Battersea Power Station issue 1: Difference between revisions

From MediaWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Created page with "{{Comicstory| |seriesissue=''Transformers: Battersea Power Station |caption=Sadly, no pig included. |image=BatterseaPowerStation-Cover.jpg |date=September 17 2025 ..."
 
No edit summary
 
(15 intermediate revisions by 5 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Comicstory|
{{Comicstory|
|seriesissue=''[[Transformers: Battersea Power Station]]
|seriesissue=''[[Transformers: Battersea Power Station]]
|caption=Sadly, no pig included.
|caption=Inflatable pig not pictured.
|image=BatterseaPowerStation-Cover.jpg
|image=BatterseaPowerStation-Cover.jpg
|date=[[September 17]] [[2025]]
|date=[[September 17]] [[2025]]
|coverdate=September [[2025]]
|coverdate=September [[2025]]
|story=[[Simon Furman]]
|story=[[Simon Furman]]
|pencils=[[Frederic Pham Chuong]]
|pencils=[[Frédéric Pham Chuong]]
}}
}}


'''Transformers: Battersea Power Station''' is a one-shot comic, featuring the debut of the [[Battersea Titan]].
'''Transformers: Battersea Power Station''' is a short comic, featuring the debut of [[Powerplex]].


It was written by [[Simon Furman]] and Illustrated by [[Frederic Pham Chuong]], and released to a limited 2500 copies run.
It was written by [[Simon Furman]] and illustrated by [[Frédéric Pham Chuong]], and released to a limited 2500 copies run via the [[Transformers (store)|Transformers store]] at Battersea Power Station.


==Synopsis==
==Synopsis==
In [[1986]], [[Wheeljack (G1)|Wheeljack]] aided [[Optimus Prime (G1)|Optimus Prime]] in following a mysterious spark uplink, indicating the presence of a Cybertronian of unknown alleigance. It would lead to London's Battersea district, but upon arrival, Optimus would only find the derelict remains of a large power station. Suddenly, the power station transformed into a colossal robot, revealing itself to be [[Battersea Titan|the Cybertronian lifeform that they were after]]!
In [[1986]], [[Wheeljack (G1)|Wheeljack]] aids [[Optimus Prime (G1)|Optimus Prime]] in following a mysterious spark uplink, indicating the presence of a Cybertronian of unknown alleigance. The search leads Prime to London's Battersea district, but upon arrival, he finds only the derelict remains of {{w|Battersea Power Station|a large power station}}. Suddenly, the power station converts into a colossal robot... revealing itself to be [[Powerplex|the Cybertronian lifeform that they were after]]!


==Characters==
==Characters==
Line 23: Line 23:


|c4=
|c4=
*[[Battersea Titan]] (3)
*[[Powerplex]] (3)
}}
}}


==Notes==
==Notes==
*The entire comic is drawn on a single fold-out poster, with one side of it being the cover and the other being the comic itself.
* The entire comic is drawn on a single fold-out poster, with one side featuring the cover and the other being the comic itself. Each copy was hand-numbered.
* Powerplex is not named in this story, as the character's name had yet to be decided from a [[fan polls|fan poll]]. Early promotional material simply referred to them as the "Battersea Titan".
 
===Transformers references===
* When he transforms, Optimus Prime's [[ion blaster]] is seen flying out from the truck mode and unfolding. This detail is seen in various 2000s media, such as [[IDW Publishing]]'s ''[[The Transformers: Escalation]]'' [[Escalation issue 5|issue 5]].
 
===Errors===
* Product copy ''consistently'' refers to this poster as being "hexagonal". Guys, it's an octagon.
* Presumably, this unusual shape was chosen because they only had three pages of material to work with, and wasn't intended from the outset: rather than having been drawn to fit the, uh, "hexagon", the comic was clearly commissioned as two standard US-size comic book pages, which are simply cropped in on the poster; the remaining negative space is filled with a repeating logo.
* The lack of a credited letterer seems to imply this was an in-house job, and it shows: dialogue is awkwardly stacked into the rectangular speech bubbles, all written in unsightly-looking italicised block capitals. Hyphens are used instead of em dashes.
* Why on earth would you ever stick this on a wall?
* This thing retailed for £10.
 
==External links==
* [https://transformersbattersea.com/products/titan-print-1-copy Online product page]


[[Category:Generation 1 issues]]
[[Category:Generation 1 issues]]

Latest revision as of 17:13, 14 October 2025

Transformers: Battersea Power Station

Inflatable pig not pictured.
First published September 17 2025
Cover date September 2025
Story Simon Furman
Pencils Frédéric Pham Chuong

Transformers: Battersea Power Station is a short comic, featuring the debut of Powerplex.

It was written by Simon Furman and illustrated by Frédéric Pham Chuong, and released to a limited 2500 copies run via the Transformers store at Battersea Power Station.

Synopsis

[edit]

In 1986, Wheeljack aids Optimus Prime in following a mysterious spark uplink, indicating the presence of a Cybertronian of unknown alleigance. The search leads Prime to London's Battersea district, but upon arrival, he finds only the derelict remains of a large power station. Suddenly, the power station converts into a colossal robot... revealing itself to be the Cybertronian lifeform that they were after!

Characters

[edit]

(Numbers indicate order of appearance.)

Notes

[edit]
  • The entire comic is drawn on a single fold-out poster, with one side featuring the cover and the other being the comic itself. Each copy was hand-numbered.
  • Powerplex is not named in this story, as the character's name had yet to be decided from a fan poll. Early promotional material simply referred to them as the "Battersea Titan".

Transformers references

[edit]

Errors

[edit]
  • Product copy consistently refers to this poster as being "hexagonal". Guys, it's an octagon.
  • Presumably, this unusual shape was chosen because they only had three pages of material to work with, and wasn't intended from the outset: rather than having been drawn to fit the, uh, "hexagon", the comic was clearly commissioned as two standard US-size comic book pages, which are simply cropped in on the poster; the remaining negative space is filled with a repeating logo.
  • The lack of a credited letterer seems to imply this was an in-house job, and it shows: dialogue is awkwardly stacked into the rectangular speech bubbles, all written in unsightly-looking italicised block capitals. Hyphens are used instead of em dashes.
  • Why on earth would you ever stick this on a wall?
  • This thing retailed for £10.
[edit]