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{{picsneeded|Preferably side-by-side photos of toys of the same character under different names, toys of different characters using the same name and such.}}
[[File:Bumblebee evolution.jpg|thumb|upright=2.5|Though every one of these characters has gone by the name '''[[Bumblebee (disambiguation)|Bumblebee]]''' at some point, they are all different interpretations of the core "Bumblebee" archetype. This kind of character "speciation" has been repeated again and again across the franchise.]]
A '''character''' is a fictional depiction of a [[Transformer]], a [[human]], an alien or another entity that might or might not have a [[toy]] representation. If there is a toy, the character is usually, but not always, based on the toy and intended as a means of promoting said toy.


Over the course of the numerous ''Transformers'' series and toy lines, some characters have changed their names, while in other cases, characters have appeared that share a name with another character but are separate individuals. Many characters also have counterparts in other [[continuity|continuities]] they may or may not share a lot of similarities with.
A '''character''' is a fictional depiction of an entity, usually a Transformer, that might or might not have a [[toy]] representation. If there is a toy, the character is usually, but not always, based on the toy and intended as a [[to sell toys|means of promoting said toy]].


[[Hasbro]]'s attitude towards the importance of characters has changed a lot since the launch of the [[Transformers brand]] in [[1984]].
Over the course of the numerous ''Transformers'' series and toylines, some characters have changed their names, while in other cases, characters have appeared that share a name with another character but are separate individuals. Many characters also have counterparts in other [[continuity|continuities]] they may or may not share a lot of similarities with.


==Character depiction==
[[Hasbro]]'s attitude towards the importance of characters has changed a lot since the launch of the [[Transformers brand|''Transformers'' brand]] in [[1984]].
A character can be depicted in several ways. One of the simplest forms is the [[bio]] often featured on the back of a toy's packaging, which is usually a brief write-up of the character's personality and abilities.


Characters are also featured in supporting media such as comics, TV shows, movies, video games or books. In the case of characters based on a toy, the depiction of the character will often be consistent across the various media—in theory, at least.
==What is a character?==
[[File:MegatronG2Hero Bio&TechSpecs.jpg|thumb|upright=0.85|right|The [[Tech Spec]] cards that came with the original ''Transformers'' toys introduced kids to the personality and story behind each toy.]]
Broadly speaking, every individual [[Transformer]], human, [[alien]], or other sentient being covered on this wiki is a character. Remember that ''sentient'' includes non-''sapient'' beings like [[Bob (IDW)|the Insecticon Bob]] and [[Freya]] the dog, as well as "are they technically alive or not?" artificial intelligences like the [[Diagnostic Drone]] and [[T-AI]].


Often, characters not based on existing toys may be created specifically for supporting media. They may be [[human]]s, but may also be Transformers or other aliens. In some cases, the same non-toy character appears in several different supporting media. Some of them might be turned into toys later on, due to the (often unexpected) popularity of those characters.
Most characters have received some kind of fiction that describes their personality, defining characteristics, and unusual abilities; this may be as simple as a [[bio]] on the back of a toy package, or as elaborate as an appearance in one of the many live-action ''Transformers'' films. And those that don't have fiction of some form but do have a toy? Well, they're still characters.


The reverse is possible as well: Some toy-based characters are featured as "main" characters in the primary fiction, some are reduced to a status as supporting characters, and some may even be mere toy-only characters.
In many cases, characters can appear in multiple different works of fiction simultaneously; iconic characters, like [[Optimus Prime (disambiguation)|Optimus Prime]] or [[Bumblebee (disambiguation)|Bumblebee]], have starred in multiple distinct [[continuity|continuities]], often at the same time. These depictions generally adhere to a singular "idea" of what the character represents, but these individual portrayals can vary wildly between tellers: see the Hasbro/[[Marvel Comics|Marvel]] depiction of [[Chromedome (G1)|Chromedome]] as a quiet computer programmer versus his ''[[Transformers: The Headmasters (cartoon)|The Headmasters]]'' portrayal as a hot-headed ''shonen'' hero versus [[IDW Publishing]]'s portrayal as a moody [[Mnemosurgery|mnemosurgeon]]. Similar cases exist throughout ''Transformers'' media. In some cases, one particularly popular incarnation of a character may go on to inform future developments; while based on his original [[Headmaster (technology)|Headmaster]] toy, the bio of Chromedome's 2016 ''[[Titans Return (toyline)|Titans Return]]'' toy, for instance, notes that the character can perform mnemosurgery on other 'bots.  


==Relevance==
In some cases, non-toy characters may appear in several different supporting media, such as the various humans who have gone by the surname "[[Witwicky (surname)|Witwicky]]". Some of them might be turned into toys later on, due to the (often unexpected) popularity of those characters; the various Witwickys, for instance, have received several toys as accessories alongside the larger Transformer figures.
[[Image:PowermasterOptimusPrime toy.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Hey, didn't I already have a toy?]]
Originally, Hasbro didn't put as much emphasis on outstanding characters for the ''Transformers'' toy line from a marketing standpoint as they do today. Toys were supposed to have a shelf life of two years at maximum, to be replaced by new toys, which would be entirely new characters. As a consequence, Hasbro only bothered to register a small number of [[trademark]]s in the 1980s, such as "[[Optimus Prime (G1)|Optimus Prime]]"<ref name="opuspto">[http://tarr.uspto.gov/servlet/tarr?regser=serial&entry=73496873 United States Patent and Trademark Office file for the trademark "Optimus Prime"], filed in 1984, registered in 1985.</ref> or "[[Soundwave (G1)|Soundwave]]"<ref name="swuspto">[http://tarr.uspto.gov/servlet/tarr?regser=serial&entry=73496875 United States Patent and Trademark Office file for the trademark "Soundwave"], filed in 1984, registered in 1985.</ref>.


Hasbro didn't originally realize how much of a crucial part recognizable characters had played in the success of the original ''Transformers'' series until they were facing the viewer backlash following Optimus Prime's death in ''[[The Transformers: The Movie]]''. Following that, more and more toys were designed to resemble—and named after—existing toys/characters. Starting with the ''[[Generation 2 (toyline)|Generation 2]]'' toy line, Hasbro began basing many toys from nearly every new line on existing "classic" characters.
{{-}}


In later years, the same character would get toy releases in multiple [[size class]]es in a very short period of time, especially if they were main characters in the primary fiction. In addition, a [[redeco]] of a toy is often a new version of the same character released under the same name (sometimes with an additional prefix or suffix such as "Cybertron Defense" or "GTS"), with an explanation for the color change given in the character [[bio]], and sometimes also in the supporting media fiction.
==Relevance==
[[File:Tftm1986a.jpg|thumb|upright=1.4|The decision to kill off most of Hasbro's 1984~85 product range in the original ''Transformers'' film was poorly received by the movie's target demographic.]]
As a toymaker first and foremost, Hasbro didn't put much emphasis onto "character" during the earliest years of the ''Transformers'' franchise; the marketing department saw them as mere products—expected to have a two-year shelf life before they were replaced by new toys and new characters. It would be Marvel writer [[Bob Budiansky]] that provided early toys with names, roles, and personalities, turning them into full-fledged characters that would, in turn, find their way into the [[The Transformers (Marvel comic)|Marvel comic]] and [[The Transformers (cartoon)|Sunbow cartoon]]. As a consequence, Hasbro only bothered to register a small number of [[trademark]]s in the 1980s, such as "[[Optimus Prime (G1)|Optimus Prime]]"<ref name="opuspto">[http://tarr.uspto.gov/servlet/tarr?regser=serial&entry=73496873 United States Patent and Trademark Office file for the trademark "Optimus Prime"], filed in 1984, registered in 1985.</ref> or "[[Soundwave (G1)|Soundwave]]".<ref name="swuspto">[http://tarr.uspto.gov/servlet/tarr?regser=serial&entry=73496875 United States Patent and Trademark Office file for the trademark "Soundwave"], filed in 1984, registered in 1985.</ref> Unbeknownst to Hasbro, however, their ''Transformers'' media blitz meant that children had ''connected'' to these robots as relatable characters. Kids didn't just see them as colorful robot toys—for all intents and purposes, the toy ''was'' that character.  


==Same or different character?==
In 1986, Hasbro released the big-deal super-hyped ''[[The Transformers: The Movie]]'' to theaters. The 1984 toys that had kicked off the franchise—Optimus Prime, [[Ironhide (G1)|Ironhide]], [[Prowl (G1)|Prowl]], etc.— had largely left store shelves by this time, and Hasbro saw fit to begin the movie by "clearing the deck;" hoping to [[To sell toys|advertise]] the 1986 toyline, the opening battle of ''The Transformers: The Movie'' would feature the abrupt and violent deaths of many of these beloved characters, leaving the story free to focus on that year's brand-new toyline. The immediate backlash amongst young fans that this decision generated quickly led to the cartoon's writers resurrecting Optimus Prime in the series less than a year later, but the incident caused Hasbro to realize how much of a crucial role recognizable characters had played in the success of the ''Transformers'' line.
Considering the large number of different Transformers [[toy]]s, toy lines and [[continuity|continuities]], there have been many instances where a character has used a different name, two or more characters shared the same name, and a character has different incarnations in different continuities. Figuring out whether two characters are actually one and the same or not may sometimes be a difficult task even for longtime fans, and in some instances people's views on the matter may differ.


===According to fiction===
''[[Beast Wars: Transformers (cartoon)|Beast Wars]]'', the next ''Transformers'' show to hit the airwaves in the 1990s, turned the limitation of its expensive computer animation into a new advantage; as introducing all of the ''Beast Wars'' toys in the show would be impossible, the writers chose to focus on a small handful of [[Maximal]]s and [[Predacon (BW)|Predacons]], rotating the characters in and out to keep up with new toys on the shelves. The result was that each individual ''Beast Wars'' character had a greater amount of screentime than the oft-bloated cast of the 1984 cartoon, allowing the writers to tell deeper and more multifaceted stories involving these characters. With some exceptions, this tactic would become the general approach to most ''Transformers'' storytelling: a small onscreen cast supported by a larger group of toy-exclusive characters boosted by simple association with the cartoon.
====Same universe, same character, different name====
Sometimes a single character [[renaming|might have multiple names]]. Typically, this happens when Hasbro wants to release a [[Generation 1 reissues|reissue]] of an old toy, or a new toy based on an existing character, but the [[trademark]] for the old toy's name is no longer available. They will most often choose a different yet similar name for the new toy, even though it's very obvious it's still intended to be the same character. [[Bluestreak (G1)|Bluestreak's]] modern toys have been released under the new name "Silverstreak" (though this is presumably going to change now), [[Hot Rod (G1)|Hot Rod]]'s new toys first became "Rodimus Major" and later simply "Rodimus", and [[Bombshell (G1)|Bombshell]] has been recently renamed into "Hardshell".


Sometimes, a character changes his name in a very short span of time. A frequent reason for this is that Hasbro and Takara plan to release a new toy that represents an "upgraded" form of the original toy/character, and the new name puts more emphasis on this change. Hot Rod was upgraded into Rodimus Prime in ''[[The Transformers: The Movie]]'' (1986), and ''[[Cybertron (franchise)|Cybertron]]'' [[Overhaul (Cybertron)|Overhaul]] later became Leobreaker.
==Naming conventions==
[[File:Wheeljack-AR-DVD.jpg|thumb|upright=1.4|''Armada'' [[Wheeljack (Armada)|Wheeljack]] had little to do with the [[Wheeljack (G1)|Generation 1 character of the same name.]]]]


Usually those name changes are reflected in the accompanying fiction. Sometimes a name change is also exclusively used in fiction to explain the "origin" of a character: The [[Generation 1 (franchise)|Generation 1]] comics by [[The Transformers (Marvel comic)#Marvel UK|Marvel UK]] revealed that the [[Dinobot (G1)|Dinobot]] [[Swoop (G1)|Swoop]] used to go by the name "Divebomb" until a [[Predacon (G1)|Predacon]] humiliated him and [[Divebomb (G1)|claimed the name as his own]]. Likewise, the [[Energon (cartoon)|''Energon'' cartoon]] revealed that [[Wing Saber (Energon)|Wing Saber's]] original name was "Wing Dagger". Neither name was ever used for the corresponding toys.
Despite having realized the role that strong, likeable characters played in their franchise, Hasbro continued to take a somewhat scattershot approach to the names of ''Transformers'' characters for some time. As Hasbro repeatedly rebooted the ''Transformers'' franchise in the late 90s and 2000s, while "core" character names were ''generally'' safe, it was common to shuffle pre-existing names around, sometimes tacking them onto characters that were utterly unrelated to their original uses. Part of this was, of course, an effort to maintain valuable [[Trademark]] ownership of "major" names for future use, but it did lead to some oddities. Examples include "[[Soundwave (BW)|Soundwave]]" the heroic [[Mutant (BW)|Mutant]] bat from ''Beast Wars'', "[[Grimlock (RID 2001)|Grimlock]]" the upbeat excavator from ''Robots in Disguise'', and "[[Wheeljack (Armada)|Wheeljack]]" the brooding young Autobot-turned-Decepticon from ''Armada''.  


Lastly, a character might also have different names for different markets. [[TakaraTomy|Takara]] usually calls their toys of [[Optimus Prime (disambiguation)|Optimus Prime]] and [[Optimus Primal]] "Convoy", [[Jazz (disambiguation)|Jazz]] is known as "Meister", [[Sideswipe (G1)|Sideswipe]] becomes "Lambor", and so on (although that practice is currently changing). In return, Hasbro gave many ''[[Robots in Disguise (toyline)|Robots in Disguise]]'' toys different names when they ported the ''Car Robots'' line to their markets. Furthermore, [[Generation 1 (European toyline)|some toys released in Europe]] after the [[The Transformers (toyline)|original toy line]] had ended in the USA got different (but usually English or English-derived) names for different markets, and when Hasbro eventually released those toys in the USA as part of the ''[[Generation 2 (toyline)|Generation 2]]'' toy line, they were renamed again. But since all name [[variant]]s of those toys featured the same [[bio]]s (albeit in different languages), they're commonly considered to be the same characters by fans.
Conversely, 2004's ''[[Transformers: Energon (franchise)|Energon]]'' franchise would feature several characters obviously physically based on "Generation 1" characters (no doubt a facet of 2004 being the 20th anniversary of the ''Transformers'' brand), but their names were being used elsewhere or otherwise unavailable, giving us "[[Shockblast]]" and "[[Downshift (Energon)|Downshift]]" who were ''heavily'' recognizable as new takes on [[Shockwave (G1)|Shockwave]] and [[Wheeljack (G1)|the original Wheeljack]]. (This of course is to say nothing about their in-fiction portrayals... and in these two cases in particular, they had little in common with their visual inspirations, personality-wise.) This was an issue on both sides of the world; in Japan, the ''Armada'' Mini-Con "[[Sureshock (Armada)|Sureshock]]" was named "Arcee", which meant that when the direct-sequel series featured an [[Omnicon]] blatantly designed after [[Arcee (G1)|Generation 1 Arcee]] and called "[[Arcee (Energon)|Arcee]]" in Hasbro markets, Takara had to give her the name "Ariel".


An odd case is the ''[[Universe (2008 toyline)|Universe]]'' [[Robot Heroes (toyline)|Robot Heroes]] figure "Snarl": Like ''[[Transformers Animated (toyline)|Animated]]'' [[Snarl (Animated)|Snarl]], he was designed with ''[[Generation 1 (franchise)|Generation 1]]'' [[Slag (G1)|Slag]] in mind, but when Hasbro realized that the word "slag" is considered an expletive in the United Kingdom, they decided to change the toys' names to that of Slag's fellow [[Dinobot (G1)|Dinobot]] [[Snarl (G1)|Snarl]]. Since the ''Robot Heroes'' figure pretty obviously looks like the G1 Slag character, fans generally consider him to be Slag under a different name, rather than G1 Snarl in the body of G1 Slag.
It was not until 2007, and the launch of the [[live-action film series]], that the trends would shift heavily and various "legacy" names would slowly find their way back onto a solid "archetype", with that year's [[Transformers (film)|''Transformers'']] film featuring a handful of Autobots more-or-less based on their Generation 1 personalities. Subsequent mass-market franchises, such as that year's ''[[Transformers Animated (franchise)|Transformers Animated]]'' franchise, and 2010's ''[[Transformers: Prime (franchise)|Transformers: Prime]]'', would continue to realign character names with their Generation 1 appearances and personalities. Though these installments would also introduce brand-new characters to the series... sometimes using old names from minor characters and effectively becoming "the" character associated with that name, such as ''Prime'' [[Knock Out (Prime)|Knock Out]] and 2015's ''Robots in Disguise'' [[Strongarm (RID)|Strongarm]].


It gets more difficult with unusual cases, though, particularly with toys and characters "imported" from Japan to the USA many years after the fact. [[Commemorative Series]] [[Ricochet (Headmasters)|Ricochet]] is considered the same character as ''[[The Headmasters (franchise)|Headmasters]]'' Stepper. Other cases are less clear; see "questionable cases" below.
{{-}}


====Same universe, same name, different character====
==Changing attitudes and brand unification==
Many times multiple characters go by the same name even though they're entirely different individuals. The more common case is when two entirely different characters in two different [[continuity|continuities]] share the same name (discussed below); but this can also happen within the same continuity. Even though some fans tend to call [[Hasbro]] "lazy" because of this, there is some logic to it: If more than one [[human]] can go by the name "Bob Smith", why shouldn't the name [[Prowl (disambiguation)|Prowl]] be shared between several [[Cybertron (planet)|Cybertronian]] citizens?
[[File:ShadowStriker-SSVSBumblebee.jpg|right|thumb|upright=1.66|''Cyberverse'' Bumblebee, an amalgam of several past Bumblebees in design and concept, tangles with [[Shadow Striker (Cyberverse)|Shadow Striker]], a new character introduced in the series.]]


It started with [[Barrage (Insecticon)|Barrage]] the [[Insecticon (G1)|Insecticon]] from 1985 and [[Barrage (Micromaster)|Barrage]] the [[Micromaster]] from 1990, and [[Sky High (Pretender)|Sky High]] the [[Pretender]] from 1988 and [[Sky High (Micromaster)|Sky High]] the Micromaster from 1990. ''[[Generation 2 (toyline)|Generation 2]]'' introduced more same-name characters, as did ''[[Beast Wars (toyline)|Beast Wars]]'' and ''[[Beast Machines (toyline)|Beast Machines]]''.
The debut of the [[Aligned continuity family|"Aligned" take on ''Transformers'']] (heralded mainly by the [[Transformers: Prime (cartoon)|''Transformers: Prime'' cartoon]]) hit right at the beginning of the Hollywood nostalgia boom, due in part to the recent debut of the {{w|Marvel Cinematic Universe}} and its new approach to comic book adaptations. This pop-cultural shift would prompt [[Hasbro]] to develop a more coherent approach to the jumbled ''Transformers'' multiverse. 2010's ''[[Transformers: War for Cybertron (games)|War for Cybertron]]'' video games were the first installment of the Aligned franchise, a distinctly G1-esque take on the ''Transformers'' continuity that featured just about every major cartoon character in some capacity, all more-or-less faithful to their original designs and personalities.  


The ''[[Unicron Trilogy]]'' was equally guilty of this, with names such as [[Dirt Boss (disambiguation)|Dirt Boss]], [[Mirage (disambiguation)|Mirage]] and [[Downshift (disambiguation)|Downshift]] assigned to several different characters, most of them [[Mini-Con]]s. Hasbro did, however, attempt to avoid attributing the same name to two different [[bulk|''Unicron Trilogy'' characters who ''weren't'' Mini-Cons]]. For example, an ''[[Energon (franchise)|Energon]]'' character that resembles ''[[Generation 1 (franchise)|Generation 1]]'' [[Wheeljack (G1)|Wheeljack]] was named "[[Downshift (Energon)|Downshift]]" because the name "[[Wheeljack (Armada)|Wheeljack]]" had already been used by a major ''[[Armada (franchise)|Armada]]'' character.
Though the Aligned continuity would subsequently deviate from this aesthetic, the idea seems to have struck a chord with Hasbro; in late 2016, Hasbro would reveal a new "[[evergreen]]" style for just about every major ''Transformers'' character, beginning with ancillary side merchandise and eventually bleeding into the mass-market through [[IDW Publishing]]'s [[2005 IDW continuity|ongoing comics]], where many major characters would be redesigned into these new forms. 2018's ''[[Transformers: Cyberverse (franchise)|Cyberverse]]'' franchise would see many characters sporting these evergreen bodies.  


Takara took similar steps during their version of the "Micron Trilogy": ''Armada'' [[Scavenger (Armada)|Scavenger]] had been named "Devastar" (the Japanese name of ''Generation 1'' [[Devastator (G1)|Devastator]]) in Japan, so Takara's version of [[Constructicon Maximus]] (a G1 Devastator [[homage]]) was named "Buildron" instead. Likewise, ''Armada'' [[Blurr (Armada)|Blurr's]] Japanese name was "Silverbolt", hence the Japanese version of ''Energon'' [[Storm Jet (Energon)|Storm Jet]] became "Afterburner" instead. And since the ''Micron Densetsu'' version of ''Armada'' [[Sureshock (Armada)|Sureshock]] had already been named "Arcee", the ''Superlink'' version of ''Energon'' [[Arcee (Energon)|Arcee]] became "Ariel".
On the other hand, Hasbro and its licensees have been unafraid to create brand-new characters; 2014-15 brought the debut of [[Windblade (disambiguation)|Windblade]] the Autobot [[cityspeaker]] and [[Victorion]] the all-female [[combiner]]. Additionally, many IDW-original characters such as the [[Decepticon Justice Division|DJD]] and [[Aileron]] have proved popular with fans, with some like [[Nautica (G1)#Toys|Nautica]] and [[Rung (G1)#Toys|Rung]] even seeing mass-market release as new toys. As fresh faces represent new storytelling opportunities and, more importantly, new toys, it's safe to say that the ''Transformers'' franchise will never run out of new characters to introduce.


The [[live-action film series]] once again gives us multiple characters within the same continuity using the same name, such as ''[[Movie (toyline)|2007's]]'' [[Jolt (Movie)|Jolt]] and ''[[Revenge of the Fallen (franchise)|Revenge of the Fallen]]'' [[Jolt (ROTF)|Jolt]], or [[Mudflap (Movie)|Mudflap]] and ''Revenge of the Fallen'' [[Mudflap (ROTF)|Mudflap]].
{{-}}


Again, there is room for confusion: Are ''Armada'' [[Jolt (Armada)|Jolt]] and ''Cybertron'' [[Jolt (Cybertron)|Jolt]] the same or different characters? For the really confusing cases, once again see below for "questionable cases".
==Characters and the wiki==
: ''See also: [[Continuity family]]''
[[File:KnockOutShockwave TheToxicTransformer.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|[[Knock Out (G1)#Of Masters And Mayhem|One version of Knock Out]] complicates matters by cheekily combining traits from his [[Knock Out (Prime)|''Prime'']] and [[Knockout (G1)|Generation 1 Micromaster]] namesakes. Similar amalgamations have caused no small amount of debate on the wiki as to where a character best fits under our organizational schema.]]


====Different universe, same name, different character incarnation====
Unlike many other popular sci-fi franchises, ''Transformers'' is not a single long-running story set in one universe, ''à la'' ''[[Star Wars (franchise)|Star Wars]]'' or ''[[Star Trek]]''; rather, it is a vast entity made up of many smaller series, most of which are mutually exclusive to each other — in the Generation 1 family alone, the [[Generation 1 cartoon continuity|cartoon]], [[Marvel Comics continuity|Marvel comic]], [[Dreamwave Generation One continuity|Dreamwave comic]], [[2005 IDW continuity|IDW (2005)]] and [[2019 IDW continuity|IDW (2019)]] continuities all tell stories that, while broadly similar, are fundamentally irreconcilable.  
[[Image:WMTheLegacyOfBumblebee.jpg|thumb|300 px|This is rare: Three different character incarnations using the same name in one package.]]Since the inception of the [[Transformers brand]] in 1984, the various series and toy lines have introduced multiple [[continuity|continuities]]. Several [[franchise]]s may be set within the same continuity, while the same franchise might have incarnations in several slightly different universes. Either way, some universes, especially those from different franchises, are very different from each other—for example, the [[Unicron Trilogy]] and the [[live-action film series]].


Nevertheless, characters may appear in those universes that share not only the same name, but also distinct physical traits and similar basic characterizations. [[Generation 1 (franchise)|Generation 1]] [[Optimus Prime (G1)|Optimus Prime]] has a [[Optimus Prime (Armada)|counterpart]] in the Unicron Trilogy and [[Optimus Prime (Movie)|another one]] in the Movie-verse. Likewise, Generation 1 [[Bumblebee (G1)|Bumblebee]] had a [[Bumblebee (Movie)|live-action]] and an ''[[Transformers Animated (franchise)|Animated]]'' [[Bumblebee (Animated)|counterpart]]. Although the general audience might simply consider them all the same characters, most fans view them as different incarnations of the same general character archetype.
On the {{SITENAME}}, we therefore align characters by what we call "[[continuity family]];" basically loose groupings of [[franchises]] that follow a rough internal theme/[[continuity]]. For instance, every appearance of the "Generation 1" version of Fortress Maximus can be found under [[Fortress Maximus (G1)]]. No matter how divergent one portrayal is from the other—the [[The Transformers (cartoon)|cartoon's]] portrayal of Maximus as a nonsentient battlesuit, his [[Marvel Comics]] depiction as a weary pacifist-turned-reluctant-warrior, or even his IDW depiction as a toughened prison guard—we consider that, since they all appeared in different versions of what we call the "[[Generation 1 continuity family]]", they are different incarnations of the same character.  
{{-}}


====Different universe, same name, different character====
Conversely, largely-identical versions of the same character may be split up across several pages according to their continuity family of origin. For example, the vain Decepticon medic [[Knock Out (Prime)|Knock Out]] was a breakout new character in the ''[[Transformers: Prime (cartoon)|Transformers: Prime]]'' cartoon, to the point where an ''incredibly'' similar take on him appeared as a major character in the 2005 IDW continuity. Specific details were tweaked to fit him into the universe, but in both appearance and personality, the characters are largely identical. ''However'', since ''this'' version of the character appeared in IDW's Generation 1 continuity, we consider "[[Knock Out (G1)]]" to be a ''different'' version of the character, if only for organizational purposes, as he appeared in a different continuity family.
Characters in different universes might also use the same name despite having nothing else in common. For most fans, this is less problematic than two characters with the same name in the same universe, since it's entirely possible that a White supremacist, a Buddhist monk or a genius child in another universe might also be named [[Barack Obama]].
;Why Do We Do This?
If that example seems a bit silly... well, it kind of is, but it's important to note that his case is a bit of an outlier, and that has a lot to do with changes in how Hasbro and its licensees have been treating characters since this wiki's creation. {{SITENAME}} was founded during the reign of the "[[Unicron Trilogy continuity family|Unicron Triology]]", a time when ''Transformers'' toys and media were nowhere near as numerous and diverse as they have been in recent history, and ''were'' pretty strictly regimented, which would be the case for many years as ''Transformers'' would get a full hard-stop reboot every now and then. While previous characters might end up with analogues in whatever new franchise pops up, they were usually heavily re-interpreted for said new franchise, such as how the [[Bulkhead (Animated)|character "Bulkhead" from ''Animated'']] would get reworked to [[Bulkhead (Prime)|the similar ''Prime'' "Bulkhead"]]. And both are ''completely'' different from the [[Bulkhead (Energon)|previous holder of the name, from ''Energon'']] (well, aside from being green).


Therefore, ''[[Movie (franchise)|Movie]]'' [[Barricade (Movie)|Barricade]] is an entirely different character than [[Generation 1 (franchise)|Generation 1]] [[Micromaster]] [[Barricade (G1)|Barricade]], and both are entirely different characters than ''[[Energon (franchise)|Energon]]'' [[Barricade (Energon)|Barricade]]. Likewise, ''[[Cybertron (franchise)|Cybertron]]'' [[Mini-Con]] [[Shockwave (Cybertron)|Shockwave]] has nothing in common with Generation 1 [[Shockwave (G1)|Shockwave]] other than the name.
And really, how useful do you think lumping every iteration of [[Starscream (disambiguation)|Starscream]] together, regardless of franchise, would really be?


A common reason for this is that [[Hasbro]] wants to protect their [[trademark]]s. When no new toy based on the original [[Thunderwing (G1)|Thunderwing]] is planned for the foreseeable future, Hasbro will simply slap the name on the [[Thunderwing (Classics)|next available Mini-Con]] to make sure the name is used in commerce for another term. Considering the large number of [[homage]] toys in recent years, however, this practice is applied less often than in the past.
For the first 30 years of the brand, it was rare, if not nigh-unheard-of, for a character to basically be "transplanted" from one very-different franchise to another with minimal changes until the height of [[IDW Publishing]]'s original comic run. While that series is considered "Generation 1" many writers began to pull popular characters from other non-"G1" franchises and drop them into the story. While this has led to some quibble, as an organizational tool, it ''does'' in general work better to have the IDW "G1" Knock Out have his own separate page for his adventures, regardless of how similar to the original he is.


====Different universe, different name, similar character====
Of course, there's always extra-outliers and troublemakers, thus the need for some flexibility in special circumstances.
[[Image:UniverseBrawnvsCybertronOverhaul.jpg|thumb|200 px|left|Say, sir, you look familiar.]]These ones are the most difficult to categorize: There can be characters based on characters from older franchises with their own universes which are given different names (often for [[trademark]] reasons). There's ''something'' that ties them to the older character, be it the characterization, a still similar, but more lawyer-friendly name, a similar [[alternate mode]] or a similar color scheme and/or deco. However, for the purposes of this wiki, these are usually ''not'' considered alternate versions of differently-named characters from different universes, but mere [[homage]]s.


For example, ''[[Energon (franchise)|Energon]]'' featured a character who was obviously based on ''[[Generation 1 (franchise)|Generation 1]]'' [[Shockwave (G1)|Shockwave]], but was named "[[Shockblast]]" for trademark reasons. (However, the ''[[Alternators]]'' toy of G1 Shockwave was ''also'' named "Shockblast" for trademark reasons, thus making the connection stronger.) Meanwhile, another ''Energon'' character who was visually based on ''Generation 1'' [[Wheeljack (G1)|Wheeljack]] (but had a different personality) was named "[[Downshift (Energon)|Downshift]]" instead, because there had already been a major character named [[Wheeljack (Armada)|Wheeljack]]" in the previous, same-universe franchise, ''[[Armada (franchise)|Armada]]''. (The [[Energon (cartoon)|''Energon'' cartoon]], however, mixed up Downshift's name with that of his fellow Autobot [[Cliffjumper (Energon)|Cliffjumper]] more often than not.)
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Similarly, ''Armada'' [[Hot Shot (Armada)|Hot Shot]] essentially occupied the position of ''Generation 1'' [[Bumblebee (G1)|Bumblebee]] as the main "yellow kid-appeal character" in the [[Unicron Trilogy]] universe with some elements of G1 [[Hot Rod (G1)|Hot Rod]] mixed in (in fact, Takara's ''Micron Legend'' name for Hot Shot ''was'' "Hot Rod"), mostly because the latter two names were both unavailable to Hasbro for trademark reasons during that time. (As a matter of fact, ''[[Transformers Animated (franchise)|Animated]]'' [[Bumblebee (Animated)|Bumblebee]] was originally intended to be named "Hot Shot", but was renamed when ''[[Movie (franchise)|Movie]]'' [[Bumblebee (Movie)|Bumblebee]] became a household name overnight, easily overshadowing the popularity of UT Hot Shot.) Furthermore, ''[[Cybertron (franchise)|Cybertron]]'' [[Overhaul (Cybertron)|Overhaul's]] color scheme was based on ''Generation 1'' [[Brawn (G1)|Brawn]] (even though Overhaul had previously been designed with G1 [[Trailbreaker (G1)|Trailbreaker]] in mind, most of that was scrapped when it turned out the name was unavailable for [[trademark]] reasons), whose personality also happens to be similar to Overhaul's.
==Gray areas==
With a franchise as large, sprawling, and convoluted as ''Transformers'', it can sometimes be hard to tell what separates one character or toy from another; this section goes over some of the more common "gray areas" that have cropped up during the history of the wiki, often involving the thorny issue of [[toy]]s and how they relate to their in-fiction depictions.


===Toys vs. fiction===
===Micro-continuities===
====Same toy, same universe, different company, different character====
[[File:Optimusprimaltoyultraape.jpg|thumb|upright=1.66|As a result of an early promotional comic, this toy of [[Optimus Primal (BW)|Optimus Primal]] simultaneously represents a new character ''and'' an upgraded version of the Autobot leader [[Optimus Prime (G1)|Optimus Prime]].]]
[[Image:WindchargerOverdrive.jpg|thumb|250px|right|We're different guys, honest.]]In some cases, the [[Hasbro]] and [[Takara]] versions of a toy represent different characters.
{{main|Micro-continuity}}


This was more common during ''[[The Transformers (toyline)|Generation 1]]'', when the Hasbro and Takara lines started to diverge more and more. For the 1987 lineup, one could still debate whether the [[Headmaster (technology)|Headmasters]] and [[Targetmaster]]s such as [[Scorponok (G1)|Scorponok/Megazarak]] were to be considered different interpretations of the same characters, or fully-fledged separate characters... however, the Hasbro Headmasters' Nebulan partners (such as [[Zarak (Nebulan)|Zarak]]) were treated as the same characters as their larger "[[Transtector]]" robots in Japanese fiction, and the Targetmaster Nebulans were robots rather than organic aliens in Japanese fiction. Also notably, Targetmaster Nebulans [[Nightstick (Cyclonus)|Nightstick]] (from [[Cyclonus (G1)|Cyclonus]]) and [[Fracas]] (from [[Scourge (G1)|Scourge]]) got repurposed (but not or only minimally [[redeco]]ed) to new Targetmaster toys [[Ricochet (Headmasters)|Stepper]] and [[Artfire (Headmasters)|Artfire]] and renamed into "[[Nightstick (Ricochet)|Nebulon]]" and "[[Nightstick (Artfire)|Nightstick]]" for the Japanese market, respectively. Hasbro later released a [[Commemorative Series]] "[[Generation 1 reissues|reissue]]" of Stepper in the USA under the name "Ricochet", renaming "Nebulon" into "Nightstick"... but there's no official information whether this Nightstick is in any way related to Cyclonus's Nightstick.
Most ''Transformers'' [[franchises]] are supported by a toyline and one or two "pillars": usually a television show or comic book designed to advertise the toys. In some cases, however, early promotional material has created entirely new continuities, which we call "[[Micro-continuity|micro-continuities]]", out of a handful of promotional materials. In some notable cases, these have created entirely new characters by conflating other characters together. Most infamous was the [[Optimus Primal vs Megatron!|very first ''Beast Wars'' comic]], which treated the setting as an extension of the Autobot-Decepticon war on contemporary Earth and depicted [[Optimus Primal (BW)|Optimus Primal]] and [[Megatron (BW)|Megatron]] as merely the newest forms of the original Optimus Prime and Megatron.


When Takara turned to ''[[Super-God Masterforce (franchise)|Masterforce]]'' and ''[[Victory (franchise)|Victory]]'', differences between the toys and their Hasbro counterparts started to become more apparent, while the characters were almost exclusively separate entities. Some toys sported entirely different decos between the two companies or even [[mold]] differences, with cases like [[Nightbeat (G1)|Nightbeat]]/[[Minerva (Masterforce)|Minerva]] or [[Crossblades (G1)|Crossblades]]/[[Blue Bacchus]] and [[Thunderwing (G1)|Thunderwing]]/[[Black Shadow]] really stressing the definition of "same toy", effectively making them concurrently released redecos or [[retool]]s. Other cases such as [[Siren]]/[[Shūta Gō|Goshooter]], [[Dreadwind (G1)|Dreadwind]]/[[Buster (Masterforce)|Buster]] and [[Darkwing]]/[[Hydra (Masterforce)|Hydra]] or [[Doubledealer]]/[[Clouder|Doublecoulder]] are less definitive, and yet again others like [[Hosehead]]/[[Cab|Carb]] or [[Squeezeplay]]/[[Cancer]] are virtually indistinguishable from each other in toy form. In what may be the most prominent example, [[Ginrai|Super/God Ginrai]], whose toy was the (slightly superior) counterpart of Hasbro's [[Powermaster]] [[Optimus Prime (G1)/toys|Optimus Prime]] but a separate character from Convoy (Optimus Prime's Japanese name), was later released by Hasbro as a Commemorative Series "reissue" named "Powermaster Optimus Prime", with minimal differences to Takara's previously released God Ginrai reissue, unlike the more obviously different 1988 releases of the respective toys.
The ''Beast Wars'' television show would quickly clarify that Primal and Megatron ''were'' their own characters, who hailed from the distant future; as a result of this comic, however, you ''will'' find early ''Beast Wars'' figures on the toy pages for both Optimus Prime and Megatron—because this comic established that, in at least one small continuity, those toys ''were'' Optimus Prime and the Decepticon Megatron.


In later years, the Hasbro and Takara versions of a toy almost exclusively represent the same character, with very rare exceptions. Sometimes this can happen for [[trademark]] reasons, when a toy was designed as a new version of a ''[[Generation 1 (franchise)|Generation 1]]'' character, but Hasbro can't release the toy under the name of the character it's designed to represent. Usually the substitute name just makes it the same character under a different name (as mentioned above), but sometimes the name is taken from a different ''Generation 1'' character. The most prominent example is ''[[Alternators]]'' [[Windcharger (G1)#Alternators|Windcharger]], who was actually designed with the [[Omnibot (G1)|Omnibot]] [[Overdrive#Binaltech|Overdrive]] in mind, and was in fact released under that name in Takara's ''Binaltech'' version of the line.
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In other cases, the cause might be a miscommunication (or disagreement) between Hasbro and Takara: While Hasbro intended ''[[Armada (toyline)|Armada]]'' [[Thundercracker (Armada)|Thundercracker]] as a different character than [[Starscream (Armada)|Starscream]], whom he was [[redeco]]ed from, the [[Armada (cartoon)|''Micron Legend'' cartoon]] made the "Thundercracker" colors an upgraded form of Starscream, and Takara released their version of the toy under the name "Starscream S" ("Super Mode"). The English ''Armada'' dub of the cartoon tried to "fix" the error by having Starscream remark that he "look[s] like Thundercracker" in his new colors.
===Repurposing===
[[File:Movie-toy Storm Surge.jpg|thumb|upright=1.66|Storm Surge's toy can be used to represent both the movie Decepticon, or with some imagination, the evil Autobot Seaspray.]]


Things got worse during ''[[Energon (franchise)|Energon]]'': Even though [[Inferno (Energon)|Inferno's]] redeco was released as a new character named "[[Roadblock (Energon)|Roadblock]]" by Hasbro, the [[Energon (cartoon)|cartoon]] made him an upgraded version of Inferno, and Takara appropriately released him as "Inferno V" ("Volt"). Likewise, the redeco of ''Energon'' [[Jetfire (Armada)|Jetfire]] ("Skyfire" in Japan), released as "Skyfire S" ("Sonic") by Takara, was released as a different character named "[[Overcast (Energon)|Overcast]]" by Hasbro, whom the [[bio]] then identified as Jetfire's long-lost brother. The same thing effectively happened with [[Landmine (Energon)|Landmine]] and [[Cliffjumper (Energon)|Cliffjumper]], whose redecos were released by Hasbro as new characters named [[Landquake (Energon)|Landquake]] and [[Beachcomber (Energon)|Beachcomber]], respectively, despite the cartoon once again depicting the new colors as "upgraded" versions of the same characters. However, Takara ultimately never released their own versions of these redecos.
{{main|Repurposing}}


There's also the odd "different branch of the same company" case: The ''[[Generation 2 (toyline)|Generation 2]]'' "Hero" [[Optimus Prime (G1)/toys|Optimus Prime]] and [[Megatron (G1)/toys|Megatron]] toys got a bizarre treatment for their [[Generation 2 (European toyline)|European releases]]—stripped of the [[sticker]] texts that identified the US toys as Optimus Prime and Megatron, they were sold as separate characters named [[Sureshot (G2)|Sureshot]] and [[Archforce]], respectively.
In some cases, a toy might simultaneously represent two or more entirely different characters. This was more common during the tail end of ''[[The Transformers (toyline)|Generation 1]]'', when the Hasbro and Takara lines began to diverge; for instance, any [[Headmaster (technology)|Headmaster]] toy could—depending on if you lived in Japan or the US—be interpreted as either an organic [[Nebulan]] in armor, or a small robot colonist from the planet [[Master (planet)|Master]]. In other cases, the cause might be a miscommunication (or disagreement) between Hasbro and Takara: while Hasbro intended ''[[Transformers: Armada (toyline)|Armada]]'' [[Thundercracker (Armada)|Thundercracker]] as a different character than [[Starscream (Armada)/Cartoon continuity|Starscream]], whom he was [[redeco]]ed from, the [[Transformers: Armada (cartoon)|''Legends of the Microns'' cartoon]] made the "Thundercracker" colors an upgraded form of Starscream, and Takara released their version of the toy under the name "Starscream S" ("Super Mode"). The English ''Armada'' dub of the cartoon tried to "explain" the discrepancy between toys and cartoon by having Starscream remark that he "look[s] like Thundercracker" in his new colors.


====Same toy, same company, different universe, different character or character incarnation====
These early divergences gave way to the practice of "[[repurposing]]", interpreting a preexisting toy as a new character or applying it to a completely different individual as a new form. [[Fun Publications]] was particularly fond of this practice; the ''[[Transformers: Shattered Glass (franchise)|Shattered Glass]]'' series would frequently grab obscure [[redeco]]es and reinterpret them as new characters—for instance, depicting the evil Autobot [[Seaspray (SG)|Seaspray]] with the body used by the obscure movieverse Decepticon [[Storm Surge (Movie)|Storm Surge]]. Wiki-wise, this means that you'll find Storm Surge's toy on Seaspray's page, even though no such toy of Seaspray "really" officially exists—it's a question of using your imagination.
[[Image:Clocker Hardtop Movie Universe.jpg|thumb|200px|right|These are not the same guys. Honestly.]]
Sometimes different-universe characters are created by pure marketing decisions that don't put a lot of thought into the fiction-related aspects (see [[rebranding]]): For example, in late 2008, Hasbro intended to release [[redeco]]s of the ''[[Energon (toyline)|Energon]]'' [[combiner]]s [[Superion Maximus]] and [[Bruticus Maximus (Energon)|Bruticus Maximus]] as [[Target]] exclusive [[Superion (G1)|Superion]] and [[Bruticus (G1)|Bruticus Maximus]] giftsets for the second ''[[Universe (2008 toyline)|Universe]]'' line. However, it was ultimately decided to delay them until 2009 and release them in ''[[Revenge of the Fallen (toyline)|Revenge of the Fallen]]'' packaging instead, to profit from the expected larger pull of the [[Revenge of the Fallen (film)|movie]]. However, both sets ''were'' released in their originally intended ''Universe'' packaging in some markets (such as Australia and Singapore), thus creating different incarnations of the same characters in different universes, despite them being the same toys, just in different packaging.


The same happened again later in 2009, when Hasbro released two [[Walmart]] exclusive ''Universe'' two-packs of repackaged ''[[Cybertron (toyline)|Cybertron]]'' Scout [[redeco]]s originally released as [[Target]] exclusive single packs from the 2007 ''[[Movie (toyline)|Movie]]'' line. Despite being unchanged from their ''Movie'' versions and sporting the same names, the ''Universe'' versions were officially labeled as part of the "Cybertron Series", thus effectively making them different character incarnations than their ''Movie'' counterparts.
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An even weirder case occurred in 2006, when four [[Mini-Con]]s released in ''[[Classics (2006)|Classics]]'' three-packs were also available as "bonus" figures with a Walmart exclusive "[[Black Friday (event)|Black Friday]]" version of ''Cybertron'' [[Primus]]. In addition to the different [[franchise]]-based packaging, two of the Mini-Cons even sported different ''names''[[Dirt Rocket]] and [[Thunderwing (Classics)|Thunderwing]] for ''Classics'', [[Offshoot (Cybertron)|Offshoot]] and [[Nightscream (Cybertron)|Nightscream]] for ''Cybertron'', respectively.
===Names===
[[File:Shockblast energon.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|''Energon'' [[Shockblast]] shares many features with G1 [[Shockwave (G1)|Shockwave]] except his name.]]
: ''See also: [[Renaming]]''


Likewise, the second wave of ''Universe'' (the original line) "Dollar store" exclusive [[Spy Changer]]s included unchanged re-releases of [[W.A.R.S.]], [[Ironhide (RID)|Ironhide]] and [[Mirage (RID)|Mirage]] from the second batch of KB Toys exclusive ''[[Robots in Disguise (toyline)|Robots in Disguise]]'' Spy Changers, with W.A.R.S. and Ironhide renamed into "[[Camshaft (G1)|Autobot Camshaft]]" and "[[Hoist (G1)|Hoist]]", respectively. Only [[Mirage (G1)|Mirage]] retained his name, but arguably represents the ''[[Generation 1 (franchise)|Generation 1]]'' character rather than his ''RID'' counterpart.
Transformer names have come and gone over the years, a combination of changing [[trademark]]s, new cast members, and Hasbro's increasing awareness of the vagaries of non-US slang (the reason why we'll never see a Transformer named [[Slag (G1)|Slag]] or [[Slapper (RID)|Slapper]] again). The practical upshot of this is that Transformer names can and have changed drastically over the years. Combined with our approach to structuring character pages, it can sometimes be vague as to whether or not a character from one continuity family could be said to have a counterpart elsewhere: for instance, should ''Energon'' [[Shockblast]] be considered a version of Generation One [[Shockwave (G1)|Shockwave]], as Generation One [[Bumblebee (G1)|Bumblebee]] is to his [[Bumblebee (Animated)|''Animated'' counterpart]]... even if Shockblast is ''far'' from the emotionless logical sort? This debate takes an interesting turn when one factors in the existence of the ''[[Transformers: Cybertron (franchise)|Cybertron]]'' [[Mini-Con]] [[Shockwave (Cybertron)|Shockwave]], who hails from the same continuity as Shockblast... but has nothing in common with any of the other Shockwaves or Shockblasts.


====Same toy, different company, different universe, different character incarnation====
Sometimes a toy released under one name sees re-release under a new alias. Depending on the circumstances, this can pan out as either two different characters, or just a rename. In 2006, several ''[[Transformers: Classics|Classics]]'' Mini-Cons were released under the ''Cybertron'' banner as part of a promotional pack-in with big-ticket item [[Primus#Toys|Primus]]: ''Classics'' [[Dirt Rocket (Classics)|Dirt Rocket]] and [[Thunderwing (Classics)|Thunderwing]] were released as [[Offshoot (Cybertron)|Offshoot]] and [[Nightscream (Cybertron)|Nightscream]] (respectively) in ''Cybertron''. Later fiction would make the distinction that the ''Cybertron'' versions were in fact ''completely'' different characters (from origin to personality to ''gender'' in Dirt Rocket/Offshoot's case).
A really bizarre case: While [[Hasbro]]'s ''[[Universe (2008 toyline)|Universe]]'' [[Hot Shot (Armada)|Hot Shot]] toy represents the same character as his ''[[Armada (franchise)|Armada]]'' predecessor, officially placed in the toy line's "Armada Series", [[TakaraTomy]] instead decided to officially place their ''[[Henkei! Henkei! (toyline)|Henkei! Henkei!]]'' [[Hot Rod (Henkei!)|Hot Rod]] release of the toy in the same [[continuity]] as the other, ''Generation 1''-derived ''Henkei!'' toys, thus effectively making him a different-universe incarnation of the character.


===Characters spanning the multiverse===
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====[[Multiversal singularity|Multiversal singularities]]====
For some characters, Hasbro has officially declared that there is only ''one'' of them ever in-fiction. There are no multiple characters in the same universe, not even different incarnations of a character in multiple universes. There is only one character that either exists in all universes at the same time, or travels from universe to universe in a linear fashion.


The first character that got this treatment from Hasbro was [[Unicron]], starting with the supporting fiction for the 2003 ''[[Universe (2003 toyline)|Universe]]'' toy line. This may seem at odds with his [[The Transformers (cartoon)|''Generation 1'' cartoon]] origin according to "[[Call of the Primitives]]" and a line in [[Eye of the Storm|issue 69]] of the [[The Transformers (Marvel comic)|Marvel US ''Generation 1'' comic]], where Unicron implies that an alternate universe incarnation of himself exists. However, since the "multiversal Unicron" concept is a [[retcon]], it officially overrules these stories.
===''Robots in Disguise''===
[[File:RIDMegatronGrippy.jpg|thumb|upright=1.4|''Robots in Disguise'' [[Megatron (RID)|Megatron]] appeared in [[2005 IDW continuity|IDW's comic universe]] as "Gigatron", his original ''Car Robots'' name. For simplicity's sake, both versions are on the same page.]]
The 2001 ''[[Transformers: Robots in Disguise (2001 franchise)|Robots in Disguise]]'' franchise is an oddity in the ''Transformers'' franchise, as it has the dubious honor of being considered part of two very different continuity families simultaneously. Originally, the series was perceived as a reboot of sorts after the conclusion of the [[Beast Era]], a back-to-basics tale that returned the action to contemporary Earth and featured vehicular Autobots. Outside of some vaguely-worded Japanese promotional backstory, both ''Robots in Disguise'' and the Japanese version, ''Car Robots'', were largely unconnected to the Generation 1 continuity that had come before. All seemed well... until years later, when [[TakaraTomy|Takara]] revealed that ''Car Robots'' was ''not'' a reboot, and officially incorporated the series into their own [[Japanese Generation 1 cartoon continuity|elaborate Generation 1 cartoon continuity]] as part of a ''huge'' gap-filling and continuity-tying-up effort that pulled a ''lot'' of pieces of fiction together, both major and obscure.


Other characters that were later also declared "multiversal singularities" by Hasbro are [[Primus]] and the [[thirteen original Transformers]], including [[Vector Prime]] and [[The Fallen]]. Not all fans are happy with the implications of this mandate, however; and furthermore, the different portrayals of The Fallen in [[Dreamwave Productions|Dreamwave's]] ''[[War Within: The Dark Ages]]'' and [[Paramount Pictures|Paramount's]] ''[[Revenge of the Fallen (film)|Revenge of the Fallen]]'' film put a huge stretch on this concept depending on whom you ask.
However, no similar proclamation was made for ''Robots in Disguise''. To this day the Hasbro version of the series stands alone, without any direct ties to any other fictional universe (aside from the whole "multiverse" thing, of course).


[[Sideways (RID)|Sideways]] is equally problematic: The ''[[Robots in Disguise (franchise)|Robots in Disguise]]'', ''[[Armada (franchise)|Armada]]'' and ''[[Cybertron (franchise)|Cybertron]]'' toys and characters and the ''[[Robot Masters (franchise)|Robot Masters]]'' Doubleface toy (a [[redeco]] of the ''Robots in Disguise'' Sideways toy; ''Armada'' Sideways' Japanese name was also "Doubleface") have all been declared to be the same character by Hasbro or Takara one way or another. ''[[Transformers Animated (franchise)|Animated]]'' Sideways is also strongly hinted to be the same character... but what really stretches it are tangential hints that ''also'' tie ''Animated'' Sideways to the ''[[Revenge of the Fallen (franchise)|Revenge of the Fallen]]'' character of the same name. Hasbro's official toy [[bio]] for the ''Fallen'' toy, in particular, is in stark contrast to all the other portrayals of the character.
On the wiki, at least, this means that ''Robots in Disguise'' characters who have received additional appearances elsewhere in the Generation 1 continuity family, such as [[Sky-Byte (RID)|Sky-Byte]]'s supporting role in IDW's comics, are consolidated onto a single page to avoid a redundant and nigh-identical "Sky-Byte (Car Robots)" page, even though the Japanese ''Car Robots'' and American ''Robots in Disguise'' franchises are considered two entirely separate continuity families.


====Multiversal aggregates====
(It also helps that ''Robots in Disguise'' is something of a "forgotten" series, so its transplants are few and far between.)
At the other end of the spectrum, there are entities which are aggregates of several alternate characters from various universes. Most notably this covers the [[Alternity (species)|Alternity]]. Each entity of the Alternity is the sum total of dozens of incarnations across the multiverse, and thus characters such as ''Alternity'' [[Optimus Prime (disambiguation)|Convoy]] are collectively drawing from the experiences of their component selves.
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===Questionable cases===
===Multiversal singularities===
[[Image:SpikevsBusterCartoonMarvelIDW.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Which of these are the same characters? You decide!]]And then there are the rare cases that effectively defy all rules as defined above. The ones that transcend being "borderline cases" and just become instances of bizarro weirdo "we don't know". ''[[Generation 1 (franchise)|Generation 1]]'' [[Shockwave (G1)|Shockwave]] may have gotten drastically different characterizations between the [[The Transformers (Marvel comic)|original comic]] and the [[The Transformers (cartoon)|cartoon]], but the two depictions still have enough in common (being based on the same toy, for instance) to be considered variations of the same character... somehow. ''Generation 1'' [[Jetfire (G1)|Jetfire]] went a step further, being not only given drastically different origins between the cartoon and comic, but also different ''names'', as the cartoon called him "Skyfire". The fact that the Jetfire [[toy]] looks ''very'' different from the cartoon Skyfire/Marvel Jetfire [[character model]] doesn't exactly help, either.
{{main|Multiversal singularity}}


Even worse were the [[Omnibot (G1)|Omnibots]], who got characterizations with wildly varying degrees of consistency between their [[instructions]], the [[You Have Been Chosen.|mail order flyer]] advertising them, profiles in the [[Marvel Comics]] [[production bible]] (which were never officially released to the public), their Japanese market toy [[bio]]s and their profiles in [[Dreamwave Productions|Dreamwave's]] ''[[More Than Meets The Eye (G1)|More Than Meets The Eye]]'' profile book series.
[[File:Unicron-UltimateGuide.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|[[Unicron]]'s status as a former multiversal singularity means that his page is organized differently than a more "standard" ''Transformers'' character.]]


The [[Autobot|Autobots']] human ally from the ''Generation 1'' cartoon, [[Spike Witwicky (G1)|Spike Witwicky]], had a counterpart in the Marvel comics named [[Buster Witwicky (G1)|Buster Witwicky]], who had effectively the same role as cartoon Spike for a long time... until the comic introduced Spike as Buster's older brother, who had been away at college for years. While Dreamwave's version of Spike can be easily viewed as an older version of his season 1-2 cartoon self, [[IDW Publishing|IDW]] further complicated matters by introducing a "Sam 'Spike' Witwicky" in their own [[IDW Generation 1 continuity|''Generation 1''-based continuity]] who is very different from all previous incarnations. And none of the above takes into consideration the virtually identical character [[Butch Witwicky (G1)|Butch Witwicky]] from the [[Marvel Books|Marvel coloring book]] [[Forest Rescue Mission]], let alone [[Sam Witwicky]], another analogous Witwicky teen who befriends the Autobots in the [[live-action film series|live-action Movie contintuity]].
One of Hasbro's earliest attempts to tie together a cohesive ''Transformers'' mythology was the creation of "multiversal singularities": the story pitch was that there was only ''one'' of them ever in-fiction, existing as higher-dimensional beings who could inhabit multiple universes simultaneously. The first character that got this treatment from Hasbro was [[Unicron]], starting with the supporting fiction for the 2003 ''[[Transformers: Universe (2003 toyline)|Universe]]'' toyline, depicting him as the force responsible for abducting many heroes and villains from across the multiverse to aid in his restoration. Subsequent fiction would reconcile his various conflicting [[Unicron/Generation 1#Generation1 cartoon continuity|cartoon]] and [[Unicron/Generation 1#Marvel Comics continuity|Marvel Comics]] backstories by describing all of his various incarnations as a sort of "virus" that could manifest in different universes through mystical or mundane means. On the wiki, this meant that we organized Unicron's page as a single, long article, detailing ''all'' of his exploits throughout the ''Transformers'' multiverse, rather than splitting them up into "Unicron (G1)", "Unicron (Armada)"...


''Generation 1'' [[Galvatron (G1)|Galvatron]] was shown to be rebuilt from [[Megatron (G1)/Generation 1 cartoon continuity|Megatron]] in ''[[The Transformers: The Movie]]'', but his original toy [[bio]] states that he is ''not'' the leader of the Decepticons, nor gives any indication of him having once been Megatron. The Marvel comics, by extent of the UK title, featured several versions of Galvatron who hailed from several alternate realities, although all of them had in common that they were reformatted versions of Megatron. One of these versions was later officially established a separate entity dubbed "[[Galvatron II]]" via [[e-Hobby]]. Then IDW introduced their own version of Galvatron, who was definitively an altogether separate entity from Megatron... Likewise, IDW introduced their own version of [[Goldbug (IDW)|Goldbug]] who was a separate entity from [[Bumblebee (G1)|Bumblebee]], unlike his toy bio and cartoon and Marvel depictions. Head scratching ensues.
Other notable characters demarcated as singularities included [[Primus]] and the [[Thirteen]]. This admittedly high-concept premise... didn't ''really'' work as planned; immediately, it became clear that many of these so-called singularities had radically different characterizations and origin stories across multiple continuities, which made the entire concept harder to rationalize as the ''Transformers'' multiverse continued to change hands.  


[[Image:PyroSparkComicWhatever.jpg|thumb|200px|left|You guys love driving us crazy, don't ya?]]Then there's ''[[Super-God Masterforce (franchise)|Masterforce]]'' [[Overlord (Masterforce)|Overlord]], whose toy was later released in slightly different colors in the [[Generation 1 (European toyline)|European market]] under the same name... with a very different background in his on-packaging bio. Later, [[TakaraTomy|Takara]] released a ''[[Heroes of Cybertron#SCF|Super Collection Figure]]'' version of Overlord, which was released in the United States market as part of the ''Heroes of Cybertron'' line by [[Hasbro]], renamed "Gigatron"... and [[Tech Spec]] stats that are at odds with the European release of [[Powermaster]] Overlord (his bio doesn't really give him a characterization).
As things grew more fraught, some more fiction from [[Fun Publications]] would put the entire concept to rest by [[retcon]]ning the concept away entirely, through the in-fiction medium of the [[Shroud]], which retroactively nullified the entire concept of singularities—G1 Unicron was his own guy again, as was ''Armada'' or ''Prime'' Unicron. However, owing to their legacy as singularities, and their status as very important characters within ''Transformers'' lore, we at the wiki have continued to consolidate their information all onto a single page, even though each of their fictional appearances are now recognized to belong to entirely separate characters. The exception to this rule is Sideways, who is now treated like most other ''Transformers'' characters and has had all of his appearances split into separate characters by continuity.
{{-}}


The Europe-only ''Generation 1'' [[Action Master]] [[Charger]] shares his function, motto, Tech Spec stats, and personality description with the [[Dinobot (G1)|Dinobot]] [[Slag (G1)|Slag]], even though the two look nothing alike... and Charger is a [[Decepticon]]. Yeah, we have no idea, either. Meanwhile, the equally Europe-only [[Action Master Elite]] "Omega Spreem" has similar enough Tech Spec stats and personality descriptions to ''Generation 1'' [[Omega Supreme (G1)|Omega Supreme]], in addition to a very similar-looking toy, to be considered the same character, despite the slightly different name (which could be due to a case of [[Engrish]]) and the weird colors.
===Merchandise and the multiverse===
{{main|Iocus}}
[[File:Bot Shots S1 B002 Starscream.jpg|thumb|upright=1.66|''[[Bot Shots (franchise)|Bot Shots]]'' Starscream is pretty clearly based on G1 [[Starscream (G1)|Starscream]]—and on this wiki, we sort him under [[Starscream (G1)/toys|Starscream's toy page]]. In the in-fiction ''Transformers'' multiverse, however, he and many other merchandise-based representations are established to hail from [[Iocus|a separate universal cluster]].]]


The Europe-only tail-end ''Generation 1'' [[Obliterator]] [[Pyro]] was [[rebranding|re-released]] as part of the [[Generation 2 (European toyline)|Europe-only version of the ''Generation 2'' line]], renamed "Spark" but retaining the same Tech Spec stats and personality description. Many years later, Pyro ''finally'' appeared in fiction, in IDW ''[[Last Stand of the Wreckers]]'' comic... and almost at the same time, '''Pyro Ignatius Spark''' appeared in [[Fun Publications]]'s [[BotCon 2010]] exclusive ''[[Wings of Honor continuity|Wings of Honor]]'' comic [[Generation 2: Redux]], with a drastically different character portrayal.
The in-fiction world of the Transformers is based around an elaborate [[multiverse]], which more-or-less follows our own system of classification by continuity family; breaking down into a series of "universal clusters" that, are, in turn, made up of "[[universal stream]]s", corresponding to real world continuity families and individual continuities. The rise of these universal streams as the primary system of in-fiction universal classification coincided with Hasbro's release of multiple new, merchandise-oriented sidelines: ''[[Kre-O]]'', ''[[Construct-Bots]]'', ''[[Hero Mashers]]'', ''[[Bot Shots (franchise)|Bot Shots]]'', and so on.


The ''[[Classics (2006)|Classics]]'' toy line featured a toy named "Leo Prime", which sported the same colors as ''[[Beast Wars II (franchise)|Beast Wars II]]'' [[Lio Convoy]], but he was declared an Autobot rather than a [[Maximal]]. Then Lio Convoy appeared in IDW's ''[[Beast Wars (franchise)|Beast Wars]]'' comics, as a Maximal called "Lio Convoy" rather than "Leo Prime", but with a very different character background than his original Japanese portrayal. And then Hasbro released more "Leo Prime" toys in their second ''[[Universe (2008 toyline)|Universe]]'' toy line, whose bios reflected IDW's Lio Convoy.
As these characters seemingly represented new versions of old standby characters like Optimus Prime or Grimlock, the wiki initially gave each of these characters a separate page: "Optimus Prime (Bot Shots)", "Optimus Prime (Construct-Bots)", "Optimus Prime (Hero Mashers)", and so on... in spite of the fact that often (but not always) these characters were clearly based on specific prior iterations, and the fact that almost none of these ''specific'' incarnations received any real fiction that would separate them from their namesakes outside of a handful of toys and maybe a commercial or two. As it soon became clear that the wiki would be overrun by these tiny, one-note articles, [[Ask Vector Prime]] would introduce a new cluster, "Iocus", which would serve as a "dumping ground" for all of these miscellaneous toys; under this schema, there would be one "Optimus Prime (Iocus)" page, which would consolidate ''all'' of the side merchandise as a single "character".


As for the [[live-action film series|live-action movie universe]], IDW's ''[[Alliance (comic)|Alliance]]'' comic featured a Decepticon who sported the same colors as the [[Walmart]] [[exclusive]] [[Movie (toyline)|''Movie''-affiliated]] [[Jolt (Movie)|Jolt]] toy... yet went by the name "Dead End" (or Deadend") and sported a different [[alternate mode]]. Are he and Jolt supposed to be the same character? Is he supposed to be the same character as the ''[[Revenge of the Fallen (toyline)|Revenge of the Fallen]]'' [[Dead End (ROTF)|Dead End]] toys? The only thing certain is that all of them are separate from the ''[[Revenge of the Fallen (film)|Revenge of the Fallen]]'' on-screen character [[Jolt (ROTF)|Jolt]] and his toys.
However, the Iocus cluster landed right as these miscellaneous toylines had begun stronger cross-promotional synergy with the main franchises, ''directly'' featuring characters from these series in their toylines. For ease of access, it was decided that all of these side appearances would be directly integrated under the character they most resembled, so Hound's Construct-Bots toy was moved to "[[Hound (G1)/toys#Construct-Bots]]", and so on. The result of all of this is that while these side toys are cast in the images of characters from Generation 1, the movies, ''Prime'', or lord knows where else, they officially ''simultaneously exist'' as their own characters, who hail from the "Iocus" universal cluster.


Essentially, in these cases the Transformers Wiki has decided either to consider several or all of these variations of a character as the same or different characters. While there is ''some'' reason to our choices, we are well aware that they may occasionally seem arbitrary. That is simply because these cases are often ''confusing'', and [http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/YourMileageMayVary your mileage may vary] whether these are the same or separate characters.
Some exceptions exist as far as wiki organization is concerned, such as those rare ''Kre-O'' characters who received enough fiction in enough forms to make this sort of sorting ''problematic''. Thus, "[[Optimus Prime (Kre-O)]]" remains its own page, but the toys ''also'' appear on the various relevant other Optimuses said toys are based on.


===Official positions===
{{-}}
====Hasbro's official position====
===Official perspectives===
Aside from the official mandate regarding "multiversal singularities", it's not entirely clear whether [[Hasbro]] makes the same distinctions for different incarnations of characters and different characters using the same name as fans do. As far as Hasbro is concerned, are ''[[Robots in Disguise (franchise)|Robots in Disguise]]'' [[Hot Shot (RID)|Hot Shot]] and ''[[Unicron Trilogy]]'' [[Hot Shot (Armada)|Hot Shot]] two entirely separate characters using the same name, or different incarnations of the same character in different universes? Do they view ''[[Generation 1 (franchise)|Generation 1]]'' [[Bumblebee (G1)|Bumblebee]], [[Movie (franchise)|movie]] [[Bumblebee (Movie)|Bumblebee]] and ''[[Transformers Animated (franchise)|Animated]]'' [[Bumblebee (Animated)|Bumblebee]] as one and the same character who is portrayed differently in different series, or as different incarnations of the same character archetype in different universes?
====Hasbro's position====
[[File:WMTheLegacyOfBumblebee.jpg|thumb|upright=1.66|Hasbro generally treats major characters as "archetypes", with only minimal consideration for franchise/continuity as needed for marketing purposes.]]


Hasbro has never officially addressed the matter, and it's unlikely they have a clear policy on it. There have, however, been a few instances where Hasbro has explicitly declared several toys with the same name as one and the same character, despite drastically different appearances. For instance, the 2008 ''[[Universe (2008 toyline)|Universe]]'' Overload toy, a redeco of ''[[Cybertron (toyline)|Cybertron]]'' [[Scattorshot (Cybertron)|Defense Scattorshot]], is officially declared the same character as ''Armada'' [[Overload (Armada)|Overload]]... and as if that wasn't confusing enough, Hasbro, when asked about this, [[Hasbro Q&A/May 2009: Answers|gave an oddly phrased answer]] that even tied him to the ''Generation 1'' [[Micromaster]] [[Overload (G1)|Overload]].
[[Hasbro]]'s handling of "character" is a lot more, well, big-picture marketing-driven. As a ''general'' rule, Hasbro is mostly concerned with if their latest Starscream is a conniving Decepticon second-in-command that (ideally) turns into a jet with visual cues taken from [[Starscream (G1)|the original Starscream]]. What franchise they're in and how that relates to other franchises is not super-high-up in their concern outside of how they label a toy.


Other unexpected same-character declarations made ''Robots in Disguise'' Axer the same character as ''Generation 1'' [[Action Master]] [[Axer]]; and ''Robots in Disguise'' [[Sideways (RID)|Sideways]] (who was sold in a two-pack with Axer) was later [[retcon|retroactively]] declared the same character as ''Armada'' Sideways (as noted above).
Effectively, a Starscream is a Starscream, and they're all "Starscream", all reflections of the same core jerk. They are aware that it is important as a selling tool to differentiate the [[Starscream (Movie)|live-action movies Starscream]] from the original, and both of those from [[Starscream (Cyberverse)|''Cyberverse'' Starscream]] and so on, because kids (and adults) get attached to specific incarnations of characters, thanks to media portrayals. While Hasbro has "crossed the streams" with merchandise many times by using older toys designed for a different franchise with a different aesthetic in a new line, this practice is ''usually'' reserved for "filler" product. The overwhelming majority of "Starscream" toys for any given line are going to be based on the core design for the franchise in question, especially new molds and bigger-ticket items. They are going to try and keep internal consistency of a character's portrayal within a franchise as much as possible.


In contrast, Hasbro stated in the [[Hasbro Q&A/October 2009: Answers|October 2009 Q&A session]], regarding the ''[[Revenge of the Fallen (toyline)|Revenge of the Fallen]]'' [[Target]] [[exclusive]] [[Superion (ROTF)|Superion]] giftset and, by extrapolation, its originally intended release as ''[[Universe (2008 toyline)|Universe]]'' [[Superion (G1)#Universe (2008)|Superion]], that [[Airazor (ROTF)|Airazor]] (and, by extrapolation, ''Universe'' [[Airazor (Universe)|Airazor]]) "is a 'male' character that was designed in memorium {{sic}} of [[Slingshot (G1)|Slingshot]]" (whose name was unavailable as a  [[trademark]]). So instead of declaring either of the Airazors (whom they presumably don't even view as different characters) to be Slingshot under a different name, Hasbro declared him a different character instead.
Basically, Hasbro runs on the "squint test". The fine details of fiction don't particularly matter. They are not concerned with "continuity" so much as brand consistency. After all, they're not an information archive.


So in essence, Hasbro's basic line of thinking appears to be that "same name" equals "same character", and "different name" equals "different character", regardless of how much sense it makes in some instances.
{{-}}


====Takara's official position====
====TakaraTomy's position====
Japanese Transformers fiction is less fractured than its American counterpart.  With a few exceptions, comics, storybooks, bios, and other special fiction always take place in cartoon continuity (which ultimately makes for a convoluted mess in itself).
Japanese Transformers fiction is less fractured than its American counterpart: most modern Japanese fiction takes place in what we call the "[[Japanese Generation 1 cartoon continuity]]", which incorporates a variety of American and Japanese shows into a single semi-cohesive entity. Elaborate [[retcon]]s that frequently split out or merge separate characters are common ways to explain discrepancies away.  


Takara (now [[TakaraTomy]]) seldomly weighs in on the dicey issue of character analogs in other universes. However, during a Q&A at the [http://www.wcc-jp.com/ World Character Convention] in December 2002, the head of Takara's Boys Division, when asked flat out if the (then just announced) ''Micron Densetsu'' Convoy (''[[Armada (franchise)|Armada]]'' [[Optimus Prime (Armada)|Optimus Prime]]) represented the same character as G1 Convoy (''Generation 1'' [[Optimus Prime (G1)|Optimus Prime]]), said that no, he was a different character, more like [[Lio Convoy]]<ref>'''Q:''' <tt>"...in the past, we've seen a variety of "Convoy" who are different characters, such as Lio Convoy and Convoy of Beast Wars. Is the Armada Convoy intended to be a representation of the G1 Convoy, or an original character?"</tt><br/>
TakaraTomy seldom weighs in on the dicey issue of character analogs in other universes. However, during a Q&A at the [http://www.wcc-jp.com/ World Character Convention] in December 2002, the head of Takara's Boys Division, when asked flat out if the (then just announced) ''Legends of the Microns'' Convoy (''[[Transformers: Armada (franchise)|Armada]]'' [[Optimus Prime (Armada)|Optimus Prime]]) represented the same character as G1 Convoy (Generation 1 [[Optimus Prime (G1)|Optimus Prime]]), said that no, he was a different character, more like [[Lio Convoy (BW)|Lio Convoy]].<ref>'''Q:''' <tt>"...in the past, we've seen a variety of "Convoy" who are different characters, such as Lio Convoy and Convoy of Beast Wars. Is the Armada Convoy intended to be a representation of the G1 Convoy, or an original character?"</tt></ref>
'''A:''' <tt>"It's an original character."</tt> —[http://groups.google.com/group/alt.toys.transformers/msg/1febc40cc3fa4163?hl=en Jordon Derber's report from the World Character Convention]</ref> (a completely separate character). On the other hand, a [http://www.takaratomy.co.jp/products/TF/table.html timeline posted on TakaraTomy's website] in 2007 suggested that the [[Movie (franchise)|2007 movie]] was set in the Generation 1 continuity, thus effectively making movie [[Optimus Prime (Movie)|Optimus Prime]] the same character as G1 Optimus Prime. (Note, however, that other diagrams by Takara to explain Transformers continuities have made the live action movies a separate continuity from ''Generation 1''.)


==Footnotes==
==References==
<references/>
{{reflist}}


[[Category:Characters| ]]
[[Category:Characters| ]]

Latest revision as of 00:45, 31 March 2026

Though every one of these characters has gone by the name Bumblebee at some point, they are all different interpretations of the core "Bumblebee" archetype. This kind of character "speciation" has been repeated again and again across the franchise.

A character is a fictional depiction of an entity, usually a Transformer, that might or might not have a toy representation. If there is a toy, the character is usually, but not always, based on the toy and intended as a means of promoting said toy.

Over the course of the numerous Transformers series and toylines, some characters have changed their names, while in other cases, characters have appeared that share a name with another character but are separate individuals. Many characters also have counterparts in other continuities they may or may not share a lot of similarities with.

Hasbro's attitude towards the importance of characters has changed a lot since the launch of the Transformers brand in 1984.

What is a character?

[edit]
The Tech Spec cards that came with the original Transformers toys introduced kids to the personality and story behind each toy.

Broadly speaking, every individual Transformer, human, alien, or other sentient being covered on this wiki is a character. Remember that sentient includes non-sapient beings like the Insecticon Bob and Freya the dog, as well as "are they technically alive or not?" artificial intelligences like the Diagnostic Drone and T-AI.

Most characters have received some kind of fiction that describes their personality, defining characteristics, and unusual abilities; this may be as simple as a bio on the back of a toy package, or as elaborate as an appearance in one of the many live-action Transformers films. And those that don't have fiction of some form but do have a toy? Well, they're still characters.

In many cases, characters can appear in multiple different works of fiction simultaneously; iconic characters, like Optimus Prime or Bumblebee, have starred in multiple distinct continuities, often at the same time. These depictions generally adhere to a singular "idea" of what the character represents, but these individual portrayals can vary wildly between tellers: see the Hasbro/Marvel depiction of Chromedome as a quiet computer programmer versus his The Headmasters portrayal as a hot-headed shonen hero versus IDW Publishing's portrayal as a moody mnemosurgeon. Similar cases exist throughout Transformers media. In some cases, one particularly popular incarnation of a character may go on to inform future developments; while based on his original Headmaster toy, the bio of Chromedome's 2016 Titans Return toy, for instance, notes that the character can perform mnemosurgery on other 'bots.

In some cases, non-toy characters may appear in several different supporting media, such as the various humans who have gone by the surname "Witwicky". Some of them might be turned into toys later on, due to the (often unexpected) popularity of those characters; the various Witwickys, for instance, have received several toys as accessories alongside the larger Transformer figures.


Relevance

[edit]
The decision to kill off most of Hasbro's 1984~85 product range in the original Transformers film was poorly received by the movie's target demographic.

As a toymaker first and foremost, Hasbro didn't put much emphasis onto "character" during the earliest years of the Transformers franchise; the marketing department saw them as mere products—expected to have a two-year shelf life before they were replaced by new toys and new characters. It would be Marvel writer Bob Budiansky that provided early toys with names, roles, and personalities, turning them into full-fledged characters that would, in turn, find their way into the Marvel comic and Sunbow cartoon. As a consequence, Hasbro only bothered to register a small number of trademarks in the 1980s, such as "Optimus Prime"[1] or "Soundwave".[2] Unbeknownst to Hasbro, however, their Transformers media blitz meant that children had connected to these robots as relatable characters. Kids didn't just see them as colorful robot toys—for all intents and purposes, the toy was that character.

In 1986, Hasbro released the big-deal super-hyped The Transformers: The Movie to theaters. The 1984 toys that had kicked off the franchise—Optimus Prime, Ironhide, Prowl, etc.— had largely left store shelves by this time, and Hasbro saw fit to begin the movie by "clearing the deck;" hoping to advertise the 1986 toyline, the opening battle of The Transformers: The Movie would feature the abrupt and violent deaths of many of these beloved characters, leaving the story free to focus on that year's brand-new toyline. The immediate backlash amongst young fans that this decision generated quickly led to the cartoon's writers resurrecting Optimus Prime in the series less than a year later, but the incident caused Hasbro to realize how much of a crucial role recognizable characters had played in the success of the Transformers line.

Beast Wars, the next Transformers show to hit the airwaves in the 1990s, turned the limitation of its expensive computer animation into a new advantage; as introducing all of the Beast Wars toys in the show would be impossible, the writers chose to focus on a small handful of Maximals and Predacons, rotating the characters in and out to keep up with new toys on the shelves. The result was that each individual Beast Wars character had a greater amount of screentime than the oft-bloated cast of the 1984 cartoon, allowing the writers to tell deeper and more multifaceted stories involving these characters. With some exceptions, this tactic would become the general approach to most Transformers storytelling: a small onscreen cast supported by a larger group of toy-exclusive characters boosted by simple association with the cartoon.

Naming conventions

[edit]
Armada Wheeljack had little to do with the Generation 1 character of the same name.

Despite having realized the role that strong, likeable characters played in their franchise, Hasbro continued to take a somewhat scattershot approach to the names of Transformers characters for some time. As Hasbro repeatedly rebooted the Transformers franchise in the late 90s and 2000s, while "core" character names were generally safe, it was common to shuffle pre-existing names around, sometimes tacking them onto characters that were utterly unrelated to their original uses. Part of this was, of course, an effort to maintain valuable Trademark ownership of "major" names for future use, but it did lead to some oddities. Examples include "Soundwave" the heroic Mutant bat from Beast Wars, "Grimlock" the upbeat excavator from Robots in Disguise, and "Wheeljack" the brooding young Autobot-turned-Decepticon from Armada.

Conversely, 2004's Energon franchise would feature several characters obviously physically based on "Generation 1" characters (no doubt a facet of 2004 being the 20th anniversary of the Transformers brand), but their names were being used elsewhere or otherwise unavailable, giving us "Shockblast" and "Downshift" who were heavily recognizable as new takes on Shockwave and the original Wheeljack. (This of course is to say nothing about their in-fiction portrayals... and in these two cases in particular, they had little in common with their visual inspirations, personality-wise.) This was an issue on both sides of the world; in Japan, the Armada Mini-Con "Sureshock" was named "Arcee", which meant that when the direct-sequel series featured an Omnicon blatantly designed after Generation 1 Arcee and called "Arcee" in Hasbro markets, Takara had to give her the name "Ariel".

It was not until 2007, and the launch of the live-action film series, that the trends would shift heavily and various "legacy" names would slowly find their way back onto a solid "archetype", with that year's Transformers film featuring a handful of Autobots more-or-less based on their Generation 1 personalities. Subsequent mass-market franchises, such as that year's Transformers Animated franchise, and 2010's Transformers: Prime, would continue to realign character names with their Generation 1 appearances and personalities. Though these installments would also introduce brand-new characters to the series... sometimes using old names from minor characters and effectively becoming "the" character associated with that name, such as Prime Knock Out and 2015's Robots in Disguise Strongarm.


Changing attitudes and brand unification

[edit]
Cyberverse Bumblebee, an amalgam of several past Bumblebees in design and concept, tangles with Shadow Striker, a new character introduced in the series.

The debut of the "Aligned" take on Transformers (heralded mainly by the Transformers: Prime cartoon) hit right at the beginning of the Hollywood nostalgia boom, due in part to the recent debut of the Marvel Cinematic Universe and its new approach to comic book adaptations. This pop-cultural shift would prompt Hasbro to develop a more coherent approach to the jumbled Transformers multiverse. 2010's War for Cybertron video games were the first installment of the Aligned franchise, a distinctly G1-esque take on the Transformers continuity that featured just about every major cartoon character in some capacity, all more-or-less faithful to their original designs and personalities.

Though the Aligned continuity would subsequently deviate from this aesthetic, the idea seems to have struck a chord with Hasbro; in late 2016, Hasbro would reveal a new "evergreen" style for just about every major Transformers character, beginning with ancillary side merchandise and eventually bleeding into the mass-market through IDW Publishing's ongoing comics, where many major characters would be redesigned into these new forms. 2018's Cyberverse franchise would see many characters sporting these evergreen bodies.

On the other hand, Hasbro and its licensees have been unafraid to create brand-new characters; 2014-15 brought the debut of Windblade the Autobot cityspeaker and Victorion the all-female combiner. Additionally, many IDW-original characters such as the DJD and Aileron have proved popular with fans, with some like Nautica and Rung even seeing mass-market release as new toys. As fresh faces represent new storytelling opportunities and, more importantly, new toys, it's safe to say that the Transformers franchise will never run out of new characters to introduce.


Characters and the wiki

[edit]
See also: Continuity family
One version of Knock Out complicates matters by cheekily combining traits from his Prime and Generation 1 Micromaster namesakes. Similar amalgamations have caused no small amount of debate on the wiki as to where a character best fits under our organizational schema.

Unlike many other popular sci-fi franchises, Transformers is not a single long-running story set in one universe, à la Star Wars or Star Trek; rather, it is a vast entity made up of many smaller series, most of which are mutually exclusive to each other — in the Generation 1 family alone, the cartoon, Marvel comic, Dreamwave comic, IDW (2005) and IDW (2019) continuities all tell stories that, while broadly similar, are fundamentally irreconcilable.

On the MediaWiki, we therefore align characters by what we call "continuity family;" basically loose groupings of franchises that follow a rough internal theme/continuity. For instance, every appearance of the "Generation 1" version of Fortress Maximus can be found under Fortress Maximus (G1). No matter how divergent one portrayal is from the other—the cartoon's portrayal of Maximus as a nonsentient battlesuit, his Marvel Comics depiction as a weary pacifist-turned-reluctant-warrior, or even his IDW depiction as a toughened prison guard—we consider that, since they all appeared in different versions of what we call the "Generation 1 continuity family", they are different incarnations of the same character.

Conversely, largely-identical versions of the same character may be split up across several pages according to their continuity family of origin. For example, the vain Decepticon medic Knock Out was a breakout new character in the Transformers: Prime cartoon, to the point where an incredibly similar take on him appeared as a major character in the 2005 IDW continuity. Specific details were tweaked to fit him into the universe, but in both appearance and personality, the characters are largely identical. However, since this version of the character appeared in IDW's Generation 1 continuity, we consider "Knock Out (G1)" to be a different version of the character, if only for organizational purposes, as he appeared in a different continuity family.

Why Do We Do This?

If that example seems a bit silly... well, it kind of is, but it's important to note that his case is a bit of an outlier, and that has a lot to do with changes in how Hasbro and its licensees have been treating characters since this wiki's creation. MediaWiki was founded during the reign of the "Unicron Triology", a time when Transformers toys and media were nowhere near as numerous and diverse as they have been in recent history, and were pretty strictly regimented, which would be the case for many years as Transformers would get a full hard-stop reboot every now and then. While previous characters might end up with analogues in whatever new franchise pops up, they were usually heavily re-interpreted for said new franchise, such as how the character "Bulkhead" from Animated would get reworked to the similar Prime "Bulkhead". And both are completely different from the previous holder of the name, from Energon (well, aside from being green).

And really, how useful do you think lumping every iteration of Starscream together, regardless of franchise, would really be?

For the first 30 years of the brand, it was rare, if not nigh-unheard-of, for a character to basically be "transplanted" from one very-different franchise to another with minimal changes until the height of IDW Publishing's original comic run. While that series is considered "Generation 1" many writers began to pull popular characters from other non-"G1" franchises and drop them into the story. While this has led to some quibble, as an organizational tool, it does in general work better to have the IDW "G1" Knock Out have his own separate page for his adventures, regardless of how similar to the original he is.

Of course, there's always extra-outliers and troublemakers, thus the need for some flexibility in special circumstances.


Gray areas

[edit]

With a franchise as large, sprawling, and convoluted as Transformers, it can sometimes be hard to tell what separates one character or toy from another; this section goes over some of the more common "gray areas" that have cropped up during the history of the wiki, often involving the thorny issue of toys and how they relate to their in-fiction depictions.

Micro-continuities

[edit]
As a result of an early promotional comic, this toy of Optimus Primal simultaneously represents a new character and an upgraded version of the Autobot leader Optimus Prime.
Main article: Micro-continuity

Most Transformers franchises are supported by a toyline and one or two "pillars": usually a television show or comic book designed to advertise the toys. In some cases, however, early promotional material has created entirely new continuities, which we call "micro-continuities", out of a handful of promotional materials. In some notable cases, these have created entirely new characters by conflating other characters together. Most infamous was the very first Beast Wars comic, which treated the setting as an extension of the Autobot-Decepticon war on contemporary Earth and depicted Optimus Primal and Megatron as merely the newest forms of the original Optimus Prime and Megatron.

The Beast Wars television show would quickly clarify that Primal and Megatron were their own characters, who hailed from the distant future; as a result of this comic, however, you will find early Beast Wars figures on the toy pages for both Optimus Prime and Megatron—because this comic established that, in at least one small continuity, those toys were Optimus Prime and the Decepticon Megatron.


Repurposing

[edit]
Storm Surge's toy can be used to represent both the movie Decepticon, or with some imagination, the evil Autobot Seaspray.
Main article: Repurposing

In some cases, a toy might simultaneously represent two or more entirely different characters. This was more common during the tail end of Generation 1, when the Hasbro and Takara lines began to diverge; for instance, any Headmaster toy could—depending on if you lived in Japan or the US—be interpreted as either an organic Nebulan in armor, or a small robot colonist from the planet Master. In other cases, the cause might be a miscommunication (or disagreement) between Hasbro and Takara: while Hasbro intended Armada Thundercracker as a different character than Starscream, whom he was redecoed from, the Legends of the Microns cartoon made the "Thundercracker" colors an upgraded form of Starscream, and Takara released their version of the toy under the name "Starscream S" ("Super Mode"). The English Armada dub of the cartoon tried to "explain" the discrepancy between toys and cartoon by having Starscream remark that he "look[s] like Thundercracker" in his new colors.

These early divergences gave way to the practice of "repurposing", interpreting a preexisting toy as a new character or applying it to a completely different individual as a new form. Fun Publications was particularly fond of this practice; the Shattered Glass series would frequently grab obscure redecoes and reinterpret them as new characters—for instance, depicting the evil Autobot Seaspray with the body used by the obscure movieverse Decepticon Storm Surge. Wiki-wise, this means that you'll find Storm Surge's toy on Seaspray's page, even though no such toy of Seaspray "really" officially exists—it's a question of using your imagination.


Names

[edit]
Energon Shockblast shares many features with G1 Shockwave except his name.
See also: Renaming

Transformer names have come and gone over the years, a combination of changing trademarks, new cast members, and Hasbro's increasing awareness of the vagaries of non-US slang (the reason why we'll never see a Transformer named Slag or Slapper again). The practical upshot of this is that Transformer names can and have changed drastically over the years. Combined with our approach to structuring character pages, it can sometimes be vague as to whether or not a character from one continuity family could be said to have a counterpart elsewhere: for instance, should Energon Shockblast be considered a version of Generation One Shockwave, as Generation One Bumblebee is to his Animated counterpart... even if Shockblast is far from the emotionless logical sort? This debate takes an interesting turn when one factors in the existence of the Cybertron Mini-Con Shockwave, who hails from the same continuity as Shockblast... but has nothing in common with any of the other Shockwaves or Shockblasts.

Sometimes a toy released under one name sees re-release under a new alias. Depending on the circumstances, this can pan out as either two different characters, or just a rename. In 2006, several Classics Mini-Cons were released under the Cybertron banner as part of a promotional pack-in with big-ticket item Primus: Classics Dirt Rocket and Thunderwing were released as Offshoot and Nightscream (respectively) in Cybertron. Later fiction would make the distinction that the Cybertron versions were in fact completely different characters (from origin to personality to gender in Dirt Rocket/Offshoot's case).


Robots in Disguise

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Robots in Disguise Megatron appeared in IDW's comic universe as "Gigatron", his original Car Robots name. For simplicity's sake, both versions are on the same page.

The 2001 Robots in Disguise franchise is an oddity in the Transformers franchise, as it has the dubious honor of being considered part of two very different continuity families simultaneously. Originally, the series was perceived as a reboot of sorts after the conclusion of the Beast Era, a back-to-basics tale that returned the action to contemporary Earth and featured vehicular Autobots. Outside of some vaguely-worded Japanese promotional backstory, both Robots in Disguise and the Japanese version, Car Robots, were largely unconnected to the Generation 1 continuity that had come before. All seemed well... until years later, when Takara revealed that Car Robots was not a reboot, and officially incorporated the series into their own elaborate Generation 1 cartoon continuity as part of a huge gap-filling and continuity-tying-up effort that pulled a lot of pieces of fiction together, both major and obscure.

However, no similar proclamation was made for Robots in Disguise. To this day the Hasbro version of the series stands alone, without any direct ties to any other fictional universe (aside from the whole "multiverse" thing, of course).

On the wiki, at least, this means that Robots in Disguise characters who have received additional appearances elsewhere in the Generation 1 continuity family, such as Sky-Byte's supporting role in IDW's comics, are consolidated onto a single page to avoid a redundant and nigh-identical "Sky-Byte (Car Robots)" page, even though the Japanese Car Robots and American Robots in Disguise franchises are considered two entirely separate continuity families.

(It also helps that Robots in Disguise is something of a "forgotten" series, so its transplants are few and far between.)

Multiversal singularities

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Unicron's status as a former multiversal singularity means that his page is organized differently than a more "standard" Transformers character.

One of Hasbro's earliest attempts to tie together a cohesive Transformers mythology was the creation of "multiversal singularities": the story pitch was that there was only one of them ever in-fiction, existing as higher-dimensional beings who could inhabit multiple universes simultaneously. The first character that got this treatment from Hasbro was Unicron, starting with the supporting fiction for the 2003 Universe toyline, depicting him as the force responsible for abducting many heroes and villains from across the multiverse to aid in his restoration. Subsequent fiction would reconcile his various conflicting cartoon and Marvel Comics backstories by describing all of his various incarnations as a sort of "virus" that could manifest in different universes through mystical or mundane means. On the wiki, this meant that we organized Unicron's page as a single, long article, detailing all of his exploits throughout the Transformers multiverse, rather than splitting them up into "Unicron (G1)", "Unicron (Armada)"...

Other notable characters demarcated as singularities included Primus and the Thirteen. This admittedly high-concept premise... didn't really work as planned; immediately, it became clear that many of these so-called singularities had radically different characterizations and origin stories across multiple continuities, which made the entire concept harder to rationalize as the Transformers multiverse continued to change hands.

As things grew more fraught, some more fiction from Fun Publications would put the entire concept to rest by retconning the concept away entirely, through the in-fiction medium of the Shroud, which retroactively nullified the entire concept of singularities—G1 Unicron was his own guy again, as was Armada or Prime Unicron. However, owing to their legacy as singularities, and their status as very important characters within Transformers lore, we at the wiki have continued to consolidate their information all onto a single page, even though each of their fictional appearances are now recognized to belong to entirely separate characters. The exception to this rule is Sideways, who is now treated like most other Transformers characters and has had all of his appearances split into separate characters by continuity.

Merchandise and the multiverse

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Main article: Iocus
Bot Shots Starscream is pretty clearly based on G1 Starscream—and on this wiki, we sort him under Starscream's toy page. In the in-fiction Transformers multiverse, however, he and many other merchandise-based representations are established to hail from a separate universal cluster.

The in-fiction world of the Transformers is based around an elaborate multiverse, which more-or-less follows our own system of classification by continuity family; breaking down into a series of "universal clusters" that, are, in turn, made up of "universal streams", corresponding to real world continuity families and individual continuities. The rise of these universal streams as the primary system of in-fiction universal classification coincided with Hasbro's release of multiple new, merchandise-oriented sidelines: Kre-O, Construct-Bots, Hero Mashers, Bot Shots, and so on.

As these characters seemingly represented new versions of old standby characters like Optimus Prime or Grimlock, the wiki initially gave each of these characters a separate page: "Optimus Prime (Bot Shots)", "Optimus Prime (Construct-Bots)", "Optimus Prime (Hero Mashers)", and so on... in spite of the fact that often (but not always) these characters were clearly based on specific prior iterations, and the fact that almost none of these specific incarnations received any real fiction that would separate them from their namesakes outside of a handful of toys and maybe a commercial or two. As it soon became clear that the wiki would be overrun by these tiny, one-note articles, Ask Vector Prime would introduce a new cluster, "Iocus", which would serve as a "dumping ground" for all of these miscellaneous toys; under this schema, there would be one "Optimus Prime (Iocus)" page, which would consolidate all of the side merchandise as a single "character".

However, the Iocus cluster landed right as these miscellaneous toylines had begun stronger cross-promotional synergy with the main franchises, directly featuring characters from these series in their toylines. For ease of access, it was decided that all of these side appearances would be directly integrated under the character they most resembled, so Hound's Construct-Bots toy was moved to "Hound (G1)/toys#Construct-Bots", and so on. The result of all of this is that while these side toys are cast in the images of characters from Generation 1, the movies, Prime, or lord knows where else, they officially simultaneously exist as their own characters, who hail from the "Iocus" universal cluster.

Some exceptions exist as far as wiki organization is concerned, such as those rare Kre-O characters who received enough fiction in enough forms to make this sort of sorting problematic. Thus, "Optimus Prime (Kre-O)" remains its own page, but the toys also appear on the various relevant other Optimuses said toys are based on.


Official perspectives

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Hasbro's position

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Hasbro generally treats major characters as "archetypes", with only minimal consideration for franchise/continuity as needed for marketing purposes.

Hasbro's handling of "character" is a lot more, well, big-picture marketing-driven. As a general rule, Hasbro is mostly concerned with if their latest Starscream is a conniving Decepticon second-in-command that (ideally) turns into a jet with visual cues taken from the original Starscream. What franchise they're in and how that relates to other franchises is not super-high-up in their concern outside of how they label a toy.

Effectively, a Starscream is a Starscream, and they're all "Starscream", all reflections of the same core jerk. They are aware that it is important as a selling tool to differentiate the live-action movies Starscream from the original, and both of those from Cyberverse Starscream and so on, because kids (and adults) get attached to specific incarnations of characters, thanks to media portrayals. While Hasbro has "crossed the streams" with merchandise many times by using older toys designed for a different franchise with a different aesthetic in a new line, this practice is usually reserved for "filler" product. The overwhelming majority of "Starscream" toys for any given line are going to be based on the core design for the franchise in question, especially new molds and bigger-ticket items. They are going to try and keep internal consistency of a character's portrayal within a franchise as much as possible.

Basically, Hasbro runs on the "squint test". The fine details of fiction don't particularly matter. They are not concerned with "continuity" so much as brand consistency. After all, they're not an information archive.


TakaraTomy's position

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Japanese Transformers fiction is less fractured than its American counterpart: most modern Japanese fiction takes place in what we call the "Japanese Generation 1 cartoon continuity", which incorporates a variety of American and Japanese shows into a single semi-cohesive entity. Elaborate retcons that frequently split out or merge separate characters are common ways to explain discrepancies away.

TakaraTomy seldom weighs in on the dicey issue of character analogs in other universes. However, during a Q&A at the World Character Convention in December 2002, the head of Takara's Boys Division, when asked flat out if the (then just announced) Legends of the Microns Convoy (Armada Optimus Prime) represented the same character as G1 Convoy (Generation 1 Optimus Prime), said that no, he was a different character, more like Lio Convoy.[3]

References

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  1. United States Patent and Trademark Office file for the trademark "Optimus Prime", filed in 1984, registered in 1985.
  2. United States Patent and Trademark Office file for the trademark "Soundwave", filed in 1984, registered in 1985.
  3. Q: "...in the past, we've seen a variety of "Convoy" who are different characters, such as Lio Convoy and Convoy of Beast Wars. Is the Armada Convoy intended to be a representation of the G1 Convoy, or an original character?"