Yonezawa Toys: Difference between revisions
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Yonezawa was founded in the 1950s, arising out of the ashes of a Japanese economy devastated by the Second World War. They quickly established themselves with a major presence in the then-emerging Japanese toy market, being one of the first manufacturers to pioneer electronic and [[Wikipedia:Radio-controlled model|radio-controlled]] toys. Eventually, a lot of their products would get exported globally, both through other distributors and their own international '''Yonezawa Corporation''' brand. | Yonezawa was founded in the 1950s, arising out of the ashes of a Japanese economy devastated by the Second World War. They quickly established themselves with a major presence in the then-emerging Japanese toy market, being one of the first manufacturers to pioneer electronic and [[Wikipedia:Radio-controlled model|radio-controlled]] toys. Eventually, a lot of their products would get exported globally, both through other distributors and their own international '''Yonezawa Corporation''' brand. | ||
Yonezawa was especially famous for their battery-operated tin robots, featuring gimmicks like walking, flashing lights, or [[Exhaust|smoking]]. Among these robots was "Space Explorer", released in red and black decos, which started as a box roughly approximating the appearance of a TV set, then automatically unfolded and stood up to reveal a robot. Released in 1968, seven years before ''{{w|Brave Raideen}}'', this would make it quite possibly the earliest “transforming” robot toy. | |||
Sometime during the early 80s, parallel to the then-emerging Japanese trend of robots that transform into realistic vehicles with [[Takatoku Toys|Takatoku]]'s ''[[Macross]]'' and [[Takara]]'s [[Diaclone]] ''Car Robot'' and ''[[Micro Change]]'' toys, Yonezawa released their remote-controlled, battery-operated series of transforming toy cars with the ''Remote Change Robo Series'' (リモートチェンジ ロボシリーズ). These featured super-deformed versions of a Nissan Fairlady Z, Toyota Land Cruiser, and Porsche 911 - respectively named into "Fairlady & Robo", "Lancru & Robo", and "Porsche & Robo" - that'd transform from their alternate modes and back with the push of two buttons on a small controller that was attached to the toys with a cord. They were re-released in multiple countries across the world, including in the U.S. by Village Toys as the ''Convert-A-Bots'' "Pow-R-Bots" (a toyline that, interestingly, would also feature [[Pre-Transformers#Licensed international releases of pre-Transformers|a licensed pre-Transformers version]] of [[Shockwave (G1)/toys#Notes|Shockwave]]), and eventually; arrived to Brazil through [[Estrela]] as the 1985 [[Eletrix]] figures in their regional version of [[The Transformers (toyline)|''The Transformers'']]. | |||
==Yonezawa moulds released as ''Transformers''== | ==Yonezawa moulds released as ''Transformers''== | ||
[[File:G1-toy Porsche.jpg|upright=1.67|thumb|Eletrix Esporte, based on Remote Change Robo Series Porsche & Robo, <s>unfortunately not released by Grandstand in the UK as "Skibiditron"</s>]] | [[File:G1-toy Porsche.jpg|upright=1.67|thumb|Eletrix Esporte, based on Remote Change Robo Series Porsche & Robo, <s>unfortunately not released by Grandstand in the UK as "Skibiditron"</s>]] | ||
===Remote Change Robo Series=== | ===Remote Change Robo Series=== | ||
*[[Esporte]] - Fairlady & Robo, identical besides minor sticker changes | *[[Esporte]] - "Fairlady & Robo", identical besides minor sticker changes | ||
*[[Jipe (Eletrix)|Jipe]] - Lancru & Robo, identical besides minor sticker changes | *[[Jipe (Eletrix)|Jipe]] - "Lancru & Robo", identical besides minor sticker changes | ||
*[[Porsche (Eletrix)|Porsche]] - Porsche & Robo, identical besides minor sticker changes | *[[Porsche (Eletrix)|Porsche]] - "Porsche & Robo", identical besides minor sticker changes | ||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
* Beyond the ''Remote Change Robo Series'', Yonezawa manufactured a handful of other transforming 'bots during this time which have a slight bit of interaction with other pre-Transformers toys. These included "Jet & Robo", a battery-operated robot that auto-transforms into a jet (which has a pretty similar head to [[Omega Supreme (G1)|Omega Supreme]], leading to the yet unsolved question of who exactly plagiarized who!); "Daijim", a manually-transforming toy with a walking motion that converts into an offroad truck, and "Safari Robo", a manually-transforming toy that surprisingly lacks any battery-operated functions and also transforms into an offroad truck. All of these would be featured in the British pre-Transformers Grandstand ''[[Pre-Transformers#Licensed international releases of pre-Transformers|Convertors]]'' toyline - releasing alongside an early Omega Supreme and multiple Diaclone figures - with Jet & Robo earning the name of "Deltatron" and, | * Beyond the ''Remote Change Robo Series'', Yonezawa manufactured a handful of other transforming 'bots during this time which have a slight bit of interaction with other pre-Transformers toys. These included "Jet & Robo", a battery-operated robot that auto-transforms into a jet (which has a pretty similar head to [[Omega Supreme (G1)|Omega Supreme]], leading to the yet unsolved question of who exactly plagiarized who!); "Daijim", a manually-transforming toy with a walking motion that converts into an offroad truck, and "Safari Robo", a manually-transforming toy that surprisingly lacks any battery-operated functions and also transforms into an offroad truck. All of these would be featured in the British pre-Transformers Grandstand ''[[Pre-Transformers#Licensed international releases of pre-Transformers|Convertors]]'' toyline - releasing alongside an early Omega Supreme and multiple Diaclone figures - with Jet & Robo earning the name of "Deltatron" and, keeping in line with the Greek alphabet motif, Daijim and Safari Robo earning the names of... "Betatron" and "Sigmatron". No, this is not a joke <ref>[https://retromash.com/2015/03/11/anyone-recognise-these-grandstand-convertors-in-this-a1-poster/ Grandstand ''Convertors'' catalogue] at Retromash.com</ref>, and no, no one will find it funny in any era past mid-2020s internet brainrot humor, so cherish this moment. | ||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
Latest revision as of 21:01, 11 April 2026

Yonezawa Toys (米澤玩具) was formerly one of the largest toy companies in Japan, before being purchased by Sega in 1991 to merge into Sega-Yonezawa and finally rebranding into the still-active Sega Fave Corporation.
Their interaction with the Transformers franchise is relatively brief, producing three pre-Transformers toys that were only released once under the Transformers brand in Brazil - however; when it comes to the broader history of transforming robots as a toy genre, there's more to them than meets the eye.
Overview
[edit]
Yonezawa was founded in the 1950s, arising out of the ashes of a Japanese economy devastated by the Second World War. They quickly established themselves with a major presence in the then-emerging Japanese toy market, being one of the first manufacturers to pioneer electronic and radio-controlled toys. Eventually, a lot of their products would get exported globally, both through other distributors and their own international Yonezawa Corporation brand.
Yonezawa was especially famous for their battery-operated tin robots, featuring gimmicks like walking, flashing lights, or smoking. Among these robots was "Space Explorer", released in red and black decos, which started as a box roughly approximating the appearance of a TV set, then automatically unfolded and stood up to reveal a robot. Released in 1968, seven years before Brave Raideen, this would make it quite possibly the earliest “transforming” robot toy.
Sometime during the early 80s, parallel to the then-emerging Japanese trend of robots that transform into realistic vehicles with Takatoku's Macross and Takara's Diaclone Car Robot and Micro Change toys, Yonezawa released their remote-controlled, battery-operated series of transforming toy cars with the Remote Change Robo Series (リモートチェンジ ロボシリーズ). These featured super-deformed versions of a Nissan Fairlady Z, Toyota Land Cruiser, and Porsche 911 - respectively named into "Fairlady & Robo", "Lancru & Robo", and "Porsche & Robo" - that'd transform from their alternate modes and back with the push of two buttons on a small controller that was attached to the toys with a cord. They were re-released in multiple countries across the world, including in the U.S. by Village Toys as the Convert-A-Bots "Pow-R-Bots" (a toyline that, interestingly, would also feature a licensed pre-Transformers version of Shockwave), and eventually; arrived to Brazil through Estrela as the 1985 Eletrix figures in their regional version of The Transformers.
Yonezawa moulds released as Transformers
[edit]
Remote Change Robo Series
[edit]- Esporte - "Fairlady & Robo", identical besides minor sticker changes
- Jipe - "Lancru & Robo", identical besides minor sticker changes
- Porsche - "Porsche & Robo", identical besides minor sticker changes
Notes
[edit]- Beyond the Remote Change Robo Series, Yonezawa manufactured a handful of other transforming 'bots during this time which have a slight bit of interaction with other pre-Transformers toys. These included "Jet & Robo", a battery-operated robot that auto-transforms into a jet (which has a pretty similar head to Omega Supreme, leading to the yet unsolved question of who exactly plagiarized who!); "Daijim", a manually-transforming toy with a walking motion that converts into an offroad truck, and "Safari Robo", a manually-transforming toy that surprisingly lacks any battery-operated functions and also transforms into an offroad truck. All of these would be featured in the British pre-Transformers Grandstand Convertors toyline - releasing alongside an early Omega Supreme and multiple Diaclone figures - with Jet & Robo earning the name of "Deltatron" and, keeping in line with the Greek alphabet motif, Daijim and Safari Robo earning the names of... "Betatron" and "Sigmatron". No, this is not a joke [1], and no, no one will find it funny in any era past mid-2020s internet brainrot humor, so cherish this moment.
See also
[edit]- Asahi Corporation, another Japanese company whose toys were adopted by Estrela as part of the Brazilian Transformers toyline
References
[edit]- ↑ Grandstand Convertors catalogue at Retromash.com

