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[[Image:Thereformattingmaximalsmaximize.jpg|thumb|350px|They changed bodies...''again''?]]
{{disambig2|the part organic, part mechanical Transformers|the part organic, part mechanical creations of the Quintessons|Trans-Organic}}


'''Technorganic''' describes the melding of technological and biological components into a single entity, fused at the cellular level, and generally involving the power of the [[Oracle]].
[[File:Thereformattingmaximalsmaximize.jpg|right|upright=1.95|thumb|They changed bodies...''[[To sell toys|again]]''?]]


A technorganic Transformer is no longer a purely technological robot, nor an organic life form. In the words of technorganic guru [[Optimus Primal]], they are "both, and neither"{{m-}}a balance of organic and mechanical, combining the strengths of both.  
Although many view the [[Transformer]]s as a purely-mechanical race, this is not always the case. '''Technorganic''' (also '''techno-organic''', '''technoorganic''', and '''bio-mechanical''') Cybertronians incorporate both organic and technological components into their construction; depending on the universe, these unique upgrades run the gamut of technological sophistication, from basic cybernetic implants all the way up to a true cellular symbiosis that can be classified as an entirely new kind of life-form. Already intrinsically linked to the natural world, it should come as no surprise that almost all Cybertronians who adopt a technorganic form possess some kind of [[beast mode]].  


While traditionalists view these upgrades with distrust or even outright disgust, many of the most ambitious intelligences across the ''Transformers'' [[multiverse]] have artificially accelerated the development of the Cybertronian species—and sometimes the entire galaxy—by spearheading a technorganic revolution in an attempt to bring together the best of both worlds.


==Technorganic biology==
{{bigquote|So what are we? Robots, or animals?"<br>"Both... and neither.|[[Cheetor (BW)|Cheetor]] and [[Optimus Primal (BW)/Beast Wars cartoon continuity|Optimus Primal]]|"[[Master of the House]]"}}
Technorganic Transformers appear to be highly resistant to injury with highly-advanced internal healing abilities. {{storylink|Survivor}}


Technorganic Cybertronians do not have on-board computers to handle secondary operations as previous Transformers did; functions such as transforming now require conscious thought and effort. They still retain the ability to transform between two forms, but their transforming is not a mechanical shifting of moving parts, as with their robotic predecessors. For most, it appears more like fluid shape-shifting, generally accompanied by a burst of bright energy. [[Botanica]] is an exception to this rule; her transformation is accompanied by a rapidly generated circle of technorganic plants, which shrink back down to reveal her robot mode.
==Etymology==
[[File:BeastWarsPart2-InjuredOptimus.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.66|In his original beast configuration, organic tissue conceals [[Optimus Primal (BW)|Optimus Primal]]'s robot mode circuitry.]]


Because the process is so different, many Transformers need to re-learn how to transform once they find themselves in a technorganic body. They must achieve an internal, zen-like mental balance, or "still point" as Optimus refers to it, and will themselves into their other mode. Some use a mantra such as "I am transformed" to help until they get the hang of doing it on their own; others such as [[Silverbolt (BW)|Silverbolt]], Botanica and [[Nightscream (BM)|Nightscream]] seem to master the process right away. If this state of mental balance is lost, a technorganic Transformer in robot mode may revert to their beast mode.
The concept of hybridizing the purely-mechanical Transformers with organic components dates all the way back to the [[Pretender]]s, and, more debatably, the [[Headmaster (technology)|Headmaster]], [[Targetmaster (technology)|Targetmaster]], and [[Powermaster]] characters from the original ''[[The Transformers (franchise)|The Transformers]]'' franchise, but it would be the ''[[Beast Wars: Transformers (franchise)|Beast Wars]]'' cartoon, and its cast of characters that transformed from mechanical robots into wholly organic creatures, that really brought the concept to the forefront. The specific term "technorganic" debuted in the [[The Reformatting|first episode]] of the ''[[Beast Machines: Transformers (cartoon)|Beast Machines]]'' cartoon and, initially, described a very specific kind of symbiosis that blended Cybertronian technology with organic matter at the cellular level. However, subsequent media produced under the ''Beast Wars'' banner, most prominently the ''[[Transformers: Beast Wars Sourcebook|Beast Wars Sourcebook]]'' and ''[[Transformers: The Ultimate Guide]]'', co-opted the term to describe ''Beast Wars''-era [[Maximal]]s and [[Predacon (BW)|Predacon]] physiology, alongside the lesser-used term "'bio-mechanical".  


The original ''[[Beast Wars: Transformers (cartoon)|Beast Wars]]'' cartoon never provided an in-fiction explanation behind the Transformers' ability to convincingly mimic real, flesh-and-blood creatures, but comments by story editor [[Larry DiTillio]] suggest that the original Maximals and Predacons were ''{{w|Terminator (franchise)|Terminator}}''-style cyborgs with robotic bodyframes surrounded by a layer of organic tissue that allowed them to eat and breathe while in [[alternate mode]]. <ref>[https://groups.google.com/forum/#!search/authormsg$3Aalt.toys.transformers$2C-GCtfsO_cVoJ$20after$3A1997$2F1$2F1$20before$3A1997$2F2$2F1%7Csort:date%7Cspell:false/alt.toys.transformers/Tbk9A-giwV8/HpG751F9KAwJ "When BW's transform into beast mode, they become FULLY organic. This means they are vulnerable to anything the animal they become is. They get hurt worse when hit in beast mode, they have to breathe and eat, they are for all and intents and purposes animals." <nowiki>[...]</nowiki> "Take any G1 who was a car or truck. They had glove compartments, they had mirrors, they had tires, they had uh, car stuff. BW's have animal stuff... It's their "outer shell" you might say, it is what makes them "robots in disguise". When the shell is pierced (such as when Megatron bites into it), you get to circuitry underneath (yes there is metal beneath the fur and skin and the bones are metallic superstructure)... And no Cheetor doesn't have real blood, just mech fluid."] </ref> Subsequent seasons of the show would introduce [[Transmetal]] characters, which transformed from strange, quasi-organic robots into entirely-mechanical creatures, while Cybertronians exposed to the [[Transmetal driver]] became monstrous "[[Transmetal 2]]"s that haphazardly blended flesh and metal together. Different sources, most notably the ''Ultimate Guide'', have retroactively described all of these states of being as "technorganic".


==Powers and weaknesses==
The ''Beast Machines'' episode "[[Revelations Part III: Apocalypse|Apocalypse]]" would seemingly confirm DiTillio's interpretation, as Optimus explained that the Oracle had used the organic material already present within their beast modes to [[reformatting|reformat]] them into technorganic beings. Thus, while subsequent works of fiction have muddied the term, it can be inferred that a clear divide exists between these two kinds of Transformers.
Techorganic Transformers are invisible to traditional scanners while in beast mode; they no longer give off an "energy signature" like ordinary machines. However, when in their robot mode, they are as readily detectable as any other Transformer.
In the years since, the terms "technorganic" and "biomechanical" have been used interchangeably to describe characters from other, non-[[Beast Era]] ''Transformers'' franchises—often characters based on redecoed [[Beast Wars: Transformers (toyline)|''Beast Wars'' toys]]. Different works of ''Transformers'' media have depicted this kind of intimate, organic-machine interface in a variety of ways: some have depicted these kinds of Transformers as something repulsive, while other works of fiction have hewed closer to ''Beast Machines'' and how it depicted the technology in a more positive light.


Optimus Primal's band of technorganic Maximals possessed powerful (almost supernatural) combat abilities. All technorganics would have similar capabilities. {{storylink|Wreckers: Finale Part II}}
{{--}}


Though powerful and durable, the technorganics are not invulnerable. Sufficient conventional firepower can render them unconscious {{storylink|Mercenary Pursuits}} or even physically damage them, and they are vulnerable to the same sort of [[Spark extractor]]s which [[Megatron (BW)|Megatron]] used on conventional Transformers.
==Fiction==
===Generation 1 continuity family===
====''Beast Wars'' cartoon continuity====
=====''Beast Machines'' cartoon=====
[[File:TheReformatting-technorganicoptimus.jpg|thumb|left|upright=1.4]]


On one occasion, ingesting a seemingly organic fruit caused Primal and his team to mentally devolve into primitives. When the tree that generated this fruit was slashed by [[Cheetor (BW)|Cheetor]], it shattered into fragments, as if it were a digital illusion, and the fruit's effect was immediately undone. Primal concludes that the fruit's organic nature was devolving their bodies, but the implications of the incident remain somewhat unclear. {{storylink|Forbidden Fruit}}
Shortly after [[Optimus Primal (BW)/Beast Wars cartoon continuity|Optimus Primal]] and his [[Maximal]]s arrived on [[Cybertron  (planet)|Cybertron]], [[Megatron (BW)/Beast Wars cartoon continuity|Megatron]]'s [[Vehicon (BM)|Vehicon]] drones attacked the Maximals and infected them with a [[transformation virus]] that would've proven fatal if not for the intervention of the [[Oracle (BM)|Oracle]] supercomputer. {{storylink|The Reformatting}} By drawing upon the pre-existing organic matter already integrated into their [[beast mode]]s, {{storylink|Revelations Part III: Apocalypse|Apocalypse}}  the Oracle successfully reformatted Optimus, [[Cheetor (BW)|Cheetor]], [[Rattrap (BW)|Rattrap]], and [[Blackarachnia (BW)|Blackarachnia]] into technorganic forms that melded organic tissue with advanced nanotechnology at the cellular level. {{storylink|Master of the House}}  


Another vulnerability comes from the [[Key to Vector Sigma]], a device which converts organics into "techno-matter". When applied to the technorganic Maximals, it caused them to convert to a metalized state, resulting pain and hysteria; it could eventually have resulted in deactivation if its effects were not reverted. {{storylink|The Key}}
Maximals who underwent this transformation possessed a suite of extremely advanced abilities that bordered on the supernatural. Conventional [[CR chamber]]s had no effect on them; while in robot mode, they could utilize biologically-enhanced nanosurgical capabilities, allowing them to heal faster, {{storylink|Survivor}} and their quasi-organic nature rendered them impervious to anti-Transformer weapons like [[plasma energy]]. {{storylink|End of the Line}} On different occasions, both Optimus Primal {{storylink|Mercenary Pursuits}} and Blackarachnia manifested telepathic abilities. {{storylink|Revelations Part II: Descent|Descent}} Transforming to beast mode masked their [[energy signature]]s, which allowed them to avoid detection by conventional scanners. {{storylink|Fires of the Past}}  


[[File:EndOfTheLine-transformation.gif|thumb|right|upright=1.4]]


==Technorganic Cybertron==
While in combat, most technorganic Maximals utilized powerful built-in weapons that included energy-based deflector shields, sonic attacks, and electrical blasters. {{storylink|Master of the House}} The technorganic Maximal [[Botanica (BM)|Botanica]] possessed other unusual abilities—in addition to the ability to create technorganic plants at will, she developed a connection to Cybertron's [[organic core]]; when cut off from its energy, she grew sick and eventually fell unconscious. {{storylink|Endgame Pt. I: The Downward Spiral|The Downward Spiral}}
Cybertron had long been a planet of metal upon metal, "technology" alone. According to Primal's interpretation of the Oracle, the returning Beast Warriors brought with them organic components of the planets they had visited, allowing the Oracle to begin the process of reformatting the planet to be technorganic. The Maximals eventually discovered Cybertron's organic core, with deep sublevels comprised of soil and containing organic fossils, such as the one scanned by [[Nightscream]].


At the end of the conflict, Cybertron was reformatted planet-wide, creating a new [[Earth]]-like world, a mix of technorganic flora and fauna, oceans (presumably full of [[water]]), and vast cities of varying construction; some largely technorganic in nature {{storylink|Abduction}}, others retaining more "traditional" inorganic metal or stonework construction, depending on the part of the planet. {{storylink|Wreckers: Finale Part II}}
Technorganic Transformers possessed unique, differently-coloured [[spark]]s with a strong connection to the [[Transformer afterlife|Allspark]]. While they still possessed the ability to shift between robot and beast modes, this new form of [[transformation]] involved a burst of spark energy and fluid shapeshifting. Transformation now involved conscious thought and effort, an ancient practice which had originally fallen out of favor after the introduction of [[onboard computer]]s. Initially, Optimus and his team had to find a mental "still point" that would allow them to transform, and used the mantra "I am transformed" until they'd mastered their new forms. If this balance was lost, a technorganic Transformer would simply revert back to their alternate form. {{storylink|Master of the House}} Conversely, other technorganics—[[Nightscream (BM)|Nightscream]], {{storylink|Forbidden Fruit}} [[Silverbolt (Fuzor)|Silverbolt]], {{storylink|In Darkest Knight}}  and Botanica—appeared to instinctually master the process moments after evolving into a technorganic state. {{storylink|Home Soil}}


Just what the reformatting of Cybertron implies for [[Primus]], whose body ''is'' Cybertron, is unknown.
[[File:Maximals endofBMac.JPG|thumb|left|upright=1.4]]


{{note|[[Marv Wolfman]], who did the series outline for ''Beast Machines'', did not have the Primus origin in mind: "No thoughts were ever made re: the Marvel version while I worked on the concept. Fact is, I never even read that. I did what I thought would make a good series concept." [http://tfarchive.com/fandom/interviews/marvwolfman/] }}
Despite these many advantages, technorganic Transformers were still vulnerable to conventional firepower {{storylink|Mercenary Pursuits}} and the same sort of [[Spark extractor]]s which [[Megatron (BW)|Megatron]] used on conventional Transformers. On one occasion, ingesting wholly organic fruit caused Primal and his team to lose their higher functions and revert to a primitive, bestial sate. Upon returning to normal, Primal concluded that the fruit's purely-organic nature was devolving their bodies. {{storylink|Forbidden Fruit}} Exposure to the [[Key to Vector Sigma]]'s ability to convert organic material into [[living metal|technomatter]] metallized their bodies and caused pain and hysteria, eventually resulting in deactivation if its effects were not reversed. {{storylink|The Key}}


As they battled Megatron and his Vehicon armies, Optimus and the Maximals slowly realized that Cybertron had once been an organic world until the arrival of the Cybertronian race. {{storylink|Survivor}} Primal initially believed that the Oracle had chosen him to eliminate all technology from Cybertron and return the planet to its primordial state; {{storylink|End of the Line}} in time, however, the Maximals realized that the Oracle's mission was one of ''balance'', bringing Cybertron's two states of being together into a harmonious technorganic whole. {{storylink|Fallout (episode)|Fallout}}. At the end of the conflict, Optimus Primal plunged himself and Megatron into the planet's [[organic core]] and triggered a [[Great Transformation|planet-wide reformatting]] that transformed Cybertron into a verdant technorganic world filled with plants, animals, and green cities. {{storylink|Endgame Pt. III: Seeds of the Future|Seeds of the Future}}


==Usage problems==
{{--}}
[[Image:Optimusprimalbw.jpg|right|thumb|150px|He's furry, but is he organic?]]


"Technorganic" has occasionally been used by other sources to describe pre-''Beast Machines''  characters. IDW's ''[[Beast Wars Sourcebook]]'' makes frequent references to characters possessing features like "technorganic musculature"; the [[Transformers: The Ultimate Guide|Ultimate Guide]] refers both to [[Optimus Primal]]'s beast mode and all [[Transmetal]]s as "techno-organic" (with hyphen).
=====3H comics=====
[[File:WreckersFinalePartI-rook.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.4]]
The newly-technorganic Cybertron possessed cities of varying construction; some were largely technorganic in nature, while others retained inorganic metal and stonework construction. Not all Cybertronians chose to undergo the technorganic transformation; many Maximals, Predacons, Autobots and Decepticons retained their purely-mechanical frames. {{storylink|Abduction}} The reformatting created new lifeforms, such as trees that bore [[Energon]] fruits, and highly polluted cities like [[Ankmor Park|Ankmor]] became green spaces full of technorganic plants and animals. {{storylink|Wreckers: Finale Part II}}


This use of the phrase differs from the specific meaning given by ''Beast Machines''; it may or may not be an accurate descriptor, given the conflicting descriptions of ''Beast Wars'' physiology:
Evidence arose that the [[Quintesson]]s had seemingly orchestrated the entire Great Transformation in the belief that they could invade the planet and gain the upper hand against its weakened, disoriented inhabitants.{{storylink|Disclosure}} When they followed through on their plan, however, they quickly discovered that the technorganic Maximals had developed beyond their specifications—not only could their beast mode bodies, invisible to Quintesson sensors, outmanoeuvre [[Sharkticon (species)|Sharkticon]] invaders, but their rapid nanotechnological healing abilities allowed them to quickly recover from otherwise-fatal injuries, and these traits allowed the Cybertronians to blunt the Quintesson advance.


* A major part of the entire premise of ''Beast Wars'' was that, in order to create their beast altmodes in the first place, the Cybertronians needed to scan and replicate the DNA of living or fossilized creatures.
Soon afterwards, the Quintessons learned that [[Primus]] had indeed masterminded the entire plan by fooling the duplicitious aliens into guiding his children through their evolutionary crisis, and the Light God thanked the aliens for playing a part in his grand plan. {{storylink|Wreckers: Finale Part II}}


* Instances of damage to beast mode tissue were sometimes shown to bleed ("[[Spider's Game]]"); yet, Cheetor states that "I don't have real blood—just mech fluid." ("[[The Web]]")
{{--}}


* The Beast Warriors did need to breathe to sustain themselves. ("[[Dark Voyage]]")
====2006 IDW ''Beast Wars'' continuity====
Cybertronians who adopted conventional [[beast mode]]s during the Beast Wars were described as "techno-organic" in nature. {{storylink|Transformers: Beast Wars Sourcebook|Beast Wars Sourcebook}}


* They often consumed organic food as fuel. ("[[Power Surge]]", "[[The Low Road]]", "[[Code of Hero]]", "[[Victory (Beast Wars episode)|Victory]]")
=====''Wings Universe''=====
[[File:HtF-RookUnicronandUnicorn.jpg|thumb|left|upright=1.1]]


* Despite this, Cheetor explicitly states that they no longer eat food in the ''Beast Machines'' period, instead powering up on [[Energon]] alone.  Confusing the matter further, Primal then says in reply that "we ''used'' to" only consume [[Energon]], which clearly is not the case. ("[[Forbidden Fruit]]")
Cybertron's transition to a technorganic state meant that it no longer operated on pure energon. As a result, the [[Star Seeker]]s couldn't use [[Unicron]]'s head to drain all of Cybertron's energon in [[2984]]. {{storylink|Hoist the Flag}}


*  Looking outside the show, the ''Beast Wars'' writers have stated that, in animal form, the characters are "fully organic" <ref>[http://groups.google.com/group/alt.toys.transformers/msg/31d437af229a5f5f Larry DiTillio post to ATT, Feb 4 1997]</ref>, citing both "[[Dark Voyage]]" and "[[Call of the Wild]]" as examples.
{{--}}


[[Image:Noble.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Cybertronian, but not mechanical.]]
=====Waspscream continuity=====
In [[Primax 208.06 Zeta]], the Oracle reformatted [[Starscream (G1)|Waspscream]], [[Terrorsaur (BW)|Terrorsaur]], [[Tarantulas (BW)|Tarantulas]], and [[Rampage (BW)|Protoform X]] into technorganic forms to fight Megatron’s Vehicon armies. {{storylink|Ask Vector Prime#Facebook|Ask Vector Prime, 16/8/2015}}


[[Transmetal]] forms likewise appear to remain at least partially organic:
====2005 IDW continuity====
* [[Tarantulas]] continued to consume organic food after going Transmetal. ("[[Code of Hero]]")
[[File:SinsoftheWreckers2-teethtentaclesfurrybutt.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.66]]


* Optimus Primal once showing interest in a bunch of bananas. ("[[Feral Scream Part 2]]")  
Over a period of generations, [[Jhiaxus (G2)|Jhiaxus]] slowly modified the [[Gorlamite]]s of [[Gorlam Prime]] into [[Micromaster|mechanical beings]]. As part of this artificially-induced evolution, they first passed through through a transitional techno-organic state until wholly robotic bodyframes permanently supplanted their cybernetic implants. {{storylink|Spotlight: Hardhead}} {{storylink|Spotlight: Sideswipe}}
The mad scientist [[Tarantulas (BW)|Mesothulas]] invented mass-shifting "bio-disguises" that integrated organic material atop mechanical frames. While in their beast modes, Cybertronians like [[Mayhem Attack Squad|Mayhem]], who adopted this "[[Chimeracon]]" refit, were invisible to conventional Cybertronian technology. {{storylink|Sins of the Wreckers issue 3|Sins of the Wreckers #3}} The upgrade was not permanent, however; after [[Impactor (G1)|Impactor]] took command of the team, they shifted back to conventional vehicle modes to better operate in urban terrain. {{storylink|Transformers: Requiem of the Wreckers|Requiem of the Wreckers}}


* Megatron loathed his dragon form as "disgustingly organic". ("[[Sparkwar Pt. II: The Search]]")
{{--}}


* Megatron's attempts to purge his biological portions ultimately created the purely organic [[Savage/Noble]] creature. ("[[Prometheus Unbound]]")
====''Transformers vs. G.I. Joe''====
[[File:FormFollowsFunction-strangefruit.jpg|thumb|left|upright=1.1]]


Just how much the organic beast was integrated into the technological robot form is unknown; the original Beast Warriors appear to be simply a fleshy shell surrounding the robot within, though the Transmetals appear to intermix the two more thoroughly.  Conversely, Megatron was able to create a sapient clone of [[Dinobot (BW)|Dinobot]] with simply "a spec of [his] DNA", implying that the robotic and organic are indeed bound up together.
Taking root on Cybertronian soil, the leaves sprouted from the [[G.I.Rocket|green bombs]] were technorganic in nature. {{storylink|Form Follows Function}} Eventually, after the end of the conflict, the Autobot [[Brawn (G1)|Brawn]] and the [[G.I. Joe (team)|G.I. Joe]] operative [[Cover Girl]] used [[binary bonding|binary-bonding]] and [[technoactive core]] technology to conceive a “cyber-human” child. {{storylink|The War Never Ends}}


The term '''bio-mechanical''' crops up occasionally in bios and reference books, used synonymously with "technorganic" in reference to pre-''[[Beast Machines]]'' beast warriors.
{{--}}
{{-}}
===Continuity quibbles===
* The ''[[Axalon (BW)|Axalon]]'' was implied to be an ordinary exploration ship, with an ordinary mission: deploy new Transformers on a planet, have them pick up beast forms, explore, then return to Cybertron.  If this is going on all the time, with lots of different exploration crews, why did the Oracle decide that Primal's crew was so specially needed to bring back organic elements?


* Nightscream scans organic elements, and acquires a beast form, ''without ever leaving Cybertron!''  So again, why did Primal's team need to go through the Beast Wars just to acquire beast modes?
====''Beast Wars: Uprising''====
In the 24th century CE, [[Overshoot]], while interfacing with the [[Oracle (BM)|Oracle]], experienced a vision of Earth and Cybertron orbiting the same star. The Oracle prophesied a time when Earth and Cybertron would stand together against a common threat, and, later, a time when the two diametrically opposed planets would merge into a single technorganic world. {{storylink|Cultural Appropriation}}


In the 34th century CE, at least some [[Commandron]]s and [[Maladroid]]s were technorganic, such as those who crewed the stolen ''[[Terrastar (BWU)|Terrastar]]'' and the pursuing ''[[Hyperborea (BWU)|Hyperborea]]''. Upon arriving over [[Energoa]], the local [[Skriix]] took offense to the Cybertronians "contaminating" the planet with their hybrid forms and tried to kill them. {{storylink|The Inexorable March}}


===Non-Beast Era usage===
====''Legends'' comic ====
[[Image:Predacon-ArmCard.jpg|thumb|left|200px|[[Predacon (Armada)|Predacon]] ''loves'' marching in Iacon's "Organic Pride Day" parade.]]
After Cybertron had existed as a technorganic world for millennia, [[Primus#Japanese Generation 1 cartoon continuity|Vector Sigma]] foresaw a renewal of the [[Great War (G1)|Great War]] and removed the organic, turning Cybertron back into a wholly mechanical planet so it would be strong enough to endure the coming conflict. {{storylink|LG-EX Blue Big Convoy}}


The terms "technorganic" and "biomechanical" have also been used to describe characters from other, non-''[[Beast Era]]'' TF franchises, general characters based on redecoed [[Beast Wars (toyline)|''Beast Wars'' toys]] such as [[Cheetor (Armada)|''Armada'' Cheetor]].  In the absence of a full backstory, however, the status of such purely mechanical or partly organic is debatable.
====2021 ''Beast Wars'' comic====
While stranded on a remote planet, the Maximals and Predacons were rebuilt with beast modes, whose techno-organic casing would nullify the effects of ambient [[energon radiation]]. {{storylink|Savage Landing Part 1}}


Of particular note is ''Armada''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s [[Predacon (Armada)|Predacon]]. His [[More Than Meets The Eye|Dreamwave bio]] states that that he has experimented on himself with "biomechanical" technology to integrate organic tissue into his Cybertronian robotics, something that most other Transformers are said to find repulsive.
 
{{-}}
===Dreamwave ''Armada'' comic===
[[File:MTMTEArmada-Predacon.jpg|right|upright=1.1|thumb|]]
 
The Decepticon [[Predacon (Armada)|Predacon]] developed an "organic grafting process" that allowed him to directly integrate biological tissue into his Cybertronian body. Although most other Transformers found the concept of fusing flesh with metal repulsive, the charismatic Predacon amassed a cult of like-minded followers to advance his own enigmatic agenda. However, despite their zealotry, not all the Cybertronians who followed, including the [[Mini-Con]] [[Skid-Z (Armada)|Skid-Z]], were eligible for this biomechanical upgrade. {{storylink|More than Meets the Eye: Transformers: Armada|''More Than Meets The Eye'' bio}}
 
{{--}}
 
===''Animated'' continuity family===
====''Animated'' cartoon====
[[File:TFAni Predacons Rising Blackarachina sans Helmet.jpg|left|thumb|upright=1.4|Not a being currently found at your local rave club.]]
 
When [[Blackarachnia (Animated)|Elita-1]] was attacked by [[Archa Seven arachnid|alien spiders]] on the planet [[Archa Seven]], she attempted to use her ability to download and replicate the abilities of other mechanoids on the creatures, which wound up mutating her into a technorganic form. {{storylink|Along Came a Spider}} Taking the name "Blackarachnia", she was initially revulsed by her unnatural new form—as were many around her—but she eventually embraced her transformation and sought to replicate it on other Transformers, successfully cross-mutating the fugitive Autobot [[Wasp]] with an ''actual'' wasp and creating "Waspinator". {{storylink|Predacons Rising (Animated)|Predacons Rising}}
 
Technology and organics were also blended in a different manner when a Cybertronian [[protoform]] materialized in [[Isaac Sumdac (Animated)|Isaac Sumdac]]'s lab and scanned the scientist's DNA, rather than a customary mechanical [[alternate mode]]. The result was [[Sari Sumdac (Animated)|Sari Sumdac]], outwardly an ordinary organic human by all appearances whose true nature was unknown even to her, but whose Cybertronian abilities were unlocked when she was upgraded by the [[AllSpark Key]]. {{storylink|TransWarped}} {{storylink|Transformers Animated: The AllSpark Almanac II|The AllSpark Almanac II}}
 
{{--}}
 
====''Shattered Glass Animated''====
In [[Shattered Glass Animated|another universe]], another [[Isaac Sumdac (SG Animated)|Isaac Sumdac]] encountered a protoform that attacked him and assimilated his DNA, becoming [[Sari Sumdac (SG Animated)|Sari Sumdac]].  He adopted her as his daughter, but raised her as a captive and a test subject for scientific experiments.  Her true powers were unlocked by forcible implantation of AllSpark fragments, which remained visibly protruding from her body. {{storylink|The 'Bots and The 'Cons|The 'Cons}}
 
==Games==
===''Transformers Roleplaying Game''===
[[Reptilion]] believed that perfect Technorganics possessed equal power and balance, which made them special. {{storylink|Technorganic Secrets}}
 
==Notes==
* Although later ''Beast Machines''-adjacent fiction would tie the concept of Cybertron's technorganic evolution back to Primus, whose body is usually depicted as Cybertron itself, [[Marv Wolfman]], who did the series outline for ''Beast Machines'', did not have this origin in mind when developing the series: "No thoughts were ever made re: the Marvel version while I worked on the concept. Fact is, I never even read that. I did what I thought would make a good series concept."<ref>[http://tfarchive.com/fandom/interviews/marvwolfman/ Interview with Marv Wolfman at TFarchive.com]</ref>
 
 
===Foreign names===
*''Japanese:'' '''Techno-Organic''' (テクノ・オーガニック ''Tekuno Ōganikku'')


==References==
==References==
<references/>
<references/>


[[Category: Armada]]
 
[[Category: Beast Machines]]
[[Category:Armada]]
[[Category: Biology]]
[[Category:Animated]]
[[Category: Technology]]
[[Category:Beast Machines]]
[[Category: Transformer culture]]<div id="wikia-credits"><br /><br /><small>From [http://transformers.wikia.com Teletraan I: The Transformers Wiki], a [http://www.wikia.com Wikia] wiki.</small></div>
[[Category:Beast Wars]]
[[Category:Biology]]
[[Category:Technology]]
[[Category:Transformer culture]]

Latest revision as of 20:34, 24 February 2026

This article is about the part organic, part mechanical Transformers. For the part organic, part mechanical creations of the Quintessons, see Trans-Organic.
They changed bodies...again?

Although many view the Transformers as a purely-mechanical race, this is not always the case. Technorganic (also techno-organic, technoorganic, and bio-mechanical) Cybertronians incorporate both organic and technological components into their construction; depending on the universe, these unique upgrades run the gamut of technological sophistication, from basic cybernetic implants all the way up to a true cellular symbiosis that can be classified as an entirely new kind of life-form. Already intrinsically linked to the natural world, it should come as no surprise that almost all Cybertronians who adopt a technorganic form possess some kind of beast mode.

While traditionalists view these upgrades with distrust or even outright disgust, many of the most ambitious intelligences across the Transformers multiverse have artificially accelerated the development of the Cybertronian species—and sometimes the entire galaxy—by spearheading a technorganic revolution in an attempt to bring together the best of both worlds.

So what are we? Robots, or animals?"
"Both... and neither.

Cheetor and Optimus Primal, "Master of the House"

Etymology

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In his original beast configuration, organic tissue conceals Optimus Primal's robot mode circuitry.

The concept of hybridizing the purely-mechanical Transformers with organic components dates all the way back to the Pretenders, and, more debatably, the Headmaster, Targetmaster, and Powermaster characters from the original The Transformers franchise, but it would be the Beast Wars cartoon, and its cast of characters that transformed from mechanical robots into wholly organic creatures, that really brought the concept to the forefront. The specific term "technorganic" debuted in the first episode of the Beast Machines cartoon and, initially, described a very specific kind of symbiosis that blended Cybertronian technology with organic matter at the cellular level. However, subsequent media produced under the Beast Wars banner, most prominently the Beast Wars Sourcebook and Transformers: The Ultimate Guide, co-opted the term to describe Beast Wars-era Maximals and Predacon physiology, alongside the lesser-used term "'bio-mechanical".

The original Beast Wars cartoon never provided an in-fiction explanation behind the Transformers' ability to convincingly mimic real, flesh-and-blood creatures, but comments by story editor Larry DiTillio suggest that the original Maximals and Predacons were Terminator-style cyborgs with robotic bodyframes surrounded by a layer of organic tissue that allowed them to eat and breathe while in alternate mode. [1] Subsequent seasons of the show would introduce Transmetal characters, which transformed from strange, quasi-organic robots into entirely-mechanical creatures, while Cybertronians exposed to the Transmetal driver became monstrous "Transmetal 2"s that haphazardly blended flesh and metal together. Different sources, most notably the Ultimate Guide, have retroactively described all of these states of being as "technorganic".

The Beast Machines episode "Apocalypse" would seemingly confirm DiTillio's interpretation, as Optimus explained that the Oracle had used the organic material already present within their beast modes to reformat them into technorganic beings. Thus, while subsequent works of fiction have muddied the term, it can be inferred that a clear divide exists between these two kinds of Transformers. In the years since, the terms "technorganic" and "biomechanical" have been used interchangeably to describe characters from other, non-Beast Era Transformers franchises—often characters based on redecoed Beast Wars toys. Different works of Transformers media have depicted this kind of intimate, organic-machine interface in a variety of ways: some have depicted these kinds of Transformers as something repulsive, while other works of fiction have hewed closer to Beast Machines and how it depicted the technology in a more positive light.

Fiction

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Generation 1 continuity family

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Beast Wars cartoon continuity

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Beast Machines cartoon
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Shortly after Optimus Primal and his Maximals arrived on Cybertron, Megatron's Vehicon drones attacked the Maximals and infected them with a transformation virus that would've proven fatal if not for the intervention of the Oracle supercomputer. The Reformatting By drawing upon the pre-existing organic matter already integrated into their beast modes, Apocalypse the Oracle successfully reformatted Optimus, Cheetor, Rattrap, and Blackarachnia into technorganic forms that melded organic tissue with advanced nanotechnology at the cellular level. Master of the House

Maximals who underwent this transformation possessed a suite of extremely advanced abilities that bordered on the supernatural. Conventional CR chambers had no effect on them; while in robot mode, they could utilize biologically-enhanced nanosurgical capabilities, allowing them to heal faster, Survivor and their quasi-organic nature rendered them impervious to anti-Transformer weapons like plasma energy. End of the Line On different occasions, both Optimus Primal Mercenary Pursuits and Blackarachnia manifested telepathic abilities. Descent Transforming to beast mode masked their energy signatures, which allowed them to avoid detection by conventional scanners. Fires of the Past

While in combat, most technorganic Maximals utilized powerful built-in weapons that included energy-based deflector shields, sonic attacks, and electrical blasters. Master of the House The technorganic Maximal Botanica possessed other unusual abilities—in addition to the ability to create technorganic plants at will, she developed a connection to Cybertron's organic core; when cut off from its energy, she grew sick and eventually fell unconscious. The Downward Spiral

Technorganic Transformers possessed unique, differently-coloured sparks with a strong connection to the Allspark. While they still possessed the ability to shift between robot and beast modes, this new form of transformation involved a burst of spark energy and fluid shapeshifting. Transformation now involved conscious thought and effort, an ancient practice which had originally fallen out of favor after the introduction of onboard computers. Initially, Optimus and his team had to find a mental "still point" that would allow them to transform, and used the mantra "I am transformed" until they'd mastered their new forms. If this balance was lost, a technorganic Transformer would simply revert back to their alternate form. Master of the House Conversely, other technorganics—Nightscream, Forbidden Fruit Silverbolt, In Darkest Knight and Botanica—appeared to instinctually master the process moments after evolving into a technorganic state. Home Soil

Despite these many advantages, technorganic Transformers were still vulnerable to conventional firepower Mercenary Pursuits and the same sort of Spark extractors which Megatron used on conventional Transformers. On one occasion, ingesting wholly organic fruit caused Primal and his team to lose their higher functions and revert to a primitive, bestial sate. Upon returning to normal, Primal concluded that the fruit's purely-organic nature was devolving their bodies. Forbidden Fruit Exposure to the Key to Vector Sigma's ability to convert organic material into technomatter metallized their bodies and caused pain and hysteria, eventually resulting in deactivation if its effects were not reversed. The Key

As they battled Megatron and his Vehicon armies, Optimus and the Maximals slowly realized that Cybertron had once been an organic world until the arrival of the Cybertronian race. Survivor Primal initially believed that the Oracle had chosen him to eliminate all technology from Cybertron and return the planet to its primordial state; End of the Line in time, however, the Maximals realized that the Oracle's mission was one of balance, bringing Cybertron's two states of being together into a harmonious technorganic whole. Fallout. At the end of the conflict, Optimus Primal plunged himself and Megatron into the planet's organic core and triggered a planet-wide reformatting that transformed Cybertron into a verdant technorganic world filled with plants, animals, and green cities. Seeds of the Future

3H comics
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The newly-technorganic Cybertron possessed cities of varying construction; some were largely technorganic in nature, while others retained inorganic metal and stonework construction. Not all Cybertronians chose to undergo the technorganic transformation; many Maximals, Predacons, Autobots and Decepticons retained their purely-mechanical frames. Abduction The reformatting created new lifeforms, such as trees that bore Energon fruits, and highly polluted cities like Ankmor became green spaces full of technorganic plants and animals. Wreckers: Finale Part II

Evidence arose that the Quintessons had seemingly orchestrated the entire Great Transformation in the belief that they could invade the planet and gain the upper hand against its weakened, disoriented inhabitants.Disclosure When they followed through on their plan, however, they quickly discovered that the technorganic Maximals had developed beyond their specifications—not only could their beast mode bodies, invisible to Quintesson sensors, outmanoeuvre Sharkticon invaders, but their rapid nanotechnological healing abilities allowed them to quickly recover from otherwise-fatal injuries, and these traits allowed the Cybertronians to blunt the Quintesson advance.

Soon afterwards, the Quintessons learned that Primus had indeed masterminded the entire plan by fooling the duplicitious aliens into guiding his children through their evolutionary crisis, and the Light God thanked the aliens for playing a part in his grand plan. Wreckers: Finale Part II

2006 IDW Beast Wars continuity

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Cybertronians who adopted conventional beast modes during the Beast Wars were described as "techno-organic" in nature. Beast Wars Sourcebook

Wings Universe
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Cybertron's transition to a technorganic state meant that it no longer operated on pure energon. As a result, the Star Seekers couldn't use Unicron's head to drain all of Cybertron's energon in 2984. Hoist the Flag

Waspscream continuity
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In Primax 208.06 Zeta, the Oracle reformatted Waspscream, Terrorsaur, Tarantulas, and Protoform X into technorganic forms to fight Megatron’s Vehicon armies. Ask Vector Prime, 16/8/2015

2005 IDW continuity

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Over a period of generations, Jhiaxus slowly modified the Gorlamites of Gorlam Prime into mechanical beings. As part of this artificially-induced evolution, they first passed through through a transitional techno-organic state until wholly robotic bodyframes permanently supplanted their cybernetic implants. Spotlight: Hardhead Spotlight: Sideswipe

The mad scientist Mesothulas invented mass-shifting "bio-disguises" that integrated organic material atop mechanical frames. While in their beast modes, Cybertronians like Mayhem, who adopted this "Chimeracon" refit, were invisible to conventional Cybertronian technology. Sins of the Wreckers #3 The upgrade was not permanent, however; after Impactor took command of the team, they shifted back to conventional vehicle modes to better operate in urban terrain. Requiem of the Wreckers

Transformers vs. G.I. Joe

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Taking root on Cybertronian soil, the leaves sprouted from the green bombs were technorganic in nature. Form Follows Function Eventually, after the end of the conflict, the Autobot Brawn and the G.I. Joe operative Cover Girl used binary-bonding and technoactive core technology to conceive a “cyber-human” child. The War Never Ends

Beast Wars: Uprising

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In the 24th century CE, Overshoot, while interfacing with the Oracle, experienced a vision of Earth and Cybertron orbiting the same star. The Oracle prophesied a time when Earth and Cybertron would stand together against a common threat, and, later, a time when the two diametrically opposed planets would merge into a single technorganic world. Cultural Appropriation

In the 34th century CE, at least some Commandrons and Maladroids were technorganic, such as those who crewed the stolen Terrastar and the pursuing Hyperborea. Upon arriving over Energoa, the local Skriix took offense to the Cybertronians "contaminating" the planet with their hybrid forms and tried to kill them. The Inexorable March

Legends comic

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After Cybertron had existed as a technorganic world for millennia, Vector Sigma foresaw a renewal of the Great War and removed the organic, turning Cybertron back into a wholly mechanical planet so it would be strong enough to endure the coming conflict. LG-EX Blue Big Convoy

2021 Beast Wars comic

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While stranded on a remote planet, the Maximals and Predacons were rebuilt with beast modes, whose techno-organic casing would nullify the effects of ambient energon radiation. Savage Landing Part 1


Dreamwave Armada comic

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The Decepticon Predacon developed an "organic grafting process" that allowed him to directly integrate biological tissue into his Cybertronian body. Although most other Transformers found the concept of fusing flesh with metal repulsive, the charismatic Predacon amassed a cult of like-minded followers to advance his own enigmatic agenda. However, despite their zealotry, not all the Cybertronians who followed, including the Mini-Con Skid-Z, were eligible for this biomechanical upgrade. More Than Meets The Eye bio

Animated continuity family

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Animated cartoon

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Not a being currently found at your local rave club.

When Elita-1 was attacked by alien spiders on the planet Archa Seven, she attempted to use her ability to download and replicate the abilities of other mechanoids on the creatures, which wound up mutating her into a technorganic form. Along Came a Spider Taking the name "Blackarachnia", she was initially revulsed by her unnatural new form—as were many around her—but she eventually embraced her transformation and sought to replicate it on other Transformers, successfully cross-mutating the fugitive Autobot Wasp with an actual wasp and creating "Waspinator". Predacons Rising

Technology and organics were also blended in a different manner when a Cybertronian protoform materialized in Isaac Sumdac's lab and scanned the scientist's DNA, rather than a customary mechanical alternate mode. The result was Sari Sumdac, outwardly an ordinary organic human by all appearances whose true nature was unknown even to her, but whose Cybertronian abilities were unlocked when she was upgraded by the AllSpark Key. TransWarped The AllSpark Almanac II

Shattered Glass Animated

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In another universe, another Isaac Sumdac encountered a protoform that attacked him and assimilated his DNA, becoming Sari Sumdac. He adopted her as his daughter, but raised her as a captive and a test subject for scientific experiments. Her true powers were unlocked by forcible implantation of AllSpark fragments, which remained visibly protruding from her body. The 'Cons

Games

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Transformers Roleplaying Game

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Reptilion believed that perfect Technorganics possessed equal power and balance, which made them special. Technorganic Secrets

Notes

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  • Although later Beast Machines-adjacent fiction would tie the concept of Cybertron's technorganic evolution back to Primus, whose body is usually depicted as Cybertron itself, Marv Wolfman, who did the series outline for Beast Machines, did not have this origin in mind when developing the series: "No thoughts were ever made re: the Marvel version while I worked on the concept. Fact is, I never even read that. I did what I thought would make a good series concept."[2]


Foreign names

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  • Japanese: Techno-Organic (テクノ・オーガニック Tekuno Ōganikku)

References

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