Transformers Animated: The AllSpark Almanac: Difference between revisions
Geewunling (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary |
|||
| (151 intermediate revisions by 34 users not shown) | |||
| Line 15: | Line 15: | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{bigquote|What a brilliant book! Probably the best I've ever read, human or Cybertronian. | {{bigquote|What a brilliant book! Probably the best I've ever read, human or Cybertronian. I can't recommend it strongly enough!|[[Sunstorm (Animated)|Sunstorm]], the rear cover of ''The AllSpark Almanac''}} | ||
'''''Transformers Animated: The AllSpark Almanac''''' is a <s>lusty</s> happy love-letter written to {{SITENAME}} for our carnal pleasure. | '''''Transformers Animated: The AllSpark Almanac''''' is a <s>lusty</s> happy love-letter written to {{SITENAME}} for our carnal pleasure. | ||
''The AllSpark Almanac'' is an encyclopedic examination of the entire ''Transformers Animated'' storyline universe. | ''The AllSpark Almanac'' is an encyclopedic examination of the entire ''[[Transformers Animated (franchise)|Transformers Animated]]'' storyline universe. It presents exhaustively thorough character profiles and summaries of the first two seasons of the cartoon and the ''Animated [[Transformers Animated: The Arrival|Arrival]]'' comic book...''all written completely in-universe'', in the form of "interviews" with the characters or excerpts from their journals and other in-story media. | ||
"Interstitial" interludes are presented out-of-universe and describe the design process behind the art, animation, and locations, as well as brief story summaries of the [[Transformers Animated (Titan)|Titan | "Interstitial" interludes are presented out-of-universe and describe the design process behind the art, animation, and locations, as well as brief story summaries of the [[Transformers Animated (Titan)|Titan Comics]] ''Animated'' issues. Elements of toy design are covered as well, but comparatively briefly. | ||
There are also an ''insane'' number of [[easter egg|obscure references]] to Transformers minutiae culled from the 25-year history of the [[Transformers brand|brand]], as well as other sci-fi and entertainment franchises as well. | There are also an ''insane'' number of [[easter egg|obscure references]] to Transformers minutiae culled from the 25-year history of the [[Transformers brand|brand]], as well as other sci-fi and entertainment franchises as well. Basically, ''all'' proper nouns and names refer to something or someone, even if that someone is a possibly non-existent character only mentioned once in a letters page of a foreign comic. And that's before we start talking about the ''numbers'': Almost every seemingly incongruous alphanumeric string is a reference to another franchise, be it a ''[[Star Trek]]'' stardate or a [[T-800|Terminator]]'s official designation. And that's just the content in English—about a third of the book's pages have large stretches covered in [[Cybertronix]]. Deciphered, these are all revealed to be non-Transformers-related passages, including song lyrics, catchphrases, memes, map coordinates and extensive, verbatim quotes from diverse sources ranging from {{w|Alfred, Lord Tennyson|Tennyson}}'s ''{{w|Ulysses (poem)|Ulysses}}'' to ''{{w|Max Headroom}}''. In particular, the book has a noticeable number of hidden references to [[Iron Maiden]], courtesy of author [[Bill Forster]], a massive fan of the band. | ||
A [[Transformers Animated: The AllSpark Almanac II|sequel]] was published in late June 2010. | A [[Transformers Animated: The AllSpark Almanac II|sequel]] was published in late June 2010. | ||
| Line 30: | Line 30: | ||
*Foreword, by [[Derrick J. Wyatt]] | *Foreword, by [[Derrick J. Wyatt]] | ||
*Introduction, by the authors | *Introduction, by the authors | ||
*Interstitial A: | *Interstitial A: ''[[Transformers Hero]]'' | ||
*Chapter 1: | *Chapter 1: [[Autobot]]s | ||
*Interstitial B: | *Interstitial B: Lighting | ||
*Chapter 2: | *Chapter 2: [[Decepticon]]s | ||
*Interstitial C: | *Interstitial C: [[Transformation]]s | ||
*Chapter 3: | *Chapter 3: [[Human]]s | ||
*Interstitial D: | *Interstitial D: Opening Credits | ||
*Chapter 4: | *Chapter 4: Events | ||
*Interstitial E: | *Interstitial E: [[Transformers Animated (Titan)|Titan Comics]] | ||
*Chapter 5: | *Chapter 5: Culture | ||
*Interstitial F: | *Interstitial F: Design Evolution | ||
*Chapter 6: | *Chapter 6: [[Detroit]] | ||
*Interstitial G: | *Interstitial G: "[[Bee in the City]]" | ||
*Chapter 7: | *Chapter 7: Settings | ||
*Interstitial H: | *Interstitial H: Backgrounds | ||
*Afterword, by [[Marty Isenberg]] | *Afterword, by [[Marty Isenberg]] | ||
*A Word from [[Hasbro]] | *A Word from [[Hasbro]] | ||
| Line 75: | Line 75: | ||
===Transformers references=== | ===Transformers references=== | ||
* Pg 15 – | *Pg 15 – Optimus Prime's axe is identified as a [[solitarium]] ultra-axe. | ||
* Pg 20a – As mentioned in his tech spec, | *Pg 20a – As mentioned in his tech spec, Ratchet is a [[Protihex Medical Mechanics University|Protihex Medical Mechanical graduate]]. | ||
* Pg 20b – [[Lockdown (Animated)|Lockdown]] refers to Ratchet with the nickname | *Pg 20b – [[Lockdown (Animated)|Lockdown]] refers to Ratchet with the nickname "Cool Hand Lube", an epithet coined for [[Ratchet (G1)|the original Ratchet]]. | ||
* Pg 34 – Unnamed in the ''Animated'' cartoon, the alien planet visited by the young Optimus, | *Pg 34 – Unnamed in the ''Animated'' cartoon, the alien planet visited by the young Optimus, Sentinel and [[Blackarachnia (Animated)|Elita-1]] populated by [[Archa Seven arachnid|giant spiders]] is here given the name [[Archa Seven]]. Presumably, this puts it in the same system as [[Archa Nine]]. | ||
* Pg 35 – Sentinel Prime's [[Skyboom (Animated)|shield]] is dubbed a [[Skyboom (Armada)|Skyboom shield]]. | *Pg 35 – Sentinel Prime's [[Skyboom (Animated)|shield]] is dubbed a [[Skyboom (Armada)|Skyboom shield]]. | ||
* Pg 44 – Ratchet recalls an old flame from [[Crystal City]]. | *Pg 44 – Ratchet recalls an old flame from [[Crystal City]]. | ||
* Pg 55 – | *Pg 55 – Omega Supreme's profile contains numerous references: | ||
**The language describing Omega's strength deliberately hearkens back to Generation 1 [[Omega Supreme (G1)|Omega]]'s [[The Transformers Universe (Marvel)|''Transformers Universe'']] profile, describing how he can pulverize "steel cubes" of impressive volume and hit diminutive items from a great distance with his head cannon. Numerous [[Units of length|Cybertronian units of measurement]] are used in the process: Omega is said to be able to lift 600,000 kilo-units (a measurement used by [[Bulkhead (Animated)|Bulkhead]] in the ''Animated'' episode "[[Rise of the Constructicons]]"); the dimensions of the aforementioned cube are given in mechanometers (used in the Generation 1 episode "[[City of Steel (episode)|City of Steel]]" and mentioned twice more in the book); and the distance at which he can blast a small object is given in hics (from the Marvel UK 1991 annual story "[[The Magnificent Six!]]" and used once more in the book). | |||
**Omega is also noted to be armed with [[Concussion weapon|concussion blasters]] (the personal weapon of Generation 1 [[Soundwave (G1)|Soundwave]]), [[pulsar bomb]]s (used by the [[Predacon (BW)|Predacons]] on [[Bullet Train to the Rescue|two]] [[Commandos|occasions]] in the 2001 [[Transformers: Robots in Disguise (2001 cartoon)|''Robots in Disguise'' cartoon]]), quasar beams (Generation 2 [[Blowout (G2)|Blowout]] and ''Beast Wars'' [[Cheetor (BW)|Cheetor]] both wielded [[quasar rifle]]s), friction cannons (Generation 1 [[Runamuck (G1)|Runamuck]] was armed with a [[friction rifle]]) and [[aquasting missile]]s (weapon of choice of the ''Beast Wars'' [[Fuzor]] [[Injector (BW)|Injector]]). | |||
**And finally, Omega has armor enhanced with [[rheanimum]]. | |||
===Real-world references=== | ===Real-world references=== | ||
* Pg 46 – Ratchet speculates that Wreck-Gar must have | *Pg 46 – Ratchet speculates that Wreck-Gar must have "27,000 gags" hidden in his trash bin. The number 27 is a running gag in [["Weird Al" Yankovic]]'s songs... Al, of course, being the voice actor who played Wreck-Gar. | ||
===Errors=== | ===Errors=== | ||
* Page 33: The [[Magnus Hammer]] is referred to as a "Storm'''breaker'''" hammer instead of "Storm'''bringer'''," a previously | *Page 33: The [[Magnus Hammer]] is referred to as a "Storm'''breaker'''" hammer instead of "Storm'''bringer'''," a previously given name for the weapon. | ||
==Chapter 2 - Decepticons== | ==Chapter 2 - Decepticons== | ||
| Line 116: | Line 115: | ||
===Transformers references=== | ===Transformers references=== | ||
* Pg 60 – Mentioned here and restated on pg 127, Megatron's swords are forged from [[tironium]]. As noted in his tech specs, his armor can deflect anti-proton lasers. | *Pg 60 – Mentioned here and restated on pg 127, Megatron's swords are forged from [[tironium]]. As noted in his tech specs, his armor can deflect anti-proton lasers. | ||
* Pg 66 – As on his toy packaging, Lugnut is referred to with the nickname "The [[Kaon]] Krusher". | *Pg 66 – As on his toy packaging, Lugnut is referred to with the nickname "The [[Kaon (polity)|Kaon]] Krusher". | ||
* Pg 74 – Shockwave's cannon can fire blasts from anywhere in the electromagnetic spectrum, just like Generation 1 [[Shockwave (G1)|Shockwave]] could. | *Pg 74 – Shockwave's cannon can fire blasts from anywhere in the electromagnetic spectrum, just like Generation 1 [[Shockwave (G1)|Shockwave]] could. | ||
* Pg 77 – Swindle's gyro gun and scatter blaster are named after the weapons of the original Generation 1 [[Swindle (G1)|Swindle]]. | *Pg 77 – Swindle's [[gyro gun]] and [[scatter blaster]] are named after the weapons of the original Generation 1 [[Swindle (G1)|Swindle]]. | ||
* Pg 81 – Starscream claims to be the handsomest 'bot "this side of the [[Benzuli Expanse]]". | *Pg 81 – Starscream claims to be the handsomest 'bot "this side of the [[Benzuli Expanse]]". | ||
* Pg | *Pg 83–84 – Having gone unnamed in the ''Animated'' cartoon, Thundercracker, Sunstorm and Skywarp were all given names and powers derived from their Generation 1 counterparts when they were released as toys. The liar and female clones did not get toys, but ''The AllSpark Almanac'' carries on the trend; the liar clone is named Ramjet and is noted to have a reinforced nosecone for mid-air collisions, while the female clone gets the brand new name of Slipstream (which was previously revealed at [[BotCon 2009]]). | ||
* Pg 88 – Numerous weapons used by Lockdown in the cartoon are here given the names of similar weapons from other corners of the Transformers multiverse. He is armed with [[Sleep Net]]s (from the Generation 1 coloring book ''[[Bumblebee to the Rescue!]]''), [[nova spray]], and a [[lightning whip]]. His chainsaw is also described as being | *Pg 88 – Numerous weapons used by Lockdown in the cartoon are here given the names of similar weapons from other corners of the Transformers multiverse. He is armed with [[Sleep Net]]s (from the Generation 1 coloring book ''[[Bumblebee to the Rescue!]]''), [[nova spray]], and a [[lightning whip]]. His chainsaw is also described as being "micro-serrated", language frequently used to describe the beak of Generation 1 [[Buzzsaw (G1)|Buzzsaw]]. | ||
===Real-world references=== | ===Real-world references=== | ||
* Pg 66 | *Pg 66 – Blitzwing calls Lugnut a "five-eyed, no-brained, flying purple people eater," paraphrasing the 1958 {{w|Sheb Wooley}} song, "{{w|The Purple People Eater}}". | ||
* Pg 82 – Starscream's first sycophantic clone is given the numerical designation [[Clone number 2716057|#2716057]], the serial number of hard-drinking robot Bender from '' | *Pg 82 – Starscream's first sycophantic clone is given the numerical designation [[Clone number 2716057|#2716057]], the serial number of hard-drinking robot Bender from ''{{w|Futurama}}''. The first cowardly clone, meanwhile, is marked [[Clone number 3370318|#3370318]], the serial number of Bender's identical duplicate, Flexo. | ||
===Errors=== | |||
*Pg 60 - Megatron's tironium sword is misspelled as "trionium". | |||
==Chapter 3 - Humans== | ==Chapter 3 - Humans== | ||
Character models and the occasional background image for the major humans of Animated. | Character models and the occasional background image for the major humans of Animated. | ||
{{collist|3| | {{collist|3| | ||
*[[Sari Sumdac]] by Bulkhead | *[[Sari Sumdac (Animated)|Sari Sumdac]] by Bulkhead | ||
*[[Isaac Sumdac]] by Megatron | *[[Isaac Sumdac (Animated)|Isaac Sumdac]] by Megatron | ||
*[[Carmine Fanzone|Captain Carmine Fanzone]] by Sari | *[[Carmine Fanzone|Captain Carmine Fanzone]] by Sari | ||
*The [[Angry Archer]] by Swindle | *The [[Angry Archer]] by Swindle | ||
| Line 142: | Line 144: | ||
*[[Colossus Rhodes]] by Meltdown | *[[Colossus Rhodes]] by Meltdown | ||
*[[Fusion creature]]s | *[[Fusion creature]]s | ||
** | **BAT-MONSTER by Grimlock | ||
**The | **The Seafood Louis creature by Fanzone | ||
*[[Master Disaster (Animated)|Master Disaster]] by Blurr | *[[Master Disaster (Animated)|Master Disaster]] by Blurr | ||
*[[Street Demon]] by Bulkhead | *[[Street Demon]] by Bulkhead | ||
| Line 152: | Line 154: | ||
===Transformers references=== | ===Transformers references=== | ||
* Pg 94 – Swindle plans to imitate | *Pg 94 – Swindle plans to imitate Angry Archer's antiquated dialect to help facilitate his next deal with the [[Darkling Lord]]s of [[Prysmos]]. This is a reference to the 1987 Hasbro toyline, [[Visionaries]]; Prysmos was the planet upon which that series was set, and the Darkling Lords were the villains of the franchise. Visionaries was also a back-up strip for the UK Marvel Transformers comics. | ||
* Pg 101 – The name of Prometheus Black's company is given as [[Biotech Unbound]], referring to the Greek poem, | *Pg 101 – The name of Prometheus Black's company is given as [[Biotech Unbound]], referring to the Greek poem, "Prometheus Unbound", which was also the title of a ''[[Beast Machines: Transformers (franchise)|Beast Machines]]'' [[Prometheus Unbound|episode]]. | ||
*Pg 103 – In the Animated cartoon, the bat-monster is noted as having formerly been Meltdown's lawyer. Here, Captain Fanzone notes that the shark-monster was his stock broker. In addition, he calls it a "[[Seafood Louis]] creature" | *Pg 103 – In the ''Animated'' cartoon, the bat-monster is noted as having formerly been Meltdown's lawyer. Here, Captain Fanzone notes that the shark-monster was his stock broker. In addition, he calls it a "[[Seafood Louis]] creature." | ||
* Pg 105 – | *Pg 105 – Solon Kitakaze is named after [[Deathsaurus (G1)|Deathsaurus]]'s [[Solon Kitakaze (G1)|cyborg son]] from the infamously kooky ''[[Fight! Super Robot Lifeform Transformers (franchise)#Fight! Super Robot Lifeform Transformers: Victory|Victory]]'' [[Fight! Super Robot Lifeform Transformers: Victory (manga)|manga]]. | ||
===Real-world references=== | ===Real-world references=== | ||
* Pg 97 – | *Pg 97 – Slo-Mo is here given the first name of Samantha, and on pg 143, the surname of Lomow. So hey, it turns out that her real name is the same as Hasbro Senior Vice President of Global Marketing [[Samantha Lomow]], on whom she was based. | ||
* Pg 105 – | *Pg 103 – Captain Fanzone claims that the shark-monster "kicks some serious fin," one of the multiple catchphrases of the cartoon series ''{{w|Street Sharks}}. | ||
* Pg 106 – Porter C. Powell's limousine is branded as a "TUX model", named for the [[GoBots | *Pg 105 – Ming-Li is named after author Jim Sorenson's wife, Ming-Li Wang. Shana Story is named for a friend of author Bill Forster, Shana Storey, who is credited in the acknowledgments section of their previous book, ''[[Transformers: The Ark II]]''. | ||
*Pg 106 – Porter C. Powell's [[TUX model mega-limo|limousine]] is branded as a "[[Tux|TUX]] model", named for the [[GoBots|GoBot]] it was designed to resemble. | |||
===Errors=== | ===Errors=== | ||
* Page | *Page 85: The "d" is left out of "Powdered Sugar." | ||
==Chapter 4 - Events== | ==Chapter 4 - Events== | ||
The episodes and comic stories that make up the primary Animated continuity, in order. | The episodes and comic stories that make up the primary Animated continuity, in order. | ||
{{collist|2| | {{collist|2| | ||
*[[Transform and Roll Out]] as three Autobot Incident Reports by Optimus Prime and a page from Isaac Sumdac's journal | *"[[Transform and Roll Out]]" as three Autobot Incident Reports by Optimus Prime and a page from Isaac Sumdac's journal | ||
*[[Dispatches]] as musings from [[Vector Prime]] | *"[[Dispatches]]" as musings from [[Vector Prime]] | ||
*[[Home Is Where the Spark Is]] as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | *"[[Home Is Where the Spark Is]]" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | ||
*[[Total Meltdown]] as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | *"[[Total Meltdown]]" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | ||
*[[Blast from the Past]] as Megatron's Encrypted Internal Log | *"[[Blast from the Past]]" as Megatron's Encrypted Internal Log | ||
*[[The Arrival issue 4# | *"[[The Arrival issue 4#"A Few Loose Strands"|A Few Loose Strands]]" as [[Venus (magazine)|''Venus'']], the trans-dimensional magazine for Decepti-[[Female Transformer|femmes]] | ||
*[[The Thrill of the Hunt]] as an Autobot Incident Report by Ratchet | *"[[The Thrill of the Hunt]]" as an Autobot Incident Report by Ratchet | ||
*[[The Arrival issue 5|The Arrival #5]] as a page from Swindle's ledger and an evaluation form | *"[[The Arrival issue 5|The Arrival #5]]" as a page from Swindle's ledger and an evaluation form | ||
*[[Nanosec (episode)|Nanosec]] as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | *"[[Nanosec (episode)|Nanosec]]" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | ||
*[[Along Came a Spider]] as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | *"[[Along Came a Spider]]" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | ||
*[[The Arrival issue 2# | *"[[The Arrival issue 2#"Whatever Happened To Whatisname?"|Whatever Happened To Whatisname?]]" as a page from Professor Princess' [['Lil Spoiled Brat|diary]] | ||
*[[Sound and Fury]] as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | *"[[Sound and Fury (episode)|Sound and Fury]]" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | ||
*[[The Arrival issue 2# | *"[[The Arrival issue 2#"Attention Surplus Disorder"|Attention Surplus Disorder]]" as two pages from the ''[[Detroit Powell Press]]'' | ||
*[[Lost and Found ( | *"[[Lost and Found (Animated)|Lost and Found]]" as Lugnut's Encrypted Internal Log | ||
*[[The Arrival issue 3|The Arrival #3]] as Megatron's Encrypted Internal Log and a medical report from Ratchet | *"[[The Arrival issue 3|The Arrival #3]]" as Megatron's Encrypted Internal Log and a medical report from Ratchet | ||
*[[Survival of the Fittest]] as a police report from Captain Fanzone | *"[[Survival of the Fittest]]" as a police report from Captain Fanzone | ||
*[[Headmaster (episode)|Headmaster]] as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | *"[[Headmaster (episode)|Headmaster]]" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | ||
*[[The Arrival issue 4# | *"[[The Arrival issue 4#"The Insincerest Form of Flattery"|The Insincerest Form of Flattery]]" as an Autobot Incident Report by Bulkhead | ||
*[[Nature Calls]] as an Autobot Incident Report by Prowl | *"[[Nature Calls]]" as an Autobot Incident Report by Prowl | ||
*[[Megatron Rising - Part 1]] as Megatron's Encrypted Internal Log and a medical report from Ratchet | *"[[Megatron Rising - Part 1]]" as Megatron's Encrypted Internal Log and a medical report from Ratchet | ||
*[[Megatron Rising - Part 2]] as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | *"[[Megatron Rising - Part 2]]" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | ||
*[[The Elite Guard]] as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | *"[[The Elite Guard]]" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | ||
*[[The Return of the Headmaster]] as Sentinel Prime's private journal and a letter from Sari to her absent father | *"[[The Return of the Headmaster]]" as Sentinel Prime's private journal and a letter from Sari to her absent father | ||
*[[Mission Accomplished]] as Megatron's Internal Log and a medical report from Ratchet | *"[[Mission Accomplished]]" as Megatron's Internal Log and a medical report from Ratchet | ||
*[[Garbage In, Garbage Out]] as a box of [[Garbage O's]] cereal | *"[[Garbage In, Garbage Out]]" as a box of [[Garbage O's]] cereal | ||
*[[Velocity]] as an Autobot Incident Report by Bumblebee | *"[[Velocity (episode)|Velocity]]" as an Autobot Incident Report by Bumblebee | ||
*[[Rise of the Constructicons]] as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | *"[[Rise of the Constructicons]]" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | ||
*[[A Fistful of Energon]] as Starscream's Internal Log | *"[[A Fistful of Energon]]" as Starscream's Internal Log | ||
*[[SUV: Society of Ultimate Villainy]] as excerpts from interrogations conducted by Captain Fanzone | *"[[SUV: Society of Ultimate Villainy]]" as excerpts from interrogations conducted by Captain Fanzone | ||
*[[Autoboot Camp]] as Shockwave's Encrypted Internal Log | *"[[Autoboot Camp]]" as Shockwave's Encrypted Internal Log | ||
*[[First (and Second) in Flight]] as a page from Ultra Magnus' memoirs | *"[[First (and Second) in Flight]]" as a page from Ultra Magnus's memoirs | ||
*[[Black Friday (episode)|Black Friday]] as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | *"[[Black Friday (episode)|Black Friday]]" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | ||
*[[Sari, No One's Home]] as a letter from Sari to her absent father | *"[[Sari, No One's Home]]" as a letter from Sari to her absent father | ||
*[[A Bridge Too Close, Part I]] as Megatron's Internal Log | *"[[A Bridge Too Close, Part I]]" as Megatron's Internal Log | ||
*[[A Bridge Too Close, Part II]] as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | *"[[A Bridge Too Close, Part II]]" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime | ||
}} | }} | ||
===Transformers references=== | ===Transformers references=== | ||
*Pg 112 – An observation of the events of the | *Pg 112 – An observation of the events of the [[Dispatches|first issue]] of the ''Animated'' comic by the trans-dimensional [[Vector Prime]]. He uses the aforementioned Universal Stream classification system to catalog this manuscript, identifying the ''Animated'' cartoon universe as "Malgus 1207.26 Alpha". The designation is later used again on pg 117. | ||
* Pg 116 | *Pg 116 – Presumably, the trans-dimensional magazine ''Venus'' is named for ''Beast Wars'' [[Blackarachnia (BW)|Blackarachnia's]] voice actor, [[Venus Terzo]]. Whatever currency its cover price is in, it's represented with a "B" in Predacon Cybertronix! Blackarachnia wears the crown, shoulderpads and cape donned by Generation 1 Starscream for his coronation in ''[[The Transformers: The Movie]]''. References on the cover include: | ||
:* | :*"Sparkmate" is a term used in the [[Nintendo 64|N64]] ''[[Transformers: Beast Wars Transmetals (N64)|Transformers: Beast Wars Transmetals]]'' video game, to describe [[Tigatron (BW)|Tigatron]] and [[Airazor (BW)|Airazor]]'s romantic bond. | ||
:*[[Chain of Command]] is the title of a Beast Wars episode. | :*[[Chain of Command (BW)|Chain of Command]] is the title of a ''Beast Wars'' episode. | ||
:*Readers are invited to compare several pairs of Decepticon and Predacon fembots: | :*Readers are invited to compare several pairs of Decepticon and Predacon fembots: | ||
:**[[Clio]] is a Decepticon [[Powermaster]] mentioned by [[Blaster (G1)|Blaster]] in the letters page of issue #315 of Marvel UK's Generation 1 comic. She is pitted against [[Lyzack]], sister of Decepticon Breastforce warrior [[Leozack]] | :**[[Clio]] is a Decepticon [[Powermaster]] mentioned by [[Blaster (G1)|Blaster]] in the letters page of issue #315 of Marvel UK's Generation 1 comic. She is pitted against [[Lyzack (G1)|Lyzack]], the sister of Decepticon [[Breastforce]] warrior [[Leozack]] who appears in the [[The Grand Victory War|final issue]] of the ''Victory'' manga. | ||
:**[[Manta Ray (BW)|Manta Ray]] is a Beast Wars | :**[[Manta Ray (BW)|Manta Ray]] is a ''Beast Wars'' [[McDonald's]] Happy Meal figure, who was established as being female by IDW Publishing's ''[[Transformers: Beast Wars Sourcebook|Beast Wars Sourcebook]]''. She is up against the equally [[Seacon (BW)|aquatic]] [[Scylla (BW)|Scylla]] from ''[[Beast Wars: Super Lifeform Transformers#Beast Wars II|Beast Wars II]]''. | ||
:**[[Flamewar]] and [[Nightracer]] are both BotCon [[exclusive]] female Decepticons, from 2005 and 1995, respectively. The match-up has a deeper meaning; Nightracer was created by notorious Decepticon fan [[Raksha]], and some fans believe that Flamewar's personality is based on Raksha, though her creator [[Ben Yee]] denies it. | :**[[Flamewar (G1)|Flamewar]] and [[Nightracer (G2)|Nightracer]] are both BotCon [[exclusive]] female Decepticons, from [[BotCon 2005|2005]] and [[BotCon 1995|1995]], respectively. The match-up has a deeper meaning; Nightracer was created by notorious Decepticon fan [[Raksha]], and some fans believe that Flamewar's personality is based on Raksha, though her creator [[Ben Yee]] denies it. | ||
:*''Revenge of the Fallen'''s Pretender [[Alice]] teaches readers how to disarm a [[foldspace warhead]], a weapon which appears in the second issue of the UK's 2007 live-action movie comic. | :*[[Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (film)|''Revenge of the Fallen'']]'s [[Pretender]] [[Alice (ROTF)|Alice]] teaches readers how to disarm a [[foldspace warhead]], a weapon which appears in the [[Transformers Comic issue 2|second issue]] of the UK's 2007 live-action movie comic. | ||
:*The magazine's gossip columnist is [[Freezon]], the Decepticon car included with Tyco's Transformers Electric Racing Set released in the 1980s. She is dishing the dirt on Lugnut and [[Strika (Animated)|Strika]]'s relationship, which was established in Strika's profile, published in issue #24 of the Transformers Collectors Club Official Magazine. | :*The magazine's gossip columnist is [[Freezon]], the Decepticon car included with Tyco's Transformers [[Electric Racing Set]] released in the 1980s. She is dishing the dirt on Lugnut and [[Strika (Animated)|Strika]]'s relationship, which was established in Strika's profile, published in [[Hasbro Transformers Collectors' Club issue 24|issue #24]] of the Transformers Collectors Club Official Magazine. | ||
:*[[Beta Maxx]] is the partner of BotCon 2007 exclusive [[Alpha Trion | :*[[Beta Maxx (RID)|Beta Maxx]] is the partner of [[BotCon 2007]] exclusive [[Alpha Trion#Shattered Glass|Alpha Trion]], while [[Caliburn (Universe)|Caliburn]] is partnered with [[OTFCC 2004|2004]] exclusive, [[Megazarak (Universe)|Megazarak]]. The cover identifies them as [[Mini-Con]]s, despite the fact that no previous writing has ever done so (Caliburn is explicitly a [[Micromaster]], while Beta Maxx has only been referred to as an Autobot). Funnily enough, in late 2008, author Jim Sorenson was involved in an argument on the Transformers Wiki about Beta Maxx being a Mini-Con... hmmmn. In 2015, the Facebook version of [[Ask Vector Prime]] would clarify that both ''Robots in Disguise'' and Unicron Trilogy versions of them existed, with the former being Micromasters and the latter being Mini-Cons. Anyway, the Mini-Con versions of [[Beta Maxx (Armada)|Beta Maxx]] and [[Caliburn (Armada)|Caliburn]] are talking to ''Cybertron'' [[Thunderblast (Decepticon)|Thunderblast]]. | ||
* Pg 119a – Most of the weapons Swindle sells Lugnut and Blitzwing, and the planets he gets them from, are established, if obscure, Transformers items and locales. Most of them were named in the comic story this page covers, "[[The Arrival issue 5#Everything Must Go|Everything Must Go]]", but a few more things are named here. The full list includes: | *Pg 119a – Most of the weapons Swindle sells Lugnut and Blitzwing, and the planets he gets them from, are established, if obscure, Transformers items and locales. Most of them were named in the comic story this page covers, "[[The Arrival issue 5#"Everything Must Go"|Everything Must Go]]", but a few more things are named here. The full list includes: | ||
:*An [[anti-gravity gun|anti-gravity cannon]] from the planet [[Andellor]]. | :*An [[anti-gravity gun|anti-gravity cannon]] from the planet [[Andellor]]. | ||
:*A [[triple crusher cannon]] from the planet Talos Four (probably derived from a mistake on TFWIKI.Net, which misspelled [[Taros Four]] in this manner for a time). | :*A [[triple crusher cannon]] from the planet Talos Four (probably derived from a mistake on TFWIKI.Net, which misspelled [[Taros Four]] in this manner for a time). | ||
:*A decompression pump from [[Torkulon]]. | :*A decompression pump from [[Torkulon]]. | ||
:*[[Glass gas]] and a [[Digital Impact Mace]] (the weapon of choice of [[BotCon 2000]] exclusive toy [[Apelinq]]) from the planet [[Darhos]]. | :*[[Glass gas]] and a [[Digital Impact Mace]] (the weapon of choice of [[BotCon 2000]] exclusive toy [[Apelinq (BM)|Apelinq]]) from the planet [[Darhos]]. | ||
:*Super glue from the [[Menonia]]. | :*Super glue from the [[Menonia]]. | ||
:*An [[omega bomb]] from [[Ganzvort]]. | :*An [[omega bomb]] from [[Ganzvort]]. | ||
| Line 229: | Line 231: | ||
:*A [[Chaosmaster Bomb]] from [[Xeptos]]. | :*A [[Chaosmaster Bomb]] from [[Xeptos]]. | ||
:*Circuitry repair patches from [[Cheyne]]. | :*Circuitry repair patches from [[Cheyne]]. | ||
* Pg 119b – Optimus's evaluation form is rendered in the style of classic Transformers [[Tech Spec]]s, but not any one particular design. The training exercise from the comic story | *Pg 119b – Optimus's evaluation form is rendered in the style of classic Transformers [[Tech Spec]]s, but not any one particular design. The training exercise from the comic story "Survival Skills" is revealed to have taken place on [[Kyber-5]]. | ||
* Pg | *Pg 124–125 – The included article text from the ''Detroit Powell Press'' contains numerous references: | ||
:*[[ | :*[[Irwin Spoon]] was a journalist who appeared in a [[Inside Story!|three]]-[[Front Line! (issue)|part]] [[End of the Road! (UK)|story]] in Marvel UK's Generation 1 comic. | ||
:*[[Quake-Maker]] is a supervillain from the UK's Animated comic. | :*[[Quake-Maker]] is a supervillain from the UK's ''Animated'' comic. | ||
:*The [[ | :*The [[Mechanic]] is a human criminal who battled the Autobots in [[Funeral for a Friend!|two]] [[Mechanical Difficulties!|issues]] of the Marvel's original Generation 1 comic. | ||
:*The [[Jack Boys]] are a motorcycle gang from the ''Super-God Masterforce'' cartoon. | :*The [[Jack Boys]] are a motorcycle gang from the [[Transformers: Super-God Masterforce (cartoon)|''Super-God Masterforce'' cartoon]]. | ||
:*[[Jake Lomax]] is a mob boss from issue #13 of Marvel's Generation 1 comic. | :*[[Jake Lomax]] is a mob boss from [[Shooting Star!|issue #13]] of Marvel's Generation 1 comic. | ||
:*[[Jacob Lee Bonaventure]] is an industrialist from IDW's ''[[Hearts of Steel]]'' mini-series. | :*[[Jacob Lee Bonaventure]] is an industrialist from IDW's ''[[Hearts of Steel]]'' mini-series. | ||
:The sidebar on the page also makes numerous references: | :The sidebar on the page also makes numerous references: | ||
:* | :*"Defensor United" refers, of course, to the Generation 1 [[Defensor (G1)|Protectobot combiner]], but more specifically to the recurring discussions of [[Mecha-soccer]] in the Marvel UK comic's letters page, where Defensor United played in the Cybertron Premier Division. The team is thrashed by real-life football team West Ham at [[Tigatron Stadium]], the venue named for the [[Tigatron (BW)|''Beast Wars'' character]], which appeared in the ''Animated'' episode "[[Five Servos of Doom]]". | ||
:*In the Animated universe, the Generation 1 Decepticon ally, mad scientist [[Doctor Arkeville]], is the surgeon general! He recommends [[Ding Dong]]s (favored by the [[President of the United States]] in the live-action movie!) as a cure for the [[Hate Plague]], a rage-inciting disease that appeared in the Generation 1 two-part episode, "[[The Return of Optimus Prime, Part 1|The Return of Optimus Prime]]". | :*In the ''Animated'' universe, the Generation 1 Decepticon ally, mad scientist [[Doctor Arkeville]], is the surgeon general! He recommends [[Ding Dong (food)|Ding Dong]]s (favored by the [[President of the United States]] in the live-action movie!) as a cure for the [[Hate Plague]], a rage-inciting disease that appeared in the Generation 1 two-part episode, "[[The Return of Optimus Prime, Part 1|The Return of Optimus Prime]]". | ||
:*Racing queen [[Junko Shiragami]] is a human female from the ''Binaltech Asterisk'' toyline (who was in turn based upon [[Kelly (RID)|Kelly]] from ''[[Robots in Disguise (franchise)|Robots in Disguise]]''). Here, she is dating scientist [[Michael Avery]], who appeared in the 2007 movie prequel novel, [[Ghosts of Yesterday]]. | :*Racing queen [[Kelly (RID)|Junko Shiragami]] is a human female from the ''[[The Transformers: Binaltech Asterisk|Binaltech Asterisk]]'' toyline (who was in turn based upon [[Kelly (RID)|Kelly]] from the 2001 ''[[Transformers: Robots in Disguise (2001 franchise)|Robots in Disguise]]'' franchise). Here, she is dating scientist [[Michael Avery (Movie)|Michael Avery]], who appeared in the 2007 movie prequel novel, ''[[Transformers: Ghosts of Yesterday|Ghosts of Yesterday]]''. | ||
:*Street Demon racer Roxy Sparkles (earlier named on page 105) is here noted to be a member of the band [[Purple Fungus]], who were a favorite of [[Buster Witwicky (G1)|Buster Witwicky]] in the Find Your Fate Junior novel, "[[Attack of the Insecticons]]". | :*Street Demon racer Roxy Sparkles (earlier named on page 105) is here noted to be a member of the band [[Purple Fungus]], who were a favorite of [[Buster Witwicky (G1)|Buster Witwicky]] in the Find Your Fate Junior novel, "[[Attack of the Insecticons]]". | ||
:*"Princess Ringo" was the nickname by which ''[[Kiss Players (franchise)|Kiss Players]]'' character [[Ringo Chikuma]] preferred to be known. Here, she has recently visited [[Mont Porte]], the country that is home to the ''Super-God Masterforce'' Headmaster Junior [[Minerva ( | :*"Princess Ringo" was the nickname by which ''[[Transformers: Kiss Players (franchise)|Kiss Players]]'' character [[Ringo Chikuma]] preferred to be known. Here, she has recently visited [[Mont Parta|Mont Porte]], the country that is home to the ''Super-God Masterforce'' [[Headmaster Junior]] [[Minerva (human)|Minerva]]. | ||
:Adverts refer to: | :Adverts refer to: | ||
:*[[Dancitron]], a musical event named for a dance club from the Generation 1 cartoon episode "[[Auto-Bop]]". Cold Slither is playing here, a band from the G.I. Joe cartoon episode of the same name, created as part of an evil Cobra plot. The piece of music composed as their [[Cold Slither (song)|signature tune]] was used as incidental music in several Transformers episodes. | :*[[Dancitron]], a musical event named for a dance club from the Generation 1 cartoon episode "[[Auto-Bop]]". [[Cold Slither (band)|Cold Slither]] is playing here, a band from the ''[[G.I. Joe (franchise)|G.I. Joe]]'' cartoon episode of the same name, created as part of an evil [[Cobra]] plot. The piece of music composed as their [[Cold Slither (song)|signature tune]] was used as incidental music in several [[The Transformers (cartoon)|''Transformers'' episodes]]. | ||
:*Wyatt Toys, the toy store named after Animated art director [[Derrick J. Wyatt]] which appears in several episodes of the cartoon. The advert notes that the store sells [[Diaclone]] and [[Microman]] figures, the two toylines that were Transformers' progenitors. | :*Wyatt Toys, the toy store named after Animated art director [[Derrick J. Wyatt]] which appears in several episodes of the cartoon. The advert notes that the store sells [[Diaclone]] and [[Microman]] figures, the two toylines that were Transformers' progenitors. | ||
:*Roadhog Horton's Motorcycle Show, named after [[Randy Horton|Randy "Roadhog" Horton]], a member of the bounty-hunting motorcyclist [[Roadjammers]] from [[Ca$h and Car-nage!|issue #46]] of the Marvel Generation 1 comic. His show also features autograph signings from Rorza, a reference to the [[Rorza, the Rocket-cycle Racer from Rigel III|Rocket-Cycle Racer from Rigel III]] of the same name from issue #44. | :*Roadhog Horton's Motorcycle Show, named after [[Randy Horton|Randy "Roadhog" Horton]], a member of the bounty-hunting motorcyclist [[Roadjammers]] from [[Ca$h and Car-nage!|issue #46]] of the Marvel Generation 1 comic. His show also features autograph signings from Rorza, a reference to the [[Rorza, the Rocket-cycle Racer from Rigel III|Rocket-Cycle Racer from Rigel III]] of the same name from [[The Cosmic Carnival|issue #44]]. The motorcycle in the ad seems visually based on [[Wreck-Gar (G1)|Generation 1 Wreck-Gar]]. | ||
:* | :*The horror movie ''[[Monster from Mars]]'' is an elaborate reference to the movie of the same name that was the central plot element of "[[Monstercon from Mars!]]", issue #45 of the Marvel comic. In said issue, Decepticon Pretender [[Skullgrin]] starred in the title role; this poster features a monster designed to look like Skullgrin in the style of Meltdown's [[fusion creature]]s, in reference to the fact that Skullgrin's fellow Pretenders [[Submarauder (G1)|Submarauder]] and [[Bomb-Burst (G1)|Bomb-Burst]] were the base for the two fusion creatures in the cartoon. In both the original comic and this version, the movie is directed by [[Rollie Friendly (G1)|Rollie Friendly]] and stars [[Jake Colton (G1)|Jake Colton]] and [[Carissa Carr (G1)|Carissa Carr]]; this version also adds [[Karen Fishook]], an actress from the Generation 1 cartoon episode, "[[Hoist Goes Hollywood (episode)|Hoist Goes Hollywood]]". The movie's soundtrack is by the [[High Rollahz]], a band featured in ''[[The Transformers Trilogy]]'' novel, ''[[Transformers: Hardwired|Hardwired]]''. | ||
* Pg 127 – Unnamed in the original comic "[[The Arrival issue 3#"'Bots of Science"|'Bots of Science]]", Ratchet here notes that he has dubbed the cure for Cosmic Rust "[[Corrostop]]". Its ingredients include [[Ingredient X]] and [[razon gas]]. | *Pg 127 – Unnamed in the original comic "[[The Arrival issue 3#"'Bots of Science"|'Bots of Science]]", Ratchet here notes that he has dubbed the cure for Cosmic Rust "[[Corrostop]]". Its ingredients include [[Ingredient X]] and [[razon gas]]. | ||
* Pg 134 – The [[Sigma Supreme|Elite Guard ship]] is here given the name ''[[Steelhaven]]''. | *Pg 134 – The [[Sigma Supreme|Elite Guard ship]] is here given the name ''[[Steelhaven (G1)|Steelhaven]]''. | ||
* Pg 136 – Sari's notebook paper is decorated with an illustration of "Hello [[Nekomimi A and Nekomimi B|Nekomimi]] Pop-Star", a chibified, "Hello Kitty"-style version of Nekomimi A from the Energon episode, "[[Distribution]]". Nekomimi B appears on pg 147 in a similar fashion. | *Pg 136 – Sari's notebook paper is decorated with an illustration of "Hello [[Nekomimi A and Nekomimi B|Nekomimi]] Pop-Star", a chibified, "Hello Kitty"-style version of Nekomimi A from the ''Energon'' episode, "[[Distribution]]". Nekomimi B appears on pg 147 in a similar fashion. | ||
* Pg | *Pg 138–139 – The Garbage O's cereal box also includes a number of references, such as: | ||
:*The brand of the tire in the logo is [[Wheeljack's workshop|Wheeljack]] Tyres! | :*The brand of the tire in the logo is [[Wheeljack's workshop|Wheeljack]] Tyres! | ||
:*In the "fueltritional facts" box alone, there are references to: | |||
:*In the | :**[[Mercury sauce]], a favorite of the [[Mecannibal]]s from the Marvel Generation 1 comic issue "[[Recipe for Disaster!]]" | ||
:** | :**[[Rarified Energon]], introduced in the Transformers Collectors Club magazine storyline, ''[[Crossing Over]]''. | ||
:**[[Rarified Energon]], introduced in the Transformers Collectors Club magazine storyline, [[Crossing Over]] | :**[[Energon Z]], from [[Fight! Super Robot Lifeform Transformers (franchise)#Transformers: Zone|''Zone'']]. | ||
:**[[Energon Z]] from [[ | :**Budianskium basil (referring to Transformers writer [[Bob Budiansky]]). | ||
:** | :**[[Grated gears]], a serving suggestion for ants by ''Beast Wars'' [[Rampage (BW)|Rampage]] in the episode "[[Transmutate (episode)|Transmutate]]". | ||
:** | :**Janick [[jaAm]] (see below). | ||
:** | :*The word jumble unscrambles to read "You lived like a warrior ans died to an hero", an infamous quote from the late-1990s fanfic by MG-Dinobot, "Dinobot's Old Technology", which was itself a misquote from the Beast Wars episode "[[Code of Hero]]". The quote went on to become one of the most famous online memes from that era of Transformers [[fandom]]. | ||
:**The answer at the bottom of the page, however, claims it actually says "WhY mY ShOuldErs hUrT?", a tortured quote from British fan Blueshift's [[JaAm|famous re-scripting]] of the first Armada pack-in mini-comic. This was also the source of the above-mentioned "jaAm" line, which was since been immortalized on the license plate and packaging bio of the 2009 [[Transformers: Universe (2008 toyline)|Universe]] [[Hot Shot (Armada)/toys|Hot Shot figure]]. | |||
:*The word jumble unscrambles to read | :*Illustration B in the "spot the difference" puzzle is, of course, Generation 1 [[Grimlock (G1)|Grimlock's]] [[character model]]. | ||
:**The answer at the bottom of the page, however, claims it actually says | *Pg 145 – Ultra Magnus's memoir is prefaced with a haiku from "[[Sky-Byte (Animated)|Sky-Byte]], Decepticon poet", referencing the loveable haiku-writing [[Predacon (BW)|Predacon]] [[Sky-Byte (RID)|Sky-Byte]] from the 2001 ''[[Transformers: Robots in Disguise (2001 franchise)|Robots in Disguise]]'' franchise. He has to be a Decepticon here, of course, because there are no Predacons in the ''Animated'' universe. In the course of this page, Magnus mentions [[mitotic spark]]s and the [[Angarrix sector|Angarix Sector]], a region of space introduced in the Generation 1 episode "[[The Quintesson Journal]]". | ||
*Pg 148 – Megatron refers to the act of [[branding]] the Constructicons with the Decepticon symbol as the "[[Rite of the Deceptibrand]]," after the Autobot equivalent, the "[[Rite of the Autobrand]]". | |||
:*Illustration B in the | |||
* Pg 145 – Ultra Magnus's memoir is prefaced with a haiku from "[[Sky-Byte (Animated)|Sky-Byte]], Decepticon poet", referencing the loveable haiku-writing [[Predacon ( | |||
* Pg 148 – Megatron refers to the act of [[branding]] the Constructicons with the Decepticon symbol as the "[[Rite of the Deceptibrand]]," after the Autobot equivalent, the "[[Rite of the Autobrand]]". | |||
===Real-world references=== | ===Real-world references=== | ||
| Line 277: | Line 275: | ||
===Errors=== | ===Errors=== | ||
* Page 117: Blackarachnia is spelled "Blacharachnia" | *Page 117: Blackarachnia is spelled "Blacharachnia" | ||
* Page 133: "...have tried harder to recruit the Dinobots as allies, but I was so angry at Prowl's deception that I..." is repeated immediately following the first use in the third paragraph. | *Page 117: "turbotigers" is spelled "tubortigers" | ||
* Page 145: The "c" is left out of "First (and Second) in Flight." | *Page 119: "Serial" is spelled "Seriel" | ||
*Page 133: "...have tried harder to recruit the Dinobots as allies, but I was so angry at Prowl's deception that I..." is repeated immediately following the first use in the third paragraph. | |||
*Page 145: The "c" is left out of "First (and Second) in Flight." | |||
==Chapter 5 - Culture== | ==Chapter 5 - Culture== | ||
| Line 287: | Line 287: | ||
*Autobot Cybertronian forms by Ultra Magnus | *Autobot Cybertronian forms by Ultra Magnus | ||
*Decepticon Cybertronian forms by Starscream | *Decepticon Cybertronian forms by Starscream | ||
*The [[Death's Head (Animated)|Death's Head]] by Lockdown | *The [[Death's Head (Animated)|''Death's Head'']] by Lockdown | ||
*[[ | *[[Emergency shuttle|Autobot Shuttle]] by Blitzwing | ||
*[[Automaton|Sumdac robots]] by Porter C. Powell | *[[Automaton|Sumdac robots]] by Porter C. Powell | ||
*Bulkhead's Art by Ratchet, Optimus Prime and Sari | *Bulkhead's Art by Ratchet, Optimus Prime and Sari | ||
| Line 299: | Line 299: | ||
===Transformers references=== | ===Transformers references=== | ||
* Pg 161 – Starscream uses the expression | *Pg 161 – Starscream uses the expression "a few [[lightpole|lipoles]] short of a nest", referring to the metal-eating bat-creatures native to [[Jupiter]]'s moon [[Io]], from the Generation 1 multi-part episode, "[[Five Faces of Darkness]]". The book uses an incorrect spelling for the creatures' names, as the true spelling had not been discovered at the time of publication. | ||
* Pg 164 – Lockdown's spaceship is named the '' | *Pg 164 – Lockdown's spaceship is named the ''Death's Head'', after a certain [[Death's Head (G1)|freelance peacekeeping agent]], yes? It has been upgraded using parts obtained from the planets [[Jörmungandr]] and [[Taxxos]] (implied to be the [[Taxxon]] homeworld), and the [[Jabbi-Ko]] aliens, outfitted with Vandarian holographic technology (from the same planet as the [[Vandarian fuzz-worm]]s) and [[cybertitanium]] cables (among other items mentioned below as they're non-''Transformers'' references). | ||
* Pg 170 – Bulkhead describes candy as being like [[Ultra-Energon]] for kids. | *Pg 168 – The Sumdac Constructobots are colored in [[Constructicon (G1)|Constructicon]]-style green and purple. | ||
* Pg 174 – Newscaster [[Lester Black]] is revealed to be the great-nephew of [[ | *Pg 170 – Bulkhead describes candy as being like [[Ore-13|Ultra-Energon]] for kids. | ||
*Pg 174 – Newscaster [[Lester Black]] is revealed to be the great-nephew of [[Hector Ramirez]], a callback to the Generation 1 news reporter of the same name (who was actually unnamed in his one ''Transformers'' cartoon appearance). | |||
===Real-world references=== | ===Real-world references=== | ||
* Pg 164 – Lockdown's spaceship used to be an | *Pg 164 – Lockdown's spaceship used to be an "IG-2000" class ship, referring to the [[Star Wars (franchise)|Star Wars]] ship that bore that name. It is outfitted with Deckard cannons (named for Rick Deckard from ''{{w|Blade Runner}}''), [[Samus-blaster]]s (named for [[Samus Aran]] from the ''{{w|Metroid}}'' series), and isomorphic controls preventing anyone other than Lockdown from piloting it, as does ''[[Doctor Who]]''{{'}}s {{w|TARDIS}}. Lockdown rounds out the paragraph by saying "a bot's got to know his limitations", paraphrasing Clint Eastwood in ''{{w|Magnum Force}}''. | ||
* Pg 165 | *Pg 165 – "A three hour tour!" cackles Blitzwing, quoting the [[theme song|theme tune]] of ''{{w|Gilligan's Island}}''. | ||
*Pg | *Pg 170–171 – Among the [[Halloween]] costumes are a [[wikia:ghostbusters:Samhain|Samhain]], {{w|Headless Horseman}}, {{w|Afro Samurai}}, [[Destro]], [[Cobra Commander]] and [[Hawk (G.I. Joe)|General Hawk]]. | ||
==Chapter 6 - Detroit== | ==Chapter 6 - Detroit== | ||
| Line 323: | Line 324: | ||
===Transformers references=== | ===Transformers references=== | ||
* Pg 178 – [[Augustus Edsel|Mayor Edsel]] is revealed to be the nephew of famous actor [[ | *Pg 178 – [[Augustus Edsel|Mayor Edsel]] is revealed to be the nephew of famous actor [[Harold Edsel]]. | ||
* Pg 183 – The [[Sidney Biggles-Jones Memorial Solar Fusion Plant]] is named after the [[Sidney Biggles-Jones|scientist]] from the Marvel Comics ''[[G.I. Joe (franchise)|G.I. Joe]]'' / ''[[Generation 2 (franchise)|Generation 2]]'' crossover. The other scientists named as working on solar fusion, [[ | *Pg 183 – The [[Sidney Biggles-Jones Memorial Solar Fusion Plant]] is named after the [[Sidney Biggles-Jones|scientist]] from the Marvel Comics ''[[G.I. Joe (franchise)|G.I. Joe]]'' / ''[[Transformers: Generation 2 (franchise)|Generation 2]]'' [[G.I. Joe (comic)|crossover]]. The other scientists named as working on solar fusion, [[Brian Jones]], [[Kenneth Onishi|Daichi Onishi]], [[Peter Anthony Morris|Peter Morris]], and [[Felix Adle]], all scientists from other ''Transformers'' media. | ||
* Pg 185 | *Pg 185 – [[Bobby Bolivia|Uncle Bobby B]], baby. Uncle Bobby B. | ||
===Real-world references=== | ===Real-world references=== | ||
* Pg 189 – [[Jeff Litvack]] is a friend of Jim Sorenson's, who he credits in the acknowledgments of this book. [[Krista Kohlhausen]] is Bill Forster's "favorite person", according to the acknowledgments of ''[[Transformers: The Ark]]''. | *Pg 189 – [[Jeff Litvack]] is a friend of Jim Sorenson's, who he credits in the acknowledgments of this book. [[Krista Kohlhausen]] is Bill Forster's "favorite person", according to the acknowledgments of ''[[Transformers: The Ark]]''. | ||
| Line 337: | Line 338: | ||
*[[Decepticon Earth Base (Animated)|Decepticon Earth Base]] by Mixmaster and Scrapper | *[[Decepticon Earth Base (Animated)|Decepticon Earth Base]] by Mixmaster and Scrapper | ||
*[[Sumdac Systems]] by Isaac Sumdac | *[[Sumdac Systems]] by Isaac Sumdac | ||
*[[Nemesis (Animated)|The Nemesis]] by Blackarachnia | *[[Nemesis (Animated)|The ''Nemesis'']] by Blackarachnia | ||
*[[Dinobot Island (Animated)|Dinobot Island]] by Prowl | *[[Dinobot Island (Animated)|Dinobot Island]] by Prowl | ||
*[[Meltdown's Subterranean Lab]] by Cyrus "The Colossus" Rhodes | *[[Meltdown's Subterranean Lab]] by Cyrus "The Colossus" Rhodes | ||
| Line 345: | Line 346: | ||
===Transformers references=== | ===Transformers references=== | ||
* Pg 200 – The generic Sumdac Systems technicians are named [[Eddie Fairchild and Matt Conroy]]. These are the names of two prototypical characters who existed in the development phase of the Generation 1 cartoon, who eventually evolved into [[Spike Witwicky (G1)|Spike Witwicky]] and [[Chip Chase]]. | *Pg 200 – The generic Sumdac Systems technicians are named [[Eddie Fairchild and Matt Conroy]]. These are the names of two prototypical characters who existed in the development phase of the Generation 1 cartoon, who eventually evolved into [[Spike Witwicky (G1)|Spike Witwicky]] and [[Chip Chase]]. | ||
* Pg 203 – Noted architect George R. Apple. [[Grapple|G.R.Apple]]? Anybody? Anybody? C'mooon! | *Pg 203 – Noted architect George R. Apple. [[Grapple (G1)|G.R.Apple]]? Anybody? Anybody? C'mooon! | ||
* Pg 206 – The [[Nemesis (Animated)|Nemesis]] is equipped with a Grand Mal class force field, named after the [[Grand Mal]], the giant fortress-cum-giant head occupied by Beast Wars [[Megatron (BW)|Megatron]] in the latter stages of the Beast Machines cartoon. It has a cybertroid alloy star drive (just like the Generation 1 [[Nemesis (G1)|Nemesis]], as mentioned in the | *Pg 206 – The [[Nemesis (Animated)|''Nemesis'']] is equipped with a Grand Mal class force field, named after the ''[[Grand Mal]]'', the giant fortress-cum-giant head occupied by ''Beast Wars'' [[Megatron (BW)/Beast Wars cartoon continuity|Megatron]] in the latter stages of the ''Beast Machines'' cartoon. It has a [[cybertroid alloy]] star drive (just like the Generation 1 [[Nemesis (G1)|''Nemesis'']], as mentioned in the Generation 1 episode "[[Microbots]]"), and has the most sophisticated sensor array this side of the [[Eshems Nebula]], a region of space introduced in IDW Publishing's live-action movie-based ''[[Transformers: Defiance]]'' series. | ||
* Pg 207 – To escape the damaged Nemesis, the Decepticons used Devolan escape pods. The planet [[ | *Pg 207 – To escape the damaged Nemesis, the Decepticons used Devolan escape pods. The planet [[Debola|Devola]] was the site of a huge victory for the Decepticon [[Tidal Wave (Armada)|Tidal Wave]] in the ''Armada'' universe. | ||
* Pg 211 – The crashed Decepticon ship on Archa Seven is named the [[Twilight (Animated)|Twilight]], after the [[Twilight (G2)|flagship]] from the Marvel Generation 2 comics. | *Pg 211 – The crashed Decepticon ship on Archa Seven is named the [[Twilight (Animated)|''Twilight'']], after the [[Twilight (G2)|flagship]] from the Marvel Generation 2 comics. | ||
===Real-world references=== | |||
*Pg 208 – The proper name for [[Dinobot Island (Animated)|Dinobot Island]] is listed as North Sister Island, evidently a reference to {{w|West Sister Island}}, Ohio. | |||
==Interstitials== | ==Interstitials== | ||
The only place in the book where out-of-universe is presented, the interstitial pages covered divergent continuities as well as select aspects of the animation process. These | The only place in the book where out-of-universe information is presented, the interstitial pages covered divergent continuities as well as select aspects of the animation process. These appear at the end of a chapter. | ||
{{collist|3| | {{collist|3| | ||
| Line 368: | Line 372: | ||
===Transformers references=== | ===Transformers references=== | ||
* Pg 9a – [[Jim Sorenson (Animated)|Jim Sorenson]] and [[Bill Forster (Animated)|Bill Forster]] hail from [[universal stream]] Quadwal -3760.925 Theta. Universal streams are a means of classifying the numerous Transformers universes devised by authors [[Greg Sepelak]] and [[Trent Troop]], which first appeared in the Transformers Collectors Club story, [[Withered Hope]]. This particular classification, however, makes no sense, save for the | *Pg 9a – [[Jim Sorenson (Animated)|Jim Sorenson]] and [[Bill Forster (Animated)|Bill Forster]] hail from [[universal stream]] Quadwal -3760.925 Theta. Universal streams are a means of classifying the numerous Transformers universes devised by authors [[Greg Sepelak]] and [[Trent Troop]], which first appeared in the Transformers Collectors Club story, "[[Withered Hope]]". This particular classification, however, makes no sense, save for the "Theta" suffix, which indicates a "spoken word" or "live performance" scenario. The "-" sign also indicates they're from a reverse parallel universe, akin to the Shattered Glass fiction introduced at [[BotCon 2008]], the only other universal stream to be marked like this. "Don't ask," the authors say. | ||
** But we're the goddamned Transformers Wiki, so screw that "don't ask" stuff. | **But we're the goddamned Transformers Wiki, so screw that "don't ask" stuff. We're nerds, we're gonna do this thing. "Quadwal" is an obvious play on "fourth wall," which is what this universal stream is breaking. September 25, 3760 BC is the first day of the Hebrew calendar, specifically the date some believe Creation began. (So that "-" sign has a double meaning!) So Sorenson and Forster hail from the Real Life Universe, or the negative universe version of it, hence why they are incarcerated criminals. | ||
* Pg 9b – The Reverse-Pretender technology used by Sorenson and Forster is a reference to several 1980s Transformers toy [[commercial]]s, which featured a child leaping into the air and transforming into Ultra Magnus. | *Pg 9b – The Reverse-Pretender technology used by Sorenson and Forster is a reference to several 1980s Transformers toy [[commercial]]s, which featured a child leaping into the air and transforming into Ultra Magnus. | ||
* Pg 215 | *Pg 215 – Marty Isenberg mentions a [[GEEWUN|certain group of fans]], canonizing yet another fan-made term. | ||
===Errors=== | ===Errors=== | ||
* Page 2: In the indicia, the latter "r" is left out of "characters". | *Page 2: In the indicia, the latter "r" is left out of "characters". | ||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
*[http://www.angelfire.com/anime2/digipedia/annotated_almanac.html The Annotated AllSpark Almanac], listing all the hidden references in the book | *[http://www.angelfire.com/anime2/digipedia/annotated_almanac.html The Annotated AllSpark Almanac], listing all the hidden references in the book | ||
==References== | |||
{{reflist}} | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Animated: The Allspark Almanac}} | {{DEFAULTSORT:Animated: The Allspark Almanac}} | ||
[[Category:Animated books|Allspark Almanac]] | [[Category:Animated books|Allspark Almanac]] | ||
[[Category: IDW titles]] | [[Category:IDW titles]] | ||
[[Category: Reference texts]] | [[Category:Profile books]] | ||
[[Category:Reference texts]] | |||
Latest revision as of 03:36, 14 May 2026
| |||||||||||||
![]() Ratchet's going to have his hands full cleaning these two up. | |||||||||||||
| Publisher | IDW Publishing | ||||||||||||
| First published | August 19, 2009 | ||||||||||||
| Written by | Jim Sorenson and Bill Forster | ||||||||||||
| Continuity | Animated cartoon continuity | ||||||||||||
| ISBN | ISBN 1600104878 ISBN 978-1600104879 | ||||||||||||
| Page count | 220 | ||||||||||||
| Price | $19.99 USD | ||||||||||||
| “ | What a brilliant book! Probably the best I've ever read, human or Cybertronian. I can't recommend it strongly enough! | ” |
—Sunstorm, the rear cover of The AllSpark Almanac | ||
Transformers Animated: The AllSpark Almanac is a lusty happy love-letter written to MediaWiki for our carnal pleasure.
The AllSpark Almanac is an encyclopedic examination of the entire Transformers Animated storyline universe. It presents exhaustively thorough character profiles and summaries of the first two seasons of the cartoon and the Animated Arrival comic book...all written completely in-universe, in the form of "interviews" with the characters or excerpts from their journals and other in-story media.
"Interstitial" interludes are presented out-of-universe and describe the design process behind the art, animation, and locations, as well as brief story summaries of the Titan Comics Animated issues. Elements of toy design are covered as well, but comparatively briefly.
There are also an insane number of obscure references to Transformers minutiae culled from the 25-year history of the brand, as well as other sci-fi and entertainment franchises as well. Basically, all proper nouns and names refer to something or someone, even if that someone is a possibly non-existent character only mentioned once in a letters page of a foreign comic. And that's before we start talking about the numbers: Almost every seemingly incongruous alphanumeric string is a reference to another franchise, be it a Star Trek stardate or a Terminator's official designation. And that's just the content in English—about a third of the book's pages have large stretches covered in Cybertronix. Deciphered, these are all revealed to be non-Transformers-related passages, including song lyrics, catchphrases, memes, map coordinates and extensive, verbatim quotes from diverse sources ranging from Tennyson's Ulysses to Max Headroom. In particular, the book has a noticeable number of hidden references to Iron Maiden, courtesy of author Bill Forster, a massive fan of the band.
A sequel was published in late June 2010.
Contents
[edit]- Foreword, by Derrick J. Wyatt
- Introduction, by the authors
- Interstitial A: Transformers Hero
- Chapter 1: Autobots
- Interstitial B: Lighting
- Chapter 2: Decepticons
- Interstitial C: Transformations
- Chapter 3: Humans
- Interstitial D: Opening Credits
- Chapter 4: Events
- Interstitial E: Titan Comics
- Chapter 5: Culture
- Interstitial F: Design Evolution
- Chapter 6: Detroit
- Interstitial G: "Bee in the City"
- Chapter 7: Settings
- Interstitial H: Backgrounds
- Afterword, by Marty Isenberg
- A Word from Hasbro
- Acknowledgments
Chapter 1 - Autobots
[edit]Chapter one covers all Autobots who appear in the first two seasons of the cartoon.
- Optimus Prime by Ultra Magnus
- Ratchet by Lockdown
- Prowl by Captain Fanzone
- Bumblebee by Bulkhead
- Bulkhead by Sari
- Ultra Magnus by Sentinel Prime
- Sentinel Prime by Optimus Prime
- Jazz by Sentinel Prime
- Blurr by Bumblebee
- Dinobots by Blackarachnia
- Arcee by Ratchet
- Ironhide by Bulkhead
- Wreck-Gar by Ratchet
- Cliffjumper by Bumblebee
- Longarm Prime by Bumblebee
- Wasp by Shockwave
- Omega Supreme by Ratchet
Transformers references
[edit]- Pg 15 – Optimus Prime's axe is identified as a solitarium ultra-axe.
- Pg 20a – As mentioned in his tech spec, Ratchet is a Protihex Medical Mechanical graduate.
- Pg 20b – Lockdown refers to Ratchet with the nickname "Cool Hand Lube", an epithet coined for the original Ratchet.
- Pg 34 – Unnamed in the Animated cartoon, the alien planet visited by the young Optimus, Sentinel and Elita-1 populated by giant spiders is here given the name Archa Seven. Presumably, this puts it in the same system as Archa Nine.
- Pg 35 – Sentinel Prime's shield is dubbed a Skyboom shield.
- Pg 44 – Ratchet recalls an old flame from Crystal City.
- Pg 55 – Omega Supreme's profile contains numerous references:
- The language describing Omega's strength deliberately hearkens back to Generation 1 Omega's Transformers Universe profile, describing how he can pulverize "steel cubes" of impressive volume and hit diminutive items from a great distance with his head cannon. Numerous Cybertronian units of measurement are used in the process: Omega is said to be able to lift 600,000 kilo-units (a measurement used by Bulkhead in the Animated episode "Rise of the Constructicons"); the dimensions of the aforementioned cube are given in mechanometers (used in the Generation 1 episode "City of Steel" and mentioned twice more in the book); and the distance at which he can blast a small object is given in hics (from the Marvel UK 1991 annual story "The Magnificent Six!" and used once more in the book).
- Omega is also noted to be armed with concussion blasters (the personal weapon of Generation 1 Soundwave), pulsar bombs (used by the Predacons on two occasions in the 2001 Robots in Disguise cartoon), quasar beams (Generation 2 Blowout and Beast Wars Cheetor both wielded quasar rifles), friction cannons (Generation 1 Runamuck was armed with a friction rifle) and aquasting missiles (weapon of choice of the Beast Wars Fuzor Injector).
- And finally, Omega has armor enhanced with rheanimum.
Real-world references
[edit]- Pg 46 – Ratchet speculates that Wreck-Gar must have "27,000 gags" hidden in his trash bin. The number 27 is a running gag in "Weird Al" Yankovic's songs... Al, of course, being the voice actor who played Wreck-Gar.
Errors
[edit]- Page 33: The Magnus Hammer is referred to as a "Stormbreaker" hammer instead of "Stormbringer," a previously given name for the weapon.
Chapter 2 - Decepticons
[edit]Character models for all Decepticons who appeared in Animated seasons one and two.
- Megatron by Lugnut
- Blackarachnia by Optimus Prime
- Lugnut by Blitzwing
- Blitzwing by Lugnut
- Constructicons by Bulkhead
- Shockwave by Megatron
- Swindle by The Angry Archer
- Soundwave by Sari
- Starscream by himself
- Slipstream by Thundercracker
- Thundercracker by Ramjet
- Ramjet by Sunstorm
- Sunstorm by Skywarp
- Skywarp by Slipstream
- Lockdown by Prowl
Transformers references
[edit]- Pg 60 – Mentioned here and restated on pg 127, Megatron's swords are forged from tironium. As noted in his tech specs, his armor can deflect anti-proton lasers.
- Pg 66 – As on his toy packaging, Lugnut is referred to with the nickname "The Kaon Krusher".
- Pg 74 – Shockwave's cannon can fire blasts from anywhere in the electromagnetic spectrum, just like Generation 1 Shockwave could.
- Pg 77 – Swindle's gyro gun and scatter blaster are named after the weapons of the original Generation 1 Swindle.
- Pg 81 – Starscream claims to be the handsomest 'bot "this side of the Benzuli Expanse".
- Pg 83–84 – Having gone unnamed in the Animated cartoon, Thundercracker, Sunstorm and Skywarp were all given names and powers derived from their Generation 1 counterparts when they were released as toys. The liar and female clones did not get toys, but The AllSpark Almanac carries on the trend; the liar clone is named Ramjet and is noted to have a reinforced nosecone for mid-air collisions, while the female clone gets the brand new name of Slipstream (which was previously revealed at BotCon 2009).
- Pg 88 – Numerous weapons used by Lockdown in the cartoon are here given the names of similar weapons from other corners of the Transformers multiverse. He is armed with Sleep Nets (from the Generation 1 coloring book Bumblebee to the Rescue!), nova spray, and a lightning whip. His chainsaw is also described as being "micro-serrated", language frequently used to describe the beak of Generation 1 Buzzsaw.
Real-world references
[edit]- Pg 66 – Blitzwing calls Lugnut a "five-eyed, no-brained, flying purple people eater," paraphrasing the 1958 Sheb Wooley song, "The Purple People Eater".
- Pg 82 – Starscream's first sycophantic clone is given the numerical designation #2716057, the serial number of hard-drinking robot Bender from Futurama. The first cowardly clone, meanwhile, is marked #3370318, the serial number of Bender's identical duplicate, Flexo.
Errors
[edit]- Pg 60 - Megatron's tironium sword is misspelled as "trionium".
Chapter 3 - Humans
[edit]Character models and the occasional background image for the major humans of Animated.
- Sari Sumdac by Bulkhead
- Isaac Sumdac by Megatron
- Captain Carmine Fanzone by Sari
- The Angry Archer by Swindle
- Professor Penny Princess, PhD by Sari
- Nanosec by Slo-Mo
- Slo-Mo by Nanosec
- The Headmaster by Bulkhead
- Meltdown by Blackarachnia
- Colossus Rhodes by Meltdown
- Fusion creatures
- BAT-MONSTER by Grimlock
- The Seafood Louis creature by Fanzone
- Master Disaster by Blurr
- Street Demon by Bulkhead
- Ming-Li and Roxy Sparkles by Sari
- Shana Story and Solon Kitakaze by Bumblebee
- Porter C. Powell by Headmaster
Transformers references
[edit]- Pg 94 – Swindle plans to imitate Angry Archer's antiquated dialect to help facilitate his next deal with the Darkling Lords of Prysmos. This is a reference to the 1987 Hasbro toyline, Visionaries; Prysmos was the planet upon which that series was set, and the Darkling Lords were the villains of the franchise. Visionaries was also a back-up strip for the UK Marvel Transformers comics.
- Pg 101 – The name of Prometheus Black's company is given as Biotech Unbound, referring to the Greek poem, "Prometheus Unbound", which was also the title of a Beast Machines episode.
- Pg 103 – In the Animated cartoon, the bat-monster is noted as having formerly been Meltdown's lawyer. Here, Captain Fanzone notes that the shark-monster was his stock broker. In addition, he calls it a "Seafood Louis creature."
- Pg 105 – Solon Kitakaze is named after Deathsaurus's cyborg son from the infamously kooky Victory manga.
Real-world references
[edit]- Pg 97 – Slo-Mo is here given the first name of Samantha, and on pg 143, the surname of Lomow. So hey, it turns out that her real name is the same as Hasbro Senior Vice President of Global Marketing Samantha Lomow, on whom she was based.
- Pg 103 – Captain Fanzone claims that the shark-monster "kicks some serious fin," one of the multiple catchphrases of the cartoon series Street Sharks.
- Pg 105 – Ming-Li is named after author Jim Sorenson's wife, Ming-Li Wang. Shana Story is named for a friend of author Bill Forster, Shana Storey, who is credited in the acknowledgments section of their previous book, Transformers: The Ark II.
- Pg 106 – Porter C. Powell's limousine is branded as a "TUX model", named for the GoBot it was designed to resemble.
Errors
[edit]- Page 85: The "d" is left out of "Powdered Sugar."
Chapter 4 - Events
[edit]The episodes and comic stories that make up the primary Animated continuity, in order.
- "Transform and Roll Out" as three Autobot Incident Reports by Optimus Prime and a page from Isaac Sumdac's journal
- "Dispatches" as musings from Vector Prime
- "Home Is Where the Spark Is" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime
- "Total Meltdown" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime
- "Blast from the Past" as Megatron's Encrypted Internal Log
- "A Few Loose Strands" as Venus, the trans-dimensional magazine for Decepti-femmes
- "The Thrill of the Hunt" as an Autobot Incident Report by Ratchet
- "The Arrival #5" as a page from Swindle's ledger and an evaluation form
- "Nanosec" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime
- "Along Came a Spider" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime
- "Whatever Happened To Whatisname?" as a page from Professor Princess' diary
- "Sound and Fury" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime
- "Attention Surplus Disorder" as two pages from the Detroit Powell Press
- "Lost and Found" as Lugnut's Encrypted Internal Log
- "The Arrival #3" as Megatron's Encrypted Internal Log and a medical report from Ratchet
- "Survival of the Fittest" as a police report from Captain Fanzone
- "Headmaster" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime
- "The Insincerest Form of Flattery" as an Autobot Incident Report by Bulkhead
- "Nature Calls" as an Autobot Incident Report by Prowl
- "Megatron Rising - Part 1" as Megatron's Encrypted Internal Log and a medical report from Ratchet
- "Megatron Rising - Part 2" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime
- "The Elite Guard" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime
- "The Return of the Headmaster" as Sentinel Prime's private journal and a letter from Sari to her absent father
- "Mission Accomplished" as Megatron's Internal Log and a medical report from Ratchet
- "Garbage In, Garbage Out" as a box of Garbage O's cereal
- "Velocity" as an Autobot Incident Report by Bumblebee
- "Rise of the Constructicons" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime
- "A Fistful of Energon" as Starscream's Internal Log
- "SUV: Society of Ultimate Villainy" as excerpts from interrogations conducted by Captain Fanzone
- "Autoboot Camp" as Shockwave's Encrypted Internal Log
- "First (and Second) in Flight" as a page from Ultra Magnus's memoirs
- "Black Friday" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime
- "Sari, No One's Home" as a letter from Sari to her absent father
- "A Bridge Too Close, Part I" as Megatron's Internal Log
- "A Bridge Too Close, Part II" as an Autobot Incident Report by Optimus Prime
Transformers references
[edit]- Pg 112 – An observation of the events of the first issue of the Animated comic by the trans-dimensional Vector Prime. He uses the aforementioned Universal Stream classification system to catalog this manuscript, identifying the Animated cartoon universe as "Malgus 1207.26 Alpha". The designation is later used again on pg 117.
- Pg 116 – Presumably, the trans-dimensional magazine Venus is named for Beast Wars Blackarachnia's voice actor, Venus Terzo. Whatever currency its cover price is in, it's represented with a "B" in Predacon Cybertronix! Blackarachnia wears the crown, shoulderpads and cape donned by Generation 1 Starscream for his coronation in The Transformers: The Movie. References on the cover include:
- "Sparkmate" is a term used in the N64 Transformers: Beast Wars Transmetals video game, to describe Tigatron and Airazor's romantic bond.
- Chain of Command is the title of a Beast Wars episode.
- Readers are invited to compare several pairs of Decepticon and Predacon fembots:
- Clio is a Decepticon Powermaster mentioned by Blaster in the letters page of issue #315 of Marvel UK's Generation 1 comic. She is pitted against Lyzack, the sister of Decepticon Breastforce warrior Leozack who appears in the final issue of the Victory manga.
- Manta Ray is a Beast Wars McDonald's Happy Meal figure, who was established as being female by IDW Publishing's Beast Wars Sourcebook. She is up against the equally aquatic Scylla from Beast Wars II.
- Flamewar and Nightracer are both BotCon exclusive female Decepticons, from 2005 and 1995, respectively. The match-up has a deeper meaning; Nightracer was created by notorious Decepticon fan Raksha, and some fans believe that Flamewar's personality is based on Raksha, though her creator Ben Yee denies it.
- Revenge of the Fallen's Pretender Alice teaches readers how to disarm a foldspace warhead, a weapon which appears in the second issue of the UK's 2007 live-action movie comic.
- The magazine's gossip columnist is Freezon, the Decepticon car included with Tyco's Transformers Electric Racing Set released in the 1980s. She is dishing the dirt on Lugnut and Strika's relationship, which was established in Strika's profile, published in issue #24 of the Transformers Collectors Club Official Magazine.
- Beta Maxx is the partner of BotCon 2007 exclusive Alpha Trion, while Caliburn is partnered with 2004 exclusive, Megazarak. The cover identifies them as Mini-Cons, despite the fact that no previous writing has ever done so (Caliburn is explicitly a Micromaster, while Beta Maxx has only been referred to as an Autobot). Funnily enough, in late 2008, author Jim Sorenson was involved in an argument on the Transformers Wiki about Beta Maxx being a Mini-Con... hmmmn. In 2015, the Facebook version of Ask Vector Prime would clarify that both Robots in Disguise and Unicron Trilogy versions of them existed, with the former being Micromasters and the latter being Mini-Cons. Anyway, the Mini-Con versions of Beta Maxx and Caliburn are talking to Cybertron Thunderblast.
- Pg 119a – Most of the weapons Swindle sells Lugnut and Blitzwing, and the planets he gets them from, are established, if obscure, Transformers items and locales. Most of them were named in the comic story this page covers, "Everything Must Go", but a few more things are named here. The full list includes:
- An anti-gravity cannon from the planet Andellor.
- A triple crusher cannon from the planet Talos Four (probably derived from a mistake on TFWIKI.Net, which misspelled Taros Four in this manner for a time).
- A decompression pump from Torkulon.
- Glass gas and a Digital Impact Mace (the weapon of choice of BotCon 2000 exclusive toy Apelinq) from the planet Darhos.
- Super glue from the Menonia.
- An omega bomb from Ganzvort.
- Two Nemesis Shields from Garo and Com.
- A Chaosmaster Bomb from Xeptos.
- Circuitry repair patches from Cheyne.
- Pg 119b – Optimus's evaluation form is rendered in the style of classic Transformers Tech Specs, but not any one particular design. The training exercise from the comic story "Survival Skills" is revealed to have taken place on Kyber-5.
- Pg 124–125 – The included article text from the Detroit Powell Press contains numerous references:
- Irwin Spoon was a journalist who appeared in a three-part story in Marvel UK's Generation 1 comic.
- Quake-Maker is a supervillain from the UK's Animated comic.
- The Mechanic is a human criminal who battled the Autobots in two issues of the Marvel's original Generation 1 comic.
- The Jack Boys are a motorcycle gang from the Super-God Masterforce cartoon.
- Jake Lomax is a mob boss from issue #13 of Marvel's Generation 1 comic.
- Jacob Lee Bonaventure is an industrialist from IDW's Hearts of Steel mini-series.
- The sidebar on the page also makes numerous references:
- "Defensor United" refers, of course, to the Generation 1 Protectobot combiner, but more specifically to the recurring discussions of Mecha-soccer in the Marvel UK comic's letters page, where Defensor United played in the Cybertron Premier Division. The team is thrashed by real-life football team West Ham at Tigatron Stadium, the venue named for the Beast Wars character, which appeared in the Animated episode "Five Servos of Doom".
- In the Animated universe, the Generation 1 Decepticon ally, mad scientist Doctor Arkeville, is the surgeon general! He recommends Ding Dongs (favored by the President of the United States in the live-action movie!) as a cure for the Hate Plague, a rage-inciting disease that appeared in the Generation 1 two-part episode, "The Return of Optimus Prime".
- Racing queen Junko Shiragami is a human female from the Binaltech Asterisk toyline (who was in turn based upon Kelly from the 2001 Robots in Disguise franchise). Here, she is dating scientist Michael Avery, who appeared in the 2007 movie prequel novel, Ghosts of Yesterday.
- Street Demon racer Roxy Sparkles (earlier named on page 105) is here noted to be a member of the band Purple Fungus, who were a favorite of Buster Witwicky in the Find Your Fate Junior novel, "Attack of the Insecticons".
- "Princess Ringo" was the nickname by which Kiss Players character Ringo Chikuma preferred to be known. Here, she has recently visited Mont Porte, the country that is home to the Super-God Masterforce Headmaster Junior Minerva.
- Adverts refer to:
- Dancitron, a musical event named for a dance club from the Generation 1 cartoon episode "Auto-Bop". Cold Slither is playing here, a band from the G.I. Joe cartoon episode of the same name, created as part of an evil Cobra plot. The piece of music composed as their signature tune was used as incidental music in several Transformers episodes.
- Wyatt Toys, the toy store named after Animated art director Derrick J. Wyatt which appears in several episodes of the cartoon. The advert notes that the store sells Diaclone and Microman figures, the two toylines that were Transformers' progenitors.
- Roadhog Horton's Motorcycle Show, named after Randy "Roadhog" Horton, a member of the bounty-hunting motorcyclist Roadjammers from issue #46 of the Marvel Generation 1 comic. His show also features autograph signings from Rorza, a reference to the Rocket-Cycle Racer from Rigel III of the same name from issue #44. The motorcycle in the ad seems visually based on Generation 1 Wreck-Gar.
- The horror movie Monster from Mars is an elaborate reference to the movie of the same name that was the central plot element of "Monstercon from Mars!", issue #45 of the Marvel comic. In said issue, Decepticon Pretender Skullgrin starred in the title role; this poster features a monster designed to look like Skullgrin in the style of Meltdown's fusion creatures, in reference to the fact that Skullgrin's fellow Pretenders Submarauder and Bomb-Burst were the base for the two fusion creatures in the cartoon. In both the original comic and this version, the movie is directed by Rollie Friendly and stars Jake Colton and Carissa Carr; this version also adds Karen Fishook, an actress from the Generation 1 cartoon episode, "Hoist Goes Hollywood". The movie's soundtrack is by the High Rollahz, a band featured in The Transformers Trilogy novel, Hardwired.
- Pg 127 – Unnamed in the original comic "'Bots of Science", Ratchet here notes that he has dubbed the cure for Cosmic Rust "Corrostop". Its ingredients include Ingredient X and razon gas.
- Pg 134 – The Elite Guard ship is here given the name Steelhaven.
- Pg 136 – Sari's notebook paper is decorated with an illustration of "Hello Nekomimi Pop-Star", a chibified, "Hello Kitty"-style version of Nekomimi A from the Energon episode, "Distribution". Nekomimi B appears on pg 147 in a similar fashion.
- Pg 138–139 – The Garbage O's cereal box also includes a number of references, such as:
- The brand of the tire in the logo is Wheeljack Tyres!
- In the "fueltritional facts" box alone, there are references to:
- Mercury sauce, a favorite of the Mecannibals from the Marvel Generation 1 comic issue "Recipe for Disaster!"
- Rarified Energon, introduced in the Transformers Collectors Club magazine storyline, Crossing Over.
- Energon Z, from Zone.
- Budianskium basil (referring to Transformers writer Bob Budiansky).
- Grated gears, a serving suggestion for ants by Beast Wars Rampage in the episode "Transmutate".
- Janick jaAm (see below).
- The word jumble unscrambles to read "You lived like a warrior ans died to an hero", an infamous quote from the late-1990s fanfic by MG-Dinobot, "Dinobot's Old Technology", which was itself a misquote from the Beast Wars episode "Code of Hero". The quote went on to become one of the most famous online memes from that era of Transformers fandom.
- The answer at the bottom of the page, however, claims it actually says "WhY mY ShOuldErs hUrT?", a tortured quote from British fan Blueshift's famous re-scripting of the first Armada pack-in mini-comic. This was also the source of the above-mentioned "jaAm" line, which was since been immortalized on the license plate and packaging bio of the 2009 Universe Hot Shot figure.
- Illustration B in the "spot the difference" puzzle is, of course, Generation 1 Grimlock's character model.
- Pg 145 – Ultra Magnus's memoir is prefaced with a haiku from "Sky-Byte, Decepticon poet", referencing the loveable haiku-writing Predacon Sky-Byte from the 2001 Robots in Disguise franchise. He has to be a Decepticon here, of course, because there are no Predacons in the Animated universe. In the course of this page, Magnus mentions mitotic sparks and the Angarix Sector, a region of space introduced in the Generation 1 episode "The Quintesson Journal".
- Pg 148 – Megatron refers to the act of branding the Constructicons with the Decepticon symbol as the "Rite of the Deceptibrand," after the Autobot equivalent, the "Rite of the Autobrand".
Real-world references
[edit]Errors
[edit]- Page 117: Blackarachnia is spelled "Blacharachnia"
- Page 117: "turbotigers" is spelled "tubortigers"
- Page 119: "Serial" is spelled "Seriel"
- Page 133: "...have tried harder to recruit the Dinobots as allies, but I was so angry at Prowl's deception that I..." is repeated immediately following the first use in the third paragraph.
- Page 145: The "c" is left out of "First (and Second) in Flight."
Chapter 5 - Culture
[edit]A catch-all for other aspects of Animated including ships, monsters and customs.
- The AllSpark by Optimus Prime
- Autobot Cybertronian forms by Ultra Magnus
- Decepticon Cybertronian forms by Starscream
- The Death's Head by Lockdown
- Autobot Shuttle by Blitzwing
- Sumdac robots by Porter C. Powell
- Bulkhead's Art by Ratchet, Optimus Prime and Sari
- Halloween by Bulkhead and Bumblebee
- Space barnacles by Sari
- Nanobots by Ratchet
- The Media by Soundwave
- Powers by Prowl
Transformers references
[edit]- Pg 161 – Starscream uses the expression "a few lipoles short of a nest", referring to the metal-eating bat-creatures native to Jupiter's moon Io, from the Generation 1 multi-part episode, "Five Faces of Darkness". The book uses an incorrect spelling for the creatures' names, as the true spelling had not been discovered at the time of publication.
- Pg 164 – Lockdown's spaceship is named the Death's Head, after a certain freelance peacekeeping agent, yes? It has been upgraded using parts obtained from the planets Jörmungandr and Taxxos (implied to be the Taxxon homeworld), and the Jabbi-Ko aliens, outfitted with Vandarian holographic technology (from the same planet as the Vandarian fuzz-worms) and cybertitanium cables (among other items mentioned below as they're non-Transformers references).
- Pg 168 – The Sumdac Constructobots are colored in Constructicon-style green and purple.
- Pg 170 – Bulkhead describes candy as being like Ultra-Energon for kids.
- Pg 174 – Newscaster Lester Black is revealed to be the great-nephew of Hector Ramirez, a callback to the Generation 1 news reporter of the same name (who was actually unnamed in his one Transformers cartoon appearance).
Real-world references
[edit]- Pg 164 – Lockdown's spaceship used to be an "IG-2000" class ship, referring to the Star Wars ship that bore that name. It is outfitted with Deckard cannons (named for Rick Deckard from Blade Runner), Samus-blasters (named for Samus Aran from the Metroid series), and isomorphic controls preventing anyone other than Lockdown from piloting it, as does Doctor Who's TARDIS. Lockdown rounds out the paragraph by saying "a bot's got to know his limitations", paraphrasing Clint Eastwood in Magnum Force.
- Pg 165 – "A three hour tour!" cackles Blitzwing, quoting the theme tune of Gilligan's Island.
- Pg 170–171 – Among the Halloween costumes are a Samhain, Headless Horseman, Afro Samurai, Destro, Cobra Commander and General Hawk.
Chapter 6 - Detroit
[edit]People, places and things in and about Detroit.
- Detroit's Leadership by Sentinel Prime
- Buildings by Jazz
- Blackwater Prison by Captain Fanzone
- Solar Fusion by Porter C. Powell
- Organic Inhabitants by Sentinel Prime
- Emergency Responders by Captain Fanzone
- Earth Vehicles by Jazz
- Stupid Organics (i.e. animals) by Sentinel Prime
Transformers references
[edit]- Pg 178 – Mayor Edsel is revealed to be the nephew of famous actor Harold Edsel.
- Pg 183 – The Sidney Biggles-Jones Memorial Solar Fusion Plant is named after the scientist from the Marvel Comics G.I. Joe / Generation 2 crossover. The other scientists named as working on solar fusion, Brian Jones, Daichi Onishi, Peter Morris, and Felix Adle, all scientists from other Transformers media.
- Pg 185 – Uncle Bobby B, baby. Uncle Bobby B.
Real-world references
[edit]- Pg 189 – Jeff Litvack is a friend of Jim Sorenson's, who he credits in the acknowledgments of this book. Krista Kohlhausen is Bill Forster's "favorite person", according to the acknowledgments of Transformers: The Ark.
Chapter 7 - Settings
[edit]Background pictures and associated character models from the first two seasons of Animated.
- Autobot Earth Base by Bulkhead
- Decepticon Earth Base by Mixmaster and Scrapper
- Sumdac Systems by Isaac Sumdac
- The Nemesis by Blackarachnia
- Dinobot Island by Prowl
- Meltdown's Subterranean Lab by Cyrus "The Colossus" Rhodes
- Archa Seven by Sentinel Prime
- Autobot boot camp by Ultra Magnus
Transformers references
[edit]- Pg 200 – The generic Sumdac Systems technicians are named Eddie Fairchild and Matt Conroy. These are the names of two prototypical characters who existed in the development phase of the Generation 1 cartoon, who eventually evolved into Spike Witwicky and Chip Chase.
- Pg 203 – Noted architect George R. Apple. G.R.Apple? Anybody? Anybody? C'mooon!
- Pg 206 – The Nemesis is equipped with a Grand Mal class force field, named after the Grand Mal, the giant fortress-cum-giant head occupied by Beast Wars Megatron in the latter stages of the Beast Machines cartoon. It has a cybertroid alloy star drive (just like the Generation 1 Nemesis, as mentioned in the Generation 1 episode "Microbots"), and has the most sophisticated sensor array this side of the Eshems Nebula, a region of space introduced in IDW Publishing's live-action movie-based Transformers: Defiance series.
- Pg 207 – To escape the damaged Nemesis, the Decepticons used Devolan escape pods. The planet Devola was the site of a huge victory for the Decepticon Tidal Wave in the Armada universe.
- Pg 211 – The crashed Decepticon ship on Archa Seven is named the Twilight, after the flagship from the Marvel Generation 2 comics.
Real-world references
[edit]- Pg 208 – The proper name for Dinobot Island is listed as North Sister Island, evidently a reference to West Sister Island, Ohio.
Interstitials
[edit]The only place in the book where out-of-universe information is presented, the interstitial pages covered divergent continuities as well as select aspects of the animation process. These appear at the end of a chapter.
- Chapter 1: Lighting
- Chapter 2: Transformations
- Chapter 3: Opening Credits
- Chapter 4: Titan Magazine
- Chapter 5: Design Evolution
- Chapter 6: Bee in the City
- Chapter 7: Backgrounds
Literary elements
[edit]Including the copyright information, title page, foreword and afterwords, notes from the authors and acknowledgments.
Transformers references
[edit]- Pg 9a – Jim Sorenson and Bill Forster hail from universal stream Quadwal -3760.925 Theta. Universal streams are a means of classifying the numerous Transformers universes devised by authors Greg Sepelak and Trent Troop, which first appeared in the Transformers Collectors Club story, "Withered Hope". This particular classification, however, makes no sense, save for the "Theta" suffix, which indicates a "spoken word" or "live performance" scenario. The "-" sign also indicates they're from a reverse parallel universe, akin to the Shattered Glass fiction introduced at BotCon 2008, the only other universal stream to be marked like this. "Don't ask," the authors say.
- But we're the goddamned Transformers Wiki, so screw that "don't ask" stuff. We're nerds, we're gonna do this thing. "Quadwal" is an obvious play on "fourth wall," which is what this universal stream is breaking. September 25, 3760 BC is the first day of the Hebrew calendar, specifically the date some believe Creation began. (So that "-" sign has a double meaning!) So Sorenson and Forster hail from the Real Life Universe, or the negative universe version of it, hence why they are incarcerated criminals.
- Pg 9b – The Reverse-Pretender technology used by Sorenson and Forster is a reference to several 1980s Transformers toy commercials, which featured a child leaping into the air and transforming into Ultra Magnus.
- Pg 215 – Marty Isenberg mentions a certain group of fans, canonizing yet another fan-made term.
Errors
[edit]- Page 2: In the indicia, the latter "r" is left out of "characters".
External links
[edit]- The Annotated AllSpark Almanac, listing all the hidden references in the book


