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Details on a [[Transformer]]s toy that are not molded, [[tampograph|printed]], or [[Paint operation|painted]] on may be provided by the application of one or more '''stickers'''.  Generally called labels, peel-and-stick labels, pressure-sensitive decals, or simply decals in polite conversation, none of these terms have achieved the popularity of the simpler vernacular.   
[[File:G1 Jazz sticker instructions.jpg|upright=1.33|thumb|Hope you got a real steady hand, seven-year-old hopped up on Cocoa Puffs!]]
Details on a [[Transformer]]s toy that are not molded, [[tampograph|printed]], or [[Paint operation|painted]] on may be provided by the application of one or more '''stickers'''—also known as '''labels''' or '''decals'''.   


These devices are simply a flexible substrate with colors and designs printed on one side, and some sort of gummy glue on the other. Generally they are stuck to a wax-coated protective sheet before use, and often the individual stickers are [[die-cut]] from a single sheet of backing while attached to this waxy sheet. Many toys have stickers already applied to them at the manufacturing plant.
Stickers are a flexible sheet—typically paper or foil—with colors and designs printed on one side and an adhesive substance on the other. Generally they are stuck to a wax-coated protective sheet before use, with the individual stickers being die-cut from a single sheet of backing while attached to this waxy sheet. Many toys have stickers already applied to them at the manufacturing plant.


Stickers were abundant throughout the first decade of the ''Transformers'' franchise, but since then have been all but totally replaced with other detailing methods.
Stickers were abundant throughout the first decade of the ''Transformers'' franchise, but since then have been effectively replaced with other detailing methods. Stickers still see some use today, but are mostly relegated to more nostalgic collector-oriented releases, and the occasional "there really is no better cost-effective option".


{{TOCclear}}


==Use in Transformers==
==Use in Transformers==
===Generation 1===
===Generation 1===
{{stub}}
[[File:G1-toy Sunstreaker.jpg|upright=1.66|thumb|The original Sunstreaker, with loads of sticker detailing. Including stickers that betray an [[Sunstreaker (G1)/toys#Notes|abandoned color scheme]]....]]
When the [[The Transformers (toyline)|original ''Transformers'' toyline]] debuted in the early/mid 1980s, stickers were already an industry standard for larger toys. Vehicle-heavy action figure lines, like ''[[Star Wars (franchise)|Star Wars]]'' and ''[[G.I. Joe (franchise)|G.I. Joe]]'', made extensive use of stickers on flat surfaces to provide more "realistic" detailing while keeping production costs down. And as larger ''Transformers'' toys were already using [[die-cast|other cost-saving measures]] to keep the price reasonable, stickers were used to ramp up the toys' detailing.


As the original line lost retail steam around the globe, cost-saving measures went into effect, and pper decals became more prevalent.  
For the first several years of the line, shiny foil-based stickers were the norm for smaller details, with paper-based ones covering larger expanses of flat plastic. Most toys had a few stickers that were pre-applied at the factory (notably the big paper decals mentioned prior), supplemented by customer-applied stickers that came on a single sheet. By and large these stickers were used to add tech detailing to the robot modes, with some needing stickers to replicate more complex detailing in their alternate mode, like [[Soundwave (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Soundwave's]] tape-player-mode text and power light. [[Rubsign]]s were introduced shortly after the line's debut: heat-sensitive stickers that changed colors, in this case revealing the robot's true allegiance (and marking the toy as an "official" ''Transformers'' brand toy).


[[File:G1-toy Rewind.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|left|A few toys replaced stickers with paint later in the line.]]
As the line slowly ceased to be the unstoppable sales juggernaut of its early years, several cost-saving measures were taken, experimenting with ways of replacing or altering stickers. Several of the last-year [[Mini-Cassette]]s switched to detailed [[tampograph]]s to replace the foil stickers that made up their cassette side/mode. For most of the rest of the line, stickers stuck around (ha), but changes were made to the ''types'' of stickers used. Rubsigns were dropped altogether by the line's fifth year, and the [[Pretender]]s experimented with clear-plastic stickers that used less paint. This experiment was short-lived though (see "[[#Pros and cons|pros and cons]]" below), and by year six, most new toys had moved to using cheaper, less durable paper-based stickers, which would persist to the end of the line. There were a few standouts, such as the individually-carded [[Action Master]]s having foil-''like'' faction symbol stickers, and the water-play-based [[Aquaspeeder]]s and [[Stormtrooper (G1)|Stormtroopers]] of the late European-market line used classic foil stickers (for hopefully obvious reasons), but exceptions from laminated paper decals were rare.
It's important to note that these changes were ''global'', affecting all three major markets (US, Japan, Europe) at the same time.
{{--}}


===Generation 2===
===Generation 2===
As the first year of ''[[Generation 2 (toyline)|Generation 2]]'' in the US was almost wholly recycled molds, stickers were still the norm. The concurrent molds from the European line (which were often released in both the prior-year's packaging style ''and'' under the new ''Generation 2'' brand) kept stickers as well, both factory-applied and on separate sticker sheets. Most new-mold toys from this year used foil stickers (the [[Color Changer]]s/[[Aquaspeeder]]s/[[Stormtrooper (G1)|Stormtrooper]]s, the [[Axelerator]]s and [[Skyscorcher]]s,) though others ([[Megatron (G1)/toys#Generation 2|tank Megatron]], the [[Lightformer]]s, [[Trakkon]]s and [[Obliterator]]s) kept with thick paper, thankfully using stronger adhesives than the Japanese paper-decal toys just a few years prior.
[[File:AeroRaid-stickers.jpg|thumb|upright=1.66|You didn't buy this, and you certainly didn't apply this.]]
The first year of ''[[Transformers: Generation 2 (toyline)|Generation 2]]'' in both the US and Europe was almost wholly recycled molds, and thus stickers were still the norm. Virtually all of the new-to-the-US-mold toys, such as the [[Color Changer]]s, were originally from the prior year's European toyline, which—despite the use of new faction symbols—was still "Generation 1". Some used foil stickers ([[Aquaspeeder]]s/[[Stormtrooper (G1)#Toys|Stormtrooper]]s, [[Axelerator]]s and [[Skyscorcher]]s), while others kept with thick paper ([[Megatron (G1)/toys#Generation 2|tank Megatron]], the [[Lightformer]]s, [[Trakkon]]s and [[Obliterator]]s), albeit with stronger adhesive than the Japanese paper-decal toys just a few years prior.


[[Image:AeroRaid-stickers.jpg|right|thumb|200px|You didn't buy this, and you certainly didn't apply this.]]
By the second year of ''Generation 2'', the apply-your-own separate sticker sheets vanished almost completely. Most toys still used factory-applied paper decals, but paint operations and tampographs became more and more commonplace. Even the recycled [[Aerialbot (G1)#Generation 2|Aerialbot]] and [[Combaticon (G1)#Generation 2|Combaticon]] toys lacked separate sticker sheets (as did the ultimately-unreleased [[Protectobot (G1)#Generation 2|Protectobots]] and [[Stunticon (G1)#Generation 2|Stunticons]]). By 1995, many toys had eschewed sticker detailing altogether.


As the line entered its second year though, the apply-your-own separate sticker sheets vanished almost completely. Most toys still used factory-applied paper decals for more intricate detailing, typically for rally deco and text, but paint operations and tampographs became more and more commonplace. Even the recycled Generation 1 [[Aerialbot (G1)#Generation 2|Aerialbot]] and [[Combaticon (G1)#Generation 2 2|Combaticon]] toys lacked separate sticker sheets (as did the ultimately-unreleased [[Protectobot (G1)#Generation 2 2|Protectobots]] and [[Stunticon (G1)#Generation 2|Stunticons]]). By 1995, many toys had eschewed sticker detailing altogether.
The only late ''Generation 2'' exception to the "no separate sticker sheet" rule is [[Optimus Prime (G1)/toys#LaserOptimusPrime|Laser Optimus Prime]], 1995's big-ticket item, which also featured a lot of "random [[robot mode]] tech greeblies" sticker detailing that called back to the early days of the line. Japan also brought back separate sticker sheets, though in a much more low-key manner; their releases of the Autobot [[Cyberjet]]s each came with a separate transparent-plastic sheet full of extra detailing, including battle damage markings. It appears, however, that no instructions were given as to ''where'' on the toy these decals were supposed to go.  
{{--}}


The only exception to the "no separate sticker sheet" rule in the US line from 1994 until ''Generation 2''<nowiki>'s</nowiki> end is [[Optimus Prime (G1)/toys#LaserOptimusPrime|Laser Optimus Prime]], 1995's big-ticket item, which also featured a lot of "random robot-mode tech greeblies" sticker detailing that called back to the early days of the line. Japan also brought back separate sticker sheets, though in a much more low-key manner; their releases of the Autobot [[Cyberjet]]s each came with a separate transparent-plastic sheet full of extra detailing, including "battle damage" markings. It appears, however, that no instructions were given as to ''where'' on the toy these decals were supposed to go. You could take a few educated guesses, but still.
===Beast Era===
{{-}}
[[File:BWtoy-JaguarTM.jpg|upright=1.66|thumb|''Metals'' Ravage, an exceedingly rare use of customer-applied stickers in the Beast Era.]]
Starting in 1996, the rounded and organic sculpting of [[Beast Wars: Transformers (toyline)|''Beast Wars'' toys]] made even factory-applied stickers impractical... plus the toy industry had largely moved on from sticker use in general. That the first year toys eschewed any form of faction symbol on the actual toys also made stickers largely obsolete.


===Beast Wars===
Stickers returned for the line's second year in a familiar form: the "[[rubsign|energon chip]]", a tiny, often-hidden heat-reactive sticker that would reveal the robot's allegiance, bringing back the classic rubsign [[gimmick]]. These stickers stuck (ha ha) with the line up through the third year, but were replaced by the snazzier-looking [[spark crystal]]s of the [[Transmetal 2|Transmetals 2]].
In 1996, the rounded, organic, heavy-sculpted-detail styling of the [[Beast Wars (toyline)|''Beast Wars'' toys]] made even factory-applied stickers ridiculously impractical for detailing purposes. Paint operations became the norm, and sticker detailing all but disappeared from new-mold toys since then. In the second year of ''Beast Wars'', the toys gained a very subtle sticker addition; the "[[rubsign|energon chip]]", a tiny, often-hidden heat-reactive sticker that would reveal the robot's allegiance, bringing back the classic "rubsign" [[gimmick]] from Generation 1. These stickers stuck (ha ha) with the line up through the third year, but were replaced by the snazzier-looking "[[spark crystal]]s" of the [[Transmetal|Transmetal 2s]].


Stickers made a very brief comeback in the super-short 1997 ''[[Machine Wars]]'' sub-series, liberally mixing painted details with decals. The Basic-sized figures had factory-applied paper stickers only, while the larger boxed toys retained apply-your-own paper sticker sheets, modified from the original iterations of the toys.
In Japan, ''[[Transformers: Beast Wars (Japanese toyline)#1998 (Beast Wars II)|Beast Wars II]]'' made ample use of molds developed for ''Generation 2'' in its early Destron releases, resulting in a fair amount of factory-applied paper stickers on toys like [[Megastorm (BW)#Toys|Megastorm]], and [[Starscream (BW)#Toys|Starscream]] & [[BB (BW)#Toys|BB]]. In 1999, ''[[Beast Wars: Transformers (toyline)#Super Lifeform Transformers: Beast Wars Metals (1999)|Metals]]'' [[Ravage (G1)/toys#Beast Wars Metals|Jaguar]] not only had a factory-applied sticker inside an opening chest compartment (revealing a [[Predacon (BW)|Predacon]] faction symbol), but also the first separate sticker sheet in a ''Transformers'' toy since 1995. This foil sticker sheet featured two replacement "viewscreen" images for the chest-sticker ([[Megatron (G1)|Generation 1 Megatron]]'s head, and the classic [[Decepticon]] insignia on a purple grid background) as well as two Predacon symbols and two Decepticon symbols to be placed on his biceps as you wish. Mind, due to the rounded biceps, they don't really stay on well. The [[redeco]] of this toy, [[BotCon 2001]]'s [[Tigatron (BW)#BotCon2001|Transmetal Tigatron]], also had a similar decal sheet.


Japan would once again let stickers linger a bit longer with their unique releases. ''[[Beast Wars II (toyline)|Beast Wars II]]'' made ample use of molds developed for ''Generation 2'', resulting in a fair amount of factory-applied sitckers on [[Megastorm#Toys|Megastorm]], [[Starscream (BWII)#Toys|Starscream]] and [[BB#Toys|BB]]. In 1999, ''[[Beast Wars Metals (toyline)|Metals]]'' [[Ravage (G1)/toys#Beast Wars Metals|Jaguar]] not only had a factory-applied sticker inside an opening chest compartment (revealing a [[Predacon (BW)|Predacon]] faction symbol), but also the first separate sticker sheet in a ''Transformers'' toy since 1995. This foil sticker sheet featured two replacement "viewscreen" images for the chest-sticker ([[Megatron (G1)|Generation 1 Megatron]]'s head, and the classic [[Decepticon]] insignia on a purple grid background) as well as two Predacon symbols and two Decepticon symbols to be placed on his biceps as you wish. Mind, due to the rounded biceps, they don't really stay on well. The [[redeco]] of this toy, [[BotCon 2001]]'s [[Tigatron#BC01|Transmetal Tigatron]], also had a similar decal sheet.
Stickers made a very brief comeback in the short 1997 ''[[Machine Wars: Transformers|Machine Wars]]'' series. The Basic-sized figures had factory-applied paper stickers, while the larger boxed toys retained apply-your-own paper sticker sheets, as those toys were all redecos of older last-year-of-Generation-1 transitional European toys. In many cases their new sticker sheets yielded unimpressive or confusing results due to the sticker colors not having been properly changed to match the new toy color schemes (i.e. putting a featureless white sticker onto a piece of white plastic of the same size and shape).
{{--}}


===Beyond the beasts===
===Beyond the beasts===
Despite the general return to toys with more flat planes suitable for stickers once the [[Beast Era]] ended, for the most part they have been replaced by paint operations and tampographs. From this point forward, it is far quicker to name the individual toys that ''do'' have stickers than to list all the groups that ''don't''.
[[File:RID15-toy SteeljawWarrior.jpg|upright=1|thumb|2015 ''Robots in Disguise'' Steeljaw. The faction sticker was used to unlock him in the line's mobile game.]]
Although ''Transformers'' began to shift back to predominantly "realistic" modern vehicle modes come the turn of the century, stickers remained rare as advancements in painting and tampographing techniques made the stickers increasingly outdated. Not gone, but very few and far between.  2004's ''[[Transformers: Robots in Disguise (2001 toyline)|Robots In Disguise]]'' [[Dreadwind (RID)|Dreadwind]] and [[Smokejumper]] set was quite conspicuous as being the first American Transformers retail release in ''years'' to include a customer-applied decal sheet.   
 
The most common use of stickers over the following decades has been in the repeated revivals of the [[rubsign]] gimmick, in lines like 2006's ''[[Transformers: Classics|Classics]]'' and the [[Transformers (2010 toyline)#Hasbro Reveal the Shield subline|2010 ''Transformers'' series's ''Reveal the Shield'' subline]]. 2015's [[Transformers: Robots in Disguise (2015 toyline)|''Robots in Disguise'' line]] had a similar sticker-based faction symbol gimmick, where each toy in the line had a sticker with a unique circular code surrounding the character's faction symbol, which unlocked them in the [[Transformers: Robots in Disguise (mobile game)|mobile game]] (now defunct); the Takara ''Adventure'' version of the line had a similar gimmick, only it was used to keep a virtual checklist of toys (also now defunct).
 
Stickers are often used to give toys a level of fine detailing that even current tampographing would not be able to provide (at least, for a reasonable cost), such as on "video screens" like the ones on 2003's ''[[The Transformers: Masterpiece|Masterpiece]]'' [[Optimus Prime (G1)/toys#Masterpiece|Optimus Prime]]'s flip-up forearm communications screens. Numerous [[Real Gear Robot]]s who transform into mobile phones, camcorders, handheld video game consoles and the like also make use of big chunky stickers for their on-screen visuals, as do the "spy tablet" modes of various former-cassette characters in the ''[[Titans Return (toyline)|Titans Return]]'' toyline. [[Rescue Roy]] and the other ''[[1-2-3 Transformers]]'' toys use stickers for their detailed department badges and such, a slightly odd choice for a line of [[Tonka]] "tough play" style toys for the younger set.


Most of these have come in the form of [[convention]]-[[exclusive]] toys, and mostly due to necessity rather than preference. Aside from the aforementioned [[BotCon 2001]] Tigatron, [[OTFCC 2003]]'s [[Sideswipe (G1)#Universe|Sideswipe]] and [[Sunstreaker (G1)#Universe|Sunstreaker]] had simple block-decals on their roofs, due to the use of white [[unpaintable plastic]] as part of their car-mode exteriors, which were supposed to be red and yellow (respectively). [[BotCon 2006]] [[Thrust (G1)#Timelines|Thrust]] had small circular stickers applied to the tops of the screws in his new-mold wings, in order to hide them since they were ''supposed'' to be on the ''underside'', but an error placed them on top. And while 2011's [[Ramjet (G1)#Timelines|''Generation 2'' "Classics" style Ramjet]] is not technically a convention toy, being a [[Transformers Collectors' Club]] release, it's in the same spirit, and uses factory-applied stickers to replicate a lot of the detailing from [[Ramjet (G1)#Generation 2 2|the original ''Generation 2'' Ramjet toy]].
On occasion, stickers are used to cover areas of [[unpaintable plastic]] that would end up unsightly in one mode or the other, such as on the [[OTFCC 2003|2003 Official Transformers Collectors' Convention]] exclusives [[Sideswipe (G1)/toys#Universe (2003)|Sidewsipe]] and [[Sunstreaker (G1)/toys#Universe (2003)|Sunstreaker]], whose white plastics left a big patch of white on the roof of their red and yellow car modes.


Stickers used on toys released at "normal" retail are rare nowadays, but do happen from time to time.
[[File:Prime-toy RatchetTakTom.jpg|left|upright=1|thumb|TakaraTomy ''Prime'' Ratchet. Almost every bit of red on the robot mode is a customer-applied sticker.]]
In more collector-oriented lines, sticker sheets were sometimes included with some toys to bring back that old nostalgic "finalize/customize your toy" feel. The Takara ''[[Transformers: Alternators|Binaltech]]'' line (their name for ''Alternators'') and its spin-offs had several toys with additional sticker sheets: most notable is the ''[[Transformers: Kiss Players (toyline)|Kiss Players]]'' [[army-building|army-builder]] bot [[Autorooper#Toys|Autorooper]], which came with a sticker sheet full of squad markings, enabling you to have your Autorooper be any of the ''forty-eight'' individual units from the story, not simply the one assigned to [[Atari Hitotonari#Toys|Atari Hitotonari]], its pack-in partner. (It is unknown if anyone actually ''did'' assemble a full complement of Autoroopers. And if they did, what the hell they did with the other forty-seven Ataris. Though forty-eight [[Kremzeek#Kiss Players 2|Kremzeek]]s sound pretty awesome.) Takara's version of the [[Transformers: Prime (toyline)#|''Prime'' toyline]] actually ''removed'' much of the painted detailing of the Hasbro versions and replaced them with customer-applied sticker sheets, as part of the line's [[Arms Micron]] gimmick, where each toy also came with an unassembled (and unpainted) [[Mini-Con]] still on a sprue—making the whole purchase more akin to buying and finishing a model kit. The [[Yokohama Convoy]] giveaway toy has odd plastic colours because a separately-distributed sticker sheet is meant to complete a Nemesis Prime-inspired deco, with transparent windows. [[BotCon]] returned to the customer-applied-sticker well often, mainly with the customization class exclusives, but they offered sheets for numerous other toys in their last year of operation.


The [[Robots in Disguise (toyline)|''Car Robots/Robots in Disguise'' toylines]] (beginning in 2000 in Japan) featured several pieces that were redecoes of older toys and thus included some stickers. ''Car Robots'''s [[Mega-Octane|Dolrailer]] and [[Ruination (RID)|Baldigus]] had several factory-applied stickers (which were removed from the Hasbro version of the toy, one of several small but significant deco changes made), as did as both versions of [[Scourge (RID)|Black Convoy / Scourge]]. The [[Target]]-exclusive [[Dreadwind (RID)|Dreadwind]] and [[Smokejumper]] set also utilized a traditional peel-off sticker sheet.
[[File:HasbroAsiaTitansReturnstickersheet.jpg|right|upright=1|thumb|You can ''always'' spend more money on this hobby.]]
Strangely, the TakaraTomy release of [[Vortex (FOC)#Retail|''Fall of Cybertron'' Vortex]] came with a pre-applied Decepticon sticker. In the ''[[Thrilling 30]]'' subline of ''[[Transformers: Generations (toyline)|Generations]]'', customer-applied sticker sheets were included with [[Whirl (G1)#Generations|Whirl]] and [[Roadbuster (G1)#Generations|Roadbuster]], and more notably with the Titan Class [[Metroplex (G1)#Generations|Metroplex]] toy, which used over ''one hundred'' customer-applied stickers for detail to accentuate his bigness—presumably because doing all those fine details in paint would have skyrocketed the budget of this already-expensive figure. Later Titan Class toys [[Fortress Maximus (G1)#Titans Return|Fortress Maximus]] and [[Trypticon (G1)#Titans Return|Trypticon]] had similar sheets packed in as well. Exclusively in Asian markets, similar sheets were individually sold to add new details to ''[[Combiner Wars (toyline)|Combiner Wars]]'' [[Devastator (G1)/toys#Combiner Wars|Devastator]], [[Superion (G1)#Combiner Wars|Superion]], [[Menasor (G1)#Combiner Wars|Menasor]], [[Defensor (G1)#Combiner Wars|Defensor]], and [[Optimus Maximus (G1)#Toys|Optimus Maximus]], as well as the first two waves of Deluxes and Voyagers from ''[[Titans Return (toyline)|Titans Return]]''. The ''Titans Return'' and [[Power of the Primes (toyline)|''Power of the Primes'']] toylines also featured factory-applied foil stickers on numerous larger Voyager and Leader Class figures... which actually did not go over well with fans (see "[[#Pros and cons|pros and cons]]" below), leading to stickers being mostly abandoned once more. Optional sticker sheets were included with the exclusive ''[[Generations Selects (toyline)|Generations Selects]]'' [[Galvatron (G1)/toys#Selects|Galvatron]] and [[Cyclonus (G1)/toys#SelectsTargetmaster|Cyclonus]], and the Hasbro Asia-exlusive gift sets of ''[[Transformers: Age of the Primes|Age of the Primes]]'' [[Superion (G1)#Age of the Primes|Superion]] and ''[[Studio Series]]'' [[Devastator (G1)/toys#Studio Series|Devastator]], to add Generation 1 toy detailing.


2003's [[Masterpiece]] [[Optimus Prime (G1)/toys#Masterpiece|Optimus Prime]] used stickers to put images on the flip-up "communications screens" on his forearms. In the same vein, the older-collector-oriented ''[[Alternators|Alternators/Binaltech]]'' line (as well as its spin-offs) would see multiple uses of separate sticker sheets, though the overwhelming majority of them were from Japan. Later releases of [[Tracks (G1)#Alternators|the ''Binaltech'' blue Tracks]] came with an optional hood decal based on the [[Tracks (G1)#Toys|flame-deco of his original toy]]; this sheet was also included without changes (yes, even having Japanese text) with [[Swerve (G1)#Alternators|''Alternators'' Swerve]], making that rarely-spotted toy all the more desirable to collectors. [[Skids (G1)#Alternators|''Binaltech'' Skids]] lost the Hasbro version's flame tampographs, but toy came with a sticker sheet with the flames, a set of stripes resembling [[Skids (G1)#Toys|those from his original toy]] (Takara slavish to 1985? ''Noooooooo!''), as well as a Japanese "New Driver" badge for the window. His ''[[Binaltech Asterisk]]'' redeco, [[Blaster (G1)#Binaltech Asterisk|Broadblast]], also came with a separate sheet of stickers, including the flames, but also decals to turn him into a "TBN" news-Scion. Finally, the ''[[Kiss Players (toyline)|Kiss Players]]'' [[Autorooper#Toys|Autorooper]] came with a sticker sheet full of squad markings, enabling you to have your Autorooper be any of the 48 individual units from the story, not simply the one assigned to [[Atari Hitotonari]], his pack-in "partner". (It is unknown if anyone actually ''did'' assemble a full compliment of 48 Autoroopers. And if they did, what the hell they did with the other 47 Ataris. Though 48 [[Kremzeek]]s sounds pretty awesome.)
Hasbro's reissues of the ''Prime'' Arms Micron toys for the accompanying cartoons tenth anniversary came with sticker sheets similar to the original.
{{--}}


Several of the [[Movie (toyline)|2007 movie's]] [[Real Gear Robot]]s have factory applied stickers used for display images. These include: [[Farsight T-20]], [[Hacker X-3]], [[Highline 1070]], [[Longview (Movie)|Longview]], [[Photon T-34]], [[Power Up VT6]], [[Speed Dial 800]], [[Spy Shot 6]], [[Wire Tap V20]], and [[Zoom Out 25X]]. The Real Gear Robots were originally designed for ''[[Cybertron (franchise)|Cybertron]]'', and several of these displays feature images from that franchise.
===Modern Generation 1 reissues and redecos===
[[File:G1toy-SunstormeHobby.jpg|upright=1|thumb|''Collectors Edition'' Sunstorm replaced the mold's factory-applied wing stickers with paint, starting a big trend in reissues.]]
Reissues and redecoes of Generation 1 molds naturally retained their separate decal sheets, but as time went on, more and more began replacing factory-applied stickers with more durable tampographs. The most notable examples are in the reissues and redecoes of the [[Sideswipe (G1)/toys#Toys|original Sideswipe mold]]: the rally-deco headlamps on every use of the mold since the New Year Special release in 2002 have been tampographs.


In 2011, Hasbro [[rebranding|rebranded]] the [[Transformers (2010 toyline)|gold-packaging ''Transformers'' line]] as "[[Reveal the Shield]]", bringing the heat-sensitive [[rubsign]]s back for another go, though this time rather than being squares, they were cut in the rough shape of the Autobot [[insignia]].
The Takara ''[[The Transformers: Micromaster|Micromaster]]'' series (also begun in 2002) used nothing but paint operations for the five Micromaster six-teams, often leaving areas once covered by more complex-detail stickers blank and adding entirely new detailing to other areas. However, the final releases in the series, the DX Micromaster versions of [[Multiforce#Toys|Multiforce]], used factory-applied paper decals for their robot mode torso detailing.


===Modern Generation 1 reissues & redecos===
The "[[Transformers Retro|Retro]]" line of Generation 1 repaints in cartoon-accurate colors largely phased out stickers, except for [[Laserbeak (G1)/toys#Retro|Laserbeak]], who has two pre-applied stickers.
Reissues and redecoes of Generation 1 molds naturally retained their separate decal sheets, but as time went on, more and more began replacing factory-applied stickers with more durable tampographs. The most notable examples are in the reissues and redecoes of the [[Sideswipe (G1)#Toys|original Sideswipe mold]]: the rally-deco headlamps on every use of the mold since the "New Year Special" release in 2002. The Takara ''[[The Transformers: Micromaster|Micromaster]]'' series (also begun in 2002) used nothing but paint operations for the five Micromaster six-teams, often leaving areas once covered by more complex-detail stickers blank and adding entirely new detailing to other areas. However, the final releases in the series, the "DX Micromaster" versions of [[Multiforce]], used factory-applied paper decals for their robot-mode torso detailing.
{{--}}


==Pros and cons==
==Pros and cons==
[[File:DeathsaurusBadCutStickers.jpeg|thumb|right|upright=1|Deathsaurus's Decepticon badge is trying to escape its confines!]]
A distinct advantage of stickers over paint in general is the ability to do much more intricately-detailed, multicolor detailing for a cheaper price. Many fans also enjoy the simple act of applying stickers, adding an almost personal touch to the toy upon ownership.
A distinct advantage of stickers over paint in general is the ability to do much more intricately-detailed, multicolor detailing for a cheaper price. Many fans also enjoy the simple act of applying stickers, adding an almost personal touch to the toy upon ownership.


But, well... there are some disadvantages to them too. Okay, a lot of disadvantages.
But, well... there are some disadvantages to them too. Okay, a lot of disadvantages.


Stickers are a common area for early wear-and-tear, as the designs can be abraded away, leaving ugly residue underneath. (There are many plastic-safe chemicals to quickly remove this munge, but still.) Some toys have stickers meant to be applied to areas all but guaranteed to destroy them by simply transforming the toy, one of the most notorious being the the thigh stickers on the original [[The Transformers (toyline)|Generation 1]] [[Hot Rod (G1)/toys#Generation 1|Hot Rod]]. While the later [[Hot Rod (G1)/toys#Targetmaster|Targetmaster Hot Rod]] used smaller thigh decals, scraping was still a problem. Paper stickers can lose their clear-plastic top-layer, making the paper underneath ''much'' more vulnerable to damage, plus they are (obviously) more susceptible to water damage, so no tub-time play!
Stickers are a common area for early wear-and-tear, as the designs can be abraded away, leaving ugly residue underneath. Some toys have stickers meant to be applied to areas all but guaranteed to destroy them by simply transforming the toy—one of the most notorious examples being the thigh stickers on the original [[The Transformers (toyline)|Generation 1]] [[Hot Rod (G1)/toys#Generation 1|Hot Rod]]. Paper stickers can lose their clear-plastic top-layer, making the paper underneath ''much'' more vulnerable to damage and moisture.
 
While the transparent-plastic decals are probably the most resilient to physical damage, they have their own problem, namely that even the color details tend to be semi-transparent, which can lead to the details getting lost should the sticker be applied to darker plastics. Also, any dirt that happens to get under the sticker becomes much more visible, and discoloring has been known to happen. Foil stickers have also been known to simply fade, losing their color details without the sticker below being scraped.


Just how "sticky" a sticker is can also lead to problems, especially when taking into account the materials they're made of and the surfaces they're meant to cover. As noted above, the paper decals used on several toys in the ''[[Victory (toyline)|Victory]]'' line and beyond in Japan had notoriously weak adhesive, meaning stickers wouldn't stay on terribly well. This was especially problematic with stickers meant to bend around corners or rounded surfaces, as the thickness of the paper made them more likely to come off on one side. (Apparently they've yet to properly solve this problem as the 2004 [[e-Hobby]] [[Detritus]] toy also suffered from paper-sticker issues). Even foil stickers can have this problem, the most notorious example being the ridiculous "eye" sticker on the [[Seeker (body-type)#Generation 1|original "Seeker"-style jet mold]] that was supposed to go over the bridge of its nose, though several ''[[Diaclone]]'' molds wanted you to fold stickers at a 90-degree angle. [[Skids (G1)#Toys|The original Skids toy]] does that, plus has the problem of the instructions telling you to place circular stickers over the rounded screw-heads on his shoulders, which actually stick out ''beyond'' the background plastic of the shoulders! There's almost no way those are going to stay put, even if you never ever rotate his shoulders outward. Add in that his upper-thigh decals are much too easy to place in a way where they scrape against his crotch-plate when transforming, and you've got the triumvirate of Sticker Placement Annoyances.
While clear-plastic decals—such as those of the [[Pretender]] era—are probably the most resilient to physical damage, the printed details tend to be semi-transparent, getting lost against darker plastics underneath. Plus, any dirt that happens to get under the sticker becomes much more visible! Clear stickers have also been known to [[photodegradation|discolor]] over time. Foil stickers have also been known to simply fade, losing their color details without the sticker below being scraped.


And bringing back the "apply it yourself" angle, this often causes minor issues when buying old toys secondhand. More often than not, these stickers were applied without a lot of care by little kids, which mean stickers can end up misaligned or just flat-out in the wrong places. The sometimes-ambiguous instructions don't help.
[[File:G1-toy Detritus.jpg|thumb|left|upright=1|[[e-HOBBY]] [[Detritus (G1)|Detritus]]: rare, expensive, and with thick paper stickers that have to fold 90 degrees. Gee.]]
Sometimes, stickers just aren't sticky enough—which is especially problematic with stickers meant to bend around curves or be folded over corners. Several ''[[Diaclone]]'' molds required such gymnastics, as with the eye sticker on the original [[Seeker (body-type)|Seeker]] jet mold folding over the bridge of the nose, or with [[Skids (G1)#Toys|Skids]]' shoulder stickers being placed directly on rounded screw-heads. The paper decals used on some toys in the ''[[Fight! Super Robot Lifeform Transformers (toyline)#1989 (Victory)|Victory]]'' line and beyond in Japan had notoriously weak adhesive.


[[Image:SpringerG1Toy.JPG|right|thumb|150px|I demand to be called "Blinger" now.]]
[[File:SpringerG1Toy.JPG|thumb|right|upright=1|I demand to be called "Blinger" now.]]
When buying toys secondhand, it's a lottery as to whether the previous owners—kids or adults—placed the stickers correctly. With G1 toys, sticker sheets often underwent changes during the toys' development that resulted in instructions suggesting placement of stickers in areas they weren't designed for, often in contrast to toy samples or package art. [[Drag Strip (G1)#Toys|Drag Strip]] has several stickers' worth of art left totally uncut and unusable on the sticker sheet, apparently having been dropped from the toy. Meanwhile [[Snarl (G1)#Toys|Snarl]] has an Autobot symbol that is supposed to be placed in the middle of his dinosaur head... which splits in half in order to transform, necessitating owners either place the sticker asymmetrically on the toy, or cut it in half and apply each half themselves. If stickers are applied at the factory, it's totally out of your hands—you might open a brand new toy to find the stickers wrinkled or misaligned. Even if the placement is correct, the die-cutting might not line up with the detail printed on the sticker sheet, resulting in stickers that appear mis-placed.


One complaint about stickers that pops up that is not really inherent to stickers themselves, but still worth noting, is their aesthetic value even when mint. Throughout Generation 1, most of the robot-mode sticker detailing can be best described as multi-colored, utterly random, meaningless "greeblies", though some are worse than others (see the image to the right for a particularly egregious example). While [[live-action film series|excessive amounts of tech detailing are not necessarily a bad thing]], some find them very incongruous with the simpler, blockier designs of the early toys, especially their rainbow of colors and occasionally odd stylistic choices, such as the reel-to-reel tape details on [[Hot Spot (G1)#Toys|Generation 1 Hot Spot's crotch]] (which makes the sticker featuring 5-inch [[floppy disk]] drives on [[Kup (G1)#toys|the original Kup toy]], a figure of an "old guy" character, all the funnier). Some fans prefer to omit certain stickers based on looks alone.
Sometimes, fans just prefer to leave off the stickers for [[Show-accuracy|aesthetic reasons]]; the simplified [[character model]]s of the Sunbow cartoon would usually omit the technological details, which were often incongruous with the simple, blocky designs of those early toys anyway.


All told, it's little wonder why stickers have fallen out of favor with [[Hasbro]] and [[TakaraTomy]], as well as most other toymakers, it seems. While paint may not be as intricate (at least, not affordably intricate), such intricacy is rarely called for nowadays, and it is (usually) far more durable and fade-resistant.
{{--}}


==Aftermarket replacements==
==Aftermarket replacements==
Aftermarket manufacturers have sprung up that supply reproduction stickers. Some are available that were designed and never used on the original toy, and still others are original designs, supplied as improvements, to provide detail not previously found.
Aftermarket manufacturers supply reproduction sticker sets. These can be used to replace missing or damaged vintage specimens; or to [[customizing|add all-new detail]] (perhaps more fiction-accurate or to better resemble real-world alternate modes); or to repurpose a toy as a completely different character.


==Notes==
===Foreign names===
*''Japanese:'' '''seal''' (シール ''shīru'')


[[Category: Toys]]
[[Category:Toys]]

Latest revision as of 19:09, 7 May 2026

Hope you got a real steady hand, seven-year-old hopped up on Cocoa Puffs!

Details on a Transformers toy that are not molded, printed, or painted on may be provided by the application of one or more stickers—also known as labels or decals.

Stickers are a flexible sheet—typically paper or foil—with colors and designs printed on one side and an adhesive substance on the other. Generally they are stuck to a wax-coated protective sheet before use, with the individual stickers being die-cut from a single sheet of backing while attached to this waxy sheet. Many toys have stickers already applied to them at the manufacturing plant.

Stickers were abundant throughout the first decade of the Transformers franchise, but since then have been effectively replaced with other detailing methods. Stickers still see some use today, but are mostly relegated to more nostalgic collector-oriented releases, and the occasional "there really is no better cost-effective option".

Use in Transformers

[edit]

Generation 1

[edit]
The original Sunstreaker, with loads of sticker detailing. Including stickers that betray an abandoned color scheme....

When the original Transformers toyline debuted in the early/mid 1980s, stickers were already an industry standard for larger toys. Vehicle-heavy action figure lines, like Star Wars and G.I. Joe, made extensive use of stickers on flat surfaces to provide more "realistic" detailing while keeping production costs down. And as larger Transformers toys were already using other cost-saving measures to keep the price reasonable, stickers were used to ramp up the toys' detailing.

For the first several years of the line, shiny foil-based stickers were the norm for smaller details, with paper-based ones covering larger expanses of flat plastic. Most toys had a few stickers that were pre-applied at the factory (notably the big paper decals mentioned prior), supplemented by customer-applied stickers that came on a single sheet. By and large these stickers were used to add tech detailing to the robot modes, with some needing stickers to replicate more complex detailing in their alternate mode, like Soundwave's tape-player-mode text and power light. Rubsigns were introduced shortly after the line's debut: heat-sensitive stickers that changed colors, in this case revealing the robot's true allegiance (and marking the toy as an "official" Transformers brand toy).

A few toys replaced stickers with paint later in the line.

As the line slowly ceased to be the unstoppable sales juggernaut of its early years, several cost-saving measures were taken, experimenting with ways of replacing or altering stickers. Several of the last-year Mini-Cassettes switched to detailed tampographs to replace the foil stickers that made up their cassette side/mode. For most of the rest of the line, stickers stuck around (ha), but changes were made to the types of stickers used. Rubsigns were dropped altogether by the line's fifth year, and the Pretenders experimented with clear-plastic stickers that used less paint. This experiment was short-lived though (see "pros and cons" below), and by year six, most new toys had moved to using cheaper, less durable paper-based stickers, which would persist to the end of the line. There were a few standouts, such as the individually-carded Action Masters having foil-like faction symbol stickers, and the water-play-based Aquaspeeders and Stormtroopers of the late European-market line used classic foil stickers (for hopefully obvious reasons), but exceptions from laminated paper decals were rare.

It's important to note that these changes were global, affecting all three major markets (US, Japan, Europe) at the same time.

Generation 2

[edit]
You didn't buy this, and you certainly didn't apply this.

The first year of Generation 2 in both the US and Europe was almost wholly recycled molds, and thus stickers were still the norm. Virtually all of the new-to-the-US-mold toys, such as the Color Changers, were originally from the prior year's European toyline, which—despite the use of new faction symbols—was still "Generation 1". Some used foil stickers (Aquaspeeders/Stormtroopers, Axelerators and Skyscorchers), while others kept with thick paper (tank Megatron, the Lightformers, Trakkons and Obliterators), albeit with stronger adhesive than the Japanese paper-decal toys just a few years prior.

By the second year of Generation 2, the apply-your-own separate sticker sheets vanished almost completely. Most toys still used factory-applied paper decals, but paint operations and tampographs became more and more commonplace. Even the recycled Aerialbot and Combaticon toys lacked separate sticker sheets (as did the ultimately-unreleased Protectobots and Stunticons). By 1995, many toys had eschewed sticker detailing altogether.

The only late Generation 2 exception to the "no separate sticker sheet" rule is Laser Optimus Prime, 1995's big-ticket item, which also featured a lot of "random robot mode tech greeblies" sticker detailing that called back to the early days of the line. Japan also brought back separate sticker sheets, though in a much more low-key manner; their releases of the Autobot Cyberjets each came with a separate transparent-plastic sheet full of extra detailing, including battle damage markings. It appears, however, that no instructions were given as to where on the toy these decals were supposed to go.

Beast Era

[edit]
Metals Ravage, an exceedingly rare use of customer-applied stickers in the Beast Era.

Starting in 1996, the rounded and organic sculpting of Beast Wars toys made even factory-applied stickers impractical... plus the toy industry had largely moved on from sticker use in general. That the first year toys eschewed any form of faction symbol on the actual toys also made stickers largely obsolete.

Stickers returned for the line's second year in a familiar form: the "energon chip", a tiny, often-hidden heat-reactive sticker that would reveal the robot's allegiance, bringing back the classic rubsign gimmick. These stickers stuck (ha ha) with the line up through the third year, but were replaced by the snazzier-looking spark crystals of the Transmetals 2.

In Japan, Beast Wars II made ample use of molds developed for Generation 2 in its early Destron releases, resulting in a fair amount of factory-applied paper stickers on toys like Megastorm, and Starscream & BB. In 1999, Metals Jaguar not only had a factory-applied sticker inside an opening chest compartment (revealing a Predacon faction symbol), but also the first separate sticker sheet in a Transformers toy since 1995. This foil sticker sheet featured two replacement "viewscreen" images for the chest-sticker (Generation 1 Megatron's head, and the classic Decepticon insignia on a purple grid background) as well as two Predacon symbols and two Decepticon symbols to be placed on his biceps as you wish. Mind, due to the rounded biceps, they don't really stay on well. The redeco of this toy, BotCon 2001's Transmetal Tigatron, also had a similar decal sheet.

Stickers made a very brief comeback in the short 1997 Machine Wars series. The Basic-sized figures had factory-applied paper stickers, while the larger boxed toys retained apply-your-own paper sticker sheets, as those toys were all redecos of older last-year-of-Generation-1 transitional European toys. In many cases their new sticker sheets yielded unimpressive or confusing results due to the sticker colors not having been properly changed to match the new toy color schemes (i.e. putting a featureless white sticker onto a piece of white plastic of the same size and shape).

Beyond the beasts

[edit]
2015 Robots in Disguise Steeljaw. The faction sticker was used to unlock him in the line's mobile game.

Although Transformers began to shift back to predominantly "realistic" modern vehicle modes come the turn of the century, stickers remained rare as advancements in painting and tampographing techniques made the stickers increasingly outdated. Not gone, but very few and far between. 2004's Robots In Disguise Dreadwind and Smokejumper set was quite conspicuous as being the first American Transformers retail release in years to include a customer-applied decal sheet.

The most common use of stickers over the following decades has been in the repeated revivals of the rubsign gimmick, in lines like 2006's Classics and the 2010 Transformers series's Reveal the Shield subline. 2015's Robots in Disguise line had a similar sticker-based faction symbol gimmick, where each toy in the line had a sticker with a unique circular code surrounding the character's faction symbol, which unlocked them in the mobile game (now defunct); the Takara Adventure version of the line had a similar gimmick, only it was used to keep a virtual checklist of toys (also now defunct).

Stickers are often used to give toys a level of fine detailing that even current tampographing would not be able to provide (at least, for a reasonable cost), such as on "video screens" like the ones on 2003's Masterpiece Optimus Prime's flip-up forearm communications screens. Numerous Real Gear Robots who transform into mobile phones, camcorders, handheld video game consoles and the like also make use of big chunky stickers for their on-screen visuals, as do the "spy tablet" modes of various former-cassette characters in the Titans Return toyline. Rescue Roy and the other 1-2-3 Transformers toys use stickers for their detailed department badges and such, a slightly odd choice for a line of Tonka "tough play" style toys for the younger set.

On occasion, stickers are used to cover areas of unpaintable plastic that would end up unsightly in one mode or the other, such as on the 2003 Official Transformers Collectors' Convention exclusives Sidewsipe and Sunstreaker, whose white plastics left a big patch of white on the roof of their red and yellow car modes.

TakaraTomy Prime Ratchet. Almost every bit of red on the robot mode is a customer-applied sticker.

In more collector-oriented lines, sticker sheets were sometimes included with some toys to bring back that old nostalgic "finalize/customize your toy" feel. The Takara Binaltech line (their name for Alternators) and its spin-offs had several toys with additional sticker sheets: most notable is the Kiss Players army-builder bot Autorooper, which came with a sticker sheet full of squad markings, enabling you to have your Autorooper be any of the forty-eight individual units from the story, not simply the one assigned to Atari Hitotonari, its pack-in partner. (It is unknown if anyone actually did assemble a full complement of Autoroopers. And if they did, what the hell they did with the other forty-seven Ataris. Though forty-eight Kremzeeks sound pretty awesome.) Takara's version of the Prime toyline actually removed much of the painted detailing of the Hasbro versions and replaced them with customer-applied sticker sheets, as part of the line's Arms Micron gimmick, where each toy also came with an unassembled (and unpainted) Mini-Con still on a sprue—making the whole purchase more akin to buying and finishing a model kit. The Yokohama Convoy giveaway toy has odd plastic colours because a separately-distributed sticker sheet is meant to complete a Nemesis Prime-inspired deco, with transparent windows. BotCon returned to the customer-applied-sticker well often, mainly with the customization class exclusives, but they offered sheets for numerous other toys in their last year of operation.

You can always spend more money on this hobby.

Strangely, the TakaraTomy release of Fall of Cybertron Vortex came with a pre-applied Decepticon sticker. In the Thrilling 30 subline of Generations, customer-applied sticker sheets were included with Whirl and Roadbuster, and more notably with the Titan Class Metroplex toy, which used over one hundred customer-applied stickers for detail to accentuate his bigness—presumably because doing all those fine details in paint would have skyrocketed the budget of this already-expensive figure. Later Titan Class toys Fortress Maximus and Trypticon had similar sheets packed in as well. Exclusively in Asian markets, similar sheets were individually sold to add new details to Combiner Wars Devastator, Superion, Menasor, Defensor, and Optimus Maximus, as well as the first two waves of Deluxes and Voyagers from Titans Return. The Titans Return and Power of the Primes toylines also featured factory-applied foil stickers on numerous larger Voyager and Leader Class figures... which actually did not go over well with fans (see "pros and cons" below), leading to stickers being mostly abandoned once more. Optional sticker sheets were included with the exclusive Generations Selects Galvatron and Cyclonus, and the Hasbro Asia-exlusive gift sets of Age of the Primes Superion and Studio Series Devastator, to add Generation 1 toy detailing.

Hasbro's reissues of the Prime Arms Micron toys for the accompanying cartoons tenth anniversary came with sticker sheets similar to the original.

Modern Generation 1 reissues and redecos

[edit]
Collectors Edition Sunstorm replaced the mold's factory-applied wing stickers with paint, starting a big trend in reissues.

Reissues and redecoes of Generation 1 molds naturally retained their separate decal sheets, but as time went on, more and more began replacing factory-applied stickers with more durable tampographs. The most notable examples are in the reissues and redecoes of the original Sideswipe mold: the rally-deco headlamps on every use of the mold since the New Year Special release in 2002 have been tampographs.

The Takara Micromaster series (also begun in 2002) used nothing but paint operations for the five Micromaster six-teams, often leaving areas once covered by more complex-detail stickers blank and adding entirely new detailing to other areas. However, the final releases in the series, the DX Micromaster versions of Multiforce, used factory-applied paper decals for their robot mode torso detailing.

The "Retro" line of Generation 1 repaints in cartoon-accurate colors largely phased out stickers, except for Laserbeak, who has two pre-applied stickers.

Pros and cons

[edit]
Deathsaurus's Decepticon badge is trying to escape its confines!

A distinct advantage of stickers over paint in general is the ability to do much more intricately-detailed, multicolor detailing for a cheaper price. Many fans also enjoy the simple act of applying stickers, adding an almost personal touch to the toy upon ownership.

But, well... there are some disadvantages to them too. Okay, a lot of disadvantages.

Stickers are a common area for early wear-and-tear, as the designs can be abraded away, leaving ugly residue underneath. Some toys have stickers meant to be applied to areas all but guaranteed to destroy them by simply transforming the toy—one of the most notorious examples being the thigh stickers on the original Generation 1 Hot Rod. Paper stickers can lose their clear-plastic top-layer, making the paper underneath much more vulnerable to damage and moisture.

While clear-plastic decals—such as those of the Pretender era—are probably the most resilient to physical damage, the printed details tend to be semi-transparent, getting lost against darker plastics underneath. Plus, any dirt that happens to get under the sticker becomes much more visible! Clear stickers have also been known to discolor over time. Foil stickers have also been known to simply fade, losing their color details without the sticker below being scraped.

e-HOBBY Detritus: rare, expensive, and with thick paper stickers that have to fold 90 degrees. Gee.

Sometimes, stickers just aren't sticky enough—which is especially problematic with stickers meant to bend around curves or be folded over corners. Several Diaclone molds required such gymnastics, as with the eye sticker on the original Seeker jet mold folding over the bridge of the nose, or with Skids' shoulder stickers being placed directly on rounded screw-heads. The paper decals used on some toys in the Victory line and beyond in Japan had notoriously weak adhesive.

I demand to be called "Blinger" now.

When buying toys secondhand, it's a lottery as to whether the previous owners—kids or adults—placed the stickers correctly. With G1 toys, sticker sheets often underwent changes during the toys' development that resulted in instructions suggesting placement of stickers in areas they weren't designed for, often in contrast to toy samples or package art. Drag Strip has several stickers' worth of art left totally uncut and unusable on the sticker sheet, apparently having been dropped from the toy. Meanwhile Snarl has an Autobot symbol that is supposed to be placed in the middle of his dinosaur head... which splits in half in order to transform, necessitating owners either place the sticker asymmetrically on the toy, or cut it in half and apply each half themselves. If stickers are applied at the factory, it's totally out of your hands—you might open a brand new toy to find the stickers wrinkled or misaligned. Even if the placement is correct, the die-cutting might not line up with the detail printed on the sticker sheet, resulting in stickers that appear mis-placed.

Sometimes, fans just prefer to leave off the stickers for aesthetic reasons; the simplified character models of the Sunbow cartoon would usually omit the technological details, which were often incongruous with the simple, blocky designs of those early toys anyway.

Aftermarket replacements

[edit]

Aftermarket manufacturers supply reproduction sticker sets. These can be used to replace missing or damaged vintage specimens; or to add all-new detail (perhaps more fiction-accurate or to better resemble real-world alternate modes); or to repurpose a toy as a completely different character.

Notes

[edit]

Foreign names

[edit]
  • Japanese: seal (シール shīru)