimes just a laser blast or two will do the trick. Other times, characters survive being melted, [[Waspinator (BW)|crushed into cubes]], and even [[Demolishor (Armada)|utterly disintegrated]]. It does not take a terribly cynical viewer to conclude that the threshold of survival is generally determined by the needs of the plot.
''Transformers'' is a children's franchise, but most works of ''Transformers'' fiction are stories of war. This means that the '''death''' of major and minor characters often figures into the fiction.


The out-of-universe reasons for a character's death can vary from plot development to the arrival of [[To sell toys|new toys]]. Conveniently enough for writers who are beholden to the whims of a toy company, the majority of Transformers characters are machines, which means that death isn't necessarily permanent. Across the various universes, characters that appear to have been killed have been known to pop up alive again at a later date, or go through some sort of resurrection.
Given the ambiguous nature of [[Transformer]] physiology, there is very little consistency regarding what is fatal to a Transformer, even within a single storyline. Damage that one Transformer might shrug off can prove fatal to another, or even to the same character in a different story. Sometimes just a laser blast or two will do the trick. Other times, characters survive being melted, crushed, and even utterly disintegrated. It does not take a terribly cynical viewer to conclude that the threshold of survival is generally determined by the needs of the plot. The out-of-universe reasons for a character's death can vary from plot development to the arrival of [[To sell toys|new toys]].


{{quote|"How can you all be so cold and unfeeling? He died a hero!"<br>"Don't you even have mechanical hearts?"<br>"The humans don't understand! Our form of life is vastly different from theirs!"|[[Spider-Man]], [[Sparkplug Witwicky]], and [[Optimus Prime (G1)/Marvel Comics continuity|Optimus Prime]]|"[[Prisoner of War!]]"|noquote=true}}
Conveniently enough for writers who are beholden to the whims of a toy company, the majority of ''Transformers'' characters are machines, which means that death isn't necessarily permanent. Across the various universes, characters that appear to have been killed have been known to pop up alive again at a later date, or go through some sort of resurrection.


==In-fiction causes of death==
{{bigquote|"How can you all be so cold and unfeeling? He died a hero!"<br>"Don't you even have mechanical hearts?"<br>"The humans don't understand! Our form of life is vastly different from theirs!"|[[Spider-Man]], [[Sparkplug Witwicky]], and [[Optimus Prime (G1)/Marvel Comics continuity|Optimus Prime]]|"[[Prisoner of War!]]"}}
[[File:DEATH.jpg|left|thumb|upright=2.2|[[Scorponok (G1)/Marvel Comics continuity|Scorponok]] is just as puzzled as the rest of us.]]
There is little consistency in what can kill a Transformer. Sometimes it takes just a shot. Other times, even totally annihilating a Transformer's body still doesn't do the trick. Even the most basic method of killing, which is to destroy or otherwise cause the loss of a Transformer's [[spark]], varies quite a bit in its details from story to story, character to character, and series to series.


However, over time there has been some convergence of concepts regarding Transformer design across the various franchises and storylines. The concept of Sparks as a Transformer's driving life force has become nearly universal, and with it, the notion that loss of Spark equals death. Various [[2005 IDW continuity]] comics, particularly ''[[The Transformers: More than Meets the Eye|More Than Meets The Eye]]'', have delved deeply into this, positing that a Transformer can die if their Spark, brain or (in a new and unique twist) transformation cog are sufficiently damaged, known as "[[Rossum's Trinity‎]]". MTMTE also makes note of the difficulties in killing a Transformer, and how things like decapitation may not be lethal in the right circumstances.
==Hasbro and death==
[[File:Newyorkunderbase.jpg|thumb|left|upright=1.1|They also cease to appear on store shelves.]]


If one is so inclined, these concepts can be applied retroactively to many, if not all, older stories - so that various means of death described below can be seen simply as the means of inflicting the requisite damage on a Transformer's vital bits.
When the ''Transformers'' franchise debuted in [[1984]], [[Hasbro]] saw the show's enormous cast of characters as interchangeable product to be advertised and discarded in favor of the next toy. This cynical approach to marketing meant that characters were constantly rotated in and out to accommodate Hasbro's marketing wishes; as ''Transformers'' was first and foremost a war story, death or deactivation became a convenient "out" to remove those characters whose toys had left store shelves in favor of [[To sell toys|new product]]. The more serialized [[The Transformers (Marvel comic)|Marvel comic]] and its [[The Transformers (Marvel comic)#Marvel UK|UK imprint]] would also feature original characters like [[Scrounge (G1)|Scrounge]], [[Subsea]], [[Impactor (G1)|Impactor]], and [[Chuffer]], toyless characters whose sole purpose was to raise the stakes by dying to the villain of the month—it must be said, however, that many of these characters would themselves garner substantial fan followings over the following decades!
 
Over the course of their seven year run, the Marvel comics featured three distinct "massacre" storylines that removed multiple irrelevant characters from the comics: the UK comic's "[[Time Wars]]" storyline features the deaths of multiple Autobots and Decepticons, while the notorious "[[Underbase Saga]]" sees a cosmically-empowered [[Starscream (G1)/Marvel Comics continuity|Starscream]] indiscriminately obliterate a combined Autobot-Decepticon alliance, conveniently removing pretty much every character who wasn't a [[Headmaster (technology)|Headmaster]], [[Powermaster]], [[Targetmaster (technology)|Targetmaster]], or [[Pretender]] from the story. As is the way of such things, many of ''those'' characters would then fall to [[Unicron/Generation 1|Unicron]] in 1990's "[[On the Edge of Extinction!]]", clearing the way for a new storyline involving the brand new [[Action Master]] gimmick.
 
[[File:Windcharger wheeljack otp.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4]]
 
The most infamous massacre of all, however, would be ''[[The Transformers: The Movie]]'''s decision to sideline vast swathes of the [[The Transformers (cartoon)|concurrent cartoon]]'s cast. Within the first half hour of the film's runtime, ''many'' characters who'd starred in the show's first two seasons suffer abrupt, violent deaths, sometimes not even on camera: notable casualties include [[Prowl (G1)|Prowl]], [[Brawn (G1)|Brawn]], [[Ironhide (G1)|Ironhide]], [[Wheeljack (G1)|Wheeljack]], [[Ratchet (G1)|Ratchet]], and, most notoriously of all, [[Optimus Prime (G1)|Optimus Prime]] himself. Having cleared the proverbial deck, the film then pivots to follow multiple new characters with new toys to sell. In what could be called a microcosm of Hasbro's cynical approach to marketing, [[Ultra Magnus (G1)|Ultra Magnus]] is ambushed, blasted and subsequently ripped to pieces by [[Galvatron (G1)|Galvatron]] and the other Decepticons... but because he's a new character with a new toy to sell, the Autobots and some friendly [[Junkion (species)|Junkion]]s repair him a few minutes later, and he returns to life none the worse for wear. Ultimately, however, Hasbro underestimated Optimus's pull: the decision to kill him off sparked a massive letter-writing campaign from young fans; Hasbro eventually backtracked, and the season three episode "[[The Return of Optimus Prime, Part 1]]" ended with Optimus's resurrection. However, the fiasco had taught Hasbro a valuable lesson: their target audience saw these characters as more than just interchangeable merchandise, and this, in turn, would lead to a ''much'' tighter approach to how Hasbro would advertise its characters going forward.
 
When the ''Transformers'' property returned to the airwaves in 1996, the decision to use [[computer-generated imagery]] restricted ''[[Beast Wars: Transformers (cartoon)|Beast Wars]]'' to a limited pool of characters, and the introduction of "new product" meant permanently eliminating other cast members. To this end, [[Terrorsaur (BW)|Terrorsaur]] and [[Scorponok (BW)|Scorponok]] unceremoniously plunged into lava in the [[Aftermath (BW episode)|second season premiere]] to make room for the arrival of [[Silverbolt (Fuzor)|Silverbolt]] and [[Quickstrike (BW)|Quickstrike]]; not long afterwards, [[Optimus Primal (BW)|Optimus Primal]] returned to life in a new body a mere three episodes after meeting his end in [[Other Voices, Part 2|the first season finale]]. Anticipating that ''someone'' on the main cast would have to be swapped out for new product, the producers of the show had enough time to craft a meaningful farewell arc to [[Dinobot (BW)|Dinobot]], a long-time series mainstay; his final episode, "[[Code of Hero]]", is widely hailed as one of the best ''Transformers'' episodes of all time.
 
After this point, most mainline ''Transformers'' television shows put less of an emphasis on death, and largely reserved it for various background [[generic]]s, the occasional villain, or one-off characters like [[Cliffjumper (WFC)|''Prime'' Cliffjumper]] or [[Blurr (Cyberverse)|''Cyberverse'' Blurr]] who perished in their debut episodes. When one of the good guys ''did'' die, they were more often than not returned to life after an episode or two—in really extreme cases, they might even return to life less than five minutes after biting the dust. Part of this comes down to Hasbro's comparatively cautious approach to contemporary brand management: after what happened last time, does anyone ''really'' think they'd permanently kill Optimus again? That said, many of these rules go out the window when it comes to series finales: as writers and showrunners strike the proverbial sets and tie up their stories without any real Hasbro input, basically ''anyone'' can die, including series mainstays. [[Endgame, Part II|The final ''Animated'' episode]] ends with [[Prowl (Animated)|Prowl]] giving up his own Spark to complete the [[AllSpark]], the [[The Perfect Decepticon|''Cyberverse'' finale]] features the death of on-again-off-again protagonist [[Soundwave (Cyberverse)|Soundwave]], while the ''Prime'' movie ''[[Predacons Rising (Prime)|Predacons Rising]]'' ends with [[Optimus Prime (WFC)|Optimus Prime]] sacrificing himself to reignite the [[Well of All Sparks]]... although he returns to life in [[Transformers: Robots in Disguise (2015 cartoon)|the sequel series]].
 
All this said, death remains a fixture in older-skewing works of ''Transformers'' fiction. The [[Movie continuity family|live-action films]] take a relatively cavalier approach to the concept, as do the comics published by [[Dreamwave Productions]], [[IDW Publishing]], and [[Skybound Entertainment]]. With no fixed cast to build the series around, nor any specific toylines to advertise, creators have the freedom to kill off as many characters as they want: indeed, plenty of works positively ''revel'' in the opportunity to depict violent, over-the-top gorefests where dozens of characters meet their ends, and a few stories like ''[[The Transformers: Regeneration One|Regeneration One]]'' and ''[[Transformers: Last Bot Standing|Last Bot Standing]]'' have stretched the concept to its ultimate endpoint by depicting the final extinction of the Cybertronian race. That said, Hasbro still has some say over who lives and who dies—while writing the [[...For All Mankind|first issue]] of IDW's [[The Transformers (IDW)|2009 ''Transformers'' ongoing]], for instance, Hasbro vetoed author [[Mike Costa]]'s suggestion to kill off [[Bumblebee (G1)|Bumblebee]], the most shocking death he could think of, and Ironhide ultimately wound up taking his place.<ref>[http://moonbase2.libsyn.com/webpage/the-underbase-reviews-ongoing-31 Moonbase 2 interview with Mike Costa ("Special Guest")]</ref> Of course, these attitudes can change with time and circumstance, as evidenced by Hasbro having ''no'' qualms with [[Daniel Warren Johnson]] killing off Bumblebee in the [[Transformers (2023) issue 1|very first issue]] of the [[Energon Universe]] ''[[Transformers (2023 comic)|Transformers]]'' series. <ref> {{citesocial|quote=And this is actually funny, our contact over at Hasbro was also a little tired of seeing Bumblebee everywhere, and he actually asked, before he saw my script, he's like, "is there any way we can not use Bumblebee in the main line?" And I told him, I was like, "I got good news for you!" He had to go, he had to go. Sorry Bumblebee fans, sorry to let you down like that, I am so sorry.|link=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=joUZgObXmU0&t=2545s|name=Daniel Warren Johnson|site=YouTube|title=TRANSFORMERS Issue 1 DIRECTOR'S COMMENTARY|year=2023|month=10|day=06}}</ref>
{{--}}
 
==Death in fiction==
[[File:TFAnimated transformandrollout DEATH.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4]]
 
Originally, the [[The Transformers (Marvel comic)|Marvel ''Transformers'' comic]] took a relatively cavalier approach to death: characters could be smashed, blasted to bits, or fatally zapped with cosmic energy, but, so long as their bodies remained relatively intact a sufficiently skilled mechanic with enough time and resources could restore them to full functionality. It was the ''[[Beast Wars: Transformers (cartoon)|Beast Wars]]'' cartoon that first introduced the concept of the [[spark]] to the ''Transformers'' canon: with the insertion of a physical, tangible "life force" came the implicit assertion that the destruction of a Spark equals death, and that Cybertronians ''could'' permanently die; as explained in "[[Coming of the Fuzors (Part 2)]]", deceased Sparks return to a mysterious "[[Transformer afterlife|Matrix]]", a metaphysical realm beyond space and time where "all are one".


When a Transformer dies, the loss of their life force (or artistic convention, out here in the real world) often results in them turning gray. The most well-known example by far is Optimus Prime's death in the animated movie; Prowl can also be glimpsed turning gray as he falls during the shuttle assault. This idea has shown up in a few other places, such as [[Transform and Roll Out#Part 3|the ''Animated'' cartoon]] and [[World, Shut Your Mouth Part 3: Predestination: A Beginner's Guide|the ''More Than Meets the Eye'' comics]], the latter of which [[Sardines|coined]] the term "[[aggressive depigmentation]]" to describe the phenomenon.
When a Transformer dies, the loss of their life force (or artistic convention, out here in the real world) often results in them turning gray. The most well-known example by far is Optimus Prime's death in the animated movie; Prowl can also be glimpsed turning gray as he falls during the shuttle assault. This idea has shown up in a few other places, such as [[Transform and Roll Out#Part 3|the ''Animated'' cartoon]] and [[World, Shut Your Mouth Part 3: Predestination: A Beginner's Guide|the ''More Than Meets the Eye'' comics]], the latter of which [[Sardines|coined]] the term "[[aggressive depigmentation]]" to describe the phenomenon.
{{-}}
{{--}}
 
===Weaponsfire===
{{bigquote|This was almost too easy, Starscream!|[[Megatron (G1)/Generation 1 cartoon continuity|Megatron]] (like the fandom) is surprised to find how easily Autobots die, ''[[The Transformers: The Movie]]''}}


[[File:Tftm1986a.jpg|upright=1.1|thumb|We're here aboard the Autobot shuttle, where we've secretly replaced Brawn's hyper-dense metal armor plating with styrene plastic. Let's see if anyone can tell the difference.]]
==Common causes of death==
[[File:TFTM UltraMagnus dies.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|Prepare for your death today. Yer gonna die!!]]
{{bigquote|We are '''so''' hard to kill. It takes real determination. '''Commitment''', I suppose.|[[Ratchet (G1)|Ratchet]]|"[[The Cracks Beneath Your Feet Part One]]"}}
[[File:Magnusdeath.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|Ow! Hey! Cut it out, guys! That hurts!]]
[[File:Blades1.jpg|upright=1.1|thumb|Sorry, [[Outpost B-67 exo-structuring party|nameless guy]], your generic nature means you will never be miraculously resurrected.]]
[[File:DreadwingdeathImage.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|You will pay for this, Megatron! Mark my words, you'll pay!]]
Like humans, Transformers can be killed by damage caused by energy, projectile, and chemical weapons. Just how many shots it takes is widely variable, however.
*In the [[The Transformers (cartoon)|original ''The Transformers'' cartoon]]:
**Many casualties of the [[Battle of Autobot City]] (and its run-up), including [[Prowl (G1)/Generation 1 cartoon continuity|Prowl]], [[Brawn (G1)|Brawn]], [[Ratchet (G1)/Generation 1 cartoon continuity|Ratchet]], [[Ironhide (G1)/Generation 1 cartoon continuity|Ironhide]], and [[Optimus Prime (G1)/Generation 1 cartoon continuity|Optimus Prime]], are victims of energy weapons. {{storylink|The Transformers: The Movie}} This was quite a change from the cartoon's M.O., wherein the same characters routinely got shot and blasted all the time and shrugged it off, or at worst spent some time in the repair bay. Brawn and Prowl (whose tech specs show endurances of 9) both went down after ''one shot''.
**[[Ultra Magnus (G1)/Generation 1 cartoon continuity|Ultra Magnus]] subsequently "dies" after being shot a few times by the [[Sweep (G1)|Sweeps]], exploding into pieces. He is soon revived by the [[Junkion (species)|Junkions]], however. {{storylink|The Transformers: The Movie}}
**In the Japanese continuity, Ultra Magnus dies ''again'', for real this time, after [[Sixshot (G1)|Sixshot]] shoots him a few times. {{storylink|Ultra Magnus Dies!!}}
*In the [[Marvel Comics continuity|Marvel comics]]:
**[[Impactor (G1)|Impactor]] is cut down by a single head shot from [[Macabre]], who himself is then shot to pieces by the [[Wreckers]]. {{storylink|Target: 2006}}
**[[Ferak]] is executed by a head shot from [[Hot Rod (G1)/Marvel Comics continuity|Rodimus Prime]]. {{storylink|Wanted: Galvatron — Dead or Alive!}}
**[[Dreadwind (G1)|Dreadwind]] is taken out by a shot through the chest from [[Grimlock (G1)/Marvel Comics continuity|Grimlock]]. {{storylink|Another Time & Place}}
**Most deaths in the ''[[Transformers: Generation 2 (Marvel)|Generation 2]]'' book occur from energy weapons, such as [[Red Alert (G1)|Red Alert]], {{storylink|Devices and Desires! (Marvel)|Devices and Desires!}} as well as numerous generics. {{storylink|War Without End!}} Quite a few victims explode spectacularly after being shot, including [[Tantrum (G1)|Tantrum]], {{storylink|The Gathering Darkness}} [[Runamuck (G1)|Runamuck]], [[Quake (G1)|Quake]], {{storylink|New Dawn}} and [[Smokescreen (G1)|Smokescreen]]. {{storylink|Escalation!}}
*In the ''[[Beast Wars: Transformers (cartoon)|Beast Wars]]'' cartoon:
**[[Dinobot (BW)|Dinobot]] dies after incurring severe damage from numerous [[Predacon (BW)|Predacon]] weapons. {{storylink|Code of Hero}} Other characters have survived similar or worse levels of damage, but the episode gave a reason: Dinobot refuses to go into [[stasis lock]], which his onboard computer warns could "result in loss of Spark" if he keeps it up.
**[[Tigerhawk]] is disintegrated by the main cannon of the starship ''[[Nemesis (G1)|Nemesis]]''. The same cannon subsequently blasts [[Inferno (BW)|Inferno]] and [[Quickstrike (BW)|Quickstrike]], apparently killing them too, though their "deaths" may be permanent simply because there was nobody around to put them back together - or at least, [[Waspinator (BW)|nobody who cared to]]. {{storylink|Nemesis Part 2}}
*''Armada'' cartoon: [[Optimus Prime (Armada)/Cartoon continuity|Optimus Prime]] dies holding back the [[Hydra Cannon]], the damage causing him to [[:File:Crisis Optimus Prime dies.jpg|crumble to dust]]. {{storylink|Crisis (Armada)|Crisis}}
*[[Dreamwave Generation One continuity|Dreamwave G1]] comics: [[Grimlock (G1)|Grimlock]] is gunned down by [[Motormaster (G1)|Motormaster]]. {{storylink|The Age of Wrath}} He got better. {{storylink|Prime Directive issue 3|Prime Directive #3}}
*[[Transformers: Universe (comic)|Universe]]: [[Tankor (BM)|Tankor]] is shot and killed by [[Rhinox (BW)|Rhinox]] during the final battle of the [[Universe War]].
*This happens a ''lot'' in the [[Movie continuity]]:
**[[Brawl (Movie)|Brawl]] and [[Blackout (Movie)|Blackout]] both die from weapons fire. {{storylink|Transformers (film)|Transformers}}
**Arcee and Elita-One and possibly Chromia are killed by Decepticon fire.
**All the [[Appliancebot]]s are shot dead by [[Bumblebee (Movie)|Bumblebee]].
**A crapload of [[Protoform]]s are shot down by [[NEST]] soldiers. {{storylink|Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (film)|Revenge of the Fallen}}
**[[Crowbar]] is shot in the face by Ironhide.
**[[Wheeljack (Movie)|Que]] is brought to his knees by a shot to the chest from a Decepticon protoform before [[Barricade (Movie)|Barricade]] finishes him off by shooting him in the back. {{storylink|Transformers: Dark of the Moon (film)|Dark of the Moon}}
**[[Leadfoot (DOTM)|Leadfoot]] is killed by a massive onslaught of gunfire from [[Cemetery Wind]]. [[Ratchet (Movie)|Ratchet]] is brutally whittled down in a similar manner, until Lockdown comes and executes him. {{storylink|Transformers: Age of Extinction (film)|Age of Extinction}}
*"[[Transformers: Shattered Glass (franchise)|Shattered Glass]]": [[Megatron (SG)|Megatron]] gets his face blown off/in by [[Cyclonus (SG)|Cyclonus]]. {{storylink|Reunification: Part 4}}
*Many goons during the [[Transformers: War for Cybertron (franchise)|War for Cybertron]] die from being shot. {{storylink|Transformers: War for Cybertron (games)|War for Cybertron}}
*''Prime'' cartoon: [[Dreadwing (Prime)|Dreadwing]] is killed by a shot through the chest by [[Megatron (WFC)|Megatron]]. {{storylink|Regeneration (Prime)|Regeneration}}
*''Beast Wars: Uprising'':
**[[Thunderhoof (BWU)|Thunderhoof]] is shot down by his former minions, [[Terrorsaur (BW)|Terrorsaur]] and [[Scavenger (BM)|Scavenger]]. {{storylink|Identity Politics}}
**[[Overshoot]] is shot in the chest by [[Vamp]] and bleeds out from the injury. {{storylink|Cultural Appropriation}}
**[[Steel Jaw]] is killed by a stray shot. {{storylink|Derailment}}
*''Cyberverse'' cartoon:
**[[Prowl (Cyberverse)|Prowl]] leaps in front of a shot meant for Optimus Prime. While dialogue suggests he could have lived, he is not seen afterward as the lights in his optics fade out. {{storylink|Battle For Cybertron II}}
**In [[Megatron X (Cyberverse)|Megatron X's]] reality, the tyrant shot his universe's Optimus Prime with his fusion cannon and subsequently seized the Matrix of Leadership for himself. {{storylink|The Other One}}
*''War for Cybertron Trilogy'' cartoon:
**[[Bug Bite (G1)|Bug Bite]] and [[Exhaust]] are shot by [[Cog (G1)|Cog]] (Bug Bite in the chest and Exhaust in the head) and left adrift in space. {{storylink|Earthrise episode 6}}
**[[Barricade (IDW)|Barricade]] is possibly killed by a shot from [[Optimus Prime (G1)|Optimus Prime]], since he never appears again and one of the AllSpark ghosts uses his character model. {{storylink|Kingdom episode 2}} {{storylink|Kingdom episode 6}}
* ''Last Bot Standing'': [[Sharpclaw]] dies after [[Steel Jaw|Steeljaw]] shoots her in the back. {{storylink|Last Bot Standing issue 4}}
{{-}}


===Big explosions===
There is little consistency in what can kill a Transformer—sometimes it take a single, well-placed shot, while in other stories the total annihilation of a Transformer's physical body still won't do the trick. Across the [[multiverse]], different Transformers have survived being blasted, roasted, melted, disintegrated, and even ''eaten''; even the very concept of destroying a spark varies quite a bit in its details from story to story, character to character, and series to series. Many modern works of ''Transformers'' fiction have explained or implied that Cybertronians are ''extremely'' difficult to kill: their durable mechanical bodies and extraterrestrial construction allows them to survive attacks that would kill or incapacitate lesser beings.
{{bigquote|They're going to blow us all to pieces! [[Guardian (Marvel)|Guardian]]'s booby-trapped - packed with enough explosives to level this whole mountain!|[[Prowl (G1)|Prowl]], "[[The Wrath of Grimlock!]]"}}


[[File:Afterdeath-gameoverman.jpg|upright=1.1|thumb|"[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gw98ARXfcqk You are dead, dead, DEAAD!]"]]
Below are some of the most common causes of death that have befallen unfortunate Cybertronians across the ''Transformers'' mythos. This is not an exhaustive list-the ''Transformers'' franchise is too large to try to catalogue every single fatality, and a creative writer can come up with dozens of bizarre ways to kill off their characters. Furthermore, just how durable Cybertronians are vary greatly across different dimensions; what is immediately fatal in one story is but a minor inconvenience in another.
Transformers characters often assume that explosions are more lethal than they really are; characters survive explosions all the time. An explosion's messy nature makes a good "out" for a writer to fake a character's death. {{storylink|The Wrath of Grimlock!}} {{storylink|Gone but Not Forgotten!}} {{storylink|The Agenda (Part 2)}} Nevertheless, a few characters have been permanently killed by explosions. (This list omits characters who exploded from within, like Ultra Magnus up above.)
{{--}}
*In the Marvel comics:
**[[Straxus (G1)|Straxus]] is the victim of an interdimensionally triggered explosion that destroys his body. {{storylink|The Bridge to Nowhere!}} However, in the UK continuity he survives as a raggedy, bodiless head. {{storylink|...The Harder They Die!}}
**In an alternate future, a wounded [[Inferno (G1)|Inferno]] dies in the fiery explosion of a crashing shuttlecraft. {{storylink|The Legacy of Unicron!}}
**[[Roadbuster (G1)|Roadbuster]] is killed when a prototype [[pathblaster]] exploded in his face. {{storylink|Time Wars}}
**[[Finback]] is presumably killed in the explosion of a huge gun battery. [[Misfire (G1)|Misfire]] tried to warn him off, and may have been killed in the same explosion. {{storylink|On the Edge of Extinction!}}
**[[Octane]] may have been killed when he was fired upon while carrying highly explosive fuel. {{storylink|Manoeuvres!}}
*''Beast Wars'' cartoon:
**[[Optimus Primal (BW)/Beast Wars cartoon continuity|Optimus Primal]] is blown to bits — terminally so — by the [[unspace|transwarp]] explosion that destroyed the [[Planet Buster]]. {{storylink|Other Voices, Part 2}}
**[[Depth Charge (BW)|Depth Charge]] is killed by the explosion that resulted from [[Rampage (BW)|Rampage]]'s death (either his exploding spark, or the exploding energon shard that pierced it.) {{storylink|Nemesis Part 1}}
*Several of the [[Beast Era]] [[Wrecker]]s ([[Sonar (BW)|Sonar]], [[Spittor (BW)|Spittor]], the [[Deployer (BM)|Deployers]]) are destroyed when part of their ship explodes with them in it. {{storylink|Betrayal}}
*Energon: [[Bruticus Maximus (Energon)|Bruticus Maximus]] is killed when Storm Jet causes a massive explosion that engulfs them both.
*''Prime'':
**[[Makeshift (Prime)|Makeshift]] and the surrounding [[Vehicon (Prime)|Vehicon]]s are blown up by a grenade attached by the Autobots. Both the Vehicons and Makeshift are killed in the blast. {{storylink|Con Job}} <ref>(According to an interview at [[BotCon 2011]] with the ''Prime'' show runners, Makeshift was deemed too overpowered to be a regular in the show, so they killed him off at the end of the episode.)</ref>
** [[Hardshell]] is killed by [[Miko Nakadai|Miko]] when she fires two missiles at him, blowing him up. {{storylink|Hurt}}
*''Movie Continuty'':
**[[Long Haul (ROTF)|Long Haul]], [[Scrapper (ROTF)|Scrapper]], and several Decepticon Protoforms are killed by a human air strike in [[Egypt]]. {{storylink|Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (film)|Revenge of the Fallen}}
**[[Crankcase (DOTM)|Crankcase]] blows up when Ironhide kicks him into a gas station. {{storylink|Transformers: Dark of the Moon (film)|Dark of the Moon}}
**[[Blitzwing (BB)|Blitzwing]] gets blown to bits when Bumblebee shoves his own missile into his chest and detonates it. {{storylink|Bumblebee (film)|Bumblebee}}
*''War for Cybertron Trilogy'' cartoon: [[Elita One (G1)|Elita-1]], [[Jetfire (G1)|Jetfire]], [[Chromia (G1)|Chromia]], [[Red Alert (G1)|Red Alert]], [[Scrapface]], and possibly [[Shockwave (G1)|Shockwave]] are caught in the explosion that destroys [[Kaon (polity)|Kaon Arena]]. {{storylink|Earthrise episode 6}}
*IDW ''Beast Wars'' (2021): [[Razorbeast]] is dropped by [[Terrorsaur (BW)|Terrorsaur]] into a mountain of raw energon crystals, which triggers an explosion that destroys him. {{storylink|Maximals Strike Back, Part 2}}
*''Last Bot Standing'': When [[Hot Rod (G1)|Rodimus]] attempted to force [[Strongarm (G1)|Strongarm]] to land the shuttle she was piloting, he accidentally sent her to her doom in a fiery crash. {{storylink|Last Bot Standing issue 3}}


===Impact trauma===
===Weaponsfire===
Falling off a cliff or mountainside or tall building is usually just as fatal to Transformers as it is to, say... Wile E. Coyote. Only on rare occasion does it result in death:
*''[[Transformers: Classics|Classics]]'' continuity: [[Hacksaw]] meets his end by falling from a huge communications tower. {{storylink|The New World}}
*[[2005 IDW continuity]]:
** [[Doubledealer]] is shot, falls off a mountain and smashed to bits on impact. {{storylink|Spotlight: Doubledealer}}
** [[Sentinel Prime (G1)|Infinitus]] gets knocked down a very big hole by [[Beak]] and dies. {{storylink|Last Light (issue)|Last Light}}
*Movie continuity:
**[[Devastator (ROTF)|Devastator]] falls off the [[Great Pyramid of Giza]] after a [[rail gun]] blows his arm apart. He tumbles back down the monument and collapses as he dies. {{storylink|Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (film)|Revenge of the Fallen}}
**[[Barricade (Movie)|Barricade]] is smashed to pieces and killed by being flung into a freeway column. {{storylink|Movie Adaptation issue 4|Movie Adaptation Issue Number Four}}
**[[Hatchet (DOTM)|Hatchet]] meets his end when [[Dino]] sends him crashing into a car. {{storylink|Transformers: Dark of the Moon (film)|Dark of the Moon}}
*The [[Beast (G1)|Beast]] falls off a cliff and shatters. {{storylink|The Beast Within Part 2, Consequences}} At least, we hope that's where and how it ended.
*''[[Transformers: Prime (cartoon)|Prime]]'':
**[[Skyquake (Prime)|Skyquake]] crash-lands after [[Bumblebee (WFC)|Bumblebee]] punches out vital components in his [[alternate mode]], reducing his body to a partially transformed scrapheap. {{storylink|Masters & Students}}
**One of two [[Vehicon (Prime)|Vehicons]] thrown off the ''[[Trypticon (WFC)|Nemesis]]'' by [[Megatron (Prime)|Megatron]] to pursue [[Smokescreen (Prime)|Smokescreen]] ends up falling to his death due to lacking a jet mode. {{storylink|Inside Job}}
*''[[Transformers: Last Bot Standing|Last Bot Standing]]'': [[Gripper (G1)|Gripper]] met his end when he fell off a cliff and slowly bled out. {{storylink|Last Bot Standing issue 3}}


===Disassembly===
[[File:EnemyOfMyEnemyPart4-Ravagedies.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4]]
[[File:Jazz DyingAction.jpg|upright=1.1|thumb|"HERE'S what I think of your resemblance to your G1 counterpart!"]]
Taking a Transformer apart into its component parts - or ripping them to pieces - can occasionally kill them:
*Marvel comics:
**[[Bludgeon (G1)|Bludgeon]] meets this fate in an alternate future, when [[Swoop (G1)/Marvel Comics continuity|Swoop]] uses a [[repair spider]] to pull him apart into his component pieces. {{storylink|Another Time & Place}}
**A future version of [[Ultra Magnus (G1)/Marvel Comics continuity|Ultra Magnus]] may have been killed when a group of Decepticons mobbed him and ripped him up. {{storylink|Time Wars}}
[[File:DOTM-Shockwavedeath.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|''That's'' for screwing up our continuity!]]
*Movie continuity:
** [[Megatron (Movie)|Megatron]] kills [[Jazz (Movie)|Jazz]] by ripping him in half. {{storylink|Transformers (film)|Transformers}}
**The Wreckers gang up on a Decepticon pilot and tear him apart.
**Optimus tears [[Shockwave (Movie)|Shockwave]]'s optic from his damaged head. {{storylink|Transformers: Dark of the Moon (film)|Dark of the Moon}}
**[[Dropkick (Movie)|Dropkick]] gets torn apart by a chain wielded by Bumblebee. {{storylink|Bumblebee (film)|Bumblebee}}
*[[2005 IDW continuity]]:
**[[Pyro (G1)|Pyro]] is torn apart and killed while making a final stand against a mass of generic Decepticons. {{storylink|Last Stand of the Wreckers issue 5|Last Stand of the Wreckers #5}}
**[[Atomizer]] died when [[Getaway]] tore him apart. {{storylink|The Plotters' Club (Part 3): Journey's End|Journey's End}}
*''Prime'' cartoon:
**When fighting [[Megatron (WFC)|Megatron]]'s [[zombie]] army, [[Ratchet (WFC)|Ratchet]] recommends dissection to [[Optimus Prime (WFC)|Optimus]] to "cut" them down to size. How this is more effective then just blasting the living slag out of them is still up for debate. {{storylink|Darkness Rising, Part 4}}
**[[Airachnid (Prime)|Airachnid]] manages to offline [[Breakdown (WFC)|Breakdown]] by tearing him limb from limb, leaving only a pile of mutilated body parts in her wake. {{storylink|Crossfire (Prime)|Crossfire}}
*''War for Cybertron Trilogy'' cartoon: [[Moonracer (G1)|Moonracer]] is dismembered by the [[Sparkless]] before dying in Optimus's arms. {{storylink|Siege episode 6|Episode 6}}
*''Shattered Glass'' (IDW): [[Sixshot (SG)|Sixshot]] winds up being dismembered by [[Blurr (SG)|Blurr]]. {{storylink|Shattered Glass issue 1}}


====Bifurcation====
Most ''Transformers'' stories feature at least some degree of conflict between different groups of Cybertronians, who often resolve these interpersonal problems by repeatedly shooting at each other. Transformer weapons can be kinetic, energy-based, or even chemical in nature; in different ''Transformers'' stories, all three forms of weaponry have killed characters, even though the actual damage threshold of the average Cybertronian can be frustratingly inconsistent.
[[File:VictoryUKAnnual.JPG|thumb|upright=0.85|"Shakkooosh!" is good, but I could really go for a good old-fashioned "CHUK" right about now.]]
{{bigquote|I have no desire to be carved up into Auto-sushi.|Tracks, "[[Make Tracks]]"}}
A particular subset of disassembly, getting chopped in half is pretty graphic for a kids' story, even one about robots, so it doesn't happen very often.
*Marvel comics: In a dream sequence, [[Grimlock (G1)/Marvel Comics continuity|Grimlock]] slices [[Megatron (G1)/Marvel Comics continuity|Megatron]] in half, killing him. {{storylink|Victory!}}
*Japanese G1 cartoon: [[Predaking (G1)|Predaking]] gets sliced in half by Dai Atlas. The strike dissects what appears to be an organic brain in his head. {{storylink|Enter the New Supreme Commander, Dai Atlas!}}
*''Beast Wars Metals'': Terrorsaur is killed by being sliced in half by Primal's mace. {{storylink|Beast Wars Metals issue 1|Beast Wars Metals #1}}
*Movie continuity:
**[[Sideways (ROTF)|Sideways]] dies when [[Sideswipe (Movie)|Sideswipe]] slices his car mode in two.
**[[Ravage (ROTF)|Ravage]] dies when Bumblebee yanks his spine out, tearing him apart.
**[[Jetfire (Movie)|Jetfire]] slices [[Mixmaster (ROTF)|Mixmaster]] in half at the chest but Mixmaster survived this. Getting his skull stomped off, not so much. {{storylink|Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (film)|Revenge of the Fallen}}
**[[Lockdown (ROTF)|Lockdown]] meets his end in this manner courtesy of Optimus Prime. {{storylink|Transformers: Age of Extinction (film)|Age of Extinction}}
**[[Cliffjumper (Movie)|Cliffjumper]] gets vertically bisected by Dropkick. {{storylink|Bumblebee (film)|Bumblebee}}
*''War For Cybertron'': In the opening, a Decepticon goon is chopped in half by Optimus Prime.
*[[2005 IDW continuity]]: [[Ambulon]] is chainsawed in half ''vertically'' by [[Pharma (G1)|Pharma]]. {{storylink|Remain in Light 3 of 5: The Divided Self|The Divided Self}} ([[Ratchet (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Ratchet]] specifically noted that ''horizontal'' bifurcation would be survivable - indeed, not much later, [[Megatron (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Megatron]] would be quite active after being ripped apart at the waist by [[Galvatron (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Galvatron]]. {{storylink|Finest Hour: Dark Cybertron Chapter 5}})
*[[Ravage (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Ravage]] later briefly survives being torn in half by [[Tarn (G1)|Tarn]], {{storylink|The Dying of the Light Part 5: Rage, Rage|Rage, Rage}} before succumbing to his wounds. {{storylink|The Dying of the Light Part 6: Do Not Go Gentle|Do Not Go Gentle}}
*When [[Gozer]] attacked Cybertron, it tore [[Devastator (G1)|Devastator]] in half, lengthways. {{storylink|Ghosts of Cybertron Part 2}}
{{-}}


===Crushing===
Sometimes, it takes a hail of bullets to take a sufficiently motivated Cybertronian out of commission; in other stories, a single shot aimed at a specific weak point, such as the [[spark]] core or the [[brain module]], can permanently kill a Transformer. Sometimes, Cybertronians are even vulnerable to [[human]] firearms; notably, in the [[Transformers (film)|first live-action film]] and its ancillary media, it's specifically noted that the film's Cybertronian characters are vulnerable to the United States military's {{w|Armour-piercing discarding sabot|high-heat sabot rounds}}, as the 6,000 degree magnesium burn can easily punch through their regenerative [[living metal]].<ref>''[[Transformers (film)|Transformers]]''</ref>
[[File:Edgeofextinction-hardheadbombburst.jpg|thumb|DO NOT WANT]]
{{--}}
Quite a few characters have been crushed into deactivation:
*In the Marvel comics:
**[[Highbrow (G1)|Highbrow]] is smashed between [[Unicron/Generation 1|Unicron]]'s palms, while [[Bomb-Burst (G1)|Bomb-Burst]] and [[Hardhead (G1)|Hardhead]] meet a similar fate when Unicron steps on them. {{storylink|On the Edge of Extinction!}}
**[[Inferno (G1)|Inferno]] is apparently killed when a very large building collapses on top of him. {{storylink|Escalation!}}
*[[Unicron Trilogy]] cartoons:
**[[Thrust (Armada)|Thrust]] is killed when caught between two folding sections of Unicron's external armor. {{storylink|Union}}
**[[Shockblast]] is crushed by Unicron's hand on [[Blizzard Planet]]. {{storylink|The Power of Unicron}}
**His brother [[Six Shot (Energon)|Six Shot]] meets a similar fate, crushed under the heel of a super-sized Galvatron. {{storylink|Galvatron Terror}}
[[File:ROTF Scorponok death.jpg|thumb|]]
*IDW continuity:
**[[Thrust (G1)|Thrust]] is killed when a group of [[human]] police officers set fire to a building and let it collapse on him, crushing him.
**The luckless [[Pipes (G1)|Pipes]] dies after [[Overlord (G1)|Overlord]] stomps on him repeatedly, causing enough damage that his Spark falls out.
*Movie continuity:
**[[Dispensor]] is crushed under [[Ratchet (Movie)|Ratchet]]'s foot. {{storylink|Alliance issue 1|Alliance #1}}
**[[Scorponok (Movie)|Scorponok]]'s head is crushed by [[Jetfire (Movie)|Jetfire]]'s ''bare fist''. {{storylink|Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (film)|Revenge of the Fallen}}
**[[Shatter]] is crushed by a tanker ship that crashes into a dock. {{storylink|Bumblebee (film)|Bumblebee}}
*''Last Bot Standing'': [[Hot Rod (G1)|Rodimus]] kills [[Vex]] and [[Treadshock (G1)|Treadshock]] by crushing their heads, using his bare feet for the former and a really big rock for the latter. {{storylink|Last Bot Standing issue 3}}
*''Shattered Glass'' (IDW): [[Goldbug (SG)|Goldbug]] is crushed underfoot by [[Jetfire (SG)|Jetfire]]. {{storylink|Shattered Glass II issue 3}}


===Melting===
===Explosions===
[[File:BW Scorponok Terrorsaur deaths.jpg|thumb|Even having a new toy couldn't save Terrorsaur!]]
[[File:Fallout title.jpg|thumb|Primal's diet had gone horribly wrong.]]
They're made of [[living metal|metal]]; therefore, with enough heat or sufficiently acidic material, they can melt. This is one of the more fool-proof methods of killing a Transformer; few, if any, have survived it.
*In the G1 cartoon:
**An acid vat would apparently have been enough to destroy Optimus Prime. {{storylink|The Search for Alpha Trion}}
**Another acid vat is used to disintegrate living victims of Unicron. {{storylink|The Transformers: The Movie}}
*In the Marvel comics:
**Victims of the Decepticon [[smelting pool]]s on Cybertron are reduced by intense heat into their base metals, including [[Scrounge (G1)|Scrounge]]. {{storylink|The Smelting Pool!}}
**It is possible that an acid bath from (naturally) [[Blot (G1)|Blot]] offlined [[Tracks (G1)|Tracks]] [[Makin' Tracks!|(for a while anyway)]]. {{storylink|Dark Star}}
**[[Scorponok (G1)|Scorponok]] is partially melted by Unicron's flame-breath and subsequently dies. {{storylink|On the Edge of Extinction!}}
**The [[Cybertronian (faction)|Cybertronians]] use some kind of acid to rather messily eradicate some of their Decepticon ancestors, including [[Stranglehold]]. {{storylink|New Dawn}}
*In the Beast Era cartoons:
**[[Terrorsaur (BW)|Terrorsaur]] and [[Scorponok (BW)|Scorponok]] are apparently melted to death after tumbling into a lava pit within the [[Darksyde (BW)|Predacon base]]. {{storylink|Aftermath}}
**Optimus Primal's body is seemingly melted into the floor after his climactic face-off with [[Megatron (BW)/Beast Wars cartoon continuity|Megatron]]. Considering how many god-like forces were unleashed and conflicting during the battle, his demise may be due to more than simple temperature-induced melting. {{storylink|Fallout (episode)|Fallout}}
*According to [[G.B. Blackrock|Garrison Blackrock]], the [[living metal]] that constitutes Cybertronian biology can be broken down using a cocktail of complicated polymers such as [[w:polyhydroxybutyrate|polyhydroxybutyrate]]; the process — one assumes — proving fatal to the Transformer in question. {{storylink|Conquerors Part 1: Aphelion|Aphelion}}
*''Cyberverse'' cartoon: [[Drift (Cyberverse)|Drift]] is implied to have been melted by toxic Energon waste, as [[Hot Rod (Cyberverse)|Hot Rod]] barely survived the experience. {{storylink|Battle For Cybertron III}} {{storylink|The Dead End}}
*''Shattered Glass'' (IDW): Blurr is tricked by [[Starscream (SG)|Starscream]] into running straight into a flow of molten metal, which melts him into a statue-like state. {{storylink|Shattered Glass issue 1}}


===Disintegration===
[[File:Dirge DeathArmada.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4|Dirge learns the hard way not to overdo the propane at his Fourth of July cookout.]]
{{bigquote|I saw the end! They died in a cosmic funeral pyre!|[[Shawn Berger]], "[[Megatron's Master Plan, Part 2]]"}}


[[File:Schismatic-KupDies.jpg|thumb|"Ironhide, I don't feel so good..."]]
Cybertronians are durable. ''How'' durable generally depends on both the universe and the needs of the story, but multiple stories have revealed or implied that Cybertronians can survive the low-yield explosions released by conventional armaments. However, Cybertronian warfare is anything ''but'' conventional, and as a result various Cybertronians have found themselves at ground zero of explosions they can't so readily withstand—across the multiverse, these have included high-powered missiles, exotic materials like [[energon crystal]]s, unusual forms of energy like [[unspace|transwarp]], exploding starships, and the extreme heat and pressure released by [[nuclear weapon]]s. In some cases, a weapon might overload the spark or ignite the Transformer's internal [[energon]] supplies, and the resultant explosion may very well blow the unlucky Transformer apart from within.


Plasma, energy fields, and stellar atmospheres can all utterly destroy a Transformer's body. Like being melted, being reduced to one's component molecules would seem to be a surefire way of getting killed, but quite a few characters seem able to survive the process as [[ghost]]s and/or disembodied sparks:
Compared to most other forms of death, explosions are comparatively quick and can obscure what would otherwise be a graphic death scene. On top of this, a single explosion can quickly remove many characters from a story, making them a perennially popular choice for the discerning ''Transformers'' author who needs to quickly clear the deck. Additionally, the messy, imprecise nature of explosions makes a good "out" for a writer to fake a character's death, or for a later creator to [[retcon]] their survival.
*Generation 1 cartoon: [[Starscream (G1)/Generation 1 cartoon continuity|Starscream]]'s spectacular death at the hands of [[Galvatron (G1)/Generation 1 cartoon continuity|Galvatron]] might be categorized as incineration. {{storylink|The Transformers: The Movie}}
{{--}}
*Quite a few characters met this fate in the Unicron Trilogy, but all survived it in some fashion:
**[[Megatron (Armada)/Cartoon continuity|Megatron]]'s spark persisted within his burnt-out body when he was dropped into the exploding Unicron. {{storylink|Mortal Combat}} {{storylink|Megatron Resurrected}}
**[[Demolishor (Armada)|Demolishor]]'s body was obliterated by an expanding [[Energon grid (technology)|energon grid]], but his spark survived the process and was placed in a new body. {{storylink|Go for Unicron!}}
**[[Inferno (Energon)|Inferno]] was destroyed when he threw himself into a star, but his spark was salvaged by the Autobots and, again, placed in a new body. {{storylink|Farewell Inferno}}
**And finally, Megatron (Galvatron, whatever) threw himself into Primus's new energon sun to prevent Unicron from possessing him, killing himself yet again. {{storylink|The Sun}} This death was so inconsequential that his subsequent resurrection wasn't even explained! {{storylink|Fallen (episode)|Fallen}}
**Megatron was disintegrated ''again'', {{storylink|Cybertron (episode)|Cybertron}} before he returned to life thanks to unholy powers of the [[Armor of Unicron]]. {{storylink|Darkness (episode)|Darkness}} After being stabbed through the Spark by [[Rhisling]], his body disintegrated as he passed on into the next life. {{storylink|Unfinished}}
*[[Cosmic Rust (disease)|Cosmic Rust]] causes a Transformer's body to disintegrate to nothing:
**The [[Thirteenth Legion]] died of Cosmic Rust. {{storylink|Cosmic Rust (episode)|Cosmic Rust}}
**[[Ironhide (Movie)|Ironhide]] dies after several shots from [[Sentinel Prime (ROTF)|Sentinel]]'s Cosmic Rust Blaster, though the big hole they left in his torso couldn't have helped much either. {{storylink|Transformers: Dark of the Moon (film)|Dark of the Moon}}
**Exposure to even a single [[Nervous bot|carrier]] of the disease has been known to wipe out entire planets. [[Blurr (Cyberverse)|Blurr]] was one of its victims, along with the rest of [[Velocitron]]. {{storylink|Terminal Velocity}}
*In the [[2005 IDW continuity]], [[magic]] is one of the few things that can reliably wound or kill a Transformer; the energies unleashed are anathema to mechanical life, and Transformers exposed to such power soon begin to crumble and die. Casualties of this method include [[Kup (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Kup]] {{storylink|Schismatic}} and [[Quickswitch]]. {{storylink|Good Men}}


===Consumption===
===Head trauma===
{{bigquote|...If we don't find the Matrix, some bad guy's gonna ''eat'' us! Right?|Longtooth, "[[Deadly Obsession]]"}}
[[File:The End of the Visitor - Last Bot Standing 1 copy.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4]]


[[File:Wreckers Mutants.jpg|upright=1.1|thumb|The shocking death of the barely-seen guys with hardly any lines!]]
In the early days of the ''Transformers'' franchise, most prominently in the [[The Transformers (Marvel comic)|Marvel comic]], a Transformer's life force was synonymous with the [[brain module]], and destroying this module would kill the Transformer. With the rise of the ''[[Beast Wars: Transformers (cartoon)|Beast Wars]]'' television show, this premise was eventually modified to incorporate the more esoteric mythology surrounding [[spark]]s, but the concept of killing a Transformer by destroying or removing their head remains a ever-popular means of killing characters in older-skewing works of ''Transformers'' fiction.
[[File:Rocky mecannibal bartender marvel uk 240.jpg|upright=1.1|thumb|Cannibalism is hilarious, kids!]]
[[File:TFTM Unicron Digestion.jpg|upright=1.1|thumb]]
Getting eaten is essentially being torn apart, crushed, and melted all in a row, and it's usually fatal. Quite a few critters in the multiverse are equipped to devour giant robots:
*In the G1 cartoon:
**Various life forms are routinely devoured by the [[Sharkticon (species)|Sharkticon]]s on Quintessa. These include [[Kranix (G1)|Kranix]], a mechanical life form, though not a Transformer. [[Kup (G1)/Generation 1 cartoon continuity|Kup]] and [[Hot Rod (G1)/Generation 1 cartoon continuity|Hot Rod]] would have suffered this fate as well, but fought their way free. {{storylink|The Transformers: The Movie}}
**Quite a few Transformers found their way into Unicron's gullet, though many survived the experience. {{storylink|The Transformers: The Movie}}
*In the Marvel comic:
**[[Scraplet]]s are a mechanical disease - tiny robots that fed on Transformers. A hapless freighter pilot dies after being infected, and quite a few other 'bots only narrowly survived being infected. {{storylink|Crater Critters}}
**[[Galvatron (G1)|Galvatron]] being torn apart by and dragged into the [[time rift]] could be classified as consumption. {{storylink|Time Wars}}
**The [[Mecannibal]]s eat robots routinely, including quite a few Transformers during their sojourn on [[Cybertron (planet)|Cybertron]]. {{storylink|All the Familiar Faces!}} {{storylink|Out to Lunch!}} There is some indication that they can actually reconstitute their victims from their "recycled" parts, though this is never explicitly shown. {{storylink|Recipe for Disaster!}}
**Unicron skewers [[Brainstorm (G1)|Brainstorm]] and eats him. {{storylink|On the Edge of Extinction!}}
**The subsurface-dwelling [[demon]]s devour [[Runabout (G1)|Runabout]]. {{storylink|On the Edge of Extinction!}}
**The Swarm "devours" innumerable Cybertronians and a handful of older-generation Transformers as well, though this is through a molecular process almost akin to incineration. {{storylink|Swarm (issue)|Swarm}} {{storylink|Total War!}} {{storylink|A Rage in Heaven!}}
*The Sharkticons kill two of the [[Mutant (BW)|Mutants]] by gobbling them up. Or ripping them apart. Or both. We don't really know. {{storylink|Betrayal}}
*[[Flanker]] is eaten up and killed by the [[Insecticon (G1)|"Deluxe" Insecticons]].
*In the live-action films:
**[[Grimlock (AOE)|Grimlock]] and [[Scorn]] eat various [[KSI Sentry|KSI Sentries]] and at least one [[KSI Boss]] {{storylink|Transformers: Age of Extinction (film)|Age of Extinction}}
**Grimlock also made a snack out of [[Dreadbot]]. {{storylink|Transformers: The Last Knight (film)|The Last Knight}}


===Decapitation===
Different works of fiction have offered varying interpretations on whether or not one can safely remove a Transformer's head. In some works of fiction, notably some Marvel-era stories and the [[Transformers Animated (cartoon)|''Animated'' cartoon]], characters can survive as severed heads; in others, removing one's head is immediately fatal. In the [[letters page]] to [[Time Wars|issue #202]], [[Dreadwind (G1)|Dreadwind]] addresses this discrepancy by noting that the Cybertronians of his reality ''can'' voluntarily detach their heads, but merely yanking it off without safely deactivating the relevant neural connections is usually fatal.<ref> From the letters page of [[Time Wars|Marvel UK issue #202]]: "It's all a matter of how you remove your head. You see, even I - unh, there it goes - can take my head off. It's all a matter of how you do it. There's a whole set of mental commands that disconnect nerve endings and the like. If you just rip it off, fuel lines, neural connections and other vital bits are severed, as in the case of Cyclonus. Nine times out of ten it's fatal."</ref> Most other works of Transformer fiction generally agree that, even if a the character can survive as a severed head, attacking the brain module itself—be it a shot through the head or the outright destruction of the relevant hardware—will kill, or at the very least severely injure, a Transformer. In the universe of the live-action ''Transformers'' film, this appears to be the definitive way of killing one's foe.
{{main|Decapitation}}
{{--}}


[[File:Cyclonus death.jpg|thumb|upright=0.85|Ahhhh, there we go...]]
===Bodily harm===
[[File:WarWorldPrime-SentinelDies.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4]]


Sometimes cutting a Transformer's head off is fatal. Sometimes!
Much like a human body, Transformer physiology can be viewed as an elaborate life support system that protects a few critical failure points—if their physical form is compromised, then the risk of death dramatically increases. Transformers can endure truly harrowing amounts of physical trauma, shrug off the loss of their limbs, and piece themselves back together from all but the most debilitating injuries, but most Cybertronians ''do'' have an upper limit on just how badly their bodies can be damaged before vital systems fail. In some instances, the impact trauma incurred by plummeting from a great height can do the trick: more than one unwary Cybertronian has met their end by plummeting off a high structure or suffering critical damage while in an airborne [[alternate mode]] before dashing themselves to pieces upon hitting the ground.
*In the Marvel comics:
**The Megatron clone kills Cyclonus by ripping his head off. {{storylink|Dry Run!}}
**Several of the Wreckers are destroyed by having their heads ripped or blasted off, including Twin Twist and Topspin, respectively. {{storylink|Time Wars}}
**[[Razorclaw (G1)|Razorclaw]] has his head cut off by a propeller fired by [[Leadfoot (G2)|Leadfoot]], presumably (given the ''Generation 2'' book's emphasis on body count) killing him. {{storylink|A Rage in Heaven!}}
*In the movie continuity:
**Characters frequently die by decapitation of some form: [[Bonecrusher (Movie)|Bonecrusher]], {{storylink|Transformers (film)|Transformers}} and [[Grindor (ROTF)|Grindor]] {{storylink|Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (film)|Revenge of the Fallen}} are particularly notable examples. [[Optimus Prime (Movie)|Optimus Prime]] LOVES doing this.
**Decapitation is a mere inconvenience for [[Frenzy (Movie)|Frenzy]] the first time. The second time, when the blow actually destroys most of his head, proves fatal.
**[[Megatron (Movie)|Megatron]] is decapitated in the third movie. [[Wheeljack (Movie)|Que]] and [[Ironhide (Movie)|Ironhide]]'s heads fall off when they die, possibly to add finality to their demises. {{storylink|Transformers: Dark of the Moon (film)|Dark of the Moon}}
**[[Onslaught (ROTF)|Onslaught]] met his end after losing his head to [[Drift (AOE)|Drift]]'s sword. {{storylink|Transformers: The Last Knight (film)|The Last Knight}}
*2005 IDW continuity: The heads of [[Springarm]] and [[Wheelarch]] are removed and then mockingly put on display to creep out [[Optimus Prime (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Orion Pax]]. {{storylink|Chaos Theory Part 2}}
*In the Aligned continuity, Vehicons and Insecticons are frequently murdered by decapitation.
*2019 IDW continuity: [[Quake (G1)|Quake]] loses his head and his spark to [[Bumblebee (G1)|Bumblebee]]. {{storylink|Rise of the Decepticons: Prisoners|Prisoners}}
*''Shattered Glass'' (IDW): [[Skywarp (SG)|Skywarp]] is decapitated by Goldbug when attempting to infiltrate his fortress. {{storylink|Shattered Glass issue 4}}
*''Last Bot Standing'': [[Nitro (IDW)|Nitro]] dies when [[Hot Rod (G1)|Rodimus]] rips his head off. {{storylink|Last Bot Standing issue 1}}


===Destruction of brain===
Other Cybertronians have been crushed to death—although their metallic armor can withstand a certain amount of excess pounds per square inch, few Cybertronians can survive being trampled by towering [[combiner]]s or planet-sized monsters like [[Unicron]]. Ripping a Transformer to pieces or deliberately removing vital parts such as the [[spark]] core can prove fatal: Cybertronians can survive losing extremities and even entire limbs, but not even they can survive wholesale damage. One alarmingly common way of putting a Transformer down for good is to simply rip them in half. While many Cybertronians can withstand a horizontal bisection that severs their torso from their legs, no Transformer can survive a ''vertical'' cut that destroys multiple vital components in one clean motion. Their robotic natures, combined with the inherent dehumanization of watching brightly colored space robots fight it out, mean that ''Transformers'' stories can feature a comparatively high level of violence and physical peril than other shows aimed at the same age group. That said, this kind of violence is usually beyond the pale for even the edgiest of kid's shows, so these kinds of actions are ''generally'' reserved for more adult-focused ''Transformers'' media; cartoons might ''imply'' a fatal dissection or dismemberment, but the actual deed is rarely shown on-screen.
{{bigquote|Next strike in the neural cluster, yes? Weakest spot on ''all'' Transformers...|[[Death's Head (G1)|Death's Head]], "[[Fire on High!]]"}}
{{--}}
[[File:K-PLUTCH.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|Roadbuster has spiders on the brain.]]
In the early days of the franchise, a Transformer's life force was sometimes understood to be entirely contained within their [[brain module]], most prominently in the Marvel comics. Destroying the brain would kill the Transformer. This premise was eventually modified to incorporate the more esoteric concept of [[spark]]s.
*In the Marvel comics:
**In an alternate future, [[Shockwave (G1)/Marvel Comics continuity|Shockwave]] is blasted by [[Death's Head (G1)|Death's Head]], who kills him by extracting and crushing his brain module. {{storylink|The Legacy of Unicron!}}
**The [[Throttlebot]]s ''avoid'' death by having their brain modules removed from their bodies shortly before their bodies are destroyed (by crushing). {{storylink|Toy Soldiers!}}
**[[Fangry (G1)|Fangry]] has his head crushed under a large rock when the Autobots raid [[Hydrus Four]]. {{storylink|Another Time & Place}}
*Movie continuity:
**Optimus rips Grindor's head apart with two hooks. {{storylink|Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (film)|Revenge of the Fallen}}
**[[Soundwave (ROTF)|Soundwave]], [[Laserbeak (DOTM)|Laserbeak]], and [[Starscream (Movie)|Starscream]]'s heads are blown to bits by explosives or other weapons.
**Optimus Prime kills Sentinel Prime by shooting him in the head with Megatron's shotgun. {{storylink|Transformers: Dark of the Moon (film)|Dark of the Moon}}
**[[Nitro Zeus]] dies when his head gets blown off by Bumblebee. {{storylink|Transformers: The Last Knight (film)|The Last Knight}}
[[File:DOTM-Soundwavedeath.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|How exactly is [[Kinetic Solutions Incorporated|KSI]] supposed to download his brain when there's no brain left?]]
*In the 2005 IDW continuity, the brain module is part of [[Rossum's Trinity]] and its destruction will cause the destruction of both the spark and the [[transformation cog]], killing the Cybertronian in question:
**[[Overlord (G1)|Overlord]] blasts [[Rotorstorm (G1)|Rotorstorm]] right in the head, destroying his brain module. {{storylink|Last Stand of the Wreckers issue 4}}
**Impactor kills [[Snare]] by crushing his brain module. {{storylink|Last Stand of the Wreckers issue 4}}
**[[Squadron X]] are all shot in the head. {{storylink|Last Stand of the Wreckers issue 4}}
**In the [[Functionist Universe]], every Cybertronian possesses an [[obsolescence chip]] that can be remotely detonated, destroying their heads. [[Rewind (G1)|Rewind]] and all other Cybertronians with [[data slug]] alt-modes are killed in a [[mass recall]]. {{storylink|The Custom-Made Now - An Elegant Chaos Prologue|The Custom-Made Now}}
**[[Trailbreaker (G1)|Trailbreaker]] dies when [[Kaon (G1)|Kaon]] smashes his brain module against his own forcefield. {{storylink|Births, Deaths, and Interventions}}
**[[Tarantulas (BW)|Tarantulas]] uses his [[size changing]] powers to blow open [[Roadbuster (G1)|Roadbuster]]'s head from the inside out. {{storylink|Sins of the Wreckers issue 4}}
**[[Oiler]] has his head sliced in two by a [[Junkion (species)|Junkion]]. {{storylink|New Cybertron Part 5: Future Glories Lost|Future Glories Lost}}
**Kup exploits [[Razorclaw (G1)|Razorclaw]]'s "secret weakness" to defeat him... shooting him in the head and blowing his cranium to bits. (Kup points out that it's most people's secret weakness.) {{storylink|The Iron Klaw}}
**[[Adaptus]] met his end when [[Solomus]] drilled directly into his brain. {{storylink|Crucible (Part 5): The Unremembering|The Unremembering}}
*''Beast Wars: Uprising'': The [[Resistance]] use a device to short-circuit the remnants of [[Cerebros (G1)|Cerebros]]'s consciousness, frying the [[Cyberdroid]]s that contain his tripartite brain. {{storylink|Head Games}}
*''Last Bot Standing'':
**[[Moon (BW)|Moon]] and [[Wildwheel (G1)|Wildwheel]] are both impaled through their heads with a girder, most likely destroying their brain modules in the process. {{storylink|Last Bot Standing issue 3}}
**[[Steel Jaw|Steeljaw]] gets his whole head blown to smithereens by [[Hot Rod (G1)|Rodimus]]. {{storylink|Last Bot Standing issue 4}}


===Destruction of spark===
===Destruction of spark===
{{bigquote|RAW energon! Right through your twisted spark!|Depth Charge to Rampage, "[[Nemesis Part 1]]"}}
[[File:Skyfallwontbethereforit.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4]]
[[File:Skyfallwontbethereforit.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|And then he hung Skyfall from his ceiling.]]
Getting stabbed right through the spark is almost always fatal:
*In ''Beast Wars'': The supposedly immortal Rampage is killed when Depth Charge pierces his spark with an energon blade. {{storylink|Nemesis Part 1}}
*''[[Transcendent Technomorph|TransTech]]'': [[Skyfall (Cybertron)|Skyfall]] dies when [[Alpha Trion (SG)|Alpha Trion]] rams his [[sword]] right through his chest. {{storylink|Transcendent: Part 6}}
*''Energon'': [[Constructicon Maximus]] dies when [[Storm Jet (Energon)|Storm Jet]] impales and crushes his spark.
*''Cybertron'': [[Megatron (Armada)#Cybertron cartoon|Galvatron]] dies when [[Optimus Prime (Armada)/Cartoon continuity|Optimus Prime]] impales him with [[Rhisling]]. {{storylink|Unfinished}}
*Movie continuity:
**[[Transformers (Titan Magazine)|Titan's Movie comics]]: Transformers have forcefields shielding their sparks, which can be externalized to protect bodywork. Jazz loved doing this, leaving him far more vulnerable to death by destruction of spark than he would otherwise be. {{storylink|Transformers Comic issue 6|Lost in Space 4: Jazz}}
**Optimus Prime dies when Megatron stabs him through the chest with his death-lock pincer, followed by a blast from his fusion cannon through the spark chamber. [[The Fallen]] also meets his end when a resurrected Optimus punches through his chest and crushes his spark. {{storylink|Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (film)|Revenge of the Fallen}}
*''Cyberverse'': [[Slipstream (Cyberverse)|Slipstream]] is killed when [[Bludgeon (Cyberverse)|Bludgeon]] stabs her in the back through her spark. {{storylink|Parley}}


That's not the only way to destroy a spark either:
Transformer bodies can withstand a staggering amount of punishment, and sometimes even the complete destruction of their physical body won't keep them down forever: if their spark still exists, it can, depending on the universe, be transplanted into a fresh [[protoform]] and effectively return the Cybertronian in question to life. To put down a Transformer for good, one must directly attack and extinguish their spark. Although Cybertronians usually protect their spark underneath layers of armor and a specially shielded spark core, any weapon that penetrates these protective measures and damages the spark itself will almost always prove fatal. Using technologies such as [[spark extractor]]s, a spark can be safely removed from the body without causing any physical injuries: while this does not strictly "kill" the Transformer in question, the body becomes an inanimate "shell" until the spark is placed in a suitable receptacle.


*''Beast Machines'' continuity: [[Rhinox (BW)|Rhinox]] — already reduced to a spark within the matrix — ceases to be when Megatron annihilates his spark from existence. {{storylink|Singularity Ablyss}}
Some works of fiction have revealed or implied that a spark can survive outside of a body, possibly even indefinitely; in other universes, this is decidedly not the case, and any spark removed from its housing will gradually dissipate into nothingness as it returns to the [[Transformer afterlife|afterlife]]. Under very rare circumstances, a Transformer may even choose to voluntarily relinquish their spark: whether through employing spiritual techniques, using technologies such as spark extractors, or simply reaching into their chest and ripping their spark free from their body.  
*2005 IDW continuity:
{{--}}
**[[Tarn (G1)|Tarn]] has modified his vocal processor so that he can get his voice into synch with a spark's pulse and then get it to stop. {{storylink|Rules of Disengagement (issue)|Rules of Disengagement}}
**The [[universal killswitch]] built by Chief Justice Tyrest worked by scrambling the Matrix derived sparkcode shared by every constructed cold spark.
**Sentinel Prime wanted Sovereign to power up by eating [[Outrigger]]'s spark, a power shared by the [[Titan Master]]s. This would have killed the [[Circle of Light]] member. {{storylink|Ten to Midnight}}
*''Beast Wars: Uprising'': The Vehicons destroy the sparks of those they inject with a nano-virus. The victim is simultaneously turned into another Vehicon in the process.


===Loss of spark===
===Disintegration===
{{bigquote|Warning. Further expenditure will result in permanent loss of spark. Stasis lock ''must'' commence.|[[Dinobot (BW)|Dinobot]]'s internal computer, "[[Code of Hero]]"}}
[[File:NoExit-Hardheaddies.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4|"Optimus, I don't feel so good..."]]
[[File:Jetstorm with extractor.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|Lost, stolen, whatever...]]
Sometimes sparks can survive outside of a body; sometimes they cannot. In the Beast Era, there is some indication that a spark left outside a body will soon begin to return to the Matrix/AllSpark/another dimension.
*When Dinobot expires after his final battle, his Spark is seen exiting his body. The implication is that a sufficiently damaged body can no longer hold a spark within this continuity. {{storylink|Code of Hero}}
*''Beast Machines'' subsequently showed living sparks existing outside of bodies on a regular basis. The sparkless bodies were simply considered shells, rather than "dead", due to the fact that the sparks were forcibly removed with a [[spark extractor]].
*''Animated'' cartoon: [[Prowl (Animated)|Prowl]] dies when he intentionally relinquishes his own spark. {{storylink|Endgame, Part II}}
*Movie continuity:
**[[Jetfire (Movie)|Jetfire]] rips out his own spark chamber to give Optimus a fighting chance. {{storylink|Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (film)|Revenge of the Fallen}}
**[[The Fallen]] dies when Optimus punches through his chest and crushes his spark. {{storylink|Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (film)|Revenge of the Fallen}}
**Lockdown executes a wounded Ratchet by removing his spark. {{storylink|Transformers: Age of Extinction (film)|Age of Extinction}}
*''Cyberverse'' cartoon:
**In ''Cyberverse''<nowiki>'s</nowiki> second season, this is [[Starscream (Cyberverse)|Starscream's]] ultimate goal, planning to use the [[AllSpark]] to rip the sparks from every Transformer and bring peace through genocide. He succeeds in doing this to his [[Seeker (Cyberverse)|Seeker]] followers before he is ultimately thwarted. {{storylink|Dark Birth}} {{storylink|I Am The Allspark}}
**Shockwave uses a spark extractor to zap his spark into the Allspark and corrupt it. A few minutes later, [[Cheetor (Cyberverse)|Cheetor]] uses the same device to do the same and counteract Shockwave's deeds. {{storylink|Battle For Cybertron IV}}
*''Shattered Glass'' (IDW): Starscream is killed when Goldbug tears out his spark. {{storylink|Shattered Glass issue 5}}
*IDW ''Beast Wars'' (2021): [[Skold]] kills Terrorsaur by tearing out his spark, avenging Razorbeast. {{storylink|Maximals Strike Back, Part 2}}


===Energy overload===
With the right weapons and technical know-how, one can damage a Transformer's physical structure, and even take them out of action for a prolonged period. However, thanks to their durable physiologies and their capability to pull themselves back together from even the most grievous injuries, it's difficult—and, depending on the universe, sometimes nearly impossible—to permanently ''keep'' them down; sometimes, the only way to permanently put a Cybertronian down for good is to completely obliterate their physical body in one go, reducing them to nothing but atoms, ash, and a few metal flakes.
{{bigquote|We may need energon for power, but this is too much of a good thing.|[[Optimus Primal (BW)/Beast Wars cartoon continuity|Optimus Primal]], "[[Beast Wars (Part 1)]]"}}
[[File:TFAnimated transformandrollout DEATH.jpg|upright=1.1|thumb|Death — the Optimus version of a power nap.]]
[[File:Underbaseallmine.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|He's got an Underbase in his underpants.]]
The average [[human]] needs a lot of [[water]] to survive. But too much water results in {{w|Water intoxication|a horrible death}}. Similarly, Transformers need energy to survive, but too much of it can be a very bad thing. Sometimes it's just plain old energy; other times it some special god-like force that does them in.
*In the Marvel comics:
**An [[Underbase]]-empowered Starscream slaughters dozens of Transformers with energy blasts, {{storylink|Dark Star}} which reportedly burn out millions of their [[microchip]]s. {{storylink|Guess Who the Mecannibals Are Having for Dinner?}} Some Transformers are seen to recover from these attacks, either via conventional repairs {{storylink|All the Familiar Faces!}} or through the power of [[Nucleon (substance)|Nucleon]]. {{storylink|The Void! (US)}}
**Starscream himself dies when he absorbs all the energies of the Underbase. {{storylink|Dark Star}}
**[[Landmine (G1)|Landmine]] is apparently killed when struck by a blast of energy from the [[Matrix of Leadership|Matrix]], though the physical effect is more like being hit by an especially powerful laser blast. {{storylink|All Fall Down|All Fall Down (issue)}}
*''Super-God Masterforce'' cartoon: [[Sixknight]] dies from an overcharge of BlackZarak's Devil Power. {{storylink|Malevolent and Inhuman! The True Form of Devil Z}}
*[[2005 IDW continuity]]: [[Runabout (G1)|Runabout]] dies when one of the [[Reaper]]s zaps him full of energy, causing him to explode from within. {{storylink|Devastation issue 6}}
*Movie continuity: [[Megatron (Movie)|Megatron]] is killed when [[Sam Witwicky]] shoves the [[AllSpark]] into his chest. {{storylink|Transformers (film)|Transformers}} [[Evac (Ride)|Evac]] does the same thing with the Allspark shard with Megatron {{storylink|Transformers: The Ride – 3D}}
*''Transformers Animated'' cartoon: [[Optimus Prime (Animated)|Optimus Prime]] gets caught in an explosion of [[AllSpark]] energy that may have been sufficient to kill him, although he also fell off a very tall building immediately afterwards (Starscream was caught in the same explosion and survived, but was knocked offline for an unspecified period.)


===Energy depletion===
This is easier said than done, however: across the vast [[multiverse]], there are very few beings who wield the kind of high-powered weapons required to instantly atomize a Cybertronian. Some pathogens such as [[Cosmic Rust (disease)|Cosmic Rust]], [[Ore-2]], and [[alchemical virus]]es cause fatal damage by gradually decaying their bodies from within; however, most Transformers who perish in this way are killed by astronomically powerful beings of supernatural origin, who can channel vast amounts of power required to instantly disintegrate a Cybertronian: common culprits include [[Unicron]], [[Primus]], and the [[Vok]], and empowered servants such as [[Tigerhawk]] and [[Galvatron (G1)|Galvatron]], who can channel a fraction of their creator's power.  Additionally, Cybertronians have demonstrated a marked weakness to [[magic]] and other forms of paranormal energy; even brief exposure to certain spells or artifacts can cause a Cybertronian to fatally crumble away.
On rare occasion, Transformers can simply run out of energy completely and expire.
{{--}}
*Marvel comics: the ancient [[Overlord (rank)|Overlord]] dies from a lack of energy. {{storylink|State Games}}
*''Cybertron'' cartoon [[Vector Prime]] dies after he helps the crew to time travel. {{storylink|Guardian (episode)|Guardian}}
*Movie continuity: [[Jetfire (Movie)|Jetfire]] explains that a lack of energon causes the Transformer equivalent of aging, such as rusting joints, mental confusion, and pieces falling apart, followed by an indefinite period of stasis that can only be reversed by an infusion of Allspark energy. {{storylink|Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (film)|Revenge of the Fallen}}
*IDW ''Beast Wars'' (2021): Scorponok is killed when a zombified Terrorsaur drains his energon. {{storylink|The Beginning of the End}}


===Disease===
===Melting===
You may think giant robots couldn't have diseases but it turns out they can!
[[File:Secrets&Lies3-smeltingpool.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4|There's nothing you and I won't do. I'll stop the world and melt with you.]]


*Marvel comics: [[Snarl (G1)|Snarl]] contracts [[Corrodia Gravis]], a wasting disease where your body is consumed by rust as your metal breaks down at the molecular level. Only a systems boost from a compatible donor could save Snarl {{storylink|Assassins}} but the disease came back anyway. The best cure is to store a Transformer's brain in remote storage and build a whole new body. {{storylink|Destiny of the Dinobots!}}
Most Cybertronians are made out of metal. Although the [[Living metal|exotic alloys]] that constitute their biology can withstand extremes of heat, cold, and pressure, prolonged exposure to extremely high temperatures—such as the molten rock found in active volcanoes, or the searing cauldron of liquid metals that constitute the dreaded [[smelting pool]]s—will fatally reduce the average Transformer to a smouldering heap of white-hot liquid. More insidiously, Cybertronians have also demonstrated a susceptibility to certain acidic compounds strong enough to punch their way through Cybertronian armor plating; given enough time to fester, they can seep into vital internal components, compromise their structural integrity, and fatally damage their targets.  
*2005 IDW comics: [[Pharma (G1)|Pharma]] engineers the [[Red Rust]] virus: spread by touch and triggered by transforming, it causes all the coolants, dispersants and anti-rusting agents in a Transformer to cross-contaminate and cause a molecular breakdown. The first sign is when the Transformer starts "crying" the fuel out. {{storylink|How Ratchet Got His Hands Back}} Most of [[Delphi]] was killed. {{storylink|Life After the Big Bang}}
*And of course, there's the aforementioned [[Scraplet]]s, [[Cosmic Rust (disease)|cosmic rust]], and the similarly named Rust Plague.


===Aging===
Much like disintegration, melting a Transformer is generally regarded as a foolproof way to kill them for good—after all, many forms of resurrection hinge on piecing their broken bodies back together again, so liquefying their remains ensures that there simply won't ''be'' anything left to repair. On the other hand, sending a character plummeting to an uncertain doom ''can'' open the road for a later writer to reveal that they somehow escaped their predicament; when [[Terrorsaur (BW)|Terrorsaur]] and [[Scorponok (BW)|Scorponok]] perished in the ''[[Beast Wars: Transformers (cartoon)|Beast Wars]]'' episode "[[Aftermath (BW episode)|Aftermath]]", the writers deliberately showed them beginning to change into [[Transmetal]] forms, a convenient "out" in case they decided to bring them back, even though this possibility never came to pass.
{{quote|Parts wear out and can no longer be replaced. Fatigue sets in. Memory banks overflow and tiny fragmentation errors creep in. In the end, entropy claims us all.|[[Vector Prime]]|[[Ask Vector Prime]]}}
{{--}}


While many characters are portrayed as being old, dying of old age is almost unheard of in Transformers.
===Exotic energy===
[[File:Counterpont-UnderbaseStarscream.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4]]


*In Transformers UK, it is implied Transformers have long, but not endless life spans. In Kup's story, Kup says that he was put on a spaceship to live out his "remaining years" alone. In another story, Goldbug says that he may never understand humans, even if he lives to be 2 million.
As robotic life-forms, Transformers can subsist upon a wide range of energy sources; in some continuities, they can even convert mundane fuel sources such as oil, coal, and uranium into [[energon]]. Their advanced mechanical bodyframes mean that Cybertronians are largely impervious to most ordinary forms of radiation, such as the {{w|ionizing radiation|ionizing radiation}} that damages organic tissue, but over the course of their endless wars Cybertronians must often contend with far more unusual—and potentially lethal—forms of energy unlike anything on planet Earth. While Transformers subsist upon energon, overexposure to the [[energon radiation]] produced by the substance in its [[Energon crystal|raw, crystalline form]] can easily prove fatal. "Energon overload", as it is often known, begins with paralysis and quickly progresses to [[stasis lock]], then outright deactivation. To survive on energon-rich planets, Transformers often adopt biomechanical "[[beast mode]]s" that sheathe their vulnerable mechanical components beneath a layer of synthetic flesh. Other dangerous forms of energy include the volatile [[plasma energy]], anathema to mechanical life, the unpredictable [[Angolmois Energy]], and unusual variants of energon such as [[Dark Energon]] and [[Tox-En]].  
*In the 2005 IDW continuity, Ratchet notes that the process of a Cybertronian aging to death (also referred to as age-related burnout) is a relatively recent discovery. He also notes that many, both spiritual and scientific, still refused to "give up on this-this very seductive idea that we're immortal". [[Tailgate (G1)|Tailgate]] had been diagnosed with [[cybercrosis]], a fatal condition that has been around since before [[Nova Prime]]'s era but which Ratchet believes in this case was brought about by a combination of the radiation Tailgate had been exposed to upon [[Vector Sigma]]'s re-ignition in addition to his old age. Far in the future, Ratchet himself would succumb to age-related burnout.
*''[[The Transformers: Regeneration One|Regeneration One]]'': Although it takes eons, all Transformers eventually die of old age after being disconnected from the life-giving powers of [[Primus]]. {{storylink|The War to End All Wars, Part 5}}


==Suicide==
In universes where science and sorcery coexist, Cybertronians and their technology have demonstrated a marked susceptibility to [[magic]] and other forms of supernatural power. Foolhardy Cybertronians who attempt to co-opt lost Cybertronian relics like the [[AllSpark]], the [[Enigma of Combination]], or the [[Underbase]] can overwhelm other Cybertronians with arcane energies, only to find themselves undone by the same power as their mortal bodies struggle to cope with the energy overload. Other notable vulnerabilities include the necrotic [[Dead Universe]], the destructive energies of the [[Talisman (G1)|Talisman]], and the enchantments channeled by spellcasters like the [[Visionaries]] of [[Prysmos]] and even the [[pony|ponies]] of [[Equestria]]—as something "beyond" the ken of Cybertronian science, intellectuals of [[2005 IDW continuity|at least one universe]] have rationalized the existence of magic as a unique form of {{w|gamma radiation|gamma radiation}};<ref>"[[Desperate Measures (Transformers vs. Visionaries)|Desperate Measures]]"</ref> left unchecked, prolonged exposure to magic can cause complete molecular breakdown, sapping away their life force as they crumble to dust.
{{quote|Do you realize how '''hard''' it is for a Cybertronian to die by his own hand? You can jump off a building, blow yourself up, cut off your own head - and you might still survive.|Chromedome, [[Before & After]]}}
{{--}}
Sometimes a Transformer kills themself for some reason, or tries to.
*Marvel comics: Dirge and Nightbeat, rather than be eaten by the Swarm, self-destruct. {{storylink|A Rage in Heaven!}}
*''Beast Wars'':
**Transformers can deliberately override the stasis lock protocols, even if this will result in death. {{storylink|Code of Hero}}
**In the final battles, Depth Charge allows himself to be blown up, killing Rampage. Rampage laughs maniacally as he detonates, suggesting that he was deliberately trying to die. {{storylink|Nemesis Part 1}}. [[Dinobot II]] let himself go down with the ''Nemesis''. {{storylink|Nemesis Part 2}}
*''Energon'': Galvatron, Starscream, and [[Tidal Wave (Armada)|Mirage]] throw themselves into a sun and vaporize themselves. [[Cyclonus (Armada)|Snow Cat]] and Demolishor may have also done this.
*''Revenge of the Fallen'': Jetfire rips out his entire spark housing for Optimus Prime to have enough power to kill The Fallen. {{storylink|Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (film)|Revenge of the Fallen}}
*2005 IDW continuity:
**A [[NAIL protester]] kills himself by repeatedly transforming until his [[transformation cog]] burns out. {{storylink|Liars, A to D Part 1: How to Say Goodbye and Mean It|How to Say Goodbye and Mean It}}
**[[Centurion (IDW)|Centurion]] alludes to a desire to find his [[Axalon (BW)|old spaceship]] so that he can die there. How exactly he plans to do this is never expounded on. {{storylink|Strange Visitors}}


==Non-fatal deactivation==
===Diseases and predators===
{{quote|"You mean he's still alive?!"<br>"No! But neither is he what you would term 'dead'!"|[[Spider-Man]] and [[Optimus Prime (G1)/Marvel Comics continuity|Optimus Prime]], "[[Prisoner of War!]]"|noquote=true}}
[[File:Cyberverse-s1e8-Terminal-Velocity-Blurr-dying-from-the-rust-plague.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4]]


[[File:Zombiesbackfromthedead.jpg|thumb|upright=1.4|Braiiiiiin mooooodulllllles....]]
It may seem strange that robotic beings like Transformers could contract illnesses of their own, but different works of ''Transformers'' fiction have established that Cybertronians are living mechanical beings whose systems more closely mimic a living organism's than a mundane machine. As a result, they are susceptible to a range of illnesses and ailments; if not properly treated, these diseases can gradually sap away their strength, impede the functionality of their bodies, and, in the worst case scenario, even prove fatal. Ailments like [[Red Rust]], [[Cosmic Rust (disease)|Cosmic Rust]], and [[Corrodia Gravis]] painfully oxidize their metallic bodies, more aggressive pathogens can immediately corrode them to nothing, and some diseases like [[Cybercrosis]] attack the spark itself.


For almost every single cause of death listed above, there's been one or more Transformers who have survived it, sometimes without so much as a period of unconsciousness.  
While rare, some life-forms prey upon or parasitize Cybertronians—and some Transformers who adopt a [[beast mode]] might well indulge their new instincts by hunting down and devouring other members of their species. Alien predators like [[Scraplet]]s, [[rust worm]]s, or the [[Mecannibal]]s can devour Cybertronians in a matter of minutes; more exotic creatures like [[limbo parasite]]s can telepathically attack them. Even organic creatures can pose a threat to an unwary Transformer; alien predators like the [[chaosteros]] or Earth [[dinosaur (dinosaur)|dinosaur]]s have displayed the capability to bite through Cybertronian armor.  
{{--}}


In particular, "deactivation" is the Transformers equivalent of being in a coma. Numerous Transformers are seen to enter this state and eventually recover, such as the Autobots deactivated by Shockwave, {{storylink|The Last Stand}} who later were repaired. However, the line between death and deactivation is a blurry one. Sometimes the two words are used interchangeably, even in reference to characters who are later revived. Most of Starscream's Underbase victims were described as deactivated, and were sometimes lamented as "dead" while at other times were shown undergoing repairs. {{storylink|Back from the Dead}} {{storylink|Gone but Not Forgotten!}} {{storylink|The Gathering Storm}}
===Old age===
[[File:WarToEndAllWarsPart5-Rodimusdies.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4]]


"[[Stasis lock]]" would eventually give a more concrete name to the state of deactivation. The inert Transformers on the crashed Ark were retconned as being in stasis lock. Various ''Beast Wars'' characters would go into stasis lock to maintain their spark when their body had sustained too much damage from weaponsfire or energon absorption. ''Animated'' showed a crew of Autobots voluntarily entering protective stasis lock in anticipation of a crash landing.
A single Transformer might live for many millions of years, outlasting entire civilizations in the process, but in the end the vast majority of Cybertronians are as mortal as any other being: their lifespans are, ultimately, finite. Parts wear out and can no longer be replaced, systems break down, [[living metal]] fatigues, and the interlinked technologies that make up their bodies become obsolete; eventually, their aged bodies can no longer safely support a [[spark]], and a Transformer dies. While many, many ''Transformers'' characters have been portrayed as old or elderly, actually showing a character ''dying'' from old age onscreen is almost unheard of. Some fiction, notably the "[[Transformers: Wings Universe|Wings Universe]]" stories, the [[Movie continuity family|live-action films]], and ''[[Transformers: Last Bot Standing|Last Bot Standing]]'', have linked the process of "aging" itself to the availability of [[energon]]—in these stories, prolonged periods of fuel deprivation artificially accelerates the aging process.  


Some of the quasi-fatal things which can cause a Transformer to "deactivate" include:
[[Transformers (2019 comic)|IDW's 2019 ''Transformers'' reboot]] took a more nuanced look at the concept of aging in a society of nigh-immortal robots: in this universe, Cybertronians who have grown weary of life can choose to go "[[immersant]]", a kind of voluntary euthanasia process where aging Transformers return to the living strata of Cybertron; in this state, what begins as a gradual dissolution of the self eventually culminates in death when their spark finally leaves their body and rejoins the Allspark.
{{--}}


===Impact trauma===
==After death==
Smashing into something usually knocks out a Transformer, but almost never actually kills them:
{{bigquote|I commend your spark to the Allspark, and the Allspark is one spark, and the one spark is your spark, and in this way we are all connected.|[[Hot Rod (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Rodimus]]|"[[The Gloaming]]"}}
*The crew of the original [[Ark (G1)|Ark]] are deactivated when the ship crashes on Earth and lies inert for 4 million years {{storylink|More than Meets the Eye, Part 1}} {{storylink|The Transformers (issue)}}
*Marvel comics: [[Gears (G1)|Gears]] falls to his "death", but is patched together and talking again in short order. {{storylink|Prisoner of War!}}


===Decapitation===
While the prospect of eternal conflict has forced the Transformers to become a race of warriors, they are not emotionless machines. Like humans, Transformers sometimes struggle to process the loss of a close comrade or accept their own innate mortality, and this human-like drive to find meaning in both life and death has led their race to develop their own religious beliefs and ceremonies regarding death and the afterlife.
[[File:Sentinelprimeanimatedhumiliated.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|In the movie continuity, this would've been fatal. In ''Animated'', it's just embarrassing.]]
{{--}}
{{bigquote|Anyone who can lop your head off in one blow is alright by me!|[[Landmine (G1)|Landmine]] jokes about [[Cloudburst]]'s near-death experience, "[[Recipe for Disaster!]]"}}
Like we said before, decapitation is sometimes fatal... and other times it isn't.
*Marvel comic:
**Optimus Prime is able to survive as just a head when Shockwave separates it from his body in an effort to get the Creation Matrix. {{storylink|The New Order}}
**[[Cloudburst]] is abruptly decapitated by sword, but is just fine after some repairs. {{storylink|Recipe for Disaster!}}
*G1 cartoon: Optimus Prime is disassembled into his component parts, but functions just fine as nothing more than a head once [[Ratchet (G1)|Ratchet]] connects a few wires. {{storylink|City of Steel (episode)|City of Steel}}
*''Beast Wars'' cartoon: [[Inferno (BW)|Inferno]] survives having his head blasted or otherwise knocked off multiple times, {{storylink|Spider's Game}} {{storylink|Other Voices, Part 2}} {{storylink|Coming of the Fuzors (Part 1)}} {{storylink|Code of Hero}} and even puts it back on himself one time. He even accidentally swaps heads with Megatron once, much to the latter's annoyance. {{storylink|Coming of the Fuzors (Part 2)}} And let's not even get started on how many times [[Waspinator (BW)|Waspinator]] has lost his head.
[[File:TLK-Mohawk demise.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|Looks like ''Animated's'' non-fatal decapitation practice is catching up to the rest of the [[Multiverse]].]]
*[[2005 IDW continuity]]:
**[[Runamuck (G1)|Runamuck]] is just fine when one of the Reapers whacks his head off. (He doesn't fare so well when another Reaper crushes his head with a boulder, however.) {{storylink|Devastation issue 6}}
**[[Red Alert (G1)|Red Alert]]'s head is removed in an apparent suicide attempt; he survived because he was put back together in time, before his Spark had faded out. {{storylink|Shadowplay, Part 1: Post Hoc}} {{storylink|Shadowplay, Part 2: Patternism}}
*''Animated'' cartoon: Decapitated victims of the ''Animated'' [[Headmaster (Animated)|Headmaster]] rarely show any ill effects other than not having a body anymore. {{storylink|Headmaster (episode)|Headmaster}} {{storylink|The Return of the Headmaster}} {{storylink|A Bridge Too Close, Part II}}
*Movie Continuity:
** Frenzy survives his first decapitation by [[Mikaela Banes]]. {{storylink|Transformers (film)|Transformers}}
**[[Megatron (Movie)|Megatron]]'s consciousness survives his decapitation in the Chicago battle, even after having an axe lodged right into his processor. {{storylink|Transformers: Age of Extinction (film)|Age of Extinction}}
**[[Mohawk]] had himself blown up by [[Bumblebee (Movie)|Bumblebee]], yet his head remained functional, and he himself continued to speak. {{storylink|Transformers: The Last Knight (film)|The Last Knight}}


===Dismemberment===
===Funerals and memorials===
{{quote|MY ARM!!!|Starscream, ''Revenge of the Fallen''}}
[[File:Warzone-Spacebridgememorialpark.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4]]
Transformers get ripped to pieces all the time, and recover from it:
*Marvel comic: Scorponok tears [[Tantrum (G1)|Tantrum]] to pieces. [[Blitzwing (G1)|Blitzwing]] slices [[Horri-Bull]] in half at the waist. Both are seen alive later on. {{storylink|Cold War!}}
*''Last Stand of the Wreckers'': [[Guzzle (G1)|Guzzle]] is torn in half by [[Overlord (G1)|Overlord]] and is easily repaired. The same also happens to [[Fortress Maximus (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Fortress Maximus]].
*''Revenge of the Fallen'': During a fierce battle, [[Optimus Prime (Movie)|Optimus Prime]] not only cuts off [[Grindor (ROTF)|Grindor]]'s arm with an Energon blade, but he rips off [[Starscream (Movie)|Starscream]]'s arm with his bare hands, and proceeded to ''beat him with it''.


===Spark removal===
{{main|Transformer funerary practices}}
{{bigquote|His spark can't exist outside a living body!|[[Rhinox (BW)|Rhinox]], "[[Optimal Situation]]"}}


A Transformer's spark—their "soul", their living essence—can be removed from their body, or the body can be destroyed around them
''Transformers'' is mostly aimed at kids—while most continuities show or imply the deaths of many Transformers, fewer stories have depicted their funerary rites or even any real kind of organized grieving process. Occasionally a deceased Transformer of narrative significance may be laid to rest inside a sarcophagus; depending on the needs of the story and the beliefs of their faction, they may be buried, launched into space, interred in a [[Autobot Mausoleum|mausoleum]] alongside other fallen Cybertronians, cremated, melted in a smelting pool, or simply broken down for spare parts. When stranded on remote worlds like [[Earth]], Cybertronians have occasionally been forced to dig basic, unmarked graves or dump their bodies at sea. Such methods of disposal are not entirely imprudent; given the opportunity, many unscrupulous humans would do anything to get their hands on Cybertronian technology, including desecrating the corpses of fallen Transformers.  
*The destruction of Starscream's body, and his subsequent survival as a ghost, was eventually retconned to be his Spark enduring without a physical form. {{storylink|The Transformers: The Movie}} {{storylink|Starscream's Ghost}} {{storylink|Possession}}
*''Beast Wars'' cartoon: Tigatron and Airazor's sparks spend quite some time wandering around behind Tigerhawk, before combining and entering his body. {{storylink|Other Victories}}
*In the ''Beast Machines'' cartoon:
**Megatron de-sparks most of Cybertron's population and stores their sparks in a big barrel. Most were restored to bodies eventually. {{storylink|Endgame Pt. III: Seeds of the Future}}
**Blackarachnia's spark wanders around bodiless for a time. {{storylink|Revelations Part III: Apocalypse}}
**Megatron himself, his spark in a depolarized state, wanders the surface of Cybertron without a body for a time. {{storylink|Spark of Darkness}}


The treatment of bodiless sparks in ''Beast Machines'' is seen by some fans as contradicting the canon established by ''Beast Wars'', particularly the quote above.
In wartime scenarios, the task of eulogizing the fallen generally falls to the commanding officer or some suitable equivalent. Religiously-motivated memorials may tie their passing to prominent Cybertronian deities, most prominently [[Primus]], the [[Thirteen]], or [[Transformer afterlife|Allspark]] that ties all Cybertronian lives together. In times of peace, Transformers may construct memorials honoring those that gave their lives in the conflict, either on Cybertron or on the battlegrounds of alien worlds. In some realities, quasi-deities such as the mysterious "[[Mortilus|Necrobot]]" are said to spend their lives cataloguing each and every dead Cybertronian.
{{--}}


*In the 2005 IDW continuity, the spark, like the other two parts of Rossum's Trinity, can be safely removed and stored with the proper medical equipment.
===Afterlife===
[[File:TheReformatting-OptimusMatrix.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4]]


===Limbo===
{{main|Transformer afterlife}}
Sometimes Transformers get shunted out of creation as we know it, and into various alternate, sub- and non-dimensions.
*Marvel comics:
**The [[trans-time dimensional portal]] crosses [[unspace]], "a bit of dimensional nothingness" where Ratchet and Megatron vanished and were believed dead. {{storylink|The Gathering Storm}}
**Transformers mass-displaced by time travel wind up in a formless dimension known as [[Limbo]].
*2005 IDW comics: Megatron severely damages Optimus Prime in battle and plans on finishing him off by crushing his [[Laser core|spark core]]. Optimus Prime feigns death by downloading his "consciousness" into his [[Combat Deck (G1)|trailer section]], causing his [[Brain Center|robot mode]] to appear dead. In the time it took for Prime's consciousness to transfer to his trailer, he briefly enters [[infraspace|limbo]], the transitional infraspace between life and death. {{storylink|The Transformers: Escalation|Escalation}}


==Resuscitation==
When a Transformer dies, their spark is said to have been "extinguished" as it vanishes from the material world. In reality, however, the spark simply transcends back to a higher dimension, a realm alternately known as the "Matrix", the "Afterspark", or the "Allspark", an extradimensional space where all Sparks are truly one, united through a higher consciousness. Religious Cybertronians who pass on may die secure in the knowledge that their experiences on the mortal plane will enrich the entire collective, and some supernatural artifacts like the [[Matrix of Leadership]] can channel a fraction of this accumulated wisdom into its bearer.  
Robots are machines. They can be switched off, taken apart, blown to bits, and put back together. Ergo, in many continuities and cases, "death" is not nearly as permanent a condition as it is for us fragile fleshy types.


===Reconstruction===
Various belief systems in different universes have ascribed unique properties to the Allspark and the sparks that dwell within them. In some mythologies, sparks must transcend through a vast, metaphysical "[[Tree of Life|tree]]" representing unique phases of consciousness in order to reach the Allspark itself;<ref>"[[Singularity Ablyss]]"</ref> in others, primordial deities like [[Primus]] and the [[Guiding Hand]] are said to reside in the highest echelons of the Afterspark, guiding and welcoming new arrivals into the kingdom of the dead.<ref>"[[The Everlasting Voices (1): Metastasis|Metastasis]]"</ref> Not all Cybertronian belief systems subscribe to the concept of the Afterspark, however; adherents of the [[Way of Flame]], for instance, instead believe that deceased sparks are recycled and reincarnated into new Cybertronians within the mythical [[Forge of Solus Prime|Forge]] of [[Solus Prime]].<ref>"[[The Life of Sideswipe]]"</ref>
[[File:PeoplePower-reprogrammed.jpg|thumb|upright=1.4]]
{{--}}


{{bigquote|I've done it! Optimus Prime lives!|[[Klementia|A random Quintesson]], "[[The Return of Optimus Prime, Part 1]]"}}
==Resuscitation and resurrection==
{{bigquote|Dying came easy to us. You were never mourned for long because someone nearly always found a way to '''bring you back'''. So you could pick up right where '''you left off'''.|[[Hot Rod (G1)|Rodimus]]|[[Last Bot Standing issue 2|''Last Bot Standing'' #2]]}}


*Generation 1 cartoon:
Transformers are robots—they can be switched off, taken apart, blown to bits, and put back together, good as new. As a result, "death" is not nearly as permanent a condition as it is it for [[human]]s and other organic beings. Various ''Transformers'' stories have offered various and sometimes contradictory explanations as to how Cybertronians can raise their dead. In some universes, these forms of resurrection is so commonplace as to be an entirely mundane part of the average Transformer life cycle; in others, death is something more permanent, and Transformers seeking to resurrect their comrades must turn to extraordinary power sources or commune with higher beings.
**Optimus Prime is simply ''repaired'' back to life by a Quintesson. Some fixing of this and that, a burst of power, and boom, suddenly he's alive again. {{storylink|The Return of Optimus Prime, Part 1}}
**Ultra Magnus's death is undone after his limbs were reconnected to each other. {{storylink|The Transformers: The Movie}}
*Marvel comics: Optimus Prime's mind gets encoded on a disk. After a new [[Powermaster]] body was constructed for him, the disk's contents are loaded into it, and Optimus Prime lives again. (One wonders why they couldn't make as many Optimus Primes as they pleased.) {{storylink|People Power!}}
*Movie continuity: [[Megatron (Movie)|Megatron]]'s consciousness manipulates [[Kinetic Solutions Incorporated|KSI]] into building him a new body, which he subsequently infects. {{storylink|Transformers: Age of Extinction (film)|Age of Extinction}}


===Spark transfer===
Resurrecting a Cybertronian may return them to perfect condition, as though they never died, or leave them with their personalities and memories only partly intact. In rare cases, a Cybertronian might return to life as an entirely new being with a new name, personality, and [[alternate mode]]. Cruder forms of resurrection might simply animate their corpses as mindless [[zombie]]s. All this to say, transient nature of Cybertronian death and ability to bring a character back to life in a new body (and thus a new toy) makes a tremendously convenient storytelling "out" for writers who want to resurrect a character for narrative—or, more commonly, marketing—reasons.
Transferring a Transformer's spark into a new body constitutes a form of resurrection, particularly if the Transformer's previous body was destroyed.
{{--}}
*''Beast Wars'' cartoon: Optimus Primal is restored to life when Rhinox manages to recall his spark from the Matrix, a special circumstance only enabled by a temporary window into transwarp space. {{storylink|Coming of the Fuzors (Part 2)}}
*''Beast Machines'' cartoon: various Vehicon generals are brought to life by placing other Transformer's sparks into them.
*''Armada'' cartoon: Smokescreen is shot through the chest at point blank range by the Requiem Blaster {{storylink|Sacrifice}} but his spark survived and is put into a new body. {{storylink|Regeneration (Armada)|Regeneration}}
*''Energon'' cartoon: Inferno and Demolishor both have their bodies ''atomized''; however, their sparks both survive, and are placed into new bodies. (The upshot of all of this is that it's nigh-impossible to kill a Unicron Trilogy Transformer, unless they do it themselves.) {{storylink|Go for Unicron!}} {{storylink|Farewell Inferno}}
*''Animated'' cartoon: The spark of a dying [[Yoketron (Animated)|Yoketron]] is placed into a new protoform body by [[Prowl (Animated)|Prowl]]; however, Yoketron consciously chooses to let his life end, and expires anyway. {{storylink|Five Servos of Doom}}
*2005 IDW comics: [[Lug (IDW)|Lug]] gets brought back to life after spending five hundred years as a spark fragment in an Energon flower by being transplanted into a snowflake of [[Living metal#2005 IDW continuity|''sentio metallico'']], which results in her being reborn as a [[protoform]]. {{storylink|Dissolution Part 6: This Machine Kills Fascists|This Machine Kills Fascists}}


==="Magical" substances===
===Physical reconstruction===
*Marvel comics: The miraculous healing properties of Nucleon bring many Autobots back to life, as well as a few Decepticons. {{storylink|The Void! (US)|The Void!}}
[[File:BackFromTheDead-Ratchetcantdoit.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4|Your average Transformer job lot on eBay.]]
*''Energon'' cartoon: Megatron is revived by the all-encompassing power of energon, as was Unicron. {{storylink|Megatron Resurrected}}


===Primus and Primus-related powers===
In early works of “[[Generation 1 continuity family|Generation 1]]” fiction, all it took to bring a “dead” Transformer back online was a suitable repairman and the right set of tools—bringing a Transformer back to life was as simple as fixing a broken television. This kind of resuscitation was very common in the [[The Transformers (Marvel comic)|Marvel comic]] and, to a lesser extent, the [[The Transformers (cartoon)|cartoon]]. Notably, this the mechanism by which [[Bumblebee (G1)/Marvel Comics continuity|Bumblebee]] evolved into his powered-up “Goldbug” form; in the Marvel continuity, Ratchet would then rebuild the damaged Goldbug ''back'' into his younger "Bumblebee" persona during a storyline introducing the [[Classic Pretender]]s, for no real reason other than that he "always preferred [his] original form."<ref>"[[Skin Deep]]"</ref>
{{bigquote|Where the Last Autobot is concerned, even death, it would appear, is an abstract concept!|Optimus Prime explains his latest revival, "[[End of the Road! (US)|End of the Road!]]"}}


Anything tied to the primordial life-force of the Transformers' god Primus tends to be a cure-all for death. This includes Primus himself, his various power-wielding avatars and servants, and the assorted Matrixes and Allsparks, all of which can deliver an infusion of the essence of life itself. In some continuities, this is portrayed as a Transformer's spark being brought back out of the Allspark dimension.
With the rise of the ephemeral [[spark]] as the defined core of Transformer life, this form of revival has generally fallen off as a clearly defined way to raise the dead. When characters in modern ''Transformers'' fiction sustain critical structural damage, they are often said to be in “[[stasis lock|stasis]]”, a kind of protective low-power state in which all functions are rerouted to protect the spark.  
{{--}}


[[File:RageInHeaven-HeroPrime.jpg|thumb|upright=0.85|A real man never dies, even when he's killed!]]
===Consciousness transfer===
*In the Marvel comics:
[[File:Hiqprimemerge.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4|''Regeneration One'' becomes weirder to read when you realize that Prime spends the entire series with a shrivelled little Hi-Q mummy in his chest.]]
**The [[Last Autobot]] is granted the power of recreation by Primus, which he uses to raise numerous fallen Autobots from the battlefield. {{storylink|End of the Road! (US)}}
**Optimus Prime is eager to find the lost Creation Matrix, stating that it would be able to restore many deactivated warriors to life. {{storylink|Bird of Prey!}}
**Optimus Prime is restored to life by the [[Swarm (G2)|Swarm]] after it had ingested the energies and knowledge of the Matrix. {{storylink|A Rage in Heaven!}}
*In the movie continuity:
**The AllSpark is shown repeatedly to be capable of restoring just about anything. Frenzy gets a whole new body from its power, Bumblebee temporarily gets his voice back, {{storylink|Transformers (film)|Transformers}} and Megatron is restored to life by merely a fragment of it. {{storylink|Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (film)|Revenge of the Fallen}}
**Optimus Prime is restored to life by the Matrix of Leadership, an Allspark-related talisman. {{storylink|Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (film)|Revenge of the Fallen}}
**Sentinel Prime is revived after crash landing on the moon by the Matrix of Leadership, courtesy of Optimus Prime. {{storylink|Transformers: Dark of the Moon (film)|Dark of the Moon}}
*''Beast Machines'' cartoon: [[Optimus Primal (BW)/Beast Wars cartoon continuity|Optimus Primal]]'s body is destroyed, but the AllSpark granted him the choice of uniting with it or being reborn. He chose the latter, and ''poof'', just walked right out of the Oracle bubble in a brand new version of his previous body. {{storylink|Fallout (episode)|Fallout}}
*''Armada'' cartoon: [[Optimus Prime (Armada)/Cartoon continuity|Optimus Prime]] is brought back to life by the power of the [[Mini-Con]]s after his body was disintegrated. {{storylink|Miracle}}
*"[[Transformers: Shattered Glass (franchise)|Shattered Glass]]": [[Skyfall (Cybertron)|Skyfall]] is resurrected when he and his gestaltmates are combined and reborn by Primus into [[Nexus Prime]]. {{storylink|Reunification: Part 5}} Nexus Prime then brings [[Megatron (SG)|Megatron]] back from the other side of the Allspark and infuses him with some of Primus's power to become Galvatron. {{storylink|Reunification: Part 6}}


===Zombies===
As machines with a [[spark]]-based physiology, "death" does not always equal the complete destruction of their physical body. Like human computers, a Cybertronian can survive the complete destruction of their physical form so long as their [[spark]], [[brain module]], [[core consciousness]] or some other seat of higher functioning persists; to bring them back to life, all one has to do is plug them back into a suitable receptacle—whether that's a tailor-made body, a sparkless [[protoform]], or, in emergencies, mundane human technology—and they'll be instantly reborn. In some realities, this kind of ad-hoc surgery can succeed even if a Transformer's original [[spark]] has been extinguished.
*Dude, [[zombie]]s!


==Immortality==
In the original [[The Transformers (Marvel comic)|Marvel comic]], which existed in a time before the franchise had fully codified the concept of [[spark]]s, this was a very common way to resurrect characters: notably, [[Optimus Prime (G1)/Marvel Comics continuity|Optimus Prime]] cheated his first death when programmer [[Ethan Zachary]] downloaded a copy of his mind onto a [[floppy disk]]; when the Autobots resurrected their leader, all it took was to simply reupload the information encoded on the disk into his new body.<ref>"[[People Power!]]"</ref> When Prime died again during the final battle against [[Unicron]], his [[Powermaster]] partner [[Hi-Q]] revealed that a portion of Prime's consciousness persisted in his own mind thanks to their [[Binary bonding|binary bond]], and the [[Last Autobot]] subsequently resurrected Prime by combining the two into a single [[Action Master]] body which contained both of their memories.<ref>"[[End of the Road! (US)|End of the Road!]]"</ref> Similar examples exist across the franchise.
===Immortal sparks===
{{--}}
Certain sparks have mutant qualities that allow them to, potentially, exist forever.
*Starscream survives his death at the hands of Galvatron; this was later explained as him having a "mutant indestructible spark". {{storylink|Starscream's Ghost}} {{storylink|Possession}} {{storylink|Bad Spark}}
*[[Rampage (BW)|Rampage]] was created as an attempt to duplicate Starscream's immortal spark. {{storylink|Bad Spark}} He is eventually killed by [[Depth Charge (BW)|Depth Charge]], so the attempt may be seen as unsuccessful. {{storylink|Nemesis Part 1}}


===Other===
===Supernatural abilities===
*[[Multiversal singularity|Multiversal singularities]] such as [[Unicron]] and [[The Fallen]] were immortal, existing in multiple dimensions simultaneously as extensions of the same being across different dimensions (reverse-time dimensions, for example, are key to revival of the singularities). Multiversal singularities ceased to exist with the coming of the [[Shroud]], nullifying this concept.
[[File:Miracle-Optimusreturns.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4|"I am Optimus the White. And I come back to you now—at the turn of the tide."]]
*''Animated'' [[Starscream (Animated)|Starscream]] cannot be killed so long as he retains his Allspark fragment embedded in his forehead. Whether or not this ability extends to other AllSpark creations is unknown.
*Denizens of the [[Dead Universe]] can essentially regenerate themselves out of nothing, no matter how much damage was inflicted on them. This ability appears to no longer apply, post-[[Expansion]], except when in direct proximity to the Dead Universe.
*Thunderwing's Pretender shell makes him nearly invincible. At the very least, he is able to withstand incredible amounts of salvo and not even flinch.
*[[Waspinator (BW)|Waspinator]] can never completely die no matter what for some reason. It's probably because if he died, the universe wouldn't be able to inflict pain on him anymore.


==Out-of-fiction causes of character death==
''Transformers'' has always blurred the line between science fiction and fantasy, and the introduction of explicitly divine entities like [[Primus]], quasi-deities like the [[Thirteen]] original Transformers, and various supernatural artifacts like the [[Matrix of Leadership]] or the [[AllSpark]] into various works of ''Transformers'' canon has allowed various authors to lean on a very literal ''deus ex machina'' to bring a character back from the brink. Multiple deities and artifacts across the [[multiverse]] can deliver a supernatural infusion of energy that can instantly repair a fatally wounded Cybertronian, or recall their Spark or "life essence" from the afterlife back to the mortal plane.
===Drama / character culmination===
[[File:LastStandoftheWreckers5- Ironfistaneurism.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|I told you I was ill.]]
At its best, character death can be a moving plot development, the fruition of an ongoing character arc.
*[[Scorponok (G1)/Marvel Comics continuity|Scorponok]] spends much of [[Simon Furman]]'s Marvel US run conflicted and doubting himself, and under the weight of his pre-Headmaster self's reputation. He finally gets past this and takes the fight to Unicron, dying in the process, his last words asking Optimus if he'd done good. {{storylink|On the Edge of Extinction!}}
*Suspecting that they would have to remove a character from the show, the writers of ''Beast Wars'' began planning for Dinobot's death several episodes ahead of time. Thus, when it came, it was the outcome of the character's own choices, flaws, and history, and played a crucial role in the show's plot. {{storylink|Code of Hero}}
*Sunstreaker's death in ''[[The Transformers: All Hail Megatron|All Hail Megatron]]'' was intended to follow a similar style of arc... only it's missing the whole choices, flaws and history thing. Oh well!
*Optimus Primal's death(s) in ''Beast Machines'' are likewise the outcome of his own choices and character. {{storylink|End of the Line}} {{storylink| Endgame Pt. III: Seeds of the Future}} His death in ''Beast Wars'', by contrast, is more a moment of dramatic pathos — knowingly walking into danger, his enemy got the better of him. {{storylink|Other Voices, Part 2}}
*[[Ironfist (G1)|Ironfist]]'s death in ''[[The Transformers: Last Stand of the Wreckers|Last Stand of the Wreckers]]'' is his main plot arc, quietly built up in the background since the first issue.


===Consequences of war===
In some stories, notably the ''[[Beast Wars: Transformers (cartoon)|Beast Wars]]'' and ''[[Beast Machines: Transformers (cartoon)|Beast Machines]]'' cartoons and their tie-in comics, Cybertronians can, with the right technology, open a "bridge" between this world and the next, and encourage Cybertronians to recuse their sparks from the afterlife and voluntarily return to the corporeal realm.
[[File:Bulkhead Eradicon Darkness Rising 3.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|His special large intestine! There's only one like it!]]
{{--}}
It's hard to take a war story seriously when nobody actually dies. The reality of war can be more readily portrayed when characters die. [[Generic]]s are particularly handy for this, allowing death to be shown while not removing primary characters (retail toys!) from the story. The results can range from high drama and pathos to numbingly pointless body counts.
*Impactor's death is used to drive home the threat of the Decepticons as well as the risks taken by the Autobots and their commanders. {{storylink|Target: 2006}}
*The ''Generation 2'' book features several deaths which drive home the realities of war. Most notably, Red Alert's destruction serves to make Grimlock acutely aware of just how badly he'd screwed up. {{storylink|Devices and Desires! (Marvel)|Devices and Desires!}}
*Pretty much every death in ''[[The Transformers: Last Stand of the Wreckers|Last Stand of the Wreckers]]'' comes under this.
*[[Cliffjumper (WFC)|Cliffjumper]], [[Tailgate (Prime)|Tailgate]], [[Skyquake (Prime)|Skyquake]] and [[Makeshift (Prime)|Makeshift]] are all killed in their first ''Prime'' episodes, due to just plain bad luck in the first three cases and because of a deliberate Autobot killing in Makeshift's. The [[Vehicon (Prime)|Vehicons]] are presented as sentient ''and'' as being killed by Autobots in large numbers. [[Jeff Kline]] famously said at the advent of ''Prime'' that all deaths would be final. While the rule applied to the majority of the series, it was happily ignored when it came time for the deaths of [[Bumblebee (WFC)|Bumblebee]], [[Megatron (WFC)|Megatron]], and [[Optimus Prime (WFC)|Optimus Prime]], who were all revived almost immediately after death (admittedly it took until the [[Transformers: Robots in Disguise (2015 cartoon)|follow-up series]] to revive Optimus a second time, but let's face it, we're used to that by this point).
*In [[Megatron X (Cyberverse)|Megatron X]]'s reality, the Autobots lost the war and all of them probably died.{{storylink|The Other One}}


===Increased threat===
===Zombies===
[[File:LastStandoftheWreckers1-whycouldntyou.jpg|upright=2.0|thumb]]
[[File:DarknessRising2-letsgetyouhome.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4]]
An enemy that kills is an enemy to be taken seriously. Thus a writer will frequently throw in some preliminary deaths to point out how seriously the bad guy should be treated.
*The generic who dies at the beginning of "[[City of Fear!]]" serves to show the zombies as a true life-threatening menace.
*Likewise for Runabout's death at the hands of the demons ; {{storylink|On the Edge of Extinction!}} knowing they can devour a Transformer makes the reader more concerned about the Dinobots' subsequent fate. {{storylink|Still Life!}}
*In "[[The Transformers: Last Stand of the Wreckers|Last Stand of the Wreckers]]", [[Overlord (G1)|Overlord]] makes corpses in practically every scene he's in!
*Cliffjumper in ''Prime'' is set up as a main character and then killed in five minutes, immediately putting the ''Prime'' Decepticons forward as a major threat.
*[[Ratchet (Movie)|Ratchet]] is brutally hunted down and killed early into ''Age of Extinction'' by [[Cemetery Wind]] and [[Lockdown (ROTF)|Lockdown]], to show what has befallen the majority of the Cybertronians on Earth (and the old cast from the first three films) and what will happen if the survivors are caught.
*''Transformers: Unicron'' begins with Unicron already having noshed on [[Velocitron]], which had previously appeared a few times in that continuity's works while never exactly being a major focus, and soon the [[Space Knight]]s find the corpse of Cliffjumper, whose last major appearance had been a good four years prior, but then Wheeljack, who has been a main character in the last few years, dies as well, proving the situation is now beyond serious. Also, several named Space Knights from Rom's own series die, but they're nasty, bigoted jerks so nobody feels bad when they snuff it.


===Cast thinning===
{{main|Zombie}}
Generation 1 stories were particularly notorious for acquiring gigantic casts as they rolled on, because of the franchise's longevity. A simple way to make things more manageable was simply to kill off large numbers of characters in battle.


*Examples are rife in the Marvel comics:
A Transformer zombie is, essentially, a dead, sparkless shell that operates on only the basest of instincts, its motor functions slaved to the will of some other controlling force. Some zombies are created through scientific means, such as salvaging a dead Transformer and rewiring it into a remotely controlled puppet; others, however, are the result of true supernatural power, created from exposure to mysterious, dangerous energy sources such as [[Dark Energon]] or the [[Dead Universe]]. While some zombies can be repaired and restored to life, it can be very difficult to truly reverse the procedure: oftentimes, the only way to defeat a zombie outbreak is to either eliminate their physical bodies or neutralize whatever's controlling them.
**The "[[Time Wars]]" storyline gets rid of the [[Wrecker]]s and quite a few Decepticons as well.
{{--}}
**The [[Underbase Saga]] even more explicitly clears out dozens of characters, leaving perhaps 2 dozen characters from each faction in the story.
**The battle with Unicron in "[[On the Edge of Extinction!]]" likewise got rid of a lot of older characters, leaving the story free to concentrate on more of a core cast (and associated newer toy characters.)
*''The Transformers: The Movie'' does this on a smaller basis. While only a handful of characters were actually killed off, many more cast members simply disappeared without explanation in the following season of the cartoon.
*[[Betrayal|Wreckers #2]] deals with its oversized cast by killing off scads of characters right up front.


More recent stories - particularly those without the overriding imperative [[to sell toys]], such as the G1 IDW comics - have accepted that not every character must be constantly accounted for at all times or roll-called every issue, allowing larger casts to simply exist in the background until needed. Another alternative, particularly visible in the ''Beast Wars'' cartoon, is to give new bodies (based on corresponding new toys, of course) to existing characters, allowing them to continue promoting new toys across multiple seasons of the show.
===Ghosts===
[[File:GhostsofCybertron1-Starscream.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4]]


===Character motivation===
{{main|Ghost}}
[[File:Bludgeonasavageplace.jpg|upright=1.5|thumb|"How are we going to SHEEEAGH together if he's dead?!"]]


A quick and easy way to create enmity between characters is for the antagonist to kill someone close to the protagonist.
In very rare cases, completely destroying a Transformer's physical body will simply cause the Cybertronian in question to return as a [[ghost]], a disembodied, incorporeal vestige of their former self. In this form, Cybertronians can manifest various "ghostly" powers, such as the ability to phase through walls; in some cases, they can temporarily return to the material plane by possessing other Cybertronians. Unlike the ghosts of human folklore and fantasy, however, this state ''can'' be ultimately reversed by constructing a new body for the Transformer to inhabit, which will effectively return them to some semblance of life.  


*In Marvel's comics, [[Ultra Magnus (G1)/Marvel Comics continuity|Ultra Magnus]] is motivated by his guilt over being unable to participate in Operation: Volcano and prevent Impactor's death. {{storylink|Under Fire!}}
Different works of ''Transformers'' fiction have tied the existence of ghosts to paranormal entities who blur the line between science and sorcery, while others have drawn a connection between ghosts and spirits and supernatural artifacts like the [[Matrix of Leadership]], [[Vector Sigma]], or the [[Oracle (BM)|Oracle]]—the implication, evidently, is that these powerful relics have somehow found a way to preserve the spirits of the great heroes and villains of ages past for future generations to consult. In rare cases, the restless dead can even pierce the veil themselves; in one notable instance, multiple slain Decepticons somehow amalgmated themselves into a the dread [[Violengiguar]]. Perhaps the most famous ghost is [[Starscream (disambiguation)|Starscream]]; across the vast ''Transformers'' [[multiverse]], many independent works of fiction have established that various iterations of the character possess a unique, "mutant spark" that allows him to exist as a ghost even after the destruction of his physical body.
*Also in Marvel's comics, [[Carnivac (G1)|Carnivac]]'s revenge plot against the new [[Mayhem Attack Squad]] is motivated by [[Bludgeon (G1)|Bludgeon]]'s murder of [[Catilla (G1)|Catilla]]. {{storylink|A Savage Place!}}
{{--}}
*In ''Energon'', [[Wing Saber (Energon)|Wing Saber ''nee'' Dagger]] swears revenge on [[Shockblast]] after the murder of his partner, [[Padlock (Energon)|Padlock]]. {{storylink|Shockblast: Rampage}} He then forgets to care about Shockblast later but, y'know, ''Energon'' story.
*In ''Prime'', [[Airachnid (Prime)|Airachnid]] and [[Arcee (WFC)|Arcee's]] conflict is down to Airachnid's murder of [[Tailgate (Prime)|Tailgate]]. {{storylink|Predatory}} She keeps throwing this in Arcee's face.


===Clear space for new toys===
==Immortality==
{{main|To sell toys}}
[[File:ChainOfCommand Waspinator gets shot up.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4|This is every day of his life.]]
[[File:Newyorkunderbase.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|(They also cease to appear on store shelves.)]]
Some fiction has an inherently limited capacity for characters. ''Beast Wars'' and ''Beast Machines'' are by far the most prominent examples; their CGI animation made character animation expensive and necessitated removing an old character before a new one could be brought in. But any medium can be susceptible to this toy-driven phenomena.
*The numerous casualties of ''[[The Transformers: The Movie]]'' are fairly explicitly removed from the story to make way for a wave of new toy/characters.
*Terrorsaur and Scorponok had to be removed — quickly — to make room for the two upcoming Fuzor characters, hence their sudden, blink-and-you-miss-it death in "[[Aftermath]]".
*Airazor and Tigatron were removed for similar reasons. When their plot was finally resolved, it was, surprise, via [[Tigerhawk|a new toy]]!
{{-}}


==Fleshling death==
All Cybertronians live for a very long time, but a select few Cybertronians can be considered truly "immortal" beings, impervious to the ravages of time. Different works of fiction have offered varying explanations for this phenomenon; the most notable, however, would be the ''[[Beast Wars: Transformers (cartoon)|Beast Wars]]'' cartoon's assertion that Starscream possessed a unique "mutant spark" that persisted even after the complete destruction of his physical body. Within the lore of the ''Beast Wars'' universe, this mutation went on to form the basis for the murderous [[Rampage (BW)|Rampage]], a rogue [[Maximal]] experiment who'd seemingly inherited his genetic template's immortality. However, [[Depth Charge (BW)|Depth Charge]] was able to kill him, seemingly for good, by impaling him through the spark with raw energon, suggestion that the experiment was not perfect.
{{quote|"The humans' spark is fragile."<br>"WHAT?! Impossible! Their spark's not eternal?"<br>"One life. That's ''all'' they've got."<br>"Bahh. Then they really ''are'' poorly designed."|[[Demolishor (Armada)|Demolishor]] and [[Megatron (Armada)/Cartoon continuity|Megatron]]|"[[Energon Grid (episode)|Energon Grid]]"|noquote=true}}


In general, ''Transformers'' fiction is pretty squeamish about showing the deaths of Earth's organic creatures. But it's a war, and sometimes it does happen. The out-of-universe reasons generally fall into three categories: Consequences of War, Emotional Pathos, and BLOOD IZ KEWL.  
For a while, [[Hasbro]]'s licensees established that different iterations of [[Unicron]], [[Primus]], and the [[Thirteen]] were immortal due to their unique status as "[[multiversal singularity|multiversal singularities]]"—that is to say, every incarnation of these characters were extensions of one singular being across different dimensions. However, due to a variety of factors, this explanation was later [[retcon]]ned away via the [[Shroud]], and these characters are now as mortal as any other Cybertronian. Other characters might gain temporarily invulnerability through advanced technology or supernatural boosts of power, but these kind of enhancements are almost always temporary in nature.


The various cartoons tend to show organic death the least, as they are most clearly aimed at, and easily accessible by, children. Comics tend to be less reluctant to show the impact of the Transformers' war on innocent lives, though the death rate varies by series. Latter-day Generation 1 books especially revel in high body counts, because squishing stupid humans is killer and awesome and radical and hardcore. Even the occasional [[Satellite of Doom|children's storybook]] has been known to off mass quantities of the dumb fleshies.
Characters like [[Waspinator (BW)|Waspinator]], meanwhile, are "immortal" solely for comedy's sake. They can be blown up, torn to shreds, decapitated, crushed, and generally sustain damage that would kill any other character, only to pop up completely fine in the next scene, ready for another comedic beatdown.
{{--}}


===Animal death===
==Characters who die a lot==
[[File:MurderedPuppy02.jpg|upright=0.85|thumb|One dead dog]]
[[File:Afterdeath-gameoverman.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4|You can set your calendar by this kind of thing.]]
[[File:Sparkwar3 Dead noble.jpg|upright=0.85|thumb|Two dead dogs]]
Cute little animals are almost always killed off for reasons of Emotional Pathos:
*A little girl's pet puppy named [[Pis]] barks at [[Wilder (G1)|Wilder]] and is kicked so hard he died. {{storylink|Rage!! Little Devils with No Need for Rules}}
*The "[[Battle Dog]]" is shot down by the Decepticons after running away from Megatron's experiments. {{storylink|Fight! Super Robot Lifeform Transformers issue 8|Fight! Super Robot Lifeform Transformers #8}}
*[[Jazz (G1)|Jazz]] reminds [[Bumblebee (G1)|Bumblebee]] that [[The Fallen]] once shot down a ship full of [[Antilian bumble-puppy|Antilian bumble-puppies]]. (Decepticons have a thing for killing puppies.)
*The dog-like [[Noble (BM)|Noble]] is shot at by [[Megatron (BW)/Beast Wars cartoon continuity|Megatron]] because of his hatred for organics {{storylink|Sparkwar Pt. III: The Siege}} and was later mourned by his "owner", [[Nightscream (BM)|Nightscream]]. {{storylink|Spark of Darkness}}
*A stray shot from [[Tigatron]] accidentally causes an avalanche which kills his friend [[Snowstalker]]. {{storylink|Law of the Jungle}}
*[[Terrorsaur (BW)|Terrorsaur]] eats an eagle. {{storylink|Power Surge (episode)|Power Surge}} [[Tarantulas (BW)|Tarantulas]] eats a cute little rat, {{storylink|Victory (episode)|Victory}} and nearly eats an antelope as well. {{storylink|Code of Hero}}
*In order to save [[Blackarachnia (BW)|Blackarachnia]], [[Silverbolt (Fuzor)|Silverbolt]] knocks a [[saber-toothed cat|saber-toothed tiger]] off a cliff, presumably killing it. {{Storylink|Bad Spark}}
*[[Blackarachnia (Animated)|Elita-1]] uses [[Sentinel Prime (Animated)|Sentinel]]'s shield to knock a spikey rock onto a giant spider, effectively killing it. She later used [[Optimus Prime (Animated)|Optimus]]' axe to kill some new-born baby spiders. {{Storylink|Along Came a Spider}}
*Human villain [[Trophy White]] has a grisly display of stuffed and mounted animal heads. {{storylink|Transformers Comic issue 2.10|Bring Me the Head of Optimus Prime}}
*[[Laserbeak (DOTM)|Laserbeak]] takes potshots at a vulture for fun in Africa. {{storylink|Transformers: Dark of the Moon (film)|Dark of the Moon}}
*[[Megatron (Movie)|Megatron]] killed a friggin' elephant in Africa. (In [[Transformers: Dark of the Moon (novel)|the adaptation]], at least.)
{{-}}


===Human death===
* '''[[Optimus Prime (disambiguation)|Optimus Prime]]''' and '''[[Optimus Primal (BW)|Optimus Primal]]''': Probably ''the'' most infamous [[The many deaths of Optimus Prime|repeat offenders]] across the entire ''Transformers'' franchise. Together, they've been blasted, roasted, disintegrated, liquified, melted, zombified, blown to bits, and yet they still keep coming back for more, always just in time to light someone's darkest hour. [[Prime Spark (story)|One prose story]] lampshades this tendency by having multiple Optimus iterations from across the [[multiverse]] meet up in a place beyond death at the moment of their passing.
[[File:Razorclawshootsahuman.jpg|thumb|upright=0.85|This didn't happen much.]]
* '''[[Megatron (disambiguation)|Megatron]]''': Antagonists named "Megatron" often die at the end of a ''Transformers'' story, an easy way to emphasize that the threat has passed and good has triumphed. In keeping with the tradition of ''[[The Transformers: The Movie]]'', however, it ''also'' paves the way for a sequel in which he returns as "[[Galvatron (disambiguation)|Galvatron]]" to menace our heroes all over again. Notably, however, a few cartoons like ''[[Transformers Animated (cartoon)|Animated]]'' and ''[[Transformers: Prime (cartoon)|Prime]]'' made the decision to sideline Megatron early on, a narrative choice that increased his menace by directly contrasting his no-nonsense leadership against Starscream's failed attempt at leadership when he made his inevitable return.  
*Marvel US: The [[The Transformers (Marvel comic)|original Marvel book]] ignored or glossed over human casualties, which were rarely if ever shown; the panel at right, from [[Toy Soldiers!|US #37]], shows a ''very'' unusual instance of a human dying right in front of us. One of the few human(oid)s to die on-panel was [[Galen]], killed off to make way for [[Spike Witwicky (G1)|Spike]]. ''[[Transformers: Generation 2 (Marvel)|Generation 2]]'' was much more explicit about human death, as Bludgeon and later [[Jhiaxus (G2)|Jhiaxus]] attacked Earth for the purpose of inflicting casualties.
* '''[[Starscream (G1)|Starscream]]''': In stories where Starscream attempts to backstab Megatron and take his place, it's not unheard of for the Decepticon leader to fatally return the favor after one bungled coup too many. Additionally, multiple works of fiction have either continued the story of, or homaged, the classic ''[[The Transformers (cartoon)|The Transformers]]'' episode "[[Starscream's Ghost]]"... a story that sort of hinges on, well, killing him.
*Marvel UK: The UK-original stories were much less reluctant to show human death; within the first year or so, humans had died in Autobot-induced car wrecks and at the hands of mind-controlled Autobots.
* '''[[Sentinel Prime (disambiguation)|Sentinel Prime]]''': As a holder of the [[Matrix of Leadership]], Sentinel usually winds up falling to [[Megatron (G1)|Megatron]] or his followers, setting up Megatron as a genuine threat capable of taking down a [[Prime (rank)|Prime]] and forcing Optimus to take up an active role in the story as he inherits the Matrix and sets about cleaning up his predecessor's mess. This sequence of events isn't ''always'' the case, however: in [[Transformers: Dark of the Moon (film)|one notable story]], it's ''Optimus'' who must put down Sentinel after his predecessor goes too far.
*In ''[[The Transformers: Regeneration One|Regeneration One]]'', after his revival on Earth, Megatron manages to gain control of Earth's nuclear arsenal and uses it to push humanity to the brink of extinction. {{storylink|Loose Ends, Part 3}} During that conflict, Megatron has some fun terrorizing the population with his army of zombie Decepticons. [[Ratbat (G1)|Ratbat]] tracks down and killed [[Buster Witwicky (G1)|Buster]] and [[Jesse (G1)|Jessie]] Witwicky in a car wash; had he had his full faculties, he might have [[Buster Witwicky and the Car Wash of Doom|appreciated the irony]]. {{storylink|Less Than Zero}}
* '''[[Cy-Kill (disambiguation)|Cy-Kill]]''': Throughout the early 2000s, many ''Transformers'' comics would take a pop at the defunct ''[[GoBots]]'' franchise by having Transformers murder other Cybertronians designed to resemble ''GoBots'' antagonist [[Cy-Kill (GoBots)|Cy-Kill]], sometimes accompanied by [[Scooter (GoBots)|Scooter]] or [[Leader-1 (GoBots)|Leader-1]]. Eventually, however, this "running gag" garnered backlash from fans, who came to view the joke as overdone and unnecessarily mean-spirited; Hasbro's various licensees picked up on the criticism,<ref>{{citesocial|quote=And right here, right now, I will officially declare a moratorium on the killing of Gobots. The funny thing is though, it was done more as a homage to days gone by than as a "Boo, we hate gobots"... Cause actually, we don't hate gobots, I think we in fact had a Prose story that embraced them, so yes, there is Gobot love at the TCC...|link=https://web.archive.org/web/20121015153222/http://www.allspark.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=53396&st=20&p=1078308&#entry1078308|name=Pete Sinclair|site=The Allspark|year=2008|month=12|day=06}}</ref> and the joke has largely fallen off in recent years.
*In almost every US-aired cartoon series, humans essentially ''never'' die. Even ''[[Transformers Animated (cartoon)|Transformers Animated]]'', which features the city of [[Detroit]] getting smashed by robot battles virtually every week, never once mentions humans getting killed. And then ''[[Transformers: Prime (cartoon)|Transformers: Prime]]'' showed up.
* '''[[Solus Prime]]''': The ''Transformers: Prime'' tie-in compendium ''[[Transformers: The Covenant of Primus|The Covenant of Primus]]'' told the story of the [[Thirteen]] original Transformers for the first time—a tale that culminated with [[The Fallen|Megatronus]] accidentally killing Solus Prime in a fit of rage using the [[Requiem Blaster (Thirteen)|Requiem Blaster]] she created for him. According to the Covenant, her fallen body became the [[Well of All Sparks]], a physical passageway by which new [[Spark]]s could travel into the physical realm. For the next decade or so, basically ''every'' new incarnation of Solus Prime leaned on this backstory to varying degrees, depicting or alluding to her death over and over again, with it taking nine years to have authors take the character in new directions—in [[Transformers (2019 comic)|IDW's ''Transformers'' reboot]], for instance, she and [[Maccadam|Alchemist Prime]] are the ''last'' remaining members of the Thirteen, having outlived their siblings and surviving into the early years of primitive Cybertronian civilization.
**A human is shown slumped against a wall in "[[Darkness Rising, Part 5]]", a victim of Soundwave, though it isn't clear whether he was dead or merely unconscious.[[File:Convoy-kablooie.jpg|thumb|upright=0.85|They'll, uh, be okay, maybe.]]
**When [[MECH|human terrorists]] are featured, they will often die. Piloted or driven vehicles explode and enemies are implied to be crushed. "[[Convoy (episode)|Convoy]]" is the first of numerous examples.
**When Nemesis Prime attacks a military base in his [[Nemesis Prime (episode)|self-titled episode]], it's likely his rampage cost the lives of numerous soldiers.
**When the military attacked [[Darkmount (Earth)|Darkmount]], its fusion cannons devastate the entire force, presumably killing them all.
**[[Silas|Cylas]] is the first human to die on-screen in Western Transformers animation, but not before thanking [[Airachnid (Prime)|Airachnid]] for finally freeing him of his gruesome existence.
*Contemporary toyline-based comics (''[[Transformers: Armada (Dreamwave)|Armada]]'', ''[[Transformers: Energon (comic)|Energon]]'') seem to follow a similar policy, avoiding showing, only mentioning, human death.
*Japanese cartoons, by contrast, don't seem to mind showing human deaths (or [[Pis|dog deaths]], for that matter).
*The [[Dreamwave Generation One continuity|Dreamwave G1 comics]] really thought it was totally awesome and cool and radical to kill off those stupid humans. Thus, they start off with Megatron smushing some stupid humans. More smushing and killing and blowing up follows. DIE, dumb stubbies, DIE!
*[[2005 IDW continuity]] managed to avoid this for a long time, showing human death only when it was particularly integral to the plot... then ''[[The Transformers: All Hail Megatron|All Hail Megatron]]'' came down the pike. DIE, stupid fleshies, DIE!
*The live-action [[movie continuity]] implies a great deal of human death. ''Revenge'' mentions a body count of over 9,000 (don't even ''think'' about it), and massive damage is done during the battle of [[Mission City]], though little of it is shown on screen. And of course, the first film begins with Blackout wiping out an entire military base. A handful of humans are killed directly on-screen, most notably [[Patrick Donnelly|Donnelly]]. Then of course we get to ''Dark of the Moon'', which has Decepticons laying siege to [[Chicago]], killing most of its citizens, including several being shot and exploding and disintegrating into just skulls ''directly in front of the camera''. That's not even mentioning [[Laserbeak (DOTM)|Laserbeak]], whose job it is to assassinate civilians, even if it means befriending their children to do it. Twisted.
**[[Dylan Gould]] is killed when he was shoved into [[Sentinel Prime (ROTF)|Sentinel Prime's]] space bridge generator, but given he was a villain it's not so much of a concern. {{storylink|Transformers: Dark of the Moon (film)|Dark of the Moon}}
**[[Sam Witwicky]] was killed by Megatron but brought back to life by the Primes.
**[[Lucas Flannery]], in a bit of karmic retribution (for having tipped off [[Cemetery Wind]] to Optimus' location against Cade's wishes), gets fried by one of [[Lockdown (ROTF)|Lockdown]]'s grenades and his mangled corpse is converted into ''[[Living metal#Live-action film series|Transformium]]''. [[James Savoy]] says his sister was a casualty of the Battle of Chicago, which he uses as an excuse to sadistically hunt and kill Autobots and their sympathizers. He ends up getting knocked out of a very high window by [[Cade Yeager]] for attempting to kill his family. Later, his boss, [[Harold Attinger]], is brutally gunned down by Optimus Prime when he tries to kill Cade for sympathizing with the Autobots. Additionally, [[Joshua Joyce]] tries to scramble paramedics to the scene of Galvatron's rampage (much to Attinger's disgust), believing people were killed. And then there's the [[Dinobot (AOE)|Dinobots]] stomping through the densely crowded streets of Hong Kong. They certainly killed more people than Decepticons!
**[[Cybertron (planet)|Cybertron]]'s arrival to Earth was predicted to cause tens of millions of human casualties. When its continents began reconnecting, the human news reported they were literally scraping away major cities such as [[Hong Kong]] and projected to kill millions.
**''[[Bumblebee (film)|Bumblebee]]'' introduces a new method of human death: liquification. [[Dropkick (Movie)|Dropkick]] uses a special gun that performs this feat on [[Roy (BB)|some random guy]] and later [[Dr. Powell]]. {{storylink|Bumblebee (film)|Bumblebee}}
*The alternate timeline arc in Titan's Movie comic featured big wars on Earth and lots of destruction, clearly ''insinuating'' human death while not being explicit. The exceptions were in [[Transformers Comic issue 10|issue #10]], where [[NATO]] is said to be suffering losses of 11,506 and the [[France|Palais Bourbon]] is blown up when people are still clearly inside. Sam Witwicky, meanwhile, was stated to have died.
*Titan quite blatantly stated that the [[Free Men]] had caused great loss of life at an air base, a rare example of humans killing humans. In the same story, [[Robert Epps]] opens fire on militia men, which kinda implies he was killing them. {{storylink|Transformers Comic issue 2.10|Bring Me the Head of Optimus Prime}} Similarly, [[Wheelie (ROTF)|Wheelie]] of all people is seen zapping humans at close range during a Decepticon attack; with no "oh it was a stun beam" handwave and the 'Cons not pulling punches, it sure seems like he's murdered 'em! {{storylink|Transformers Comic issue 2.6|Outlaw Blues}}
*In ''[[Transformers: Kiss Players (franchise)|Kiss Players]]'', several [[Kiss Player]]s were seen being devoured by Legions.
{{-}}


==Characters who die a lot==
==References==
*[[The many deaths of Optimus Prime|Optimus Prime]]
{{reflist|2}}
*[[Starscream (disambiguation)|Starscream]] — [[Starscream (G1)|He]] [[Starscream (Armada)|dies]] [[Starscream (Animated)|quite]] [[Starscream (Movie)|a]] [[Starscream (Cyberverse)|lot]].
*[[Dirge (G1)]] — the unlucky guy who also [[:File:Unicron1-RampageKillsDirge.jpg|gets]] [[:File:Dirge DeathSerpentor.jpg|killed]] [[:File:Dirge DeathSwarm.jpg|off]] [[:File:Dirge DeathTimelines.jpg|in]] [[:File:Dirge DeathUnicron.jpg|many]] [[:File:Dirge DeathArmada.jpg|continuities]]
*[[Quake (G1)|Quake]] — the unlucky guy who gets killed over and over in the same continuity, but doesn't seem to mind.
*[[Cy-Kill (disambiguation)|Cy-Kill]] — a Go-Bots character transferred to many Transformers comics just to be killed off violently, for no other reason than the lolz of ending his toyline, his universe, and finally his life... repeatedly.
*[[Sentinel Prime (G1)]] — the unlucky [[Prime (rank)|Prime]] [[:File:Sentinel prime lou.jpg|who]] [[:File:Sentinel prime dw.jpg|must]] [[Megatron Origin issue 4|die]].


==See also==
==See also==
*[[Transformer funerary practices]]
*[[To sell toys]]
*[[To sell toys]]
==References==
{{Reflist}}


[[Category:Biology]]
[[Category:Biology]]
[[Category:Transformer anatomy]]
[[Category:Transformer anatomy]]

Latest revision as of 00:25, 22 September 2025

And lo, the children did weep.

Transformers is a children's franchise, but most works of Transformers fiction are stories of war. This means that the death of major and minor characters often figures into the fiction.

Given the ambiguous nature of Transformer physiology, there is very little consistency regarding what is fatal to a Transformer, even within a single storyline. Damage that one Transformer might shrug off can prove fatal to another, or even to the same character in a different story. Sometimes just a laser blast or two will do the trick. Other times, characters survive being melted, crushed, and even utterly disintegrated. It does not take a terribly cynical viewer to conclude that the threshold of survival is generally determined by the needs of the plot. The out-of-universe reasons for a character's death can vary from plot development to the arrival of new toys.

Conveniently enough for writers who are beholden to the whims of a toy company, the majority of Transformers characters are machines, which means that death isn't necessarily permanent. Across the various universes, characters that appear to have been killed have been known to pop up alive again at a later date, or go through some sort of resurrection.

{{#if:Spider-Man, Sparkplug Witwicky, and Optimus Prime"Prisoner of War!"|
"How can you all be so cold and unfeeling? He died a hero!"
"Don't you even have mechanical hearts?"
"The humans don't understand! Our form of life is vastly different from theirs!"
{{#if:Spider-Man, Sparkplug Witwicky, and Optimus Prime|

Spider-Man, Sparkplug Witwicky, and Optimus Prime{{#if:"Prisoner of War!"|, "Prisoner of War!"}}

}}

}}

Hasbro and death

[edit]
They also cease to appear on store shelves.

When the Transformers franchise debuted in 1984, Hasbro saw the show's enormous cast of characters as interchangeable product to be advertised and discarded in favor of the next toy. This cynical approach to marketing meant that characters were constantly rotated in and out to accommodate Hasbro's marketing wishes; as Transformers was first and foremost a war story, death or deactivation became a convenient "out" to remove those characters whose toys had left store shelves in favor of new product. The more serialized Marvel comic and its UK imprint would also feature original characters like Scrounge, Subsea, Impactor, and Chuffer, toyless characters whose sole purpose was to raise the stakes by dying to the villain of the month—it must be said, however, that many of these characters would themselves garner substantial fan followings over the following decades!

Over the course of their seven year run, the Marvel comics featured three distinct "massacre" storylines that removed multiple irrelevant characters from the comics: the UK comic's "Time Wars" storyline features the deaths of multiple Autobots and Decepticons, while the notorious "Underbase Saga" sees a cosmically-empowered Starscream indiscriminately obliterate a combined Autobot-Decepticon alliance, conveniently removing pretty much every character who wasn't a Headmaster, Powermaster, Targetmaster, or Pretender from the story. As is the way of such things, many of those characters would then fall to Unicron in 1990's "On the Edge of Extinction!", clearing the way for a new storyline involving the brand new Action Master gimmick.

The most infamous massacre of all, however, would be The Transformers: The Movie's decision to sideline vast swathes of the concurrent cartoon's cast. Within the first half hour of the film's runtime, many characters who'd starred in the show's first two seasons suffer abrupt, violent deaths, sometimes not even on camera: notable casualties include Prowl, Brawn, Ironhide, Wheeljack, Ratchet, and, most notoriously of all, Optimus Prime himself. Having cleared the proverbial deck, the film then pivots to follow multiple new characters with new toys to sell. In what could be called a microcosm of Hasbro's cynical approach to marketing, Ultra Magnus is ambushed, blasted and subsequently ripped to pieces by Galvatron and the other Decepticons... but because he's a new character with a new toy to sell, the Autobots and some friendly Junkions repair him a few minutes later, and he returns to life none the worse for wear. Ultimately, however, Hasbro underestimated Optimus's pull: the decision to kill him off sparked a massive letter-writing campaign from young fans; Hasbro eventually backtracked, and the season three episode "The Return of Optimus Prime, Part 1" ended with Optimus's resurrection. However, the fiasco had taught Hasbro a valuable lesson: their target audience saw these characters as more than just interchangeable merchandise, and this, in turn, would lead to a much tighter approach to how Hasbro would advertise its characters going forward.

When the Transformers property returned to the airwaves in 1996, the decision to use computer-generated imagery restricted Beast Wars to a limited pool of characters, and the introduction of "new product" meant permanently eliminating other cast members. To this end, Terrorsaur and Scorponok unceremoniously plunged into lava in the second season premiere to make room for the arrival of Silverbolt and Quickstrike; not long afterwards, Optimus Primal returned to life in a new body a mere three episodes after meeting his end in the first season finale. Anticipating that someone on the main cast would have to be swapped out for new product, the producers of the show had enough time to craft a meaningful farewell arc to Dinobot, a long-time series mainstay; his final episode, "Code of Hero", is widely hailed as one of the best Transformers episodes of all time.

After this point, most mainline Transformers television shows put less of an emphasis on death, and largely reserved it for various background generics, the occasional villain, or one-off characters like Prime Cliffjumper or Cyberverse Blurr who perished in their debut episodes. When one of the good guys did die, they were more often than not returned to life after an episode or two—in really extreme cases, they might even return to life less than five minutes after biting the dust. Part of this comes down to Hasbro's comparatively cautious approach to contemporary brand management: after what happened last time, does anyone really think they'd permanently kill Optimus again? That said, many of these rules go out the window when it comes to series finales: as writers and showrunners strike the proverbial sets and tie up their stories without any real Hasbro input, basically anyone can die, including series mainstays. The final Animated episode ends with Prowl giving up his own Spark to complete the AllSpark, the Cyberverse finale features the death of on-again-off-again protagonist Soundwave, while the Prime movie Predacons Rising ends with Optimus Prime sacrificing himself to reignite the Well of All Sparks... although he returns to life in the sequel series.

All this said, death remains a fixture in older-skewing works of Transformers fiction. The live-action films take a relatively cavalier approach to the concept, as do the comics published by Dreamwave Productions, IDW Publishing, and Skybound Entertainment. With no fixed cast to build the series around, nor any specific toylines to advertise, creators have the freedom to kill off as many characters as they want: indeed, plenty of works positively revel in the opportunity to depict violent, over-the-top gorefests where dozens of characters meet their ends, and a few stories like Regeneration One and Last Bot Standing have stretched the concept to its ultimate endpoint by depicting the final extinction of the Cybertronian race. That said, Hasbro still has some say over who lives and who dies—while writing the first issue of IDW's 2009 Transformers ongoing, for instance, Hasbro vetoed author Mike Costa's suggestion to kill off Bumblebee, the most shocking death he could think of, and Ironhide ultimately wound up taking his place.<ref>Moonbase 2 interview with Mike Costa ("Special Guest")</ref> Of course, these attitudes can change with time and circumstance, as evidenced by Hasbro having no qualms with Daniel Warren Johnson killing off Bumblebee in the very first issue of the Energon Universe Transformers series. <ref> {{#if: And this is actually funny, our contact over at Hasbro was also a little tired of seeing Bumblebee everywhere, and he actually asked, before he saw my script, he's like, "is there any way we can not use Bumblebee in the main line?" And I told him, I was like, "I got good news for you!" He had to go, he had to go. Sorry Bumblebee fans, sorry to let you down like that, I am so sorry. |"And this is actually funny, our contact over at Hasbro was also a little tired of seeing Bumblebee everywhere, and he actually asked, before he saw my script, he's like, "is there any way we can not use Bumblebee in the main line?" And I told him, I was like, "I got good news for you!" He had to go, he had to go. Sorry Bumblebee fans, sorry to let you down like that, I am so sorry."—|}}{{#if: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=joUZgObXmU0&t=2545s |Daniel Warren Johnson|Daniel Warren Johnson}}{{#if: YouTube |, YouTube|}}{{#if: TRANSFORMERS Issue 1 DIRECTOR'S COMMENTARY |, "TRANSFORMERS Issue 1 DIRECTOR'S COMMENTARY"|}}{{#if: 2023 |, 2023{{#if: 10 |/{{#switch:{{#len:10}}|1=010|10}}{{#if: 06|/{{#switch:{{#len:06}}|1=006|06}}|}}}}|}}{{#if: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=joUZgObXmU0&t=2545s ||}}{{#switch:{{#sub:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=joUZgObXmU0&t=2545s%7C7%7C11}}%7Cweb.archive= (archive link)|}}{{#switch:{{#sub:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=joUZgObXmU0&t=2545s%7C8%7C11}}%7Cweb.archive= (archive link)|}}{{#switch:{{#sub:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=joUZgObXmU0&t=2545s%7C7%7C10}}%7Carchive.is= (archive link)|}}{{#switch:{{#sub:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=joUZgObXmU0&t=2545s%7C8%7C10}}%7Carchive.is= (archive link)|}}{{#if: | (dead link)}}</ref>

Death in fiction

[edit]

Originally, the Marvel Transformers comic took a relatively cavalier approach to death: characters could be smashed, blasted to bits, or fatally zapped with cosmic energy, but, so long as their bodies remained relatively intact a sufficiently skilled mechanic with enough time and resources could restore them to full functionality. It was the Beast Wars cartoon that first introduced the concept of the spark to the Transformers canon: with the insertion of a physical, tangible "life force" came the implicit assertion that the destruction of a Spark equals death, and that Cybertronians could permanently die; as explained in "Coming of the Fuzors (Part 2)", deceased Sparks return to a mysterious "Matrix", a metaphysical realm beyond space and time where "all are one".

When a Transformer dies, the loss of their life force (or artistic convention, out here in the real world) often results in them turning gray. The most well-known example by far is Optimus Prime's death in the animated movie; Prowl can also be glimpsed turning gray as he falls during the shuttle assault. This idea has shown up in a few other places, such as the Animated cartoon and the More Than Meets the Eye comics, the latter of which coined the term "aggressive depigmentation" to describe the phenomenon.

Common causes of death

[edit]
{{#if:Ratchet"The Cracks Beneath Your Feet Part One"|
We are so hard to kill. It takes real determination. Commitment, I suppose.
{{#if:Ratchet|

Ratchet{{#if:"The Cracks Beneath Your Feet Part One"|, "The Cracks Beneath Your Feet Part One"}}

}}

}}

There is little consistency in what can kill a Transformer—sometimes it take a single, well-placed shot, while in other stories the total annihilation of a Transformer's physical body still won't do the trick. Across the multiverse, different Transformers have survived being blasted, roasted, melted, disintegrated, and even eaten; even the very concept of destroying a spark varies quite a bit in its details from story to story, character to character, and series to series. Many modern works of Transformers fiction have explained or implied that Cybertronians are extremely difficult to kill: their durable mechanical bodies and extraterrestrial construction allows them to survive attacks that would kill or incapacitate lesser beings.

Below are some of the most common causes of death that have befallen unfortunate Cybertronians across the Transformers mythos. This is not an exhaustive list-the Transformers franchise is too large to try to catalogue every single fatality, and a creative writer can come up with dozens of bizarre ways to kill off their characters. Furthermore, just how durable Cybertronians are vary greatly across different dimensions; what is immediately fatal in one story is but a minor inconvenience in another.

Weaponsfire

[edit]

Most Transformers stories feature at least some degree of conflict between different groups of Cybertronians, who often resolve these interpersonal problems by repeatedly shooting at each other. Transformer weapons can be kinetic, energy-based, or even chemical in nature; in different Transformers stories, all three forms of weaponry have killed characters, even though the actual damage threshold of the average Cybertronian can be frustratingly inconsistent.

Sometimes, it takes a hail of bullets to take a sufficiently motivated Cybertronian out of commission; in other stories, a single shot aimed at a specific weak point, such as the spark core or the brain module, can permanently kill a Transformer. Sometimes, Cybertronians are even vulnerable to human firearms; notably, in the first live-action film and its ancillary media, it's specifically noted that the film's Cybertronian characters are vulnerable to the United States military's [[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}Armour-piercing discarding sabot|{{#if:high-heat sabot rounds|high-heat sabot rounds|Armour-piercing discarding sabot}}]], as the 6,000 degree magnesium burn can easily punch through their regenerative living metal.<ref>Transformers</ref>

Explosions

[edit]
Dirge learns the hard way not to overdo the propane at his Fourth of July cookout.

Cybertronians are durable. How durable generally depends on both the universe and the needs of the story, but multiple stories have revealed or implied that Cybertronians can survive the low-yield explosions released by conventional armaments. However, Cybertronian warfare is anything but conventional, and as a result various Cybertronians have found themselves at ground zero of explosions they can't so readily withstand—across the multiverse, these have included high-powered missiles, exotic materials like energon crystals, unusual forms of energy like transwarp, exploding starships, and the extreme heat and pressure released by nuclear weapons. In some cases, a weapon might overload the spark or ignite the Transformer's internal energon supplies, and the resultant explosion may very well blow the unlucky Transformer apart from within.

Compared to most other forms of death, explosions are comparatively quick and can obscure what would otherwise be a graphic death scene. On top of this, a single explosion can quickly remove many characters from a story, making them a perennially popular choice for the discerning Transformers author who needs to quickly clear the deck. Additionally, the messy, imprecise nature of explosions makes a good "out" for a writer to fake a character's death, or for a later creator to retcon their survival.

Head trauma

[edit]

In the early days of the Transformers franchise, most prominently in the Marvel comic, a Transformer's life force was synonymous with the brain module, and destroying this module would kill the Transformer. With the rise of the Beast Wars television show, this premise was eventually modified to incorporate the more esoteric mythology surrounding sparks, but the concept of killing a Transformer by destroying or removing their head remains a ever-popular means of killing characters in older-skewing works of Transformers fiction.

Different works of fiction have offered varying interpretations on whether or not one can safely remove a Transformer's head. In some works of fiction, notably some Marvel-era stories and the Animated cartoon, characters can survive as severed heads; in others, removing one's head is immediately fatal. In the letters page to issue #202, Dreadwind addresses this discrepancy by noting that the Cybertronians of his reality can voluntarily detach their heads, but merely yanking it off without safely deactivating the relevant neural connections is usually fatal.<ref> From the letters page of Marvel UK issue #202: "It's all a matter of how you remove your head. You see, even I - unh, there it goes - can take my head off. It's all a matter of how you do it. There's a whole set of mental commands that disconnect nerve endings and the like. If you just rip it off, fuel lines, neural connections and other vital bits are severed, as in the case of Cyclonus. Nine times out of ten it's fatal."</ref> Most other works of Transformer fiction generally agree that, even if a the character can survive as a severed head, attacking the brain module itself—be it a shot through the head or the outright destruction of the relevant hardware—will kill, or at the very least severely injure, a Transformer. In the universe of the live-action Transformers film, this appears to be the definitive way of killing one's foe.

Bodily harm

[edit]

Much like a human body, Transformer physiology can be viewed as an elaborate life support system that protects a few critical failure points—if their physical form is compromised, then the risk of death dramatically increases. Transformers can endure truly harrowing amounts of physical trauma, shrug off the loss of their limbs, and piece themselves back together from all but the most debilitating injuries, but most Cybertronians do have an upper limit on just how badly their bodies can be damaged before vital systems fail. In some instances, the impact trauma incurred by plummeting from a great height can do the trick: more than one unwary Cybertronian has met their end by plummeting off a high structure or suffering critical damage while in an airborne alternate mode before dashing themselves to pieces upon hitting the ground.

Other Cybertronians have been crushed to death—although their metallic armor can withstand a certain amount of excess pounds per square inch, few Cybertronians can survive being trampled by towering combiners or planet-sized monsters like Unicron. Ripping a Transformer to pieces or deliberately removing vital parts such as the spark core can prove fatal: Cybertronians can survive losing extremities and even entire limbs, but not even they can survive wholesale damage. One alarmingly common way of putting a Transformer down for good is to simply rip them in half. While many Cybertronians can withstand a horizontal bisection that severs their torso from their legs, no Transformer can survive a vertical cut that destroys multiple vital components in one clean motion. Their robotic natures, combined with the inherent dehumanization of watching brightly colored space robots fight it out, mean that Transformers stories can feature a comparatively high level of violence and physical peril than other shows aimed at the same age group. That said, this kind of violence is usually beyond the pale for even the edgiest of kid's shows, so these kinds of actions are generally reserved for more adult-focused Transformers media; cartoons might imply a fatal dissection or dismemberment, but the actual deed is rarely shown on-screen.

Destruction of spark

[edit]

Transformer bodies can withstand a staggering amount of punishment, and sometimes even the complete destruction of their physical body won't keep them down forever: if their spark still exists, it can, depending on the universe, be transplanted into a fresh protoform and effectively return the Cybertronian in question to life. To put down a Transformer for good, one must directly attack and extinguish their spark. Although Cybertronians usually protect their spark underneath layers of armor and a specially shielded spark core, any weapon that penetrates these protective measures and damages the spark itself will almost always prove fatal. Using technologies such as spark extractors, a spark can be safely removed from the body without causing any physical injuries: while this does not strictly "kill" the Transformer in question, the body becomes an inanimate "shell" until the spark is placed in a suitable receptacle.

Some works of fiction have revealed or implied that a spark can survive outside of a body, possibly even indefinitely; in other universes, this is decidedly not the case, and any spark removed from its housing will gradually dissipate into nothingness as it returns to the afterlife. Under very rare circumstances, a Transformer may even choose to voluntarily relinquish their spark: whether through employing spiritual techniques, using technologies such as spark extractors, or simply reaching into their chest and ripping their spark free from their body.

Disintegration

[edit]
"Optimus, I don't feel so good..."

With the right weapons and technical know-how, one can damage a Transformer's physical structure, and even take them out of action for a prolonged period. However, thanks to their durable physiologies and their capability to pull themselves back together from even the most grievous injuries, it's difficult—and, depending on the universe, sometimes nearly impossible—to permanently keep them down; sometimes, the only way to permanently put a Cybertronian down for good is to completely obliterate their physical body in one go, reducing them to nothing but atoms, ash, and a few metal flakes.

This is easier said than done, however: across the vast multiverse, there are very few beings who wield the kind of high-powered weapons required to instantly atomize a Cybertronian. Some pathogens such as Cosmic Rust, Ore-2, and alchemical viruses cause fatal damage by gradually decaying their bodies from within; however, most Transformers who perish in this way are killed by astronomically powerful beings of supernatural origin, who can channel vast amounts of power required to instantly disintegrate a Cybertronian: common culprits include Unicron, Primus, and the Vok, and empowered servants such as Tigerhawk and Galvatron, who can channel a fraction of their creator's power. Additionally, Cybertronians have demonstrated a marked weakness to magic and other forms of paranormal energy; even brief exposure to certain spells or artifacts can cause a Cybertronian to fatally crumble away.

Melting

[edit]
There's nothing you and I won't do. I'll stop the world and melt with you.

Most Cybertronians are made out of metal. Although the exotic alloys that constitute their biology can withstand extremes of heat, cold, and pressure, prolonged exposure to extremely high temperatures—such as the molten rock found in active volcanoes, or the searing cauldron of liquid metals that constitute the dreaded smelting pools—will fatally reduce the average Transformer to a smouldering heap of white-hot liquid. More insidiously, Cybertronians have also demonstrated a susceptibility to certain acidic compounds strong enough to punch their way through Cybertronian armor plating; given enough time to fester, they can seep into vital internal components, compromise their structural integrity, and fatally damage their targets.

Much like disintegration, melting a Transformer is generally regarded as a foolproof way to kill them for good—after all, many forms of resurrection hinge on piecing their broken bodies back together again, so liquefying their remains ensures that there simply won't be anything left to repair. On the other hand, sending a character plummeting to an uncertain doom can open the road for a later writer to reveal that they somehow escaped their predicament; when Terrorsaur and Scorponok perished in the Beast Wars episode "Aftermath", the writers deliberately showed them beginning to change into Transmetal forms, a convenient "out" in case they decided to bring them back, even though this possibility never came to pass.

Exotic energy

[edit]

As robotic life-forms, Transformers can subsist upon a wide range of energy sources; in some continuities, they can even convert mundane fuel sources such as oil, coal, and uranium into energon. Their advanced mechanical bodyframes mean that Cybertronians are largely impervious to most ordinary forms of radiation, such as the [[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}ionizing radiation|{{#if:ionizing radiation|ionizing radiation|ionizing radiation}}]] that damages organic tissue, but over the course of their endless wars Cybertronians must often contend with far more unusual—and potentially lethal—forms of energy unlike anything on planet Earth. While Transformers subsist upon energon, overexposure to the energon radiation produced by the substance in its raw, crystalline form can easily prove fatal. "Energon overload", as it is often known, begins with paralysis and quickly progresses to stasis lock, then outright deactivation. To survive on energon-rich planets, Transformers often adopt biomechanical "beast modes" that sheathe their vulnerable mechanical components beneath a layer of synthetic flesh. Other dangerous forms of energy include the volatile plasma energy, anathema to mechanical life, the unpredictable Angolmois Energy, and unusual variants of energon such as Dark Energon and Tox-En.

In universes where science and sorcery coexist, Cybertronians and their technology have demonstrated a marked susceptibility to magic and other forms of supernatural power. Foolhardy Cybertronians who attempt to co-opt lost Cybertronian relics like the AllSpark, the Enigma of Combination, or the Underbase can overwhelm other Cybertronians with arcane energies, only to find themselves undone by the same power as their mortal bodies struggle to cope with the energy overload. Other notable vulnerabilities include the necrotic Dead Universe, the destructive energies of the Talisman, and the enchantments channeled by spellcasters like the Visionaries of Prysmos and even the ponies of Equestria—as something "beyond" the ken of Cybertronian science, intellectuals of at least one universe have rationalized the existence of magic as a unique form of [[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}gamma radiation|{{#if:gamma radiation|gamma radiation|gamma radiation}}]];<ref>"Desperate Measures"</ref> left unchecked, prolonged exposure to magic can cause complete molecular breakdown, sapping away their life force as they crumble to dust.

Diseases and predators

[edit]

It may seem strange that robotic beings like Transformers could contract illnesses of their own, but different works of Transformers fiction have established that Cybertronians are living mechanical beings whose systems more closely mimic a living organism's than a mundane machine. As a result, they are susceptible to a range of illnesses and ailments; if not properly treated, these diseases can gradually sap away their strength, impede the functionality of their bodies, and, in the worst case scenario, even prove fatal. Ailments like Red Rust, Cosmic Rust, and Corrodia Gravis painfully oxidize their metallic bodies, more aggressive pathogens can immediately corrode them to nothing, and some diseases like Cybercrosis attack the spark itself.

While rare, some life-forms prey upon or parasitize Cybertronians—and some Transformers who adopt a beast mode might well indulge their new instincts by hunting down and devouring other members of their species. Alien predators like Scraplets, rust worms, or the Mecannibals can devour Cybertronians in a matter of minutes; more exotic creatures like limbo parasites can telepathically attack them. Even organic creatures can pose a threat to an unwary Transformer; alien predators like the chaosteros or Earth dinosaurs have displayed the capability to bite through Cybertronian armor.

Old age

[edit]

A single Transformer might live for many millions of years, outlasting entire civilizations in the process, but in the end the vast majority of Cybertronians are as mortal as any other being: their lifespans are, ultimately, finite. Parts wear out and can no longer be replaced, systems break down, living metal fatigues, and the interlinked technologies that make up their bodies become obsolete; eventually, their aged bodies can no longer safely support a spark, and a Transformer dies. While many, many Transformers characters have been portrayed as old or elderly, actually showing a character dying from old age onscreen is almost unheard of. Some fiction, notably the "Wings Universe" stories, the live-action films, and Last Bot Standing, have linked the process of "aging" itself to the availability of energon—in these stories, prolonged periods of fuel deprivation artificially accelerates the aging process.

IDW's 2019 Transformers reboot took a more nuanced look at the concept of aging in a society of nigh-immortal robots: in this universe, Cybertronians who have grown weary of life can choose to go "immersant", a kind of voluntary euthanasia process where aging Transformers return to the living strata of Cybertron; in this state, what begins as a gradual dissolution of the self eventually culminates in death when their spark finally leaves their body and rejoins the Allspark.

After death

[edit]
{{#if:Rodimus"The Gloaming"|
I commend your spark to the Allspark, and the Allspark is one spark, and the one spark is your spark, and in this way we are all connected.
{{#if:Rodimus|

Rodimus{{#if:"The Gloaming"|, "The Gloaming"}}

}}

}}

While the prospect of eternal conflict has forced the Transformers to become a race of warriors, they are not emotionless machines. Like humans, Transformers sometimes struggle to process the loss of a close comrade or accept their own innate mortality, and this human-like drive to find meaning in both life and death has led their race to develop their own religious beliefs and ceremonies regarding death and the afterlife.

Funerals and memorials

[edit]
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Transformers is mostly aimed at kids—while most continuities show or imply the deaths of many Transformers, fewer stories have depicted their funerary rites or even any real kind of organized grieving process. Occasionally a deceased Transformer of narrative significance may be laid to rest inside a sarcophagus; depending on the needs of the story and the beliefs of their faction, they may be buried, launched into space, interred in a mausoleum alongside other fallen Cybertronians, cremated, melted in a smelting pool, or simply broken down for spare parts. When stranded on remote worlds like Earth, Cybertronians have occasionally been forced to dig basic, unmarked graves or dump their bodies at sea. Such methods of disposal are not entirely imprudent; given the opportunity, many unscrupulous humans would do anything to get their hands on Cybertronian technology, including desecrating the corpses of fallen Transformers.

In wartime scenarios, the task of eulogizing the fallen generally falls to the commanding officer or some suitable equivalent. Religiously-motivated memorials may tie their passing to prominent Cybertronian deities, most prominently Primus, the Thirteen, or Allspark that ties all Cybertronian lives together. In times of peace, Transformers may construct memorials honoring those that gave their lives in the conflict, either on Cybertron or on the battlegrounds of alien worlds. In some realities, quasi-deities such as the mysterious "Necrobot" are said to spend their lives cataloguing each and every dead Cybertronian.

Afterlife

[edit]
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When a Transformer dies, their spark is said to have been "extinguished" as it vanishes from the material world. In reality, however, the spark simply transcends back to a higher dimension, a realm alternately known as the "Matrix", the "Afterspark", or the "Allspark", an extradimensional space where all Sparks are truly one, united through a higher consciousness. Religious Cybertronians who pass on may die secure in the knowledge that their experiences on the mortal plane will enrich the entire collective, and some supernatural artifacts like the Matrix of Leadership can channel a fraction of this accumulated wisdom into its bearer.

Various belief systems in different universes have ascribed unique properties to the Allspark and the sparks that dwell within them. In some mythologies, sparks must transcend through a vast, metaphysical "tree" representing unique phases of consciousness in order to reach the Allspark itself;<ref>"Singularity Ablyss"</ref> in others, primordial deities like Primus and the Guiding Hand are said to reside in the highest echelons of the Afterspark, guiding and welcoming new arrivals into the kingdom of the dead.<ref>"Metastasis"</ref> Not all Cybertronian belief systems subscribe to the concept of the Afterspark, however; adherents of the Way of Flame, for instance, instead believe that deceased sparks are recycled and reincarnated into new Cybertronians within the mythical Forge of Solus Prime.<ref>"The Life of Sideswipe"</ref>

Resuscitation and resurrection

[edit]
{{#if:RodimusLast Bot Standing #2|
Dying came easy to us. You were never mourned for long because someone nearly always found a way to bring you back. So you could pick up right where you left off.
{{#if:Rodimus|

Rodimus{{#if:Last Bot Standing #2|, Last Bot Standing #2}}

}}

}}

Transformers are robots—they can be switched off, taken apart, blown to bits, and put back together, good as new. As a result, "death" is not nearly as permanent a condition as it is it for humans and other organic beings. Various Transformers stories have offered various and sometimes contradictory explanations as to how Cybertronians can raise their dead. In some universes, these forms of resurrection is so commonplace as to be an entirely mundane part of the average Transformer life cycle; in others, death is something more permanent, and Transformers seeking to resurrect their comrades must turn to extraordinary power sources or commune with higher beings.

Resurrecting a Cybertronian may return them to perfect condition, as though they never died, or leave them with their personalities and memories only partly intact. In rare cases, a Cybertronian might return to life as an entirely new being with a new name, personality, and alternate mode. Cruder forms of resurrection might simply animate their corpses as mindless zombies. All this to say, transient nature of Cybertronian death and ability to bring a character back to life in a new body (and thus a new toy) makes a tremendously convenient storytelling "out" for writers who want to resurrect a character for narrative—or, more commonly, marketing—reasons.

Physical reconstruction

[edit]
Your average Transformer job lot on eBay.

In early works of “Generation 1” fiction, all it took to bring a “dead” Transformer back online was a suitable repairman and the right set of tools—bringing a Transformer back to life was as simple as fixing a broken television. This kind of resuscitation was very common in the Marvel comic and, to a lesser extent, the cartoon. Notably, this the mechanism by which Bumblebee evolved into his powered-up “Goldbug” form; in the Marvel continuity, Ratchet would then rebuild the damaged Goldbug back into his younger "Bumblebee" persona during a storyline introducing the Classic Pretenders, for no real reason other than that he "always preferred [his] original form."<ref>"Skin Deep"</ref>

With the rise of the ephemeral spark as the defined core of Transformer life, this form of revival has generally fallen off as a clearly defined way to raise the dead. When characters in modern Transformers fiction sustain critical structural damage, they are often said to be in “stasis”, a kind of protective low-power state in which all functions are rerouted to protect the spark.

Consciousness transfer

[edit]
Regeneration One becomes weirder to read when you realize that Prime spends the entire series with a shrivelled little Hi-Q mummy in his chest.

As machines with a spark-based physiology, "death" does not always equal the complete destruction of their physical body. Like human computers, a Cybertronian can survive the complete destruction of their physical form so long as their spark, brain module, core consciousness or some other seat of higher functioning persists; to bring them back to life, all one has to do is plug them back into a suitable receptacle—whether that's a tailor-made body, a sparkless protoform, or, in emergencies, mundane human technology—and they'll be instantly reborn. In some realities, this kind of ad-hoc surgery can succeed even if a Transformer's original spark has been extinguished.

In the original Marvel comic, which existed in a time before the franchise had fully codified the concept of sparks, this was a very common way to resurrect characters: notably, Optimus Prime cheated his first death when programmer Ethan Zachary downloaded a copy of his mind onto a floppy disk; when the Autobots resurrected their leader, all it took was to simply reupload the information encoded on the disk into his new body.<ref>"People Power!"</ref> When Prime died again during the final battle against Unicron, his Powermaster partner Hi-Q revealed that a portion of Prime's consciousness persisted in his own mind thanks to their binary bond, and the Last Autobot subsequently resurrected Prime by combining the two into a single Action Master body which contained both of their memories.<ref>"End of the Road!"</ref> Similar examples exist across the franchise.

Supernatural abilities

[edit]
"I am Optimus the White. And I come back to you now—at the turn of the tide."

Transformers has always blurred the line between science fiction and fantasy, and the introduction of explicitly divine entities like Primus, quasi-deities like the Thirteen original Transformers, and various supernatural artifacts like the Matrix of Leadership or the AllSpark into various works of Transformers canon has allowed various authors to lean on a very literal deus ex machina to bring a character back from the brink. Multiple deities and artifacts across the multiverse can deliver a supernatural infusion of energy that can instantly repair a fatally wounded Cybertronian, or recall their Spark or "life essence" from the afterlife back to the mortal plane.

In some stories, notably the Beast Wars and Beast Machines cartoons and their tie-in comics, Cybertronians can, with the right technology, open a "bridge" between this world and the next, and encourage Cybertronians to recuse their sparks from the afterlife and voluntarily return to the corporeal realm.

Zombies

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Main article{{#if:|s}}: Zombie{{#if:
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A Transformer zombie is, essentially, a dead, sparkless shell that operates on only the basest of instincts, its motor functions slaved to the will of some other controlling force. Some zombies are created through scientific means, such as salvaging a dead Transformer and rewiring it into a remotely controlled puppet; others, however, are the result of true supernatural power, created from exposure to mysterious, dangerous energy sources such as Dark Energon or the Dead Universe. While some zombies can be repaired and restored to life, it can be very difficult to truly reverse the procedure: oftentimes, the only way to defeat a zombie outbreak is to either eliminate their physical bodies or neutralize whatever's controlling them.

Ghosts

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In very rare cases, completely destroying a Transformer's physical body will simply cause the Cybertronian in question to return as a ghost, a disembodied, incorporeal vestige of their former self. In this form, Cybertronians can manifest various "ghostly" powers, such as the ability to phase through walls; in some cases, they can temporarily return to the material plane by possessing other Cybertronians. Unlike the ghosts of human folklore and fantasy, however, this state can be ultimately reversed by constructing a new body for the Transformer to inhabit, which will effectively return them to some semblance of life.

Different works of Transformers fiction have tied the existence of ghosts to paranormal entities who blur the line between science and sorcery, while others have drawn a connection between ghosts and spirits and supernatural artifacts like the Matrix of Leadership, Vector Sigma, or the Oracle—the implication, evidently, is that these powerful relics have somehow found a way to preserve the spirits of the great heroes and villains of ages past for future generations to consult. In rare cases, the restless dead can even pierce the veil themselves; in one notable instance, multiple slain Decepticons somehow amalgmated themselves into a the dread Violengiguar. Perhaps the most famous ghost is Starscream; across the vast Transformers multiverse, many independent works of fiction have established that various iterations of the character possess a unique, "mutant spark" that allows him to exist as a ghost even after the destruction of his physical body.

Immortality

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This is every day of his life.

All Cybertronians live for a very long time, but a select few Cybertronians can be considered truly "immortal" beings, impervious to the ravages of time. Different works of fiction have offered varying explanations for this phenomenon; the most notable, however, would be the Beast Wars cartoon's assertion that Starscream possessed a unique "mutant spark" that persisted even after the complete destruction of his physical body. Within the lore of the Beast Wars universe, this mutation went on to form the basis for the murderous Rampage, a rogue Maximal experiment who'd seemingly inherited his genetic template's immortality. However, Depth Charge was able to kill him, seemingly for good, by impaling him through the spark with raw energon, suggestion that the experiment was not perfect.

For a while, Hasbro's licensees established that different iterations of Unicron, Primus, and the Thirteen were immortal due to their unique status as "multiversal singularities"—that is to say, every incarnation of these characters were extensions of one singular being across different dimensions. However, due to a variety of factors, this explanation was later retconned away via the Shroud, and these characters are now as mortal as any other Cybertronian. Other characters might gain temporarily invulnerability through advanced technology or supernatural boosts of power, but these kind of enhancements are almost always temporary in nature.

Characters like Waspinator, meanwhile, are "immortal" solely for comedy's sake. They can be blown up, torn to shreds, decapitated, crushed, and generally sustain damage that would kill any other character, only to pop up completely fine in the next scene, ready for another comedic beatdown.

Characters who die a lot

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You can set your calendar by this kind of thing.

References

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<references />

See also

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