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drafting [[Cybertron (planet)#Energon Universe|Cybertron's Energon Universe page]] since it's barebones and doesn't cover TF issues 1 or 2
[[File:TF2023_Cybertron_History.jpg|thumb|right|200px|It's time you learned where I really come from.]]


===Energon Universe===
Welcome to my sandbox. Lots of things in progress, may not publish some others awaiting peer review because i always want a second set of eyes before something goes gold.
[[File:RID Cybertron.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Struggling to figure out how to upload images, please stand by with this placeholder]]
For a millennia, Cybertron was world of peace, beautiful in its own harsh way. [[Optimus Prime (G1)#Energon Universe|Optimus]]' spark came into being towards the end of that peaceful era {{storylink|Transformers (2023) issue 2|Transformers #2}} when an energy crisis struck, leading [[Jetfire (G1)#Energon Universe|Jetfire]] to leave Cybertron in order to find a way to save their world. Unfortunately, he would spend centuries searching for a solution he could never find. Eventually, Jetfire's search was interrupted when he crashed on an uncharted desolate world without enough energon to function, leaving him unable to return to Cybertron with a solution. Much would change in the time since he left, all for the worse. {{storylink|Transformers (2023) issue 1|Transformers #1}}


Since Jetfire's departure, Cybertron fell to war, driven by greed and power. For two centuries, the Autobots fought to try and keep the old ways of peace, but the extremist Decepticon faction caused such a large amount of casualties the Autobots had no choice but to abandon Cybertron to their oppressors. {{storylink|Transformers (2023) issue 2|Transformers #2}} In the absence of the Autobots and sufficient energon, the Decepticons went into stasis under the watch of [[Shockwave (G1)#Energon Universe|Shockwave]], who had barely enough energon to sustain himself. {{storylink|Void Rivals issue 4|Void Rivals #4}}
====Cliffjumper '''DIES'''====
Wanna update https://tfwiki.net/wiki/Myths#Other because IDW 2019 #28 previews had people think Cliffjumper died again when it was a simulation. WIP obv
* '''Cliffjumper dies in every ''Transformers'' series he appears in, or is part of a franchise-wide running gag where he is killed over and over again.'''


When [[Darak]] and [[Solila]] inadvertently awoke Jetfire after finding his inert body in ship mode, he quickly saw the amount of weathering on he had on his body meant he has been away from Cybertron for too long. Concerned as to the state of Cybertron, Jetfire immediately transformed and flew off-planet, leaving Darak and Solila behind. {{storylink|Void Rivals issue 1|Void Rivals #1}}
[[File:Transformers2-Cliffjumper.jpg|thumb|right|I lived, bitch!]]


Following his capture of a [[Quintesson Prosecutor]], the [[Skuxxoid]] brought his prisoner to Cybertron, hoping to arrange some kind of trade with [[Shockwave (G1)|Shockwave]]. Having little energon and even less patience, Shockwave told the organic to get out lest the Decepticon start stripping the [[Rockeroid]] for parts. {{storylink|Void Rivals issue 4|Void Rivals #4}}
: The [[Darkness Rising, Part 1|series premiere]] of ''[[Transformers: Prime (cartoon)|Transformers: Prime]]'' is well-remembered for its opening act, in which [[Starscream (WFC)|Starscream]] brutally kills [[Cliffjumper (WFC)|Cliffjumper]]. Several years later, [[Cliffjumper (Movie)|Cliffjumper]] made a prominent appearance in 2018's ''[[Bumblebee (film)|Bumblebee]]'' film, where he is tortured and killed by the Decepticons [[Shatter]] and [[Dropkick (Movie)|Dropkick]]. By sheer coincidence, [[Cliffjumper (G1)#2005 IDW continuity|Cliffjumper]] had recently perished in [[IDW Publishing|IDW]]'s concurrent ''[[Transformers: Unicron|Unicron]]'' miniseries; from these data points (sometimes adding in the fate of his [[Cliffjumper (SG)|mirror-universe self]] in ''[[Transformers: Shattered Glass (franchise)|Shattered Glass]]'' and a brief cameo in ''[[Transformers: War for Cybertron Trilogy (cartoon)|Siege]]'' that leaves his fate uncertain), some fans have extrapolated the idea that Cliffjumper must "always" die in ''Transformers'' stories, or that writers have somehow singled him out to die over and over again for the sake of comedy, not unlike the perpetually unlucky [[Waspinator (BW)|Waspinator]].  


After finding [[Ark (G1)|the Ark]] and inadvertently restarting the Great War on Earth, Jetfire was fatally wounded by [[Starscream (G1)#Energon Universe|Starscream]] as the Autobots fled the Decepticons. As he lay dying, Jetfire lamented he had spent centuries of searching for healing for their home, only to find nothing. Asking Optimus if there is any hope left for Cybertron, Jetfire succumbs to his wounds believing he had failed in his mission, leading Cybertron to die. {{storylink|Transformers (2023) issue 1|Transformers #1}}
:The truth of the matter is a bit more nuanced. Named ''Transformers'' characters die all the time—across different works of ''Transformers'' fiction, characters named "[[Wheeljack (disambiguation)|Wheeljack]]" and "[[Blurr (disambiguation)|Blurr]]" have died just as often as Cliffjumper, and Bumblebee himself has died or otherwise suffered terminal damage onscreen just as often as Cliffjumper! Some of Cliffjumper's deaths were part of climactic "massacre" storylines that killed off dozens of named characters; his appearances in ''Bumblebee'' and ''Siege'' probably came down to the fact that it was easier to finagle another pre-existing character from their limited pool of robot parts by simply recoloring Bumblebee's pre-existing CGI model, rather than any kind of ulterior commentary on the character.
 
:In contemporary comics, Cliffjumper spent years as the POV character in [[Fun Publications]]' ''Shattered Glass'' comics; more recently, he got an entire two-part adventure to himself in 2020's ''[[Transformers: Galaxies]]'' series, where he turned out just fine. However, for a brief moment when the main [[Transformers (2019 comic)|IDW 2019 comic series]] released the first few pages of issue [[War World: Hunt|number 28]] to promote its release, said pages depicted Cliffjumper being hunted down and killed, leading to fans believing he's dead yet again<ref>Transformers News - TFW2005[https://www.tfw2005.com/boards/threads/idw-solicitations-march-2021.1205678/page-5#post-18845856 IDW’s Transformers (2019) Comic Series: Issue #28 iTunes Preview]</ref> when in the full issue (nay, ''the same preview page'') showed that [[Deathsaurus (G1)|Deathsaurus]] was in a virtual reality environment living out a dream fantasy of enacting revenge on Cliffjumper for the events of the ''Galaxies'' two-parter by killing him repeatedly. As of {{CURRENTYEAR}}, he's received a starring role in [[Skybound Entertainment|Skybound]]'s [[Energon Universe]] comics, taking the usual "human ally" role from ... ''Bumblebee'', who died in [[Transformers (2023) issue 1|the very first issue]]. (See what we mean?)
{{-}}
 
==Devastator ROTF update==
 
==original section==
 
* According to [[Shawn Kelly]], the [[Industrial Light & Magic|ILM]] lead animator for ''Revenge of the Fallen'', Devastator caused a computer to catch fire spontaneously and its insides to melt.<ref>''[[Nickelodeon]] Magazine'', issue 153, published June 2009</ref> One assumes he was exaggerating for the purposes of publicity, as it is improbable for modern computers to actually catch fire under operations for which they are designed, such as rendering an extremely complex model. The special features on the DVD do (indirectly) show one of the computers blowing, with lots of black smoke and the poor animator (and his keyboard) covered in soot. (This was all done as a prank, leading to said animator asking "What the hell, man?") Not quite melting, but still.
 
==proposed new section==
 
* According to [[Shawn Kelly]], the [[Industrial Light & Magic|ILM]] lead animator for ''Revenge of the Fallen'', Devastator caused a computer to catch fire spontaneously and its insides to melt<ref>''[[Nickelodeon]] Magazine'', issue 153, published June 2009</ref> during an overnight rendering and no one was in the studio.<ref>https://twitter.com/Shawnimator/status/1816858494882189453</ref> While one assumes he was exaggerating for the purposes of publicity, as it is improbable for modern computers to actually catch fire under operations for which they are designed (such as such as rendering an extremely complex model), ILM visual effects sequence supervisor Todd Vaziri notes that even with massive amounts of RAM the computer was not able to handle rendering the shots. The special features on the ROTF DVD reenacted the incident by pretending to have one of the sequences saved with all the high-resolution textures and calling across the office to have an animator open the scene, leading to a fake mushroom cloud of smoke blow over the cubicle walls as the poor animator walked over, his entire shirt covered in soot from his keyboard exploding, asking them "What the hell?"
 
 
==References==
{{Reflist}}

Latest revision as of 09:58, 15 February 2026

It's time you learned where I really come from.

Welcome to my sandbox. Lots of things in progress, may not publish some others awaiting peer review because i always want a second set of eyes before something goes gold.

Cliffjumper DIES

[edit]

Wanna update https://tfwiki.net/wiki/Myths#Other because IDW 2019 #28 previews had people think Cliffjumper died again when it was a simulation. WIP obv

  • Cliffjumper dies in every Transformers series he appears in, or is part of a franchise-wide running gag where he is killed over and over again.
I lived, bitch!
The series premiere of Transformers: Prime is well-remembered for its opening act, in which Starscream brutally kills Cliffjumper. Several years later, Cliffjumper made a prominent appearance in 2018's Bumblebee film, where he is tortured and killed by the Decepticons Shatter and Dropkick. By sheer coincidence, Cliffjumper had recently perished in IDW's concurrent Unicron miniseries; from these data points (sometimes adding in the fate of his mirror-universe self in Shattered Glass and a brief cameo in Siege that leaves his fate uncertain), some fans have extrapolated the idea that Cliffjumper must "always" die in Transformers stories, or that writers have somehow singled him out to die over and over again for the sake of comedy, not unlike the perpetually unlucky Waspinator.
The truth of the matter is a bit more nuanced. Named Transformers characters die all the time—across different works of Transformers fiction, characters named "Wheeljack" and "Blurr" have died just as often as Cliffjumper, and Bumblebee himself has died or otherwise suffered terminal damage onscreen just as often as Cliffjumper! Some of Cliffjumper's deaths were part of climactic "massacre" storylines that killed off dozens of named characters; his appearances in Bumblebee and Siege probably came down to the fact that it was easier to finagle another pre-existing character from their limited pool of robot parts by simply recoloring Bumblebee's pre-existing CGI model, rather than any kind of ulterior commentary on the character.
In contemporary comics, Cliffjumper spent years as the POV character in Fun Publications' Shattered Glass comics; more recently, he got an entire two-part adventure to himself in 2020's Transformers: Galaxies series, where he turned out just fine. However, for a brief moment when the main IDW 2019 comic series released the first few pages of issue number 28 to promote its release, said pages depicted Cliffjumper being hunted down and killed, leading to fans believing he's dead yet again[1] when in the full issue (nay, the same preview page) showed that Deathsaurus was in a virtual reality environment living out a dream fantasy of enacting revenge on Cliffjumper for the events of the Galaxies two-parter by killing him repeatedly. As of 2026, he's received a starring role in Skybound's Energon Universe comics, taking the usual "human ally" role from ... Bumblebee, who died in the very first issue. (See what we mean?)


Devastator ROTF update

[edit]

original section

[edit]
  • According to Shawn Kelly, the ILM lead animator for Revenge of the Fallen, Devastator caused a computer to catch fire spontaneously and its insides to melt.[2] One assumes he was exaggerating for the purposes of publicity, as it is improbable for modern computers to actually catch fire under operations for which they are designed, such as rendering an extremely complex model. The special features on the DVD do (indirectly) show one of the computers blowing, with lots of black smoke and the poor animator (and his keyboard) covered in soot. (This was all done as a prank, leading to said animator asking "What the hell, man?") Not quite melting, but still.

proposed new section

[edit]
  • According to Shawn Kelly, the ILM lead animator for Revenge of the Fallen, Devastator caused a computer to catch fire spontaneously and its insides to melt[3] during an overnight rendering and no one was in the studio.[4] While one assumes he was exaggerating for the purposes of publicity, as it is improbable for modern computers to actually catch fire under operations for which they are designed (such as such as rendering an extremely complex model), ILM visual effects sequence supervisor Todd Vaziri notes that even with massive amounts of RAM the computer was not able to handle rendering the shots. The special features on the ROTF DVD reenacted the incident by pretending to have one of the sequences saved with all the high-resolution textures and calling across the office to have an animator open the scene, leading to a fake mushroom cloud of smoke blow over the cubicle walls as the poor animator walked over, his entire shirt covered in soot from his keyboard exploding, asking them "What the hell?"


References

[edit]
  1. Transformers News - TFW2005IDW’s Transformers (2019) Comic Series: Issue #28 iTunes Preview
  2. Nickelodeon Magazine, issue 153, published June 2009
  3. Nickelodeon Magazine, issue 153, published June 2009
  4. https://twitter.com/Shawnimator/status/1816858494882189453