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[[Image:All Hail Megatron TPB vol1.jpg|thumb|right|250px|This didn't happen]]
{{disambig3|All Hail Megatron}}
{{quote|I read everything that had been put out by IDW and there's no disrespect of what Simon's done coming from me. I grew up reading Simon Furman books and still have those big format TF comics in my back room. There's no way I'm going to spit on anything that man's done<ref>http://oneshallstand.com/articles/shane-mccarthy.html Shane McCarthy's January 2009 interview with OneShallStand.com to the question of retcons and continuity errors in All Hail Megatron</ref>.|[[Shane McCarthy]]}}
[[File:All Hail Megatron TPB vol1.jpg|thumb|upright=1.4|This didn't happen.]]
'''''The Transformers: All Hail Megatron''''' was the second major "act" of [[IDW Publishing]]'s [[2005 IDW continuity|first ongoing comic universe]], intended to serve as a "soft reboot" of IDW's increasingly complicated storylines and create a jumping-on point for new readers following the truncated ending of the previous collection of mini-series and one-shots. It marked a radical shift in tone and content in the ongoing story, showing a victorious Decepticon army on Earth while the Autobots are defeated and on the run throughout the universe.


'''All Hail Megatron''' is the overarching title of a widely-promoted "event" in the [[IDW Publishing|IDW Comics]] [[Generation 1]] universe in 2008-9.
Lasting from 2008 to 2009, the series ran for sixteen issues (including four "Coda" issues of short stories), with a small handful of vaguely associated ''[[The Transformers: Spotlight|Spotlight]]''-series tie-ins. A standalone sketchbook and preview comic, "[[Focus on: Decepticons!]]", may be considered "All Hail Megatron #0".


The event spans the 12-issue ''All Hail Megatron'' maxi-series, a 4 issue "Coda" <small>(appended to the main series for publication)</small> and various ''[[Spotlight (comics)|Spotlight]]''-series tie-ins.  A standalone sketchbook and preview comic, "[[Focus on Decepticons]]", may be considered "All Hail Megatron #0".
The first advertisement for the series was simply a red Decepticon symbol on a black background with "Swear Allegiance 2008" written in red. Follow-up ads used the visual style of post-revolutionary Communist propaganda. The first details of the series were revealed on the trashy Australian tabloid current affairs programme ''Today Tonight'' on [[January 16]], 2008.


Broadly, the ''All Hail Megatron'' is a transition between the 2005-08 "*ation" series and the 2009 ongoing ''[[The Trandformers (IDW)|The Trandformers (IDW]]'' series which followed it. Its purpose was provide a "soft reboot" of IDW's increasingly complicated storylines and create a convenient jumping-on point for new readers. It marks a radical shift in tone and content in the ongoing story; showing a victorious Decepticon army on Earth while the Autobots are defeated and on the run throughout the universe.
{{chapters|series=ahm|style=3 |prev=The Transformers: Maximum Dinobots |next=The Transformers (IDW) |align=left |content=
* [[Focus on: Decepticons!|Focus]]
* [[All Hail Megatron issue 1|#1]]
* [[All Hail Megatron issue 2|#2]]
* [[All Hail Megatron issue 3|#3]]
* [[All Hail Megatron issue 4|#4]]
* [[All Hail Megatron issue 5|#5]]
* [[All Hail Megatron issue 6|#6]]
* [[All Hail Megatron issue 7|#7]]
* [[All Hail Megatron issue 8|#8]]
* [[All Hail Megatron issue 9|#9]]
* [[All Hail Megatron issue 10|#10]]
* [[All Hail Megatron issue 11|#11]]
* [[All Hail Megatron issue 12|#12]]
* [[All Hail Megatron issue 13|#13]]
* [[All Hail Megatron issue 14|#14]]
* [[All Hail Megatron issue 15|#15]]
* [[All Hail Megatron issue 16|#16]]
}}
 
==Overview==
[[File:AHM1 decepticons attack.jpg|left|thumb|225px]]
One year after the events of ''[[The Transformers: Maximum Dinobots|Maximum Dinobots]]'', a traitor in the [[Autobot]] ranks has given the [[Decepticon]]s the means to conquer the Autobots, win the [[Great War (G1)|Great War]], and do as they will on the unprotected planet [[Earth]]. The Decepticons conquer [[New York City]] and hold the population hostage, and the [[United States military]] proves unable to stop them. The attack spreads to other cities around the globe as well.
 
[[File:Slowmotionmoviewalkahm5.jpg|thumb|Kup's team provide one of the book's more iconic images.]]
Meanwhile, the Autobots are in a sorry state on [[Cybertron (planet)|Cybertron]], with [[Optimus Prime (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Optimus Prime]] in critical condition, the [[Matrix of Leadership]] in Decepticon hands, and a traitor suspected in their ranks. Tensions and tempers flare. The arrival of a second group commanded by [[Kup (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Kup]] finally provides them with the [[energon]] needed to repair Optimus Prime, as well as more information about the betrayal, but the coming of the [[Insecticon swarm|Insecticon Swarm]] drives the combined Autobot forces onto the defensive. During a running battle with the Swarm, [[Sunstreaker (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Sunstreaker]] reveals that ''he'' was the traitor and sacrifices himself to save the others. However, another reason for the betrayal is that [[Hunter O'Nion]] is now a captive of the Decepticons...
 
The Decepticons question their place now that the war is apparently over; [[Starscream (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Starscream]] begins to doubt [[Megatron (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Megatron]]'s goals and secretly teams up with some Decepticons in another bid to overthrow Megatron. A rebellion soon ensues.
 
The Autobots are saved from the Swarm by the timely arrival of [[Omega Supreme (G1)|Omega Supreme]], who transports them to Earth. A pitched battle with the Decepticons follows. It is revealed that Sunstreaker betrayed the Autobots due to [[Bombshell (G1)|Bombshell]] messing with Hunter. The Decepticons are driven off; the intervention of a disgruntled [[Thundercracker (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Thundercracker]] prevents the [[European Union]] from nuking New York City, though he pays for his "betrayal". Megatron is severely damaged by the combined efforts of Optimus Prime and the humans. The captive Hunter is euthanized by [[Sideswipe (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Sideswipe]], and everyone angsts.


The first advertisement for the series was simply a red Decepticon symbol on a black background with "Swear Allegiance 2008" written in red. Follow-up ads used the visual style of post-revolutionary Communist propaganda. The first details of the series were revealed on the trashy Australian tabloid current affairs programme ''Today Tonight'' on [[January 16]], 2008.
{{note|While we don't see much of the Decepticon's rampages on Earth in this comic, later comics by [[Zander Cannon]], [[Mike Costa]], and [[John Barber]] would flesh it out. Notably, Costa's "[[Ride-Along]]" would imply and Barber's "[[All Hail Optimus Part 2: Edge of the Earth|Edge of the Earth]]" would confirm that '''a billion people''' had died because of the invasion!}}
{{--}}


{{chapters |title=''All Hail Megatron'' issues: |style=3 |prev=Maximum Dinobots |next=The Transformers (IDW) |align=left |content=
==Production==
<div class="list-header">v1:</div>
{{quote|I read everything that had been put out by IDW and there's no disrespect of what Simon's done coming from me. I grew up reading Simon Furman books and still have those big format TF comics in my back room. There's no way I'm going to spit on anything that man's done.|[[Shane McCarthy]]<ref>[http://www.oneshallstand.com/reviews/articles/shane-mccarthy.html Shane McCarthy's January 2009 interview with OneShallStand.com to the question of retcons and continuity errors in All Hail Megatron]</ref>}}
*[[Focus on Decepticons|Focus]]
[[File:ShaneMcCarthy.jpg|left|thumb|Series writer Shane McCarthy.]]
*[[All Hail Megatron issue 1|#1]]
Writer [[Shane McCarthy]] pitched ''All Hail Megatron'' in direct response to a request from IDW for a tale that would change the whole direction of the line in hopes of regaining some of the ground lost as [[Simon Furman]]'s run had wound on. Specifically featuring a cast made up almost entirely of 1984-1986 characters for their high recognizability, the series was originally intended as only six issues; [[Chris Ryall]] requested its expansion to twelve.<ref>[http://tformers.com/article.php?sid=11723 Shane McCarthy podcast interview]</ref> Similar to a tactic DC Comics had employed after its series ''{{w|Infinite Crisis}}'' two years prior, McCarthy jumped the entire IDW universe forward one year in time in order to present a story that could shock readers with its sudden, dramatic differences, the product of unseen changes that occurred within the "missing year". Originally, the series was slated to be issues #35–46 in the IDW overarching "sub-numbering" scheme,<ref>[http://boards.idwpublishing.com/3/viewtopic.php?p=64272#p64272 Chris Ryall on the IDW forums, explaining the original sub-numbering plan]</ref> leaving Furman twelve issues set during the "missing year" to wrap up any loose ends he could (though in the end, only nine issues were published across ''[[Revelation (IDW)|Revelation]]'' and ''[[The Transformers: Maximum Dinobots|Maximum Dinobots]]''). Ultimately, however, the sub-numbering was dropped before release of the series.<ref>[http://boards.idwpublishing.com/3/viewtopic.php?p=81142#p81142 Chris Ryall on the IDW forums again, dismissing sub-numbering altogether]</ref>
*[[All Hail Megatron issue 2|#2]]
*[[All Hail Megatron issue 3|#3]]
*[[All Hail Megatron issue 4|#4]]
*[[All Hail Megatron issue 5|#5]]
*[[All Hail Megatron issue 6|#6]]


<br/><div class="list-header">v2:</div>
[[File:AHM 06 CoverA.jpg|thumb|upright=0.85|Drift on the cover to [[All Hail Megatron issue 6|issue #6]].]]
*[[All Hail Megatron issue 7|#7]]
Unlike Furman's ongoing series of mini-series and inter-connected ''[[The Transformers: Spotlight|Spotlight]]'' issues, ''All Hail Megatron''{{'}}s twelve-issue run is almost entirely self-contained, with the only supplemental issues coming in the form of ''[[Spotlight: Jazz]]'', featuring a framing story set during the events of the main series, and ''[[Spotlight: Drift]]'', providing some backstory for McCarthy's original character [[Drift (G1)|Drift]]. This new Autobot made his debut in the pages of ''All Hail Megatron'' proper, and his introduction was heavily hyped by the company, garnering the character quite an infamous reputation as a polarizing figure in the fandom and marking him as one of the most distinctive elements of McCarthy's tenure on the brand for good or for ill. A small handful of other ''Spotlights'' were published while ''All Hail Megatron'' was running, but had nothing to do with the story; regardless, they would go on to be collected with ''Jazz'' and ''Drift'' in a trade paperback labelled as the third volume of the ''All Hail Megatron'' story.
*[[All Hail Megatron issue 8|#8]]
*[[All Hail Megatron issue 9|#9]]
*[[All Hail Megatron issue 10|#10]]
*[[All Hail Megatron issue 11|#11]]
*[[All Hail Megatron issue 12|#12]]


<br/><div class="list-header">v3/Spotlight:</div>
Drift was not all that set the fandom's sensibilities ablaze: the abandonment of not just Furman's storyline, but nearly all of the unique elements (discussed in more detail below) he had introduced into IDW continuity, also sat ill with many readers. Whether planned or in response to this, with issue #7, ''All Hail Megatron'' abruptly began referring back to several of these elements (including what seemed a very hasty explanation for why Cybertron was habitable again), and soon, it was announced that a four-issue mini-series, ''All Hail Megatron: Coda'', would follow the main twelve-issue series and feature stories set between Furman and McCarthy's runs that would deal with the assorted dropped concepts and continuity glitches. This idea ultimately fell through; instead, the four "Coda" issues were appended to the end of the series as issues #13-16, and mostly featured stories set after ''All Hail'', paving the way for the upcoming [[The Transformers (IDW)|ongoing series]].<ref>http://ryalltime.blogspot.com/2009/04/hailing-frequencies-still-open.html</ref>
* [[Spotlight: Blurr|Blurr]]
{{--}}
* [[Spotlight: Jazz|Jazz]]
* [[Spotlight: Drift|Drift]]
* [[Spotlight: Cliffjumper|Cliffjumper]]
* [[Spotlight: Metroplex|Metroplex]]


<br/><div class="list-header">v4/Coda:<ref>This series of "Aftermath" issues was originally announced as a 4-issue "All Hail Megatron: Coda" miniseries before becoming 4 more issues of the original series.</ref></div>
==Creative team==
*[[All Hail Megatron issue 13|#13]]
[[File:AHM 1cvrB.jpg|left|upright=0.85|thumb|Hutchison's cover to [[All Hail Megatron issue 1|issue #1]].]]
*[[All Hail Megatron issue 14|#14]]
Shane McCarthy wrote all twelve issues of the main series, which were predominantly illustrated by [[Guido Guidi]] and colored by [[Josh Burcham]]. A short lead-in time coupled with personal and family sickness meant that Guidi was not able to illustrate every issue, so [[Casey Coller]], [[E. J. Su]], [[Robert Deas]] and [[Emiliano Santalucia]] stepped in to provide back-up line art, while Deas also helped with coloring. The "B" variant covers for each issue were drawn by [[Trevor Hutchison]] in the style of [[Soviet Union]] propaganda posters.
*[[All Hail Megatron issue 15|#15]]
*[[All Hail Megatron issue 16|#16]]
}}


== Overview ==
Each of the four "Coda" issues was split into two eleven-page stories, written and drawn by several different creators. These opened with an Optimus Prime and [[Ironhide (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Ironhide]] story by returning fan-favourites Simon Furman and [[Don Figueroa]] in issue #13, which saw Figueroa debut the new "skeletal" art style he would then employ as artist of the soon-to-debut ongoing series, and the first tale by incumbent ongoing writer [[Mike Costa]], centred on Starscream with art by [[Chee Yang Ong]]. Issue #14 added an epilogue to Sunstreaker's story by the returning McCarthy and Santalucia, while line editor [[Andy Schmidt]] planted the seeds for [[Infestation (IDW)|future]] [[The Transformers: Heart of Darkness|stories]] with his contribution to issue #14, covering the return of [[Galvatron (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Galvatron]], with art by IDW cover contest winner [[Andrew Griffith]]. Issue #15 was dedicated to explaining character transformations; while [[Denton J. Tipton]] and Casey Coller dealt with [[Perceptor (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Perceptor]]'s change from scientist to sniper, writer-artist [[Nick Roche]] returned to the character of Kup with a story that bridged Roche's earlier ''[[Spotlight: Kup]]'' with ''All Hail''. Written with some assistance from [[James Roberts]], this story transformed the "Rocherts" team into fandom darlings, resulting in their collaboration on the ''[[The Transformers: Last Stand of the Wreckers|Last Stand of the Wreckers]]'' mini-series and defining the character of [[Prowl (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Prowl]] for the IDW universe. Lastly, issue #16 saw Mike Costa set up further plot points for the ongoing in a [[Spike Witwicky (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Spike Witwicky]] story with art by Guidi, while Chee returned to illustrate a Bumblebee story in #16 by [[Zander Cannon]], paving the way for the [[The Transformers: Bumblebee|''Bumblebee'' mini-series]] the pair would soon produce.
One year after the events of ''Maximum Dinobots'', a traitor in the [[Autobot]] ranks has given the Decepticons the means to conquer the Autobots, win the [[Great War (G1)|Great War]], and do as they will on the unprotected planet [[Earth]]. The Decepticons conquer [[New York City]] and hold the population hostage, and the [[United States military]] proves unable to stop them.  The attack spreads to other cities as well.
{{-}}


Meanwhile, the Autobots are in a sorry state on [[Cybertron (planet)|Cybertron]], with [[Optimus Prime (G1)|Optimus Prime]] in critical condition, the Matrix of Leadership in Decepticon hands, and a traitor suspected in their ranks.  Tensions and tempers flair. The arrival of a second group commanded by Kup finally provides them with the energon needed to repair Optimus Prime, as well as more information about the betrayal, but the coming of the [[Insecticon swarm|Insecticon Swarm]] drives the combined Autobot forces onto the defensive. During a running battle with the Swarm, [[Sunstreaker (G1)|Sunstreaker]] reveals that he was the traitor and sacrifices himself to save the others. However, another reason for the betrayal is that [[Hunter O'Nion]] is now a captive of the Decepticons...
==Discrepancies==
{{bigquote|I knew from day one that this was going to piss some people off.|Shane McCarthy on fan reaction to the changes in ''All Hail Megatron''<ref>[http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=18585 Comic Book Resources article on Shane McCarthy and All Hail Megatron]</ref>}}
[[File:AHMSeekers.JPG|thumb|upright=1.4|The Seekers' reversion to older F-15 [[alternate mode]]s stood out as strange.]]
As noted above, ''All Hail Megatron'' has some odd discontinuities with the preceding storylines. Before ''All Hail'', IDW's Transformers universe had very much been the vision of one creator—Furman—and was written very tightly, with most stories across different publications interrelating and forming a complex, unfolding tapestry. To then see so much of this ignored or thrown out as another creator took the reins of the universe proved aggravating to fans, and garnered ''All Hail'' an especially negative reputation at the time. As time has gone on and more and more creators have contributed to the IDW universe, making their own changes to what has gone before them, hindsight has seen ''All Hail''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s changes stand out far less in the grand scheme than they did when they first occurred, but as one of the more controversial aspects of a series that lasted an entire year, we here dedicate some space to noting the major offenses.


The Decepticons question their place now that the war is apparently over; [[Starscream (G1)|Starscream]] begins to doubt Megatron's goals and secretly teams up with some Decepticons in another bid to overthrow Megatron.  A rebellion soon ensues.
Most visibly, several characters were redesigned into their original Generation 1 forms; though done in the name of recognizability,<ref>[http://www.tfw2005.com/transformers-news/comics-16/botcon-2009-idw-publishing-panel-167766/ Botcon 2009 IDW Publishing Panel report]</ref> for characters like the [[Seeker (body-type)|Seekers]], [[Astrotrain (G1)|Astrotrain]], and [[Ratbat (G1)|Ratbat]], who had previously been given modern alternate forms in earlier stories, this stood out as especially technologically incongruous and illogical. On the flipside, characters such as [[Prowl (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Prowl]], [[Sideswipe (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Sideswipe]], and [[Sunstreaker (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Sunstreaker]] were updated into new forms based on their concurrently-available ''[[Transformers: Universe (2008 toyline)|Universe]]'' toys, at Hasbro's request.<ref>[http://boards.idwpublishing.com/3/viewtopic.php?t=4855&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=225 Discussion on ''All Hail Megatron'' #4 preview, with Guidi joining in]</ref> The Seekers actually reflect ''both'' these approaches, as they've reverted from modern F-22s to F-15s (which they were in the original cartoon), but they're drawn in the style of their ''[[The Transformers: Masterpiece|Masterpiece]]'' toys. This mix-and-match approach to design would only increase with the onset of the ongoing series, as artistic freedom resulted in characters changing designs from issue to issue, depending on artist.


The Autobots are saved from the Swarm by the timely arrival of Omega Supreme, who transports them to Earth.  A pitched battle with the Decepticons follows. It is revealed that Sunstreaker betrayed the Autobots due to [[Bombshell (G1)|Bombshell]] messing with Hunter. The Decepticons are driven off; the intervention of a disgruntled Thundercracker prevents the European Union from nuking New York City, though he pays for this "betrayal" with his life.  Megatron is severely damaged, possibly killed, by the combined efforts of Optimus Prime and the humans. The captive Hunter is euthanized by Sideswipe, and everyone angsts.
[[File:AHM7 megs rips out matrix.jpg|left|upright=0.85|thumb|The Matrix had a sudden introduction into IDW continuity.]]
Virtually all of the new technologies Furman introduced during his run such as [[Ore-13|Ultra-Energon]], the [[Epistemus|Magnificence]], and [[holomatter]] avatars were entirely discarded, with [[Pretender]] technology only getting a late-on nod in Kup's "Coda" story, its conveyance of ultimate power seemingly completely forgotten by the time of Perceptor's "Coda" tale, given the depiction of [[Bludgeon (G1)|Bludgeon]] therein. The [[Matrix of Leadership]] was promptly retconned in as a key factor in IDW's history, despite not appearing in [[The Transformers: Megatron Origin|the story depicting the war's origin]] (years later, James Roberts's "[[Chaos Theory Part 1|Chaos Theory]]" would expand and explain this glitch), while the paucity of energon that drove the backstory of Furman's new vision seemed a thing of the past. The creation of the [[Insecticon (G1)|Insecticon]]s is a major plot point in ''All Hail'', despite two of the team's members previously appearing in ''[[Spotlight: Blaster]]'' and ''[[The Transformers: Megatron Origin|Megatron: Origin]]'', while past depictions of IDW's eloquent [[Soundwave (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Soundwave]] were ignored in favor of instating his monotone speech patterns from the [[The Transformers (cartoon)|original ''The Transformers'' cartoon]].


== Discrepancies ==
Despite their initial remit of trying to ''fix'' glitches, the four ''Coda'' issues did not fare too well on the continuity front, immediately doing away with Starscream's change in heart from the main story's conclusion and partially re-writing a scene from Furman's Sunstreaker and Hunter story to skew it in another direction. It was Andy Schmidt's Galvatron story from #14 that proved most chaotic, full of legitimate ''errors'' rather than conscious changes, as the writer mixed up which of the [[Dead Universe]] Transformers could survive in the living universe longer than their comrades,<ref>http://boards.idwpublishing.com/3/viewtopic.php?t=6553&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=0</ref> and invalidated an [[All Hail Megatron issue 6|earlier reference]] to [[Scourge (G1)|Scourge]] as a modern-day Decepticon (a nixed plot point that would have seen him presented as the Decepticon equivalent of Kup<ref>[http://tformers.com/article.php?sid=11723 McCarthy on Scourge]</ref>) by presenting him as another of the Dead Universe legions. This story also mistakenly reiterated Cyclonus's "patriotic" personality, which was dismissed as a facade in ''[[Revelation (IDW)|Revelation]]'', but [[The Transformers: More than Meets the Eye|future stories]] would continue to run with this depiction of the character as it proved far more interesting.
{{bigquote|I knew from day one that this was going to piss some people off <ref>http://comicbookresources.com/?page=article&amp;id=18585"
{{--}}
Comic Book Resources article on Shane McCarthy and All Hail Megatron.</ref>.|Shane McCarthy on fan reaction to the changes in ''All Hail Megatron''}}


''All Hail Megatron'' has some odd discontinuities with the preceding storylines. These may or may not be resolved in the future, but in the meantime, the following changes stand out as incongruous:
==Motion comic pitch==
In 2012, a motion comic version of ''All Hail Megatron'' was pitched to [[IDW Publishing]] by Sideshow Productions. The pitch (adapting a scene from the first issue) featured [[Daniel Ross]] as [[Starscream (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Starscream]], [[David Sobolov]] as [[Megatron (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Megatron]] and [[Michael Bell]] as [[Scrapper (G1)|Scrapper]] and [[Skywarp (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Skywarp]]. IDW rejected the pitch and the motion comic went unproduced.<ref>http://ceron.jp/url/www.nicovideo.jp/watch/sm7291277</ref>


===Unexplained redesigns===
==Notes==
*The three [[Seeker (body-type)|Seeker]]s have traded in their top-of-the-line F-22 jet modes for the much older and technically inferior F-15 jet modes. Shane McCarthy had promised that an explanation for this would be provided at some point, but to date, this hasn't happened. While it's ''possible'' they chose to emulate the older and more common F-15...  
* A persistent rumor among fans is that the series was originally conceived as an ''[[The Transformers: Evolutions|Evolutions]]'' title—a parallel universe, and the decision to incorporate it into the existing IDW storyline came later. However, no statements from the creators have backed this up, and the writer himself has claimed that it was never meant to be a hard reboot.<ref>[http://www.allspark.com/forums/index.php/topic/48377-all-hail-megatron-1/page-4#entry985562 Shane McCarthy on the Allspark.com, confirming continuity]</ref>
*...[[Astrotrain (G1)|Astrotrain]] has also traded in his previous Earth-based alternate mode. Instead of transforming to a very common American diesel freight locomotive as seen in ''[[Devastation (IDW)|Devastation]]'', he now turns into a ''steam locomotive'', the last of which were retired from common use circa 1965.
* [[Titan Books|Titan]] reprinted the series and some of the covers in their [[Transformers (Titan Magazine)|''Revenge of the Fallen'' comic]], in issues 1–8, making up titles for each chapter from the fourth part onwards. When plans changed, requiring the story to be cut-off with issue #8, they hacked up, edited, and pasted together [[:File:Titan AHM cutandpaste.jpg|three pages into one page]] and told readers to buy the trade paperbacks to get the whole story.
* [[Ratbat (G1)|Ratbat]] is also in on the backdating action, trading in his contemporary MP3 player alternate form for a cassette tape—a recording medium which has virtually disappeared from the public eye.
* [[Guido Guidi]] made modernized designs for at least two characters which were eventually not used. The characters were [[Soundwave (G1)/2005 IDW continuity|Soundwave]], who would have turned into a modern microcassette recorder — which reporters still use today — and [[Wheelie (G1)|Wheelie]] who was cut from the series due to ''[[Spotlight: Wheelie]]''.
* [[Hot Rod (G1)|Hot Rod]] has traded his Dodge Viper mode for his G1 cartoon mode. This is explained at the end of [[Maximum Dinobots]], when he got smashed by [[Scorponok (G1)|Scorponok]]. It's likely he got repaired and a new alt-mode was scanned for him. [[Guido Guidi]] confirmed that the logic behind giving Hot Rod his classic G1 design was that the character had previously had a purely Cybertronian vehicle mode and then a purely Earthen vehicle mode in earlier stories, so his G1 design was a nice mixture of Cybertron and Earth sensibilities. <ref>http://forum.idwpublishing.com/viewtopic.php?p=105708&highlight=#105708</ref>
<gallery>
* Various other Earth-based Autobots are in new bodies as well, such as [[Prowl (G1)|Prowl]], [[Sideswipe (G1)|Sideswipe]] and [[Sunstreaker (G1)|Sunstreaker]], who are in forms based on their ''[[Universe (2008 franchise)|Universe]]'' toys. Sunstreaker's new body was at least explained by the end of ''Maximum Dinobots'', but no in-story explanation has yet come for Prowl or Sideswipe. Oddly enough, Ironhide, Ratchet and Bumblebee ''retain'' their [[E. J. Su]]-designed bodies instead of their ''Universe'' toy designs.
File:Unused AHM Soundwave.jpg|A modern alt mode? ''GET OUT.''
File:Unused AHM Wheelie concept.jpg|Me Wheelie say, it lucky day when not used for AHM... ay.
</gallery>
* The story got a sort-of sequel eight years later, when the 50th issue of [[The Transformers: Robots in Disguise|''The Transformers'']] kicked off "All Hail ''Optimus''".


Guido Guidi has confirmed that the ''Universe'' models were because [[Hasbro]] asked in order to promote the line<ref>http://forum.idwpublishing.com/viewtopic.php?t=4855&amp;postdays=0&amp;postorder=asc&amp;start=225 Discussion on ''AHM'' #4 preview, with Guidi joining in</ref>. IDW would later say the redesigns were all to make the characters more recognizable to bring readers in <ref>[http://www.tfw2005.com/transformers-news/comics-16/botcon-2009-idw-publishing-panel-167766/ Botcon 2009 IDW Publishing Panel report]</ref>, because clearly Sunstreaker and Ratbat are very easy to confuse with other people.
==Collections==
* '''''The Transformers: All Hail Megatron Volume 1''''' <small>([[February 18]], [[2009]]) ISBN 1600103715 / ISBN 978-1600103711</small>
** Collects ''All Hail Megatron'' issues #1–6.
** Bonus material includes a cover gallery (not including the sketch covers). Also included is an art gallery consisting of [[Drift (G1)|Drift]] in both Cybertronian modes, and sketches of Cliffjumper, Perceptor, Soundwave, Ratbat, Frenzy, the Constructicons and Devastator.
** Trade paperback format.


===Ignored technology===
* '''''The Transformers: All Hail Megatron Volume 2''''' <small>([[September 16]], 2009) ISBN 1600105246 / ISBN 978-1600105241</small>
* The series does not mention the previous plot point of [[Ultra-Energon|Ore-13/Ultra-Energon]]. It was the original reason for the Decepticons' unusually strong interest in Earth, and subsequently Megatron's only reason for staying on Earth after [[Infiltration issue 6|putting down Starscream's rebellion]]. Although one could argue the power depletion caused by its use shown in ''Stormbringer'' and ''Escalation'' is reason enough not to use Ore-13, the matter has not received any explicit closure.
** Collects ''All Hail Megatron'' issues #7–12.
* At the end of ''[[Revelation (IDW)|Revelation]]'', the Autobots controlled both the all-knowing [[Magnificence]] and the powerful [[Pretender]] technology. The Magnificence is not accounted for, while the Pretender technology seems to be used only to revive Kup.
** Bonus material includes a cover gallery and a 2-page art gallery featuring sketches of Reflector, Frenzy, Kup and Hot Rod.
** Trade paperback format.


===Unexplained continuity glitches===
* '''''The Transformers: All Hail Megatron Volume 3''''' <small>([[October 28]], 2009) ISBN 1600105416 / ISBN 978-1600105418</small>
* The Decepticons have seemingly abandoned their usual carefully planned [[infiltration protocol]] where they attempted to manipulate humanity into wiping themselves out. This is in accordance with ''Escalation'' and ''Devastation'' where it is repeatedly said to have been thrown out of the window. Unlike [[Devastation issue 1|before]] however, the Decepticons don't seem bothered that Megatron's thrown out their strategy this time.
** Collects ''[[The Transformers: Spotlight|Spotlight]]: [[Spotlight: Blurr|Blurr]]'', ''[[Spotlight: Jazz|Jazz]]'', ''[[Spotlight: Drift|Drift]]'', ''[[Spotlight: Cliffjumper|Cliffjumper]]'' and ''[[Spotlight: Metroplex|Metroplex]]''.
* Previous robot encounters such as the publicly broadcast Transformers battle and [[Grimlock (G1)|Grimlock]] stomping through the countryside are briefly hand-waved away as the work of the now-defunct [[Machination]]. Yet Air Force representatives also state that they thought the giant robots were a ''hoax'', which makes little sense considering that a news station filmed them and the Air Force has seen them fighting the [[Reaper|Reapers]]. Worse, the people of New York react to the Constructicons by thinking they're part of a movie being filmed, rather than going "Oh no, the Machination is back!"...
** Bonus material includes the alternate covers of each issue, as well as art of each [[Throttlebot]] by [[Marcelo Matere]] and new cover art by [[Trevor Hutchison]].
* In ''[[Stormbringer (comics)|Stormbringer]]'', [[Jetfire (G1)|Jetfire]] said Cybertron was healing itself, but that it would take hundreds of years. Apparently what he meant was one year, since the Autobots (and a swarm of [[Insecticon swarm|Insectithings]]) have been hanging out on Cybertron without special shielding, and haven't died yet. Much later in [[All Hail Megatron issue 7|issue 7]], the explanation given was that the storms coincidentally died down just as the Autobots arrived on Cybertron, and that living on the planet now merely causes them pain, but evidently not enough pain for them to complain about or even mention in the six previous issues, or anytime afterward. Okay then.
** Trade paperback format. Instead of being Volume 5 of the Spotlights, the TPB is labeled as part of the ''All Hail Megatron'' series. For some reason, the Drift and Cliffjumper issues were swapped from their original order.
* The [[Great War (G1)|Great War]] is apparently about the [[Matrix of Leadership]] though it had no bearing on Megatron's rise to power in ''Megatron Origin'', and nobody ever ''mentioned'' it as a motivation (or barely at all) until [[All Hail Megatron issue 6|#6 of ''All Hail'']].  
* [[Energon (fuel)|Energon]] was once considered a rarity, believed to exist only on Cybertron, with Ore-13/Ultra Energon being the closest thing found, and Cybertronians instead had to resort to artificial derivatives or "foul local brews", yet now Kup is able to quickly acquire a ship full of the stuff.
* [[Bombshell (G1)|Bombshell]] was created a year ago, though featured as a plot point in ''Spotlight: Blaster''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s flashback sequences. [[Kickback (G1)|Kickback]] also had a minor cameo in ''Megatron Origin''. (Much like Blaster and [[Bluster]], this must be... Sitback! Evidently his cousin.)
* [[Soundwave (G1)|Soundwave]]'s speech patterns have returned to the cartoon-inspired pattern from ''[[Megatron Origin]]'', after a stint of fluent internal monologue in his ''Spotlight'', as well as in ''Maximum Dinobots''.
* During Furman's run, Starscream, the Seekers and the Triple Changers were little more than an [[Infiltration protocol|Infiltration unit]], with plenty of guys much higher-up in the command structure ([[Banzai-Tron (G1)|Banzaitron]] being the head of the Secret Police and everything, for one), but now it seems Megatron has little command structure beyond the aforementioned Seekers and Triple Changers, along with a few other characters from seasons one and two of the original cartoon.
* [[Verity Carlo]] and [[Jimmy Pink]] are nowhere to be seen.


In a slightly jarring move, issue 7 of ''All Hail'' began chucking in and mentioning parts of previous IDW continuity that the comic had not acknowledged for a full half of its run. This included the Sunstreaker plot from ''[[Maximum Dinobots]]'' (thus ''blowing part of the ending'' for that miniseries), which was brought up in issue 7 as a lead-in for him being revealed as the mysterious traitor in issue 8... after having no focus in the previous six issues of ''All Hail''.
* '''''The Transformers: All Hail Megatron Volume 4''''' <small>([[January 13]], [[2010]]) ISBN 1600105920 / ISBN 978-1600105920</small>
** Collects ''All Hail Megatron'' issues #13–16.
** Bonus material consists of a cover gallery.
** Trade paperback format.


====Coda====
* '''''The Transformers: All Hail Megatron — Book Club Edition''''' <small>([[July 19]], 2010) ISBN 1600108164 / ISBN 978-1600108167</small>
In a rather flagrant admission of the glaringly broken continuity, the ''All Hail Megatron Coda'' series was planned specifically to bridge the gaps between this series and the continuity started by Simon Furman. IDW later decided to incorporate this series as part of the main title, making it issues 13–16.<ref>http://ryalltime.blogspot.com/2009/04/hailing-frequencies-still-open.html</ref>  Each of the final 4 issues contain two short stories. They attempt to tie together the numerous discontinuities between ''All Hail Megatron'' and the preceding series, and to set the stage for future stories.
** Collects ''All Hail Megatron'' issues #1–12.
** Bonus material consists of a cover gallery.
** [http://www.sfbc.com/pages/nm/product/productDetail.jsp?skuId=1065621274|link Science Fiction Book Club] exclusive smaller-format softcover.
** This edition is erroneously referred to as '''''All Hail Megatron: Earth War''''' in a few places. Notably absent among those places is anywhere on the book itself. The book's title is simply '''''All Hail Megatron''''' on the cover, inside cover, and spine. The colophon refers to the book as '''''All Hail Megatron — Book Club Edition'''''.
** Trade paperback format.


However, this begets some ''more'' glitches, including:
* '''''The Transformers: The Complete All Hail Megatron''''' <small>([[July 27]], [[2011]]) ISBN 1600109551 / ISBN 978-1600109553</small>
** Collects ''All Hail Megatron'' issues #1–16, and ''Spotlight: Blurr'', ''Jazz'', ''Drift'', ''Cliffjumper'' & ''Metroplex''.
** Bonus material includes a cover gallery and the art sketches from previous collections.
** New cover by Trevor Hutchison.
** Hardcover format.


* When Ironhide and Optimus first met, Ironhide didn't think much of him or his chances. {{storylink|All Hail Megatron issue 13|Old Ways}} Except issue 4 of the ''same maxi-series'' has Ironhide claim otherwise about their first meeting, and the tie-in "[[Spotlight: Blurr]]" has Ironhide and a pre-Prime Optimus working together!
<gallery>
* It's implied that Ironhide was passed over and ignored by a lot of Autobots. {{storylink|All Hail Megatron issue 8|All Hail Megatron #8}} Then we're told Optimus Prime took his advice from the ''start'' {{storylink|All Hail Megatron issue 13|Old Ways}} and Prowl knows Optimus will listen to Ironhide over him. {{storylink|All Hail Megatron issue 15|All Hail Megatron #15}}
File:All Hail Megatron TPB vol1.jpg|'''''All Hail Megatron Volume 1''''' – cover art by [[Klaus Scherwinski]]
* After seeming to come around to Megatron's way of thinking {{storylink|All Hail Megatron issue 11|All Hail Megatron #11}}, defending a wounded Megatron, and declaring he will take leadership properly instead of exploiting chances, {{storylink|All Hail Megatron issue 12|All Hail Megatron #12}} Starscream immediately goes on to slag off Megs in his internal thoughts, tries to have him killed, and plots about how to cement a leadership properly that he's gained through random chance! {{storylink|All Hail Megatron issue 13|Uneasy Lies the Head}} Was he faking everything before?
File:All Hail Megatron v2.jpg|'''''All Hail Megatron Volume 2''''' – cover art by [[Trevor Hutchison]]
* The scene of Sunstreaker's dissection by the Machination depicts the scientists as ignorant of the Autobot being a living, sentient entity, callously referring to him as a "piece of metal" and to his screams of pain as simply an automated response. While it is noted in "[[Spotlight: Ultra Magnus]]" that [[Scorponok (G1)|Scorponok]], a Decepticon, ran his operations through front companies whose employees might not all know whom they ultimately served, it strains credibility that the scientists working on the top-secret [[Headmaster (technology)#IDW_comics_continuity|Headmaster]] project would be so clueless. Furthermore, the Machination are amazed when Sunstreaker speaks, despite the fact that Machination operatives in the field have heard the Autobots speak and did not take this as an unusual occurrence. Unsurprisingly, this short story was written by Shane McCarthy as an attempt to explain Sunstreaker's abrupt betrayal of the Autobots and his hatred of humans in [[All Hail Megatron issue 8|issue 8]]. {{storylink|All Hail Megatron issue 14|Replay}}
File:AHM v3.jpg|'''''All Hail Megatron Volume 3''''' – cover art by Trevor Hutchison
* In a rather insulting change, #14 ''partially rewrites'' a scene from [[Devastation issue 3|''Devastation'' issue 3]]. It cuts out Hunter proposing to become a Headmaster so they could both ''fight back'' against Scorponok's plan to use Sunstreaker to hurt Autobots, and adds a plea for death after Hunter's last line. This gives the impression that Hunter's deliberately ignoring Sunstreaker's wishes and forcing him into something, when the original scene had Hunter hitting on a way to get back at the Machination (and Sunstreaker had a semi-agreeable response to the idea in [[Devastation issue 4|''Devastation'' issue 4]]). Also, in [[Maximum Dinobots issue 4|''Maximum Dinobots'' issue 4]], Hunter ''did'' unplug Sunstreaker, so he's hardly unable to bump the guy off if necessary. (This scene is ''oddly'' absent from the ''Coda''.)
File:All Hail Megatron v4.jpg|'''''All Hail Megatron Volume 4''''' – cover art by Trevor Hutchison
* [[Galvatron (G1)|Galvatron]] is unique among the [[Dead Universe]] Transformers, being able to spend far longer in the living universe than any of his comrades. {{storylink|Spotlight: Cyclonus}} And by that we mean ''[[Cyclonus (G1)|Cyclonus]]'' is unique among the Dead Universe Transformers, being able to spend far longer in the living universe than any of his comrades. {{storylink|All Hail Megatron issue 14|Rebirth}}. [[Andy Schmidt]] admitted this was simply an error on his part, due to a misreading of ''[[Revelation (IDW)|Revelation]]'' which was never caught in time <ref> http://forum.idwpublishing.com/viewtopic.php?t=6553&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=0</ref> We're also ignoring that Cyclonus realized in his spotlight that he's ''not'' noble and patriotic, as ''AHM'' #14 says, but that this is a facade.
File:AHM earthwar tpb.jpg|'''''All Hail Megatron — Book Club Edition''''' – cover art by Trevor Hutchison
* [[Scourge (G1)|Scourge]] is introduced, presented as a Dead Universe guy we just never saw. Except in [[All Hail Megatron issue 6|issue 6]] of this very series, Starscream mentioned Scourge as a Decepticon who might be a challenge to Megatron's authority! (Shane has said he originally intended Scourge to be a Decepticon equivalent of Kup, but this plan got nixed beyond Starscream's one line [http://tformers.com/article.php?sid=11723] )
File:Allhailmegatronhc.jpg|'''''The Complete All Hail Megatron''''' – cover art by Trevor Hutchison
* ''[[Stormbringer (comics)|Stormbringer]]'' and ''[[Revelation (IDW)|Revelation]]'' presented the Decepticon Pretenders as uncontrollable, hideously destructive monsters that could devastate whole regiments, and [[Bludgeon (G1)|Bludgeon]] as having lost his mind. Well, without any explanation, he's got his mind again, he's now ''being loyal'' to the Decepticons, and he retreats from a small Autobot squad instead of using his power to wipe them out. {{storylink|All Hail Megatron issue 15|Lost & Found}} The last part, embarrassingly, is an obvious error because ''the first story of the same issue'' has Springer rant about how horrifyingly dangerous Pretender technology is...
</gallery>
* [[Thrust (G1)|Thrust]] was somehow part of Megatron's crew on Earth, in spite of not having been present during any of the Decepticon rallies, the attempted Decepticon coup ''or'' the Autobot/Decepticon battle... yet got damaged and hid in a ravaged building. {{storylink|All Hail Megatron issue 16|The Man of Steel}}
* Skywatch, an American government agency staffed with Americans that dealt with aliens on American soil, will now be better because the new commander is... American. {{storylink|All Hail Megatron issue 16|The Man of Steel}}
* The story "Hidden" refers to Decepticons attacking human refugee camps and refugees in the ''present'' sense, after the Decepticons have left. While this could just be baseless paranoia on a refugee's part, the strip also refers to "these cities" being ruined and evacuated, which implies more than one city in the same area, not just New York. On top of ''that'', Devastator is said to have destroyed Manhattan Bridge when it was the Seekers hitting the bridges in [[All Hail Megatron issue 2|issue 2]]. {{storylink|All Hail Megatron issue 16|Hidden}}
* The [[United States Army]]'s anti-Transformer team turns up in both stories in issue 16. Except they're using Shockwave-based laser guns in one story and conventional firearms in the other; they're also a unit under Spike in one story, and a battalion (with units that Spike isn't leading) in another! We were used to glitches by now, but not to an issue contradicting ''itself''. {{storylink|All Hail Megatron issue 16|All Hail Megatron #16}}


== Items of note ==
* '''''[[The Transformers: The IDW Collection Volume Five]]''''' <small>([[December 14]], 2011) ISBN 978-1613770528</small>
*Shane has stated in an interview that he was deliberately asked by IDW to pitch a series that would change the whole direction of the line, and that he and IDW saw it as solving "problems" with how ''Transformers'' had been going. Everything about it, especially the early '80s cast, was very deliberately done to achieve this, though some of it never got to come out on the page. While he's said it was originally pitched as a ''six''-issue miniseries and Ryall asked for it be a twelve-issue, he says the pacing is exactly what he wanted it to be. <ref>[http://tformers.com/article.php?sid=11723 Shane McCarthy podcast interview]</ref>
** Collects ''All Hail Megatron'' issues #1–16.
* In the same interview, he said the "one year later" gap was to give Simon Furman room to play around with his own stuff.
** Hardcover format.
* Guido Guidi had personal sickness, family sickness, and too short a lead-in...and ''still'' tried as hard as possible to draw as much as he could. What a guy!
*Originally, the series was said to be issues #35–46 in the IDW overarching "sub-numbering", picking up 12 issues after ''Devastation'' (a gap which was to be filled by the four ''Revelation'' [[Spotlight (comics)|Spotlights]], the 5-issue ''Maximum Dinobots'' miniseries and 3 unnamed issues).<ref>http://forum.idwpublishing.com/viewtopic.php?p=64272&amp;sid=1e0606f82207984874d114a7c8bb42ac#64272 Chris Ryall on the IDW forums, explaining the original sub-numbering plan</ref> However, [[Simon Furman]] later reported that these 3 issues were "to be confirmed" and the sub-numbering may not still apply.<ref>http://simonfurman.wordpress.com/2008/06/26/script-wrap-%E2%80%94-max/#comment-3651 Simon Furman replying to his own blog on the uncertainty of sub-numbering</ref> Eventually, Chris Ryall said that IDW had decided to drop the sub-numbering entirely.<ref>http://forum.idwpublishing.com/viewtopic.php?p=81142#81142 Chris Ryall on the IDW forums again, dismissing sub-numbering altogether</ref>
*A persistent rumor among fans is that the series was originally conceived as an ''[[Evolutions]]'' title—a parallel universe, and the decision to incorporate it into the existing IDW storyline came later. However, no statements from the creators have backed this up, and the writer himself has claimed that it was never meant to be a reboot.<ref>http://www.allspark.com/forums/index.php?s=&amp;showtopic=48377&amp;view=findpost&amp;p=985562 Shane McCarthy on the Allspark.com, confirming continuity</ref>
*When July sales data came in, it turned out that issue #1, the heavily promoted, new-reader-friendly jump-on point to draw in new readers, had sold one copy ''less'' than [[Devastation issue 6|''Devastation'' #6]]. <ref>http://tfarchive.com/community/showthread.php?t=34535&amp;page=22 TFArchive.com's comic sales discussion thread</ref> Contrary to this, IDW and McCarthy later repeatedly insisted that ''All Hail Megatron'' has sold extremely well and more than the Diamond figures suggest, but there has been no statement of what those sales are. <ref>http://forum.idwpublishing.com/viewtopic.php?t=4855&amp;postdays=0&amp;postorder=asc&amp;start=75 Shane weighs in on sales issues</ref>
*Simon Furman confirmed that there is no collaboration or communication between himself and Shane McCarthy, and it was up to IDW editor Denton J. Tipton to sort out the continuity. <ref>http://forum.idwpublishing.com/viewtopic.php?t=5032 Simon Furman November Q&A</ref>
* Every issue has multiple covers, one of which is always drawn in [[Soviet Union|Soviet]]-propaganda style.  This is an interesting choice for a series written by someone named [[Wikipedia:Joseph McCarthy|McCarthy]].
* Like ''[[Infiltration]]'' and ''[[Escalation (IDW)|Escalation]]'', the primary cast hails from 1984-86, with only the occasional wild card thrown in, such as the ''[[Generation 2 (franchise)|Generation 2]]'' character [[Deluge (Decepticon)|Deluge]] and the entirely new [[Drift (G1)|Drift]].
* [[Titan Books|Titan]] reprinted the series and some of the covers in their [[Transformers (Titan Magazine)|''Revenge of the Fallen'' comic]], in issues 1–8. From the fourth issue, they started making up titles for the parts. To finish the reprints in #8, they hacked up, edited, and pasted together [[:Image:Titan_AHM_cutandpaste.jpg|three pages into one page]].


== Creative team ==
* '''''The Transformers: All Hail Megatron'' (Red Label)''' <small>([[March 18]], [[2015]])</small><ref>http://idwlimited.com/shop/all-hail-megatron-red-label-edition/</ref>
* Issues 1–12: Written by [[Shane McCarthy]] and drawn and colored by [[Guido Guidi]] and [[Josh Burcham]] respectively. [[Casey Coller]], [[E. J. Su]], [[Robert Deas]] & [[Emiliano Santalucia]] provided back-up lines as well, while Deas also helped with coloring.
** Collects the entire four-volume series.
* Issue 13: Optimus Prime & Ironhide's story was written by [[Simon Furman]] with art by [[Don Figueroa]], and Starscream's story was written by [[Mike Costa]] with art by [[Chee Yang Ong]].  Furman and Figueroa had previously collaborated on many projects, including ''[[The Gathering|Beast Wars: The Gathering]]'' and ''[[Stormbringer (comics)|Stormbringer]]''.  Mike Costa would later become the writer on the [[The Transformers (IDW)|ongoing series]], with Figueroa providing line-art.
** Limited to 350 copies.
* Issue 14: Sunstreaker's story was written by Shane McCarthy with art by Emiliano Santalucia, and Galvatron's story was written by [[Andy Schmidt]] with art by [[Andrew Griffith]].
** Exclusive slipcase and cover.
* Issue 15: Kup's story and art were by [[Nick Roche]] (with some assistance on the story by [[James Roberts]], and Perceptor's story was written by [[Denton J. Tipton]] with art by Casey Coller.
** Each book is numbered and signed by artist [[Guido Guidi]].
* Issue 16: Spike Witwicky's story was written by Mike Costa with art by Guido Guidi, while Bumblebee's story was written by [[Zander Cannon]] with art by Chee Yang Ong, who would also work together on the [[Transformers: Bumblebee|Bumblebee miniseries]].
** Hardcover format.


== Collections ==
* '''''The Transformers: The Complete All Hail Megatron''''' <small>([[November 15]], [[2017]]) ISBN 168405219X / ISBN 978-1684052196</small>
* '''Volume 1  TPB:''' <small>([[March 4]], [[2009]]} ISBN 1600103715 / ISBN 978-1600103711</small>
** Collects ''All Hail Megatron'' issues #1–16, and ''Spotlight: Blurr'', ''Jazz'', ''Drift'', ''Cliffjumper'' & ''Metroplex''.
:Collects issues 1–6
** New material, if any currently unknown.
:Bonus material includes a cover gallery (not including the sketch covers). Also included is an art gallery consisting of [[Drift (G1)|Drift]] in both Cybertronian modes, and sketches of Cliffjumper, Perceptor, Soundwave, Ratbat, Frenzy, the Constructicons and Devastator.  
** Trade paperback format.


* '''Volume 2 TPB:''' <small>([[September 16]], [[2009]]} ISBN 1600105246 / ISBN 978-1600105241</small>
* '''''[[Transformers: The Definitive G1 Collection]]: Volume 43: All Hail Megatron, Part 1''''' <small>([[November 29]], 2017)</small>
:Collects issues 7–12
** Collects ''All Hail Megatron'' issues #1–8.
:Bonus material includes a cover gallery and a 2-page art gallery featuring sketches of Reflector, Frenzy, Kup and Hot Rod.
** An article on creating ''All Hail Megatron'', character design sketches by Guidi, and the series pitch by [[Shane McCarthy]].


* '''Volume 3 TPB:'''
* '''''[[Transformers: The Definitive G1 Collection]]: Volume 44: All Hail Megatron, Part 2''''' <small>([[December 27]], 2017)</small>
:New cover art by [[Trevor Hutchison]]
** Collects ''All Hail Megatron'' issues #9–16.
:Collects the ''[[Spotlight (comics)|Spotlight]]''s:  [[Spotlight: Blurr|Blurr]], [[Spotlight: Jazz|Jazz]], [[Spotlight: Drift|Drift]], [[Spotlight: Cliffjumper|Cliffjumper]] and [[Spotlight: Metroplex|Metroplex]].
** A ''Decepticon Roll Call'' with mini-bios, and trivia about ''All Hail Megatron'' #13–16, pointing out notable plot points in the ''Coda'' issues.
:Bonus material includes a cover gallery and a 1-page art gallery featuring the [[Throttlebot]]s.
{{note| Volume 3 is actually the fifth volume of ''[[Spotlight (comics)|Spotlight]]''s, but presented as a collection of ''AHM'' for marketing.}}


* '''Volume 4 TPB:''' <small>([[January 29]], [[2010]] ''Scheduled'') ISBN 1600105920 / ISBN 978-1600105920</small>
* '''''[[Transformers: Best of Bumblebee]]''''' <small>([[September 7]], [[2022]])</small>
:Collects issues 13–16
** Collects [[The Transformers (Marvel comic)|''The Transformers'' (1984)]] [[Plight of the Bumblebee!|#16: "Plight of the Bumblebee!"]], [[Ghost Stories|''Transformers'' Annual 2017: "Ghost Stories"]], ''[[The Transformers: Robots in Disguise|Robots in Disguise]]'' [[Black Planet: Dark Cybertron Chapter 11|#27: "Black Planet: Dark Cybertron Chapter 11"]], [[Transformers (2019 comic)|''Transformers'' (2019)]] [[The World In Your Eyes Part Two|#2: "The World In Your Eyes Part Two"]], and ''All Hail Megatron'' [[Hidden (G1)|#16: "Hidden"]].
:Bonus material unknown (Likely a cover gallery).
** Bonus material includes an art gallery.


==Covers==
<gallery>
<gallery>
Image:All Hail Megatron TPB vol1.jpg|Megatron's wet dream.
File:IDWCollection5.jpg|'''''The IDW Collection Volume Five''''' – cover art by [[E. J. Su]]
Image:All Hail Megatron v2.jpg|I want to be in that number... when the 'bots, go marching in!
File:DefinitiveG1Collection v43.jpg|'''''The Definitive G1 Collection: Volume 43: All Hail Megatron, Part 1''''' – cover art by [[Don Figueroa]] and [[Guido Guidi]]
Image:AHM v3.jpg|"Aw mannn, why'd they have to throw us in with ''AHM''?"
File:DefinitiveG1Collection v44.jpg|'''''The Definitive G1 Collection: Volume 43: All Hail Megatron, Part 2''''' – cover art by Don Figueroa, Guido Guido and [[Emiliano Santalucia]]
Image:All Hail Megatron v4.jpg|Kickin' skidplate and takin' names since 6 million steller-cycles ago.
File:BestOfBumblebee_cvr.jpg|'''''Best of Bumblebee''''' – cover art by [[James Biggie]]
</gallery>
</gallery>


==Trivia==
===International Printings===
* [[Guido Guidi]] made modernized designs for at least two characters which were eventually not used. The characters were [[Soundwave (G1)|Soundwave]], who would have turned into a modern microcassette recorder — which reporters still use today — and [[Wheelie (G1)|Wheelie]] who was cut from the series due to "[[Spotlight: Wheelie]]".
 
====Spain====
''All Hail Megatron'' was translated and released in Spain by [[NORMA Editorial]].
 
'''Volume 1'''
* ISBN 978-84-679-0069-9
 
'''Volume 2'''
* ISBN 978-84-679-0164-1
 
====Japan====
''The Complete All Hail Megatron'' was translated and released in Japan by Shogakukan-Shueisha Productions.
* '''''Transformers: The Complete All Hail Megatron''''' <small>([[March 23]], [[2015]])</small>
** Collects ''All Hail Megatron'' issues #1–16, and ''Spotlight: Blurr'', ''Jazz'', ''Drift'', ''Cliffjumper'' & ''Metroplex''.
** Bonus material includes a cover gallery and the art sketches from previous collections.
** Trade paperback format.
* ISBN 479687514X
* ISBN 978-4796875141
 
<gallery>
<gallery>
Image:Unused AHM Soundwave.jpg|A modern alt mode? ''GET OUT.''
File:Shopro AHM Cover.jpg|'''''Transformers: The Complete All Hail Megatron''''' (トランスフォーマー:オール・ヘイル・メガトロン)
Image:Unused AHM Wheelie concept.jpg|Me Wheelie say, it lucky day when not used for AHM...ay.
</gallery>
</gallery>


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{Reflist}}
 
{{comicstub}}


[[Category: IDW titles]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:All Hail Megatron}}
[[Category:IDW (2005) comic series]]

Latest revision as of 12:34, 16 December 2025

The name or term "All Hail Megatron" refers to more than one character or idea. For a list of other meanings, see All Hail Megatron (disambiguation).
This didn't happen.

The Transformers: All Hail Megatron was the second major "act" of IDW Publishing's first ongoing comic universe, intended to serve as a "soft reboot" of IDW's increasingly complicated storylines and create a jumping-on point for new readers following the truncated ending of the previous collection of mini-series and one-shots. It marked a radical shift in tone and content in the ongoing story, showing a victorious Decepticon army on Earth while the Autobots are defeated and on the run throughout the universe.

Lasting from 2008 to 2009, the series ran for sixteen issues (including four "Coda" issues of short stories), with a small handful of vaguely associated Spotlight-series tie-ins. A standalone sketchbook and preview comic, "Focus on: Decepticons!", may be considered "All Hail Megatron #0".

The first advertisement for the series was simply a red Decepticon symbol on a black background with "Swear Allegiance 2008" written in red. Follow-up ads used the visual style of post-revolutionary Communist propaganda. The first details of the series were revealed on the trashy Australian tabloid current affairs programme Today Tonight on January 16, 2008.

The Transformers: All Hail Megatron issues:

Overview

One year after the events of Maximum Dinobots, a traitor in the Autobot ranks has given the Decepticons the means to conquer the Autobots, win the Great War, and do as they will on the unprotected planet Earth. The Decepticons conquer New York City and hold the population hostage, and the United States military proves unable to stop them. The attack spreads to other cities around the globe as well.

Kup's team provide one of the book's more iconic images.

Meanwhile, the Autobots are in a sorry state on Cybertron, with Optimus Prime in critical condition, the Matrix of Leadership in Decepticon hands, and a traitor suspected in their ranks. Tensions and tempers flare. The arrival of a second group commanded by Kup finally provides them with the energon needed to repair Optimus Prime, as well as more information about the betrayal, but the coming of the Insecticon Swarm drives the combined Autobot forces onto the defensive. During a running battle with the Swarm, Sunstreaker reveals that he was the traitor and sacrifices himself to save the others. However, another reason for the betrayal is that Hunter O'Nion is now a captive of the Decepticons...

The Decepticons question their place now that the war is apparently over; Starscream begins to doubt Megatron's goals and secretly teams up with some Decepticons in another bid to overthrow Megatron. A rebellion soon ensues.

The Autobots are saved from the Swarm by the timely arrival of Omega Supreme, who transports them to Earth. A pitched battle with the Decepticons follows. It is revealed that Sunstreaker betrayed the Autobots due to Bombshell messing with Hunter. The Decepticons are driven off; the intervention of a disgruntled Thundercracker prevents the European Union from nuking New York City, though he pays for his "betrayal". Megatron is severely damaged by the combined efforts of Optimus Prime and the humans. The captive Hunter is euthanized by Sideswipe, and everyone angsts.

While we don't see much of the Decepticon's rampages on Earth in this comic, later comics by Zander Cannon, Mike Costa, and John Barber would flesh it out. Notably, Costa's "Ride-Along" would imply and Barber's "Edge of the Earth" would confirm that a billion people had died because of the invasion!

Production

I read everything that had been put out by IDW and there's no disrespect of what Simon's done coming from me. I grew up reading Simon Furman books and still have those big format TF comics in my back room. There's no way I'm going to spit on anything that man's done.Shane McCarthy[1]
Series writer Shane McCarthy.

Writer Shane McCarthy pitched All Hail Megatron in direct response to a request from IDW for a tale that would change the whole direction of the line in hopes of regaining some of the ground lost as Simon Furman's run had wound on. Specifically featuring a cast made up almost entirely of 1984-1986 characters for their high recognizability, the series was originally intended as only six issues; Chris Ryall requested its expansion to twelve.[2] Similar to a tactic DC Comics had employed after its series Infinite Crisis two years prior, McCarthy jumped the entire IDW universe forward one year in time in order to present a story that could shock readers with its sudden, dramatic differences, the product of unseen changes that occurred within the "missing year". Originally, the series was slated to be issues #35–46 in the IDW overarching "sub-numbering" scheme,[3] leaving Furman twelve issues set during the "missing year" to wrap up any loose ends he could (though in the end, only nine issues were published across Revelation and Maximum Dinobots). Ultimately, however, the sub-numbering was dropped before release of the series.[4]

Drift on the cover to issue #6.

Unlike Furman's ongoing series of mini-series and inter-connected Spotlight issues, All Hail Megatron's twelve-issue run is almost entirely self-contained, with the only supplemental issues coming in the form of Spotlight: Jazz, featuring a framing story set during the events of the main series, and Spotlight: Drift, providing some backstory for McCarthy's original character Drift. This new Autobot made his debut in the pages of All Hail Megatron proper, and his introduction was heavily hyped by the company, garnering the character quite an infamous reputation as a polarizing figure in the fandom and marking him as one of the most distinctive elements of McCarthy's tenure on the brand for good or for ill. A small handful of other Spotlights were published while All Hail Megatron was running, but had nothing to do with the story; regardless, they would go on to be collected with Jazz and Drift in a trade paperback labelled as the third volume of the All Hail Megatron story.

Drift was not all that set the fandom's sensibilities ablaze: the abandonment of not just Furman's storyline, but nearly all of the unique elements (discussed in more detail below) he had introduced into IDW continuity, also sat ill with many readers. Whether planned or in response to this, with issue #7, All Hail Megatron abruptly began referring back to several of these elements (including what seemed a very hasty explanation for why Cybertron was habitable again), and soon, it was announced that a four-issue mini-series, All Hail Megatron: Coda, would follow the main twelve-issue series and feature stories set between Furman and McCarthy's runs that would deal with the assorted dropped concepts and continuity glitches. This idea ultimately fell through; instead, the four "Coda" issues were appended to the end of the series as issues #13-16, and mostly featured stories set after All Hail, paving the way for the upcoming ongoing series.[5]

Creative team

Hutchison's cover to issue #1.

Shane McCarthy wrote all twelve issues of the main series, which were predominantly illustrated by Guido Guidi and colored by Josh Burcham. A short lead-in time coupled with personal and family sickness meant that Guidi was not able to illustrate every issue, so Casey Coller, E. J. Su, Robert Deas and Emiliano Santalucia stepped in to provide back-up line art, while Deas also helped with coloring. The "B" variant covers for each issue were drawn by Trevor Hutchison in the style of Soviet Union propaganda posters.

Each of the four "Coda" issues was split into two eleven-page stories, written and drawn by several different creators. These opened with an Optimus Prime and Ironhide story by returning fan-favourites Simon Furman and Don Figueroa in issue #13, which saw Figueroa debut the new "skeletal" art style he would then employ as artist of the soon-to-debut ongoing series, and the first tale by incumbent ongoing writer Mike Costa, centred on Starscream with art by Chee Yang Ong. Issue #14 added an epilogue to Sunstreaker's story by the returning McCarthy and Santalucia, while line editor Andy Schmidt planted the seeds for future stories with his contribution to issue #14, covering the return of Galvatron, with art by IDW cover contest winner Andrew Griffith. Issue #15 was dedicated to explaining character transformations; while Denton J. Tipton and Casey Coller dealt with Perceptor's change from scientist to sniper, writer-artist Nick Roche returned to the character of Kup with a story that bridged Roche's earlier Spotlight: Kup with All Hail. Written with some assistance from James Roberts, this story transformed the "Rocherts" team into fandom darlings, resulting in their collaboration on the Last Stand of the Wreckers mini-series and defining the character of Prowl for the IDW universe. Lastly, issue #16 saw Mike Costa set up further plot points for the ongoing in a Spike Witwicky story with art by Guidi, while Chee returned to illustrate a Bumblebee story in #16 by Zander Cannon, paving the way for the Bumblebee mini-series the pair would soon produce.

Discrepancies

I knew from day one that this was going to piss some people off.

—Shane McCarthy on fan reaction to the changes in All Hail Megatron[6]

The Seekers' reversion to older F-15 alternate modes stood out as strange.

As noted above, All Hail Megatron has some odd discontinuities with the preceding storylines. Before All Hail, IDW's Transformers universe had very much been the vision of one creator—Furman—and was written very tightly, with most stories across different publications interrelating and forming a complex, unfolding tapestry. To then see so much of this ignored or thrown out as another creator took the reins of the universe proved aggravating to fans, and garnered All Hail an especially negative reputation at the time. As time has gone on and more and more creators have contributed to the IDW universe, making their own changes to what has gone before them, hindsight has seen All Hail's changes stand out far less in the grand scheme than they did when they first occurred, but as one of the more controversial aspects of a series that lasted an entire year, we here dedicate some space to noting the major offenses.

Most visibly, several characters were redesigned into their original Generation 1 forms; though done in the name of recognizability,[7] for characters like the Seekers, Astrotrain, and Ratbat, who had previously been given modern alternate forms in earlier stories, this stood out as especially technologically incongruous and illogical. On the flipside, characters such as Prowl, Sideswipe, and Sunstreaker were updated into new forms based on their concurrently-available Universe toys, at Hasbro's request.[8] The Seekers actually reflect both these approaches, as they've reverted from modern F-22s to F-15s (which they were in the original cartoon), but they're drawn in the style of their Masterpiece toys. This mix-and-match approach to design would only increase with the onset of the ongoing series, as artistic freedom resulted in characters changing designs from issue to issue, depending on artist.

The Matrix had a sudden introduction into IDW continuity.

Virtually all of the new technologies Furman introduced during his run such as Ultra-Energon, the Magnificence, and holomatter avatars were entirely discarded, with Pretender technology only getting a late-on nod in Kup's "Coda" story, its conveyance of ultimate power seemingly completely forgotten by the time of Perceptor's "Coda" tale, given the depiction of Bludgeon therein. The Matrix of Leadership was promptly retconned in as a key factor in IDW's history, despite not appearing in the story depicting the war's origin (years later, James Roberts's "Chaos Theory" would expand and explain this glitch), while the paucity of energon that drove the backstory of Furman's new vision seemed a thing of the past. The creation of the Insecticons is a major plot point in All Hail, despite two of the team's members previously appearing in Spotlight: Blaster and Megatron: Origin, while past depictions of IDW's eloquent Soundwave were ignored in favor of instating his monotone speech patterns from the original The Transformers cartoon.

Despite their initial remit of trying to fix glitches, the four Coda issues did not fare too well on the continuity front, immediately doing away with Starscream's change in heart from the main story's conclusion and partially re-writing a scene from Furman's Sunstreaker and Hunter story to skew it in another direction. It was Andy Schmidt's Galvatron story from #14 that proved most chaotic, full of legitimate errors rather than conscious changes, as the writer mixed up which of the Dead Universe Transformers could survive in the living universe longer than their comrades,[9] and invalidated an earlier reference to Scourge as a modern-day Decepticon (a nixed plot point that would have seen him presented as the Decepticon equivalent of Kup[10]) by presenting him as another of the Dead Universe legions. This story also mistakenly reiterated Cyclonus's "patriotic" personality, which was dismissed as a facade in Revelation, but future stories would continue to run with this depiction of the character as it proved far more interesting.

Motion comic pitch

In 2012, a motion comic version of All Hail Megatron was pitched to IDW Publishing by Sideshow Productions. The pitch (adapting a scene from the first issue) featured Daniel Ross as Starscream, David Sobolov as Megatron and Michael Bell as Scrapper and Skywarp. IDW rejected the pitch and the motion comic went unproduced.[11]

Notes

  • A persistent rumor among fans is that the series was originally conceived as an Evolutions title—a parallel universe, and the decision to incorporate it into the existing IDW storyline came later. However, no statements from the creators have backed this up, and the writer himself has claimed that it was never meant to be a hard reboot.[12]
  • Titan reprinted the series and some of the covers in their Revenge of the Fallen comic, in issues 1–8, making up titles for each chapter from the fourth part onwards. When plans changed, requiring the story to be cut-off with issue #8, they hacked up, edited, and pasted together three pages into one page and told readers to buy the trade paperbacks to get the whole story.
  • Guido Guidi made modernized designs for at least two characters which were eventually not used. The characters were Soundwave, who would have turned into a modern microcassette recorder — which reporters still use today — and Wheelie who was cut from the series due to Spotlight: Wheelie.
  • The story got a sort-of sequel eight years later, when the 50th issue of The Transformers kicked off "All Hail Optimus".

Collections

  • The Transformers: All Hail Megatron Volume 1 (February 18, 2009) ISBN 1600103715 / ISBN 978-1600103711
    • Collects All Hail Megatron issues #1–6.
    • Bonus material includes a cover gallery (not including the sketch covers). Also included is an art gallery consisting of Drift in both Cybertronian modes, and sketches of Cliffjumper, Perceptor, Soundwave, Ratbat, Frenzy, the Constructicons and Devastator.
    • Trade paperback format.
  • The Transformers: All Hail Megatron Volume 2 (September 16, 2009) ISBN 1600105246 / ISBN 978-1600105241
    • Collects All Hail Megatron issues #7–12.
    • Bonus material includes a cover gallery and a 2-page art gallery featuring sketches of Reflector, Frenzy, Kup and Hot Rod.
    • Trade paperback format.
  • The Transformers: All Hail Megatron Volume 3 (October 28, 2009) ISBN 1600105416 / ISBN 978-1600105418
    • Collects Spotlight: Blurr, Jazz, Drift, Cliffjumper and Metroplex.
    • Bonus material includes the alternate covers of each issue, as well as art of each Throttlebot by Marcelo Matere and new cover art by Trevor Hutchison.
    • Trade paperback format. Instead of being Volume 5 of the Spotlights, the TPB is labeled as part of the All Hail Megatron series. For some reason, the Drift and Cliffjumper issues were swapped from their original order.
  • The Transformers: All Hail Megatron Volume 4 (January 13, 2010) ISBN 1600105920 / ISBN 978-1600105920
    • Collects All Hail Megatron issues #13–16.
    • Bonus material consists of a cover gallery.
    • Trade paperback format.
  • The Transformers: All Hail Megatron — Book Club Edition (July 19, 2010) ISBN 1600108164 / ISBN 978-1600108167
    • Collects All Hail Megatron issues #1–12.
    • Bonus material consists of a cover gallery.
    • Science Fiction Book Club exclusive smaller-format softcover.
    • This edition is erroneously referred to as All Hail Megatron: Earth War in a few places. Notably absent among those places is anywhere on the book itself. The book's title is simply All Hail Megatron on the cover, inside cover, and spine. The colophon refers to the book as All Hail Megatron — Book Club Edition.
    • Trade paperback format.
  • The Transformers: The Complete All Hail Megatron (July 27, 2011) ISBN 1600109551 / ISBN 978-1600109553
    • Collects All Hail Megatron issues #1–16, and Spotlight: Blurr, Jazz, Drift, Cliffjumper & Metroplex.
    • Bonus material includes a cover gallery and the art sketches from previous collections.
    • New cover by Trevor Hutchison.
    • Hardcover format.
  • The Transformers: All Hail Megatron (Red Label) (March 18, 2015)[13]
    • Collects the entire four-volume series.
    • Limited to 350 copies.
    • Exclusive slipcase and cover.
    • Each book is numbered and signed by artist Guido Guidi.
    • Hardcover format.
  • The Transformers: The Complete All Hail Megatron (November 15, 2017) ISBN 168405219X / ISBN 978-1684052196
    • Collects All Hail Megatron issues #1–16, and Spotlight: Blurr, Jazz, Drift, Cliffjumper & Metroplex.
    • New material, if any currently unknown.
    • Trade paperback format.
  • Transformers: The Definitive G1 Collection: Volume 44: All Hail Megatron, Part 2 (December 27, 2017)
    • Collects All Hail Megatron issues #9–16.
    • A Decepticon Roll Call with mini-bios, and trivia about All Hail Megatron #13–16, pointing out notable plot points in the Coda issues.

International Printings

Spain

All Hail Megatron was translated and released in Spain by NORMA Editorial.

Volume 1

  • ISBN 978-84-679-0069-9

Volume 2

  • ISBN 978-84-679-0164-1

Japan

The Complete All Hail Megatron was translated and released in Japan by Shogakukan-Shueisha Productions.

  • Transformers: The Complete All Hail Megatron (March 23, 2015)
    • Collects All Hail Megatron issues #1–16, and Spotlight: Blurr, Jazz, Drift, Cliffjumper & Metroplex.
    • Bonus material includes a cover gallery and the art sketches from previous collections.
    • Trade paperback format.
  • ISBN 479687514X
  • ISBN 978-4796875141

References




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