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{{disambig3|Unicron}}
[[File:Transformers 2000s Logo.png|center|450px]]
[[Image:UnicronTrilogyVectorPrime.jpg|right|250px|thumb|The Unicron Trilogy may be over, but we'll always have redecos.]]
The "'''Unicron Trilogy'''" is [[Hasbro|Hasbro's]] designation for the [[continuity family]] consisting of ''[[Armada (franchise)|Armada]]'', ''[[Energon (franchise)|Energon]]'', and ''[[Cybertron (franchise)|Cybertron]]''.


The Unicron Trilogy continuity family includes these individual continuities:
[[File:Galactic Heroes Cybertron.jpg|thumb|right|300px]]


*'''Cartoon continuity'''
The eponymous "Unicron Trilogy", consisting of the ''[[Transformers: Armada (franchise)|Armada]]'', ''[[Transformers: Energon (franchise)|Energon]]'', and ''[[Transformers: Cybertron (franchise)|Cybertron]]'' franchises, forms the basis for the entire '''Unicron Trilogy continuity family'''. The fourth-largest [[continuity family]] encompasses three cartoons, two comics, and multiple storybooks and video games; it is named for the central role [[Unicron]] plays in the overall story, since all three series revolve around him in some way—even ''Cybertron'', where his destruction results in the creation of the series' primary threat, the [[Unicron Singularity|universe-threatening black hole]].
:A continuity composed of the ''[[Armada (cartoon)|Armada]]'', ''[[Energon (cartoon)|Energon]]'', and ''[[Cybertron (cartoon)|Cybertron]]'' television series and its related material, such as the [[Fun Publications]] ''Cybertron'' comic.
*'''Dreamwave comics continuity'''
:A continuity composed of the ''[[Armada (Dreamwave comic)|Armada]]'' and ''[[Energon (comic)|Energon]]'' comics published by [[Dreamwave]].
*'''Panini Comics continuity'''
:A continuity composed of the [[Panini]] ''Armada'' comics published in the UK.
*Various stand-alone storybooks and [[Transformers Legends|short stories]].


The Unicron Trilogy is so-named because of the central role [[Unicron]] plays in the overall story. All three series feature Unicron in some pivotal way, even ''Cybertron'', where his destruction resulted in the creation of the series' primary threat, the [[Unicron Singularity|universe-threatening black hole]].
As the first true Japanese-American coproduction to come out of the ''Transformers'' franchise, the three television shows that constitute the bulk of this continuity were originally produced in [[Japan]] and later exported and dubbed to other countries for international release. Along with ''[[Transformers: Robots in Disguise (2001 cartoon)|Robots in Disguise]]'', the cartoons are remembered for their Japanese influences—each installment features plenty of mecha-inspired [[Super Mode|super mode]]s and supernatural power boosts. Although Western ''Armada'' fiction like [[Dreamwave Productions|Dreamwave]]'s comics played the premise straighter and hewed closer to [[Marvel Comics|Marvel's]] 1980s [[The Transformers (Marvel comic)|''The Transformers'' comic]] in tone, many of the surface-level anime stylings remained. From a meta perspective, the Unicron Trilogy is also notable for introducing a third faction of diminutive, power-boosting [[Mini-Con]]s while reintroducing [[Primus]]—divine creator of the Transformer race—to the overarcing ''Transformers'' mythos.
{{bigquote|A lot of the [Unicron Trilogy] is just really long and really stupid with very little payoff.|2=[http://shortpacked.livejournal.com/491864.html?thread=12936792#t12936792 David Willis] <small>(internet celebrity / [[Wikipedia:WP:Notability|WP:Notability]] case,)</small> proves that not all generalisms are untrue.}}


==Distinctive elements==
Within the fictional ''Transformers'' [[multiverse]], the [[Transcendent Technomorph|TransTech]] classify every Unicron Trilogy continuity as a part of the "[[Aurex]]" [[universal stream|universal cluster]].
Transformer physiology in the Unicron Trilogy seem to be subtly but fundamentally different from that in many other continuity families.  Transformers' sparks, rather than being fragile flickers of life sustained and protected by their bodies, are fantastically durable things, capable of being removed for upgrades and, in several instances, floating freely in space, still alive after the bodies which once housed them were atomized, and then being easily implanted into a new body.


Unicron Trilogy Transformers also have a disconcerting habit of referring to one another as "men" or, when they wish to be disparaging, "ladies". Whether this is an element translated from the Japanese scripts, a product of the level of sexism still existent there, or a product of ill-considered dubbing is uncertain.  It's still fantastically annoying either way.
==Major continuities==
As of {{CURRENTYEAR}}, we identify three major continuities in this family, many of which possess a number of notable sub-branches and [[micro-continuity|micro-continuities]]. The lists below are not meant to be complete guides to every work in that continuity, but provide a quick overview of that continuity's most notable media.


{{see|Unicron Trilogy cartoon timeline}}
===Dreamwave ''Armada'' continuity===
{{main|Dreamwave Armada continuity|Dreamwave Armada timeline}}
 
[[File:DW MTMTE Armada 1.jpg|thumb|right|200px]]
 
* ''[[Transformers: Armada (Dreamwave)|Transformers: Armada]]'' (2002-2003)
* ''[[More than Meets the Eye: Transformers: Armada]]'' (2004)
* ''[[Transformers: Energon (comic)|Transformers: Energon]]'' (2004)
 
[[Dreamwave Productions]] acquired the ''Transformers'' license in 2002, and launched an ''[[Transformers: Armada (Dreamwave)|Armada]]'' tie-in comic alongside their "[[Dreamwave Generation One continuity|Generation One]]" storyline. Like many other ''Transformers'' tales, ''Armada'' begins on a war-torn Cybertron as [[Optimus Prime (Armada)|Optimus Prime]]'s [[Autobot]]s battle [[Megatron (Armada)|Megatron]]'s [[Decepticon]]s—in ''this'' subset of realities, however, the war is fought not for [[energon]] or territory, but for control of the planet's [[Mini-Con]]s, a third faction of tiny, power-boosting Cybertronians. But when the Mini-Cons flee their planet aboard the starship ''[[Exodus (Armada)|Exodus]]'', a freak accident strands half of the Mini-Cons on [[Earth]] and eventually brings them into contact with humanity. When the Autobots and Decepticons travel to Earth to continue their war, however, they make contact with three [[human]] children and discover that not all of the Mini-Cons ''want'' to ally themselves with the Autobots. Although the ''Armada'' comic is most notable for its frequent depiction of events from the Mini-Cons' point of view—unlike the anime, the comic depicted the Mini-Cons as normal Cybertronians with the ability to speak English—''Armada''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s final arc abruptly pushes the ideological conflict between these three races to the side in favor of a climactic battle against [[Unicron]] and his five "[[Herald of Unicron|Heralds]]", a quintet of dimension-hopping [[Generation 1 continuity family|"Generation 1"]] Transformers led by [[Galvatron (G1)|Galvatron]]. Additionally, the ''[[More than Meets the Eye: Transformers: Armada|More than Meets the Eye]]'' guidebook assigned personalities and profiles to basically every Armada character up to that point, even those who didn't appear in the comic.
 
In [[2004]], the comic rebranded itself as ''[[Transformers: Energon (comic)|Transformers: Energon]]'' and followed the cartoon's example by skipping ten years into the future. Although Unicron's defeat led to a Decepticon surrender and a complete armistice, the Autobots now find themselves contending with Unicron's "[[Unicron's Four Horsemen|Four Horsemen]]" who seek to revive their leader, while the mysterious [[Alpha Quintesson]] and his army of [[Terrorcon (Energon)|Terrorcon]]s have their own designs for the remnants of the Decepticon army.
 
Ultimately, however, a combination of poor management, numerous financial troubles, and some ''extremely'' dubious business practices resulted in the company declaring bankruptcy in early 2005, though Hasbro had already decided to not renew their partnership with Dreamwave the year before.<ref>[http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=14839 Lying in the Gutters reporting that Hasbro had revoked Dreamwave's ''Transformers'' license]</ref> As a result, the ''Energon'' comic abruptly ended midway through its run, although author [[Simon Furman]] has released several synopses of unpublished issues on his blog.<ref>[http://simonfurman.wordpress.com/2010/11/22/energon-%e2%80%94-revisited/ "Energon Revisited"]</ref>
 
===Cartoons===
{{main|Unicron Trilogy cartoon continuity|Unicron Trilogy cartoon timeline}}
 
[[File:Cybertron Ultimate Collection DVD.jpg|thumb|right|200px]]
 
* ''[[Transformers: Armada (cartoon)|Transformers: Armada]]'' (2002-2003)
* ''[[Linkage (comic)|Linkage]]'' (2003-2004)
* ''[[Transformers: Energon (cartoon)|Transformers: Energon]]'' (2004-2005)
* ''[[Transformers: Cybertron (cartoon)|Transformers: Cybertron]]'' (2005-2006)
 
The ''[[Transformers: Armada (cartoon)|Transformers: Armada]]'' cartoon hit the airwaves in late 2002. Like Dreamwave's comic, the cartoon features the Autobots and Decepticons searching for Mini-Cons hidden across the planet [[Earth]] with the assistance of their human friends [[Rad White|Rad]], [[Carlos Lopez|Carlos]], and [[Alexis Thi Dang|Alexis]]—though the Mini-Cons of this continuity lacked the ability to speak and communicated solely through electronic bleeps and bloops. Unlike Dreamwave's comic, however, the cartoon offered a distinctly sinister origin for these tiny Transformers: toward the end of the show's run, the heroes learned that the Mini-Cons were children of [[Unicron]] himself, artificial life-forms synthesized to deliberately stoke conflict between the two factions and sustain the planet-eater with their hatred.
 
Due to a hurried production cycle—most notably, the English dub was rushed to markets a whole six months before the Japanese version premiered—the ''Armada'' cartoon hit more than a few technical snafus along the way, including a number of blatant animation or dubbing errors. Unfortunately, the sequel cartoon, ''[[Transformers: Energon (cartoon)|Transformers: Energon]]'', only doubled down on many of the same production flaws; its sluggish pace, repetitive plotlines, and overuse of primitive CGI animation means that the result is widely derided as one of the worst ''Transformers'' shows of all time.
 
Fortunately, things picked up in 2005 with ''[[Transformers: Cybertron (cartoon)|Transformers: Cybertron]]''. Following Unicron's second defeat in ''Energon'', his body collapses into a [[Unicron Singularity|powerful black hole]] which threatens to consume Cybertron entirely. To save their world, the Autobots and Decepticons race to find the four [[Cyber Planet Key]]s hidden on different planets, including [[Earth]] [[Gigantion]], [[Velocitron]], and the [[Jungle Planet (colony)|Jungle Planet]]. Although ''Galaxy Force''—the show's Japanese counterpart—was initially presented as a continuity reboot in contrast to Hasbro's intent, later Japanese materials eventually [[retcon]]ned ''Galaxy Force'' back into being the continuation it was  conceived as.
 
[[Fun Publications]] produced a few stories set in this continuity— ''[[Transformers: Cybertron: Balancing Act|Balancing Act]]'' and "[[Force of Habit]]" run alongside ''Cybertron'' and fill in some of the gaps in the cartoon's chronology, while "[[The Dark Heart of Sandokan]]" takes place after the end of the ''Cybertron'' cartoon. The Japanese-exclusive ''[[Linkage (comic)|Linkage]]'' manga likewise takes place during the events of the ''Armada'' cartoon, but follows a different cast of side characters, while another Japanese-exclusive pack-in manga called "[[Optimus Prime VS Mysterious Supreme Commander Scourge|Optimus Prime VS Scourge]]", loosely ties in with the events of the ''Energon'' cartoon.
 
===Panini ''Armada'' comic===
[[File:Panini01.jpg|thumb|right|200px]]
 
* ''[[Transformers: Armada (Panini)|Transformers: Armada]]'' (2003)
[[Panini]]'s short-lived ''[[Transformers: Armada (Panini)|Transformers: Armada]]'' comic hewed closer to the Dreamwave comic than the cartoon, featuring articulate, fully-sentient Mini-Cons who are initially reluctant to take a side in the Autobot-Decepticon conflict. Although [[Simon Furman]] wrote both the Panini and Dreamwave comics, the two are not set in the same continuity.
{{--}}
 
==Minor continuities==
Continuities that comprise multiple books, issues, or instalments, and so are not [[Micro-continuity|micro-continuities]], but are far less significant.
 
===Toy bios===
[[File:Cybertronart JunglePlanetOptimusPrime.jpg|thumb|right|200px]]
 
Like basically all continuity families, the various Unicron Trilogy toys featured [[redeco]]es of pre-existing characters and many toyline-original characters that did not appear in either the cartoons or comics. The ''[[Transformers: Armada (toyline)|Armada]]'' toyline featured a very high number of [[Mini-Con]]s redecoed from pre-existing molds, and a number of full-sized toys were recolored for the "Unicron Battles" [[subline imprint]]. In many cases, these represent either new characters or new forms for old characters, existing as they do in their own little [[micro-continuity|micro-continuities]].
 
One notable micro-continuity concerns [[Optimus Prime (Armada)|Optimus Prime]]'s [[Optimus Prime (Armada)/toys#Gorilla|2006 Deluxe-class toy]]; working off his original toy [[bio]], the ''[[Transformers: TransTech|TransTech]]'' storyline and [[Ask Vector Prime]] Facebook feature established this character as "[[Optimus Prime (Armada)#Beast Prime|Beast Prime]]", an alternate-reality version of Optimus Prime who killed his universe's [[Megatron (Armada)|Megatron]] after adopting a simian [[beast mode]].
{{--}}
 
===Toy pack-in comics===
[[File:Armada minicomic 1.jpg|thumb|right|200px]]
 
* ''[[Transformers: Armada (mini-comic)|Transformers: Armada]]'' (2003-2016)
* ''[[Transformers: Energon (mini-comic)|Transformers: Energon]]'' (2004)
 
Written and illustrated by various [[Dreamwave Productions|Dreamwave]] creatives, these mini-comics were printed alongside a [[catalog]] advertising the current wave of ''Armada'' toys, but have no overt link to any other ''Armada'' fiction and take place within their own self-contained continuity that loosely follows the Dreamwave universe, but takes creative inspiration from both cartoons and comics—the Mini-Cons of this reality posess the power of speech, but are also creations of Unicron.
 
In [[2016]], [[Fun Publications]] returned to this strange little universe by publishing "[[Armada Volume 5]]", a deliberate style parody that emulated these comics while bridging the gap between ''Armada'' and ''Energon''.
{{--}}
 
===Bendon ''Armada'' books===
[[File:Cavecatastrophe frontcover.jpg|thumb|right|200px]]
 
* "[[Cave Catastrophe]]" (2003)
* "[[Race to Disaster]]" (2003)
 
A simplified pair of storybooks in which [[Optimus Prime (Armada)|Optimus Prime]] and [[Hot Shot (Armada)|Hot Shot]] battle [[Demolishor (Armada)|Demolishor]] and [[Megatron (Armada)|Megatron]].
{{--}}
 
===Reader's Digest ''Armada'' novels===
[[File:RD-TheBattleBegins.jpg|thumb|right|200px]]
 
{{main|Reader's Digest}}
 
*[[Transformers Armada: The Battle Begins]] (2003)
*[[Transformers Armada: Race for the Mini-Con Robots]] (2003)
*[[Transformers Armada: Secret of the Star Saber]] (2003)
*[[Transformers Armada: The Autobots Strike Back]] (2003)
 
A series of novels which adapt the basic ''Armada'' premise. Like the cartoon, the Mini-Cons do not speak English; unlike the cartoon, however, they are not creations of Unicron, and all three Cybertronian races are the children of a mysterious being called "The Creator".
{{--}}
 
===''Transformers Legends'' anthology===
[[File:TFLegendsCover.jpg|thumb|right|200px]]
 
{{main|Transformers Legends (book)}}
 
* "[[Something Robotic This Way Comes]]" (2004)
* "[[Lonesome Diesel]]" (2004)
* "[[Prime Spark]]" (2004)
* "[[Fire in the Dark]]" (2004)
 
The 2004 ''[[Transformers Legends (book)|Transformers Legends]]'' book contains a number of stories set in some version of the ''Transformers: Armada'' era, although it is debatable if they are all meant to be in the ''same'' universe—either way, "[[Something Robotic This Way Comes]]" depicts a timeline in which the war for the Mini-Cons is still ongoing many thousands of years in the future, "[[Fire in the Dark]]" incorporates a version of the [[Beast Wars (event)|Beast Wars]] into the universe, and "[[Lonesome Diesel]]" folds a number of "[[Generation 1 continuity family|Generation 1]]" characters and concepts into the lore. The Mini-Cons of these stories all display the ability to speak English.
{{--}}
 
===''Transformers (PS2)''===
[[File:TF atari.jpg|thumb|right|200px]]
 
* "[[The Balance of Power]]" (2004)
* ''[[Transformers (Armada PS2)|Transformers]]'' (2004)
 
In this continuity, the Decepticons have conquered Cybertron entirely using a massive [[cloning|clone]] army, leaving only [[Optimus Prime (Armada)|Optimus Prime]], [[Red Alert (Armada)|Red Alert]], and [[Hot Shot (Armada)|Hot Shot]] to travel to Earth to search for hidden Mini-Cons.
{{--}}
 
===''Galaxy Force'' manga===
[[File:TF GF manga cover.jpg|thumb|right|200px]]
 
* ''[[Transformers: Galaxy Force (manga)|Transformers: Galaxy Force]]'' (2005)
 
The ''[[Transformers: Galaxy Force (manga)|Transformers: Galaxy Force]]'' [[manga]] is an abridged adaptation of the [[Transformers: Cybertron (cartoon)|''Galaxy Force'']] cartoon, hitting most of the cartoon's major story beats but in such a way that it cannot "fit" as a straight retelling of the television show. As a result of its parent show underperforming in Japan, the comic was cancelled after only nine instalments, but with enough leeway to foreshadow most of the developments from the second half of the TV series.
{{--}}
 
===Spacewarp's Log===
[[File:Ask Vector Prime Spacewarp's Log.jpg|thumb|right|200px]]
 
*[[Transformers: Spacewarp's Log]] (2015-2016)
 
In 2015, the [[Ask Vector Prime]] Facebook feature introduced the swashbuckling [[Decepticon]] [[Spacewarp]] as a guest columnist, who proved popular enough to get her own spinoff column, [[Transformers: Spacewarp's Log|Spacewarp's Log]]. Early on, she established that she hailed from a reality more-or-less analogous to the [[Unicron Trilogy cartoon continuity]], but with some notable differences—in her native universe, for instance, the 'bot we know as "[[Starscream (Armada)|Starscream]]" is instead named "[[Starscream (Armada)#Spacewarp's Log|Ulchtar]]".
{{--}}


==Notes==
==Notes==
* The term "Unicron Trilogy" was first mentioned by [[Aaron Archer]] at [[BotCon|some convention or another]]{{fact|which one?}}. Later, the term was officially canonized by the back of ''[[Universe (2008)|Universe]]'' [[Vector Prime]]'s packaging, superceding fan-coined names such as '''Armadaverse''' and the '''AEC''' (Armada-Energon-Cybertron) universe. Well, [[Misconceptions and urban legends about Transformers|in theory]].
[[File:UnicronTrilogyVectorPrime.jpg|thumb|right|200px]]
* The Unicron Trilogy is called the '''Micron Trilogy''' in Japan, named by Hisashi Yuki of Takara.[http://www.takarahobby.com/kaihatsu/0601happy_new_year/004.html]
 
* The term "Unicron Trilogy" was first mentioned by [[Aaron Archer]] at [[BotCon 2005]].<ref name="steve-o">[http://www.camphortree.net/tf/tidbits/botcon2005.txt Steve-o Stonebraker's BotCon 2005 Notes]</ref> Later, the term was officially canonized by the back of ''[[Transformers: Universe (2008 toyline)|Universe]]'' [[Vector Prime]]'s [[packaging]], superseding fan-coined names such as "Armadaverse", "Armadagon", and the "AEC (Armada-Energon-Cybertron) universe".
 
===Foreign names===
*''Japanese:'' '''Micron Sanbusaku''' (マイクロン3部作 ''Maikuron Sanbusaku'', "Micron Trilogy")<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20120329200545/http://www.takarahobby.com/kaihatsu/0601happy_new_year/004.html "Good luck, Hisashi" (archived copy)]</ref>
{{--}}


{{stub}}
==References==
{{reflist}}


[[Category:Continuities]]
[[Category:Continuity families]]
[[Category:Unicron Trilogy]]
[[Category:Unicron Trilogy]]
[[Category:Umbrella franchises]]

Latest revision as of 22:46, 2 February 2026

The eponymous "Unicron Trilogy", consisting of the Armada, Energon, and Cybertron franchises, forms the basis for the entire Unicron Trilogy continuity family. The fourth-largest continuity family encompasses three cartoons, two comics, and multiple storybooks and video games; it is named for the central role Unicron plays in the overall story, since all three series revolve around him in some way—even Cybertron, where his destruction results in the creation of the series' primary threat, the universe-threatening black hole.

As the first true Japanese-American coproduction to come out of the Transformers franchise, the three television shows that constitute the bulk of this continuity were originally produced in Japan and later exported and dubbed to other countries for international release. Along with Robots in Disguise, the cartoons are remembered for their Japanese influences—each installment features plenty of mecha-inspired super modes and supernatural power boosts. Although Western Armada fiction like Dreamwave's comics played the premise straighter and hewed closer to Marvel's 1980s The Transformers comic in tone, many of the surface-level anime stylings remained. From a meta perspective, the Unicron Trilogy is also notable for introducing a third faction of diminutive, power-boosting Mini-Cons while reintroducing Primus—divine creator of the Transformer race—to the overarcing Transformers mythos.

Within the fictional Transformers multiverse, the TransTech classify every Unicron Trilogy continuity as a part of the "Aurex" universal cluster.

Major continuities

[edit]

As of 2026, we identify three major continuities in this family, many of which possess a number of notable sub-branches and micro-continuities. The lists below are not meant to be complete guides to every work in that continuity, but provide a quick overview of that continuity's most notable media.

Dreamwave Armada continuity

[edit]

Dreamwave Productions acquired the Transformers license in 2002, and launched an Armada tie-in comic alongside their "Generation One" storyline. Like many other Transformers tales, Armada begins on a war-torn Cybertron as Optimus Prime's Autobots battle Megatron's Decepticons—in this subset of realities, however, the war is fought not for energon or territory, but for control of the planet's Mini-Cons, a third faction of tiny, power-boosting Cybertronians. But when the Mini-Cons flee their planet aboard the starship Exodus, a freak accident strands half of the Mini-Cons on Earth and eventually brings them into contact with humanity. When the Autobots and Decepticons travel to Earth to continue their war, however, they make contact with three human children and discover that not all of the Mini-Cons want to ally themselves with the Autobots. Although the Armada comic is most notable for its frequent depiction of events from the Mini-Cons' point of view—unlike the anime, the comic depicted the Mini-Cons as normal Cybertronians with the ability to speak English—Armada's final arc abruptly pushes the ideological conflict between these three races to the side in favor of a climactic battle against Unicron and his five "Heralds", a quintet of dimension-hopping "Generation 1" Transformers led by Galvatron. Additionally, the More than Meets the Eye guidebook assigned personalities and profiles to basically every Armada character up to that point, even those who didn't appear in the comic.

In 2004, the comic rebranded itself as Transformers: Energon and followed the cartoon's example by skipping ten years into the future. Although Unicron's defeat led to a Decepticon surrender and a complete armistice, the Autobots now find themselves contending with Unicron's "Four Horsemen" who seek to revive their leader, while the mysterious Alpha Quintesson and his army of Terrorcons have their own designs for the remnants of the Decepticon army.

Ultimately, however, a combination of poor management, numerous financial troubles, and some extremely dubious business practices resulted in the company declaring bankruptcy in early 2005, though Hasbro had already decided to not renew their partnership with Dreamwave the year before.[1] As a result, the Energon comic abruptly ended midway through its run, although author Simon Furman has released several synopses of unpublished issues on his blog.[2]

Cartoons

[edit]

The Transformers: Armada cartoon hit the airwaves in late 2002. Like Dreamwave's comic, the cartoon features the Autobots and Decepticons searching for Mini-Cons hidden across the planet Earth with the assistance of their human friends Rad, Carlos, and Alexis—though the Mini-Cons of this continuity lacked the ability to speak and communicated solely through electronic bleeps and bloops. Unlike Dreamwave's comic, however, the cartoon offered a distinctly sinister origin for these tiny Transformers: toward the end of the show's run, the heroes learned that the Mini-Cons were children of Unicron himself, artificial life-forms synthesized to deliberately stoke conflict between the two factions and sustain the planet-eater with their hatred.

Due to a hurried production cycle—most notably, the English dub was rushed to markets a whole six months before the Japanese version premiered—the Armada cartoon hit more than a few technical snafus along the way, including a number of blatant animation or dubbing errors. Unfortunately, the sequel cartoon, Transformers: Energon, only doubled down on many of the same production flaws; its sluggish pace, repetitive plotlines, and overuse of primitive CGI animation means that the result is widely derided as one of the worst Transformers shows of all time.

Fortunately, things picked up in 2005 with Transformers: Cybertron. Following Unicron's second defeat in Energon, his body collapses into a powerful black hole which threatens to consume Cybertron entirely. To save their world, the Autobots and Decepticons race to find the four Cyber Planet Keys hidden on different planets, including Earth Gigantion, Velocitron, and the Jungle Planet. Although Galaxy Force—the show's Japanese counterpart—was initially presented as a continuity reboot in contrast to Hasbro's intent, later Japanese materials eventually retconned Galaxy Force back into being the continuation it was conceived as.

Fun Publications produced a few stories set in this continuity— Balancing Act and "Force of Habit" run alongside Cybertron and fill in some of the gaps in the cartoon's chronology, while "The Dark Heart of Sandokan" takes place after the end of the Cybertron cartoon. The Japanese-exclusive Linkage manga likewise takes place during the events of the Armada cartoon, but follows a different cast of side characters, while another Japanese-exclusive pack-in manga called "Optimus Prime VS Scourge", loosely ties in with the events of the Energon cartoon.

Panini Armada comic

[edit]

Panini's short-lived Transformers: Armada comic hewed closer to the Dreamwave comic than the cartoon, featuring articulate, fully-sentient Mini-Cons who are initially reluctant to take a side in the Autobot-Decepticon conflict. Although Simon Furman wrote both the Panini and Dreamwave comics, the two are not set in the same continuity.

Minor continuities

[edit]

Continuities that comprise multiple books, issues, or instalments, and so are not micro-continuities, but are far less significant.

Toy bios

[edit]

Like basically all continuity families, the various Unicron Trilogy toys featured redecoes of pre-existing characters and many toyline-original characters that did not appear in either the cartoons or comics. The Armada toyline featured a very high number of Mini-Cons redecoed from pre-existing molds, and a number of full-sized toys were recolored for the "Unicron Battles" subline imprint. In many cases, these represent either new characters or new forms for old characters, existing as they do in their own little micro-continuities.

One notable micro-continuity concerns Optimus Prime's 2006 Deluxe-class toy; working off his original toy bio, the TransTech storyline and Ask Vector Prime Facebook feature established this character as "Beast Prime", an alternate-reality version of Optimus Prime who killed his universe's Megatron after adopting a simian beast mode.

Toy pack-in comics

[edit]

Written and illustrated by various Dreamwave creatives, these mini-comics were printed alongside a catalog advertising the current wave of Armada toys, but have no overt link to any other Armada fiction and take place within their own self-contained continuity that loosely follows the Dreamwave universe, but takes creative inspiration from both cartoons and comics—the Mini-Cons of this reality posess the power of speech, but are also creations of Unicron.

In 2016, Fun Publications returned to this strange little universe by publishing "Armada Volume 5", a deliberate style parody that emulated these comics while bridging the gap between Armada and Energon.

Bendon Armada books

[edit]

A simplified pair of storybooks in which Optimus Prime and Hot Shot battle Demolishor and Megatron.

Reader's Digest Armada novels

[edit]
Main article: Reader's Digest

A series of novels which adapt the basic Armada premise. Like the cartoon, the Mini-Cons do not speak English; unlike the cartoon, however, they are not creations of Unicron, and all three Cybertronian races are the children of a mysterious being called "The Creator".

Transformers Legends anthology

[edit]

The 2004 Transformers Legends book contains a number of stories set in some version of the Transformers: Armada era, although it is debatable if they are all meant to be in the same universe—either way, "Something Robotic This Way Comes" depicts a timeline in which the war for the Mini-Cons is still ongoing many thousands of years in the future, "Fire in the Dark" incorporates a version of the Beast Wars into the universe, and "Lonesome Diesel" folds a number of "Generation 1" characters and concepts into the lore. The Mini-Cons of these stories all display the ability to speak English.

Transformers (PS2)

[edit]

In this continuity, the Decepticons have conquered Cybertron entirely using a massive clone army, leaving only Optimus Prime, Red Alert, and Hot Shot to travel to Earth to search for hidden Mini-Cons.

Galaxy Force manga

[edit]

The Transformers: Galaxy Force manga is an abridged adaptation of the Galaxy Force cartoon, hitting most of the cartoon's major story beats but in such a way that it cannot "fit" as a straight retelling of the television show. As a result of its parent show underperforming in Japan, the comic was cancelled after only nine instalments, but with enough leeway to foreshadow most of the developments from the second half of the TV series.

Spacewarp's Log

[edit]

In 2015, the Ask Vector Prime Facebook feature introduced the swashbuckling Decepticon Spacewarp as a guest columnist, who proved popular enough to get her own spinoff column, Spacewarp's Log. Early on, she established that she hailed from a reality more-or-less analogous to the Unicron Trilogy cartoon continuity, but with some notable differences—in her native universe, for instance, the 'bot we know as "Starscream" is instead named "Ulchtar".

Notes

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  • The term "Unicron Trilogy" was first mentioned by Aaron Archer at BotCon 2005.[3] Later, the term was officially canonized by the back of Universe Vector Prime's packaging, superseding fan-coined names such as "Armadaverse", "Armadagon", and the "AEC (Armada-Energon-Cybertron) universe".

Foreign names

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  • Japanese: Micron Sanbusaku (マイクロン3部作 Maikuron Sanbusaku, "Micron Trilogy")[4]

References

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