Form Follows Function: Difference between revisions
Adding reprint info pertaining to US trade paperbacks. |
mNo edit summary |
||
| (12 intermediate revisions by 6 users not shown) | |||
| Line 21: | Line 21: | ||
==Synopsis== | ==Synopsis== | ||
In [[Decepticobracropolis]] on [[Earth]], [[Duke (G.I. Joe)|Duke]]'s undercover mission has gone wrong. Though his identity has been discovered, he doesn't take it lying down: after stuffing a grenade in [[Frenzy (G1)|Frenzy]]'s mouth to free himself from the robot's grip, he fights his way through a team of [[Cobra]] troops, and takes down loquacious Cobra pugilist [[Big Boa]]. Out for a bit of personal revenge, he then hunts down the apparent turncoat [[Snake-Eyes|Snake Eyes]], who has just completed a meditation ritual and believes his mastery of body and mind will allow him to make the journey through the [[M.A.S.S. Device]] that has killed so many others. Duke tackles Snake Eyes through the M.A.S.S. Device portal, and the pair are sent tumbling through the [[ | In [[Decepticobracropolis]] on [[Earth]], [[Duke (G.I. Joe)|Duke]]'s undercover mission has gone wrong. Though his identity has been discovered, he doesn't take it lying down: after stuffing a grenade in [[Frenzy (G1)|Frenzy]]'s mouth to free himself from the robot's grip, he fights his way through a team of [[Cobra]] troops, and takes down loquacious Cobra pugilist [[Big Boa]]. Out for a bit of personal revenge, he then hunts down the apparent turncoat [[Snake-Eyes|Snake Eyes]], who has just completed a meditation ritual and believes his mastery of body and mind will allow him to make the journey through the [[M.A.S.S. Device]] that has killed so many others. Duke tackles Snake Eyes through the M.A.S.S. Device portal, and the pair are sent tumbling through the [[unspace|void between worlds]]. | ||
In [[T.H.E. P.I.T.]], [[Doctor Venom]] conducts an arcane experiment with [[Soundwave (G1)|Soundwave]]'s remains, [[General Flagg]]'s [[Bumblebee (G1)|Bumblecycle]] and some Joe greenshirts. As Venom reads in the native tongue of [[Cybertron (planet)|Cybertron]] from some kind of grimoire, the Bumblecycle springs to life and begins coiling around his arm... | In [[T.H.E. P.I.T.]], [[Doctor Venom]] conducts an arcane experiment with [[Soundwave (G1)|Soundwave]]'s remains, [[General Flagg]]'s [[Bumblebee (G1)|Bumblecycle]] and some Joe greenshirts. As Venom reads in the native tongue of [[Cybertron (planet)|Cybertron]] from some kind of grimoire, the Bumblecycle springs to life and begins coiling around his arm... | ||
| Line 27: | Line 27: | ||
A fleet of G.I. Joe [[G.I.Rocket|green bombs]] hurtles through space towards Cybertron, led by a supply rocket manned—so to speak—by G.I. Joe's "non-human personnel" unit [[U.S.7]], made up of the team's animal sidekicks and captained by [[Polly]], aka "Seasick". As they draw near to the metal planet, U.S.7's ship is attacked and boarded by G.I. Joe's Russian counterpart, the creepy, kooky [[Oktober Guard]], but after only a few moments of fighting, their ship is snatched out of the air by the gigantic [[Fortress Maximus (G1)|Fortress Maximus]]. The energy-starved colossus pulls them down to Cybertron's surface, shakes animal and guardsman alike out of the ship, and tosses them down his gullet. | A fleet of G.I. Joe [[G.I.Rocket|green bombs]] hurtles through space towards Cybertron, led by a supply rocket manned—so to speak—by G.I. Joe's "non-human personnel" unit [[U.S.7]], made up of the team's animal sidekicks and captained by [[Polly]], aka "Seasick". As they draw near to the metal planet, U.S.7's ship is attacked and boarded by G.I. Joe's Russian counterpart, the creepy, kooky [[Oktober Guard]], but after only a few moments of fighting, their ship is snatched out of the air by the gigantic [[Fortress Maximus (G1)|Fortress Maximus]]. The energy-starved colossus pulls them down to Cybertron's surface, shakes animal and guardsman alike out of the ship, and tosses them down his gullet. | ||
At Cybertron's north pole, a Joe team is marking the huge rocket-furnaces growing out of the planet's as targets for the approaching wave of green bombs. Team leader [[Psych Out]] is dismayed; he is fascinated by the constantly morphing geography of Cybertron, and would much rather be investigating the two curious mountains that have sprung up at the south pole. Though they successfully accomplish their task, misfortune strikes when the team are suddenly snagged in a [[turborat]] trap, laid around the | At Cybertron's north pole, a Joe team is marking the huge rocket-furnaces growing out of the planet's as targets for the approaching wave of green bombs. Team leader [[Psych Out]] is dismayed; he is fascinated by the constantly morphing geography of Cybertron, and would much rather be investigating the two curious mountains that have sprung up at the south pole. Though they successfully accomplish their task, misfortune strikes when the team are suddenly snagged in a [[turborat]] trap, laid around the furnace to catch robotic vermin. The traps are collected by [[Hot Rod (G1)|Hot Rod]], a fallen [[Autobot]] leader once known as "Imhotep Rodimus", now a maintenance worker for [[Megatron (G1)|Megatron]]'s empire. Loading up his traps and going on his weary way, trying to ignore the grisly sight of the [[smelting pool|smelting pits]] fueling the furnaces, Hot Rod finds his path barred by Autobot revolutionary [[Blaster (G1)|Blaster]], who is appalled by the once-great young hero's defection and eager to take him out. As the two Autobots fire on each other, the Joes are blasted free from their trap, but at that point, the green bombs begin falling. One bomb-blast kicks up a chunk of rubble that knocks out Blaster; Decepticons [[Apeface]] and [[Demolisher (G1)|Demolisher]] arrive in time to see Hot Rod standing over his fallen body and, believing he has defeated Blaster, congratulate him on a job well done. Disgusted by words of praise from the lowest of the low, Hot Rod is galvanized into action: he hurls the two Decepticons into one of the furnaces, loads Blaster into his alternate mode, and heads off for [[Metroplex (G1)|Metroplex]]. This is good news for the Joes, who secretly use their grappling hooks to hitch a ride on Hot Rod, enabling them to outrun the green bomb blasts. | ||
[[File:FormFollowsFunction-extradimensionaloptimus.jpg|thumb|left]] | |||
In the terraformed [[Iacon (polity)|Iacon]], [[Bazooka (G.I. Joe)|Bazooka]] is in a portable toilet that is thrown through the air when [[Brawn (G1)|Brawn]]'s Autobot unit attacks. Emerging from the collapsed commode, he is horrified to see what appears to be a battlefield strewn with dead bodies... but as he cradles [[Scarlett]]'s fallen form, she and all the other combatants turn out to be alive. Before hostilities can break out again, though, the crawling form of Metroplex climbs appears and disgorges [[Grimlock (G1)|Grimlock]]'s Autobots and the small Joe team they had captured. Grimlock loudly announces that a truce has been brokered, and the Autobots and Joes all have a dance party to cement their new friendship. During the celebration, Bazooka tries chewing on some of the foliage that the terraforming process has created, but the bizarre [[technorganic|techno-organic]] leaves prove to be psychoactive, and induce a hallucination of some kind of composite intelligence known as "[[Primus]]". | In the terraformed [[Iacon (polity)|Iacon]], [[Bazooka (G.I. Joe)|Bazooka]] is in a portable toilet that is thrown through the air when [[Brawn (G1)|Brawn]]'s Autobot unit attacks. Emerging from the collapsed commode, he is horrified to see what appears to be a battlefield strewn with dead bodies... but as he cradles [[Scarlett]]'s fallen form, she and all the other combatants turn out to be alive. Before hostilities can break out again, though, the crawling form of Metroplex climbs appears and disgorges [[Grimlock (G1)|Grimlock]]'s Autobots and the small Joe team they had captured. Grimlock loudly announces that a truce has been brokered, and the Autobots and Joes all have a dance party to cement their new friendship. During the celebration, Bazooka tries chewing on some of the foliage that the terraforming process has created, but the bizarre [[technorganic|techno-organic]] leaves prove to be psychoactive, and induce a hallucination of some kind of composite intelligence known as "[[Primus]]". | ||
The mesmerized Bazooka tries to explain what he is seeing, but Grimlock mistakenly believes he is asking about [[Optimus Prime (G1)|Optimus Prime]], and explains how the lost Autobot leader fled the planet after being defeated by Megatron; Rodimus was Optimus's appointed successor, but Grimlock overthrew him. The other Autobots grumble that Grimlock is twisting the facts, and that nobody knows why Optimus left or where he went... | The mesmerized Bazooka tries to explain what he is seeing, but Grimlock mistakenly believes he is asking about [[Optimus Prime (G1)|Optimus Prime]], and explains how the lost Autobot leader fled the planet after being defeated by Megatron; Rodimus was Optimus's appointed successor, but Grimlock overthrew him. The other Autobots grumble that Grimlock is twisting the facts, and that nobody knows why Optimus left or where he went... | ||
Lost in the interdimensional gulf, Duke and Snake Eyes continues to struggle, both clinging onto the ninja's sword, which somehow seems to protect them from the ravages of the space between realities. Oblivion looms, but just then, the two are snatched to safety by the claws of a mysterious, | Lost in the interdimensional gulf, Duke and Snake Eyes continues to struggle, both clinging onto the ninja's sword, which somehow seems to protect them from the ravages of the space between realities. Oblivion looms, but just then, the two are snatched to safety by the claws of a mysterious, misshapen robotic creature... which the two soldiers have no way of knowing is Optimus Prime himself, his body reconfigured into a form that can survive in the void! | ||
{{--}} | |||
==Featured characters== | ==Featured characters== | ||
| Line 59: | Line 61: | ||
*[[Soundwave (G1)|Soundwave]]'s body (9) | *[[Soundwave (G1)|Soundwave]]'s body (9) | ||
*[[Apeface]] (37) | *[[Apeface]] (37) | ||
*[[Demolisher]] (38) | *[[Demolisher (G1)|Demolisher]] (38) | ||
*[[Megatron (G1)|Megatron]] (drawing, 73) | *[[Megatron (G1)|Megatron]] (drawing, 73) | ||
| Line 99: | Line 101: | ||
*[[Quick Kick]] (53) | *[[Quick Kick]] (53) | ||
*[[Steeler]] (54) | *[[Steeler]] (54) | ||
*[[Breaker]] (58) | *[[Breaker (G.I. Joe)|Breaker]] (58) | ||
*[[Jinx]] (59) | *[[Jinx]] (59) | ||
*[[Cover Girl]] (60) | *[[Cover Girl]] (60) | ||
*[[Clutch (G.I. Joe)|Clutch]] (61) | *[[Clutch (G.I. Joe)|Clutch]] (61) | ||
*[[Gung-Ho]] (65) | *[[Gung-Ho (G.I. Joe)|Gung-Ho]] (65) | ||
*[[Roadblock (G.I. Joe)|Roadblock]] (66) | *[[Roadblock (G.I. Joe)|Roadblock]] (66) | ||
*[[Doc (G.I. Joe)|Doc]] (68) | *[[Doc (G.I. Joe)|Doc]] (68) | ||
| Line 150: | Line 152: | ||
*Classic Cybertronian locations the [[smelting pool|smelting pits]] and the [[Rust Sea|Sea of Rust]] put in appearances. | *Classic Cybertronian locations the [[smelting pool|smelting pits]] and the [[Rust Sea|Sea of Rust]] put in appearances. | ||
*It's not clear what it means yet, but the two "mega-mountains" that have emerged from Cybertron's surface certainly are reminiscent of [[Unicron]]'s famous horns. | *It's not clear what it means yet, but the two "mega-mountains" that have emerged from Cybertron's surface certainly are reminiscent of [[Unicron]]'s famous horns. | ||
*While the depiction of Rodimus is a fairly dramatic departure from the flawed, insecure hot-head he has historically been portrayed as in fiction, it actually lines up fairly well with his original toy bio, which depicted him as a wise and trusted leader in a similar vein to Optimus himself. | |||
*Blaster's grim, uncompromising depiction in this issue hearkens back to the [[The Transformers (Marvel comic)|original Marvel series]], which also debuted the character in [[The Smelting Pool!|a story revolving around the smelting pits]]. | *Blaster's grim, uncompromising depiction in this issue hearkens back to the [[The Transformers (Marvel comic)|original Marvel series]], which also debuted the character in [[The Smelting Pool!|a story revolving around the smelting pits]]. | ||
*A surprising face among the Decepticons is the [[Transformers: Armada (franchise)|''Armada'']] Decepticon [[Demolishor (Armada)|Demolishor]], but not unprecedented, as a [[Demolisher|Generation 1 version of the character also exists]]. | *A surprising face among the Decepticons is the [[Transformers: Armada (franchise)|''Armada'']] Decepticon [[Demolishor (Armada)|Demolishor]], but not unprecedented, as a [[Demolisher (G1)|Generation 1 version of the character also exists]]. | ||
*The Autobots and G.I. Joe boogie down to establish their truce, probably a reference to ''[[The Transformers: The Movie]]'', when the Autobots and [[Junkion (species)|Junkions]] did the same. | *The Autobots and G.I. Joe boogie down to establish their truce, probably a reference to ''[[The Transformers: The Movie]]'', when the Autobots and [[Junkion (species)|Junkions]] did the same. | ||
*Optimus Prime's form is based around a mistransformation of his original toy, rather than a new body. | *Optimus Prime's form is based around a mistransformation of his original toy, rather than a new body. | ||
| Line 158: | Line 161: | ||
*As Snake-Eyes meditates, he recalls the teachings of his masters. While unnamed in the issue, they are recognizable to ''G.I. Joe'' fans as the [[Soft Master]] and the [[Hard Master]], names reflected in the philosophies Snake-Eyes remembers them espousing. | *As Snake-Eyes meditates, he recalls the teachings of his masters. While unnamed in the issue, they are recognizable to ''G.I. Joe'' fans as the [[Soft Master]] and the [[Hard Master]], names reflected in the philosophies Snake-Eyes remembers them espousing. | ||
*Doctor Venom's experiment with the Bumblecycle already looks pretty gruesome, but it becomes even more horrifying when you can recognize the device that one of the "greenshirt" Joes is strapped into as the [[Brainwave Scanner]], a particularly torturous mind-reading device of Venom's design that appeared frequently in the original Marvel ''G.I. Joe'' series. | *Doctor Venom's experiment with the Bumblecycle already looks pretty gruesome, but it becomes even more horrifying when you can recognize the device that one of the "greenshirt" Joes is strapped into as the [[Brainwave Scanner]], a particularly torturous mind-reading device of Venom's design that appeared frequently in the original Marvel ''G.I. Joe'' series. | ||
*The Joes' animal team is made up of all real animal partner characters from ''G.I. Joe'' history. Franchise mainstays include [[Law]]'s German shepherd Order, [[Mutt]]'s Rottweiler Junkyard, Spirit's eagle Freedom, and of course, Shipwreck's parrot Polly, now granted a codename of her own, "Seasick". Less well-known are Spearhead's bobcat Max and Dusty's coyote Sandstorm; the odd-beast-out is warthog Clyde, who is not originally a Joe animal, but actually owned by the [[Dreadnok]] poacher Gnawgahyde. His file card here notes he was "liberated from a poacher" in reference to this. | *The Joes' animal team is made up of all real animal partner characters from ''G.I. Joe'' history. Franchise mainstays include [[Law]]'s German shepherd Order, [[Mutt (G.I. Joe)|Mutt]]'s Rottweiler Junkyard, Spirit's eagle Freedom, and of course, Shipwreck's parrot Polly, now granted a codename of her own, "Seasick". Less well-known are Spearhead's bobcat Max and Dusty's coyote Sandstorm; the odd-beast-out is warthog Clyde, who is not originally a Joe animal, but actually owned by the [[Dreadnok]] poacher Gnawgahyde. His file card here notes he was "liberated from a poacher" in reference to this. | ||
*The Oktober Guard are the Russian counterpart to G.I. Joe, and have featured in much past Joe fiction. Originally named for the {{w|October Revolution}}, they are here completely reimagined as a Halloween-themed horror team. Only team bruiser Horrorshow gets to retain his original name, given its appropriateness; infantry trooper Schrage becomes torture robot "S.H.R.I.E.K."; team leader Colonel Brekhov is now "Colonel Breakoff" (as in, "breaking off your fingers"); flamethrower-wielding mechanic Dragonsky is reinvented as fire-breathing reptilian quadruped "Dragun"; paratrooper Stormavik is replaced by the diminutive Münchnik; and [[Daina]], the only member of the Guard to have appeared in Transformers fiction before, has become "Denia" (that is, she'll "deny ya" mercy). | *The Oktober Guard are the Russian counterpart to G.I. Joe, and have featured in much past ''Joe'' fiction. Originally named for the {{w|October Revolution}}, they are here completely reimagined as a Halloween-themed horror team. Only team bruiser Horrorshow gets to retain his original name, given its appropriateness; infantry trooper Schrage becomes torture robot "S.H.R.I.E.K."; team leader Colonel Brekhov is now "Colonel Breakoff" (as in, "breaking off your fingers"); flamethrower-wielding mechanic Dragonsky is reinvented as fire-breathing reptilian quadruped "Dragun"; paratrooper Stormavik is replaced by the diminutive Münchnik; and [[Daina]], the only member of the Guard to have appeared in ''Transformers'' fiction before, has become "Denia" (that is, she'll "deny ya" mercy). | ||
===Real-life references=== | ===Real-life references=== | ||
*The title is derived from architect {{w|Louis Sullivan}}'s famous dictum that {{w|Form follows function|"form ever follows function"}}, often quoted by Modernist designers. | *The title is derived from architect {{w|Louis Sullivan}}'s famous dictum that {{w|Form follows function|"form ever follows function"}}, often quoted by Modernist designers. | ||
*The one-page scene of Doctor Venom working on the Bumblecycle is labelled "Tales from T.H.E. P.I.T.", a reference to the classic EC horror comic, ''{{w|Tales from the Crypt (comics)|Tales from the Crypt}}'', complete with a direct homage to the comic's logo. This comes on the heels of last issue's reference to Venom as the Crypt Keeper, the comic's host. | *The one-page scene of Doctor Venom working on the Bumblecycle is labelled "Tales from T.H.E. P.I.T.", a reference to the classic EC horror comic, ''{{w|Tales from the Crypt (comics)|Tales from the Crypt}}'', complete with a direct homage to the comic's logo. This comes on the heels of last issue's reference to Venom as the Crypt Keeper, the comic's host. | ||
*The Joe's "non-human personnel" team is named "U.S.7" after the comic book ''{{w|We3}}'', about cybernetically | *The Joe's "non-human personnel" team is named "U.S.7" after the comic book ''{{w|We3}}'', about cybernetically enhanced animals. | ||
*U.S.7's ship is designed to resemble {{w|Snoopy}}. | *U.S.7's ship is designed to resemble {{w|Snoopy}}. | ||
*The Joes announce their intention to "Steranko" their way out of Hot Rod's cage, a reference to comic book artist {{w|Jim Steranko}}, who performed as an escapologist in his younger days. Steranko is particularly well known for the psychedelic spy/military stories he told on ''[[Nicholas Fury|Nick Fury]]'', a big influence on the look and tone of this series. | *The Joes announce their intention to "Steranko" their way out of Hot Rod's cage, a reference to comic book artist {{w|Jim Steranko}}, who performed as an escapologist in his younger days. Steranko is particularly well known for the psychedelic spy/military stories he told on ''[[Nicholas Fury|Nick Fury]]'', a big influence on the look and tone of this series. | ||
*As the Joes and Autobots party together, some words (not in a speech bubble, but probably intended to convey a chant or song) read "Yub Yub"—a reference to "[[wikia:starwars:Ewok Celebration|Yub Nub]]", the Ewok victory song that plays at the end of the original theatrical release of [[Star Wars (franchise)|''Return of the Jedi'']], as the Ewoks and [[Rebel Alliance|Rebels]] have a similar celebration. | *As the Joes and Autobots party together, some words (not in a speech bubble, but probably intended to convey a chant or song) read "Yub Yub"—a reference to "[[wikia:starwars:Ewok Celebration|Yub Nub]]", the Ewok victory song that plays at the end of the original theatrical release of [[Star Wars (franchise)|''Return of the Jedi'']], as the Ewoks and [[Rebel Alliance|Rebels]] have a similar celebration. | ||
*Barbecue quips that the planetary engines are hot enough to "turn [them] all into M.R.E's"; "M.R.E." stands for "{{w|Meal, Ready-to-Eat}}", a kind of military field ration. M.R.E.s replaced the unpopular "{{w|C-ration}}s", which the characters of the original Marvel ''G.I. Joe'' run would often comment on with relief. | *Barbecue quips that the planetary engines are hot enough to "turn [them] all into M.R.E's"; "M.R.E." stands for "{{w|Meal, Ready-to-Eat}}", a kind of military field ration. M.R.E.s replaced the unpopular "{{w|C-ration}}s", which the characters of the original Marvel ''G.I. Joe'' run would often comment on with relief. | ||
*Hot Rod was once known as "Imhotep Rodimus". {{w|Imhotep}} was an ancient Egyptian polymath: an accomplished engineer, physician, and architect of pyramids. He was also chancellor to the pharaoh, perhaps mirroring Rodimus's high status as Optimus's choice of successor. | *Hot Rod was once known as "Imhotep Rodimus". {{w|Imhotep}} was an ancient Egyptian polymath: an accomplished engineer, physician, and architect of pyramids. He was also chancellor to the pharaoh, perhaps mirroring Rodimus's high status as Optimus's choice of successor. Given Scioli's penchant for wordplay, it's not surprising that you can find the name "Hot Rod" within "Im'''hot'''ep '''Rod'''imus". | ||
===Errors=== | ===Errors=== | ||
| Line 175: | Line 178: | ||
===Other notes=== | ===Other notes=== | ||
*This issue was originally solicited for release in October, with the solicitation blurb specifically noting that the Oktober Guard were appearing "just in time for Halloween". Unfortunately, the issue didn't make it out until the end of November. | *This issue was originally solicited for release in October, with the solicitation blurb specifically noting that the Oktober Guard were appearing "just in time for Halloween". Unfortunately, the issue didn't make it out until the end of November. | ||
*Naturally, when Bazooka's portable toilet is sent flying into the air, the onomatopoeia is ''BA-THROOM''. | |||
===Covers (4)=== | ===Covers (4)=== | ||
Latest revision as of 13:09, 8 February 2026
|
{{#if: Everybody Hates Metroplex|»}} | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| {{#if: |[[|«]]}} | {{#if: |[[|»]]}} | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| {{#if: |[[|«]]}} | {{#if: |[[|»]]}} | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| {{#if: |[[|«]]}} | {{#if: |[[|»]]}} | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|-
{{#if: TFvsJoe4_regcvr.jpg |
| colspan="2" style="font-size: 12px; background-color:#ffffff;" align="center" |
{{#if: |
}}}}
|-
|colspan="2" style="font-size: 14px; background-color:#e7d492; color:black;font-weight:bold;" align="center" | "Form Follows Function" {{#if: |
(')}} {{#if:|
""}}
}}
|-
{{#if: IDW Publishing |
|Publisher || IDW Publishing}}
|-
{{#if: |
|Published by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Imprint || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Published in || }}
|-
{{#if: November 26, 2014 |
|First published || November 26, 2014}}
|-
{{#if: |
|Shipping date || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|On-sale date || }}
|-
{{#if: October 2014 |
|Cover date || October 2014}}
|-
{{#if: |
|Credits || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|By || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Manga || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Manga by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Original story || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Story & art by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Story and color art || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Story || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Story by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Story consultants || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Story concept || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Screenplay by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Screenplay || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Adaptation by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Adapted by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Adaptation || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Based on || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Writer || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Writers || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Writing || }}
|-
{{#if: Tom Scioli and John Barber |
|Written by || Tom Scioli and John Barber}}
|-
{{#if: |
|Written & art || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Plotter || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Plotters || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Plot || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Plot by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Plot/Script || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Scripter || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Scripters || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Script || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Scripting || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Script by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Script and art || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Sript [sic] consultant || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Translation by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Artist || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Comic artist || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Artists || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Art || }}
|-
{{#if: Tom Scioli |
|Art by || Tom Scioli}}
|-
{{#if: |
|Additional art by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Flashback art by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Art assistant || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Art assist by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Line-art || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Line-art by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Line art by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Penciller || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Pencillers || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Penciler || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Pencilers || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Pencil art || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Pencils || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Pencils by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Penciled by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Penciling || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Guest penciler || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Layouts || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Pencil breakdowns || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Breakdowns || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Breakdowns by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Illustration || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Illustrations || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Illustrator || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Illustrated by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Illustration by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Illustrations by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Finished pencils || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Finishes || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Finished art || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Finishes by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Inker || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Guest inker || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Inkers || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Inks || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Inks by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Ink finishes || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Ink assist by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Additional inks || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Inking || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Backgrounds || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Backgrounds by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Colorist || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Colorists || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Colourist || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Colourists || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Color || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Colors || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Color art || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Colour || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Colours || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Colored by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Color by || }}
|-
{{#if: Tom Scioli |
|Colors by || Tom Scioli}}
|-
{{#if: |
|Color art by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Colors assist by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Color assists || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Color assistance by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Additional colors || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Additional colors by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Color assist by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Colour/Computer FX || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Computer coloring/effects || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Color Reconstruction || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Flats || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Flats by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|MTMTE Profiles || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Letterer || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Letterers || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Lettering || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Letters || }}
|-
{{#if: Tom Scioli |
|Letters by || Tom Scioli}}
|-
{{#if: |
|Lettered by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Lettering|Production || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Special Thanks{{#if: | To}} || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Collaborators || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Contributors || }}
|-
{{#if: Carlos Guzman |
|Editor || Carlos Guzman}}
|-
{{#if: |
|Editors || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Editing || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Edits by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Compiled and Edited by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Original series editor || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Original Edits by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Deputy editor || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Assistant editor || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Editorial assistant{{#if: |s}} || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Editorial Assistance
provided by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Senior editor || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Associate editor || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Story consultant || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Project manager || }}
|-
{{#if: Chris Mowry |
|Production by || Chris Mowry}}
|-
{{#if: |
|Designer || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Design by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Designed by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Design/editorial || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Book design by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Collection designer || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Collection editor || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Collection Edits by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Graphic design || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Graphic design by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Collection Design by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Creative Director{{#if: | / Layout}} || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Contributing editors || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Research editor{{#if: |s}} || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Managing editor || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|{{#if: |Editor-in-chief|Editor in chief}} || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Editorial consultant || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Dinosaur consultant || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Publishing manager || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Cover || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Cover art{{#if: |ist}}{{#if: | by}} || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Cover Design {{#if: |and Elements }}by || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Inside cover || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Apologies to || }}
|-
{{#if: Transformers vs. G.I. Joe |
|Continuity || Transformers vs. G.I. Joe}}
|-
{{#if: |
|Chronology || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|ISBN || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|TPB ISBN || ISBN }}
|-
{{#if: |
|UPC || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Page count || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Price || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Packaged with || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Printed in || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Animation || }}
|-
{{#if: |
|Music || }}
|}{{#switch:{{#sub:xx|2|14}}|dark cybertron=}}
While Scarlett's Joes make peace with the Autobots, another group led by Psych Out gets caught between the deposed Autobot leader Hot Rod and revolutionary Blaster, and the Joes' non-human unit clashes with the Oktober Guard.
Synopsis
[edit]In Decepticobracropolis on Earth, Duke's undercover mission has gone wrong. Though his identity has been discovered, he doesn't take it lying down: after stuffing a grenade in Frenzy's mouth to free himself from the robot's grip, he fights his way through a team of Cobra troops, and takes down loquacious Cobra pugilist Big Boa. Out for a bit of personal revenge, he then hunts down the apparent turncoat Snake Eyes, who has just completed a meditation ritual and believes his mastery of body and mind will allow him to make the journey through the M.A.S.S. Device that has killed so many others. Duke tackles Snake Eyes through the M.A.S.S. Device portal, and the pair are sent tumbling through the void between worlds.
In T.H.E. P.I.T., Doctor Venom conducts an arcane experiment with Soundwave's remains, General Flagg's Bumblecycle and some Joe greenshirts. As Venom reads in the native tongue of Cybertron from some kind of grimoire, the Bumblecycle springs to life and begins coiling around his arm...
A fleet of G.I. Joe green bombs hurtles through space towards Cybertron, led by a supply rocket manned—so to speak—by G.I. Joe's "non-human personnel" unit U.S.7, made up of the team's animal sidekicks and captained by Polly, aka "Seasick". As they draw near to the metal planet, U.S.7's ship is attacked and boarded by G.I. Joe's Russian counterpart, the creepy, kooky Oktober Guard, but after only a few moments of fighting, their ship is snatched out of the air by the gigantic Fortress Maximus. The energy-starved colossus pulls them down to Cybertron's surface, shakes animal and guardsman alike out of the ship, and tosses them down his gullet.
At Cybertron's north pole, a Joe team is marking the huge rocket-furnaces growing out of the planet's as targets for the approaching wave of green bombs. Team leader Psych Out is dismayed; he is fascinated by the constantly morphing geography of Cybertron, and would much rather be investigating the two curious mountains that have sprung up at the south pole. Though they successfully accomplish their task, misfortune strikes when the team are suddenly snagged in a turborat trap, laid around the furnace to catch robotic vermin. The traps are collected by Hot Rod, a fallen Autobot leader once known as "Imhotep Rodimus", now a maintenance worker for Megatron's empire. Loading up his traps and going on his weary way, trying to ignore the grisly sight of the smelting pits fueling the furnaces, Hot Rod finds his path barred by Autobot revolutionary Blaster, who is appalled by the once-great young hero's defection and eager to take him out. As the two Autobots fire on each other, the Joes are blasted free from their trap, but at that point, the green bombs begin falling. One bomb-blast kicks up a chunk of rubble that knocks out Blaster; Decepticons Apeface and Demolisher arrive in time to see Hot Rod standing over his fallen body and, believing he has defeated Blaster, congratulate him on a job well done. Disgusted by words of praise from the lowest of the low, Hot Rod is galvanized into action: he hurls the two Decepticons into one of the furnaces, loads Blaster into his alternate mode, and heads off for Metroplex. This is good news for the Joes, who secretly use their grappling hooks to hitch a ride on Hot Rod, enabling them to outrun the green bomb blasts.

In the terraformed Iacon, Bazooka is in a portable toilet that is thrown through the air when Brawn's Autobot unit attacks. Emerging from the collapsed commode, he is horrified to see what appears to be a battlefield strewn with dead bodies... but as he cradles Scarlett's fallen form, she and all the other combatants turn out to be alive. Before hostilities can break out again, though, the crawling form of Metroplex climbs appears and disgorges Grimlock's Autobots and the small Joe team they had captured. Grimlock loudly announces that a truce has been brokered, and the Autobots and Joes all have a dance party to cement their new friendship. During the celebration, Bazooka tries chewing on some of the foliage that the terraforming process has created, but the bizarre techno-organic leaves prove to be psychoactive, and induce a hallucination of some kind of composite intelligence known as "Primus".
The mesmerized Bazooka tries to explain what he is seeing, but Grimlock mistakenly believes he is asking about Optimus Prime, and explains how the lost Autobot leader fled the planet after being defeated by Megatron; Rodimus was Optimus's appointed successor, but Grimlock overthrew him. The other Autobots grumble that Grimlock is twisting the facts, and that nobody knows why Optimus left or where he went...
Lost in the interdimensional gulf, Duke and Snake Eyes continues to struggle, both clinging onto the ninja's sword, which somehow seems to protect them from the ravages of the space between realities. Oblivion looms, but just then, the two are snatched to safety by the claws of a mysterious, misshapen robotic creature... which the two soldiers have no way of knowing is Optimus Prime himself, his body reconfigured into a form that can survive in the void!
Featured characters
[edit]{{#if: ||(Numbers indicate order of appearance.)}}
- Fortress Maximus (28)
- Hot Rod (35)
- Blaster (36)
- Mirage (44)
- Brawn (45)
- Metroplex (55)
- Perceptor (56)
- Arcee (57)
- Grimlock (62)
- Swoop (63)
- Slag (64)
- Wheeljack (67)
- Optimus Prime (72)
- Omega Supreme (drawing, 74)|
Autobots }}{{#if:*Frenzy (1)
|
Decepticons }}{{#if:{|border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" style="background:transparent" |
|---|---|
|
!! style="background:#fbefde;" | G.I. Joe }}{{#if:*Cobra troopers (3)
- Big Boa (4)
- Snake Eyes (5)
- Crimson Guardsmen (8)|
!! style="background:#ffeeb8;" | Cobra }}{{#if:*Soft Master (memory, 6)
- Hard Master (memory, 7)
- S.H.R.I.E.K. (22)
- Colonel Breakoff (23)
- Horrorshow (24)
- Denia (25)
- Dragun (26)
- Münchnik (27)
- Primus (70)|
!! style="background:#d5e6d5;" | Others }}{{#if:| !! style="background:#fedeb5;" | Misc }} |- {{#if:*Bumblebee's body/Bumblecycle (11)
- Fortress Maximus (28)
- Hot Rod (35)
- Blaster (36)
- Mirage (44)
- Brawn (45)
- Metroplex (55)
- Perceptor (56)
- Arcee (57)
- Grimlock (62)
- Swoop (63)
- Slag (64)
- Wheeljack (67)
- Optimus Prime (72)
- Omega Supreme (drawing, 74)|| style="background:#ffdddd;" valign="top" |
- Bumblebee's body/Bumblecycle (11)
- Fortress Maximus (28)
- Hot Rod (35)
- Blaster (36)
- Mirage (44)
- Brawn (45)
- Metroplex (55)
- Perceptor (56)
- Arcee (57)
- Grimlock (62)
- Swoop (63)
- Slag (64)
- Wheeljack (67)
- Optimus Prime (72)
- Omega Supreme (drawing, 74) }}{{#if:*Frenzy (1)
- Soundwave's body (9)
- Apeface (37)
- Demolisher (38)
- Megatron (drawing, 73)|
| style="background:#ededff;" valign="top" |
- Frenzy (1)
- Soundwave's body (9)
- Apeface (37)
- Demolisher (38)
- Megatron (drawing, 73) }}{{#if:{|border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" style="background:transparent"
|- |style="background:transparent; border-right: 0px" valign="top"|
- Duke (2)
- Doctor Venom (10)
- Order (12)
- Junkyard (13)
- Max (14)
- Clyde (15)
- Sandstorm (16)
- Freedom (17)
- Seasick/Polly (18)
- Airtight? (19)
- Shipwreck (20)
- Spirit (21)
- Psych Out (29)
- Frostbite (30)
- Barbecue (31)
- Chuckles (32)
- Mainframe (33)
- Lt. Falcon (34)
- Bazooka (39)
- Snow Job (40)
- Tripwire (41)
|style="background:transparent; border-right: 0px" valign="top"|
- Stalker (42)
- Rock 'n Roll (43)
- ? (46)
- ? (47)
- Dusty (48)
- Scarlett (49)
- Recondo (50)
- Blowtorch (51)
- Beachhead (52)
- Quick Kick (53)
- Steeler (54)
- Breaker (58)
- Jinx (59)
- Cover Girl (60)
- Clutch (61)
- Gung-Ho (65)
- Roadblock (66)
- Doc (68)
- Lifeline (69)
- Joe Colton (image, 71)
|}| | style="background:#fbefde;" valign="top" |
|
- Big Boa (4)
- Snake Eyes (5)
- Crimson Guardsmen (8)|
| style="background:#ffeeb8;" valign="top" |
- Cobra troopers (3)
- Big Boa (4)
- Snake Eyes (5)
- Crimson Guardsmen (8) }}{{#if:*Soft Master (memory, 6)
- Hard Master (memory, 7)
- S.H.R.I.E.K. (22)
- Colonel Breakoff (23)
- Horrorshow (24)
- Denia (25)
- Dragun (26)
- Münchnik (27)
- Primus (70)|
| style="background:#d5e6d5;" valign="top" |
- Soft Master (memory, 6)
- Hard Master (memory, 7)
- S.H.R.I.E.K. (22)
- Colonel Breakoff (23)
- Horrorshow (24)
- Denia (25)
- Dragun (26)
- Münchnik (27)
- Primus (70) }}{{#if:|
| style="background:#fedeb5;" valign="top" |
}}|}
Quotes
[edit]"Trickings and Treatings, G.I Joes. Come and get your sweeties."
- —S.H.R.I.E.K. announces the October Guard's arrival
"Turncoat! The once-great polymath warrior prince Imhotep Rodimus spends his days cleaning turborat droppings and hauling energonic hot rods to fuel Megatronian death engines!? How far have the mighty fallen? Are there no heroes left on Cybertron?"
- —Blaster, a mite peeved
"The party gets weird. The dancing simultaneously speeds up and slows to a crawl. I see each creature, man and cyberman, become the same centipede. It's life cycle, womb to tomb is arrayed before me. I see Earth growing ever larger, haloed by the sun just behind it. The bodies merge. The minds become one. Is there a name for this? I hear it spoken... two syllables... a name? A call to action? A plea? A command? A prayer? PRIME US."
- —Bazooka has a vision
Notes
[edit]Continuity notes
[edit]- The street preacher from issue #1 is revealed to have been one of Snake-Eyes's teachers, the Soft Master (see "G.I. Joe references", below).
- As the green bombs strike, an image of Joe Colton's eyes appears over the scene, and the narration recalls his lifetime dream of remote warfare, as introduced back in issue #1 with his Coltonbolt.
- Shipwreck and Polly have received cybernetic upgrades to replace the damaged portions of their body following the injuries they sustained last issue. The issue's commentary notes that Shipwreck's cybernetic eye can see through Polly's own.
- Though Grimlock's "cave-painting" style recap of Cybertronian history seems to imply that Optimus left Cybertron aboard Omega Supreme, the Autobot leader's fate, reveal at the issue's end, seems to indicate their belief is incorrect. Indeed, back in issue #2, Megatron mentioned that he had "booted [Prime's] hide into the void", suggesting he is responsible for stranding him in interdimensional space.
Transformers references
[edit]- Classic Cybertronian locations the smelting pits and the Sea of Rust put in appearances.
- It's not clear what it means yet, but the two "mega-mountains" that have emerged from Cybertron's surface certainly are reminiscent of Unicron's famous horns.
- While the depiction of Rodimus is a fairly dramatic departure from the flawed, insecure hot-head he has historically been portrayed as in fiction, it actually lines up fairly well with his original toy bio, which depicted him as a wise and trusted leader in a similar vein to Optimus himself.
- Blaster's grim, uncompromising depiction in this issue hearkens back to the original Marvel series, which also debuted the character in a story revolving around the smelting pits.
- A surprising face among the Decepticons is the Armada Decepticon Demolishor, but not unprecedented, as a Generation 1 version of the character also exists.
- The Autobots and G.I. Joe boogie down to establish their truce, probably a reference to The Transformers: The Movie, when the Autobots and Junkions did the same.
- Optimus Prime's form is based around a mistransformation of his original toy, rather than a new body.
G.I. Joe references
[edit]- As Snake-Eyes meditates, he recalls the teachings of his masters. While unnamed in the issue, they are recognizable to G.I. Joe fans as the Soft Master and the Hard Master, names reflected in the philosophies Snake-Eyes remembers them espousing.
- Doctor Venom's experiment with the Bumblecycle already looks pretty gruesome, but it becomes even more horrifying when you can recognize the device that one of the "greenshirt" Joes is strapped into as the Brainwave Scanner, a particularly torturous mind-reading device of Venom's design that appeared frequently in the original Marvel G.I. Joe series.
- The Joes' animal team is made up of all real animal partner characters from G.I. Joe history. Franchise mainstays include Law's German shepherd Order, Mutt's Rottweiler Junkyard, Spirit's eagle Freedom, and of course, Shipwreck's parrot Polly, now granted a codename of her own, "Seasick". Less well-known are Spearhead's bobcat Max and Dusty's coyote Sandstorm; the odd-beast-out is warthog Clyde, who is not originally a Joe animal, but actually owned by the Dreadnok poacher Gnawgahyde. His file card here notes he was "liberated from a poacher" in reference to this.
- The Oktober Guard are the Russian counterpart to G.I. Joe, and have featured in much past Joe fiction. Originally named for the [[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}October Revolution|{{#if:||October Revolution}}]], they are here completely reimagined as a Halloween-themed horror team. Only team bruiser Horrorshow gets to retain his original name, given its appropriateness; infantry trooper Schrage becomes torture robot "S.H.R.I.E.K."; team leader Colonel Brekhov is now "Colonel Breakoff" (as in, "breaking off your fingers"); flamethrower-wielding mechanic Dragonsky is reinvented as fire-breathing reptilian quadruped "Dragun"; paratrooper Stormavik is replaced by the diminutive Münchnik; and Daina, the only member of the Guard to have appeared in Transformers fiction before, has become "Denia" (that is, she'll "deny ya" mercy).
Real-life references
[edit]- The title is derived from architect [[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}Louis Sullivan|{{#if:||Louis Sullivan}}]]'s famous dictum that [[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}Form follows function|{{#if:"form ever follows function"|"form ever follows function"|Form follows function}}]], often quoted by Modernist designers.
- The one-page scene of Doctor Venom working on the Bumblecycle is labelled "Tales from T.H.E. P.I.T.", a reference to the classic EC horror comic, [[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}Tales from the Crypt (comics)|{{#if:Tales from the Crypt|Tales from the Crypt|Tales from the Crypt (comics)}}]], complete with a direct homage to the comic's logo. This comes on the heels of last issue's reference to Venom as the Crypt Keeper, the comic's host.
- The Joe's "non-human personnel" team is named "U.S.7" after the comic book [[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}We3|{{#if:||We3}}]], about cybernetically enhanced animals.
- U.S.7's ship is designed to resemble [[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}Snoopy|{{#if:||Snoopy}}]].
- The Joes announce their intention to "Steranko" their way out of Hot Rod's cage, a reference to comic book artist [[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}Jim Steranko|{{#if:||Jim Steranko}}]], who performed as an escapologist in his younger days. Steranko is particularly well known for the psychedelic spy/military stories he told on Nick Fury, a big influence on the look and tone of this series.
- As the Joes and Autobots party together, some words (not in a speech bubble, but probably intended to convey a chant or song) read "Yub Yub"—a reference to "Yub Nub", the Ewok victory song that plays at the end of the original theatrical release of Return of the Jedi, as the Ewoks and Rebels have a similar celebration.
- Barbecue quips that the planetary engines are hot enough to "turn [them] all into M.R.E's"; "M.R.E." stands for "[[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}Meal, Ready-to-Eat|{{#if:||Meal, Ready-to-Eat}}]]", a kind of military field ration. M.R.E.s replaced the unpopular "[[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}C-ration|{{#if:||C-ration}}]]s", which the characters of the original Marvel G.I. Joe run would often comment on with relief.
- Hot Rod was once known as "Imhotep Rodimus". [[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}Imhotep|{{#if:||Imhotep}}]] was an ancient Egyptian polymath: an accomplished engineer, physician, and architect of pyramids. He was also chancellor to the pharaoh, perhaps mirroring Rodimus's high status as Optimus's choice of successor. Given Scioli's penchant for wordplay, it's not surprising that you can find the name "Hot Rod" within "Imhotep Rodimus".
Errors
[edit]- As Bazooka has his vision, quoted above, "it's" is used instead of "its".
Other notes
[edit]- This issue was originally solicited for release in October, with the solicitation blurb specifically noting that the Oktober Guard were appearing "just in time for Halloween". Unfortunately, the issue didn't make it out until the end of November.
- Naturally, when Bazooka's portable toilet is sent flying into the air, the onomatopoeia is BA-THROOM.
Covers (4)
[edit]- Standard cover: Megatron, Apeface and Astrotrain fend off a G.I. Joe attack, by Tom Scioli
- Subscription cover: Soundwave versus a small group of Joes, by Riley Rossmo
- Cover RI: Optimus Prime, Sky Lynx and Scarlett by Tom Scioli; connects to the RI covers from issues #2 and #3 to form a larger image
- Yesteryear Comics exclusive cover: The Baroness and Ravage, by Jamie Tyndall and Ula Mos, available exclusively from Yesteryear Comics
Advertisements
[edit]- Transformers vs. G.I. Joe #5
- Drift - Empire of Stone
- Windblade graphic novel
- Angry Birds Transformers
- V-Wars graphic novel (back cover)
Reprints
[edit]- Transformers vs. G.I. Joe Volume 1 TPB
- Transformers vs. G.I. Joe Quintessential Collection Hardcover
- Transformers: The Definitive G1 Collection: Volume 73: Transformers vs. G.I. Joe, Part 1
-
Volume 1; cover art by Tom Scioli
-
Quintessential Collection; cover art by Scioli
-
Definitive G1 Collection: Vol. 73: Transformers vs. G.I. Joe, Pt. 1; cover art by Don Figueroa and Scioli





