Tech Spec: Difference between revisions

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==Unicron Trilogy==
==Unicron Trilogy==


Armada was a major departure from Transformers tradition in that none of the packaging had character information, beyond trilingual "blurbs" naming the vehicle modes and conspicuous weapons or gimmicks.  The toys came with sticker cards that had their pictures and names on them, but no further information.  By its sequel series, Energon, these trading cards had tech spec numbers on the back.  When Hasbro tried to grant the fandom's request for "tech specs," they didn't realize that the most important part was the ''bio,'' not the actual Tech Spec ratings.{{fact}} So some more time passed before bios were finally written, released on trading cards only available in packs.  And, for the first time, Hasbro used its website to present bios and Tech Specs as well.
Armada was a major departure from Transformers tradition in that none of the packaging had character information, beyond trilingual "blurbs" naming the vehicle modes and conspicuous weapons or gimmicks.  The toys came with sticker cards that had their pictures and names on them, but no further information.  By its sequel series, Energon, these trading cards had tech spec numbers on the back.  When Hasbro tried to grant the fandom's request for "tech specs," they didn't realize that the most important part was the ''bio,'' not the actual Tech Spec ratings.  So some more time passed before bios were finally written, released on trading cards only available in packs.  And, for the first time, Hasbro used its website to present bios and Tech Specs as well.





Revision as of 21:53, 17 August 2007

Short for "technical specifications," Tech Specs are the character-ratings that many Transformers have received on their packaging or on Hasbro.com, ranking qualities like "Strength" and "Intelligence" and "Skill" on a scale of 1-10. While technically the bios are separate from the Tech Specs - and are sometimes called out as such on the packaging itself - the graphic design often merges them into a single box. Thus, "tech specs" has become in casual use a shorthand term for the entire bio/art/Tech-Specs combination.

The current lineup of stats is: Strength, Intelligence, Speed, Endurance, Rank, Courage, Fireblast, and Skill. This list has varied surprisingly little over the decades, but there has never appeared to be any sort of standard for the actual rankings. Optimus Prime, for instance, has traditionally maxed out most or sometimes all of his stats, despite the existence of characters like Omega Supreme, whose "Strength" and "Speed" must be far beyond his. The only category with anything close to a sense of scale is "Rank," where faction leaders tend to be 10s, group leaders tend to be 9s and 8s, and most others are below that. There are of course many exceptions, but at least there's a trend.

Generation 1

Tech Specs were present right from the start. With the very first Transformers also came a packaging gimmick: Kids were instructed to "use the special decoder inside to decipher your Tech Specs." A fuschia criss-cross pattern obscured the blue line that indicated the various ratings, so overlaying a piece of clear red plastic made the blue line much easier to see. This design was used for a number of years, but it was eventually dropped just before the end of G1, and it has never returned.

However, the Tech Specs tradition far outlasted the "decoder" gimmick. In fact, it once had even spread beyond the packaging and onto the toys themselves. The Headmaster figures had abbreviated Tech Specs bar-graphs inside their chests. When the head was plugged into the body, bars would emerge on the graph.

After the cartoon was cancelled and the comic entered the Furman years, many new toys were made whose corresponding characters never appeared in the fiction. But, with an extremely small number of exceptions, Hasbro continued writing bios and Tech Specs for every toy, and this was the only source of "life" for dozens - perhaps even hundreds - of characters. This tradition would continue into the Generation 2, Beast Wars, Machine Wars, and Beast Machines lines.

Robots In Disguise

RID had trilingual packaging, meaning that toys on the smallest packaging cards, such as the Spychangers, literally did not have room for character information; they were the first such deficient toys in an American Transformer line. However, characters in Deluxe-sized and larger packaging had the full allotment of skill numbers, bio profiles, and quotes.

Unicron Trilogy

Armada was a major departure from Transformers tradition in that none of the packaging had character information, beyond trilingual "blurbs" naming the vehicle modes and conspicuous weapons or gimmicks. The toys came with sticker cards that had their pictures and names on them, but no further information. By its sequel series, Energon, these trading cards had tech spec numbers on the back. When Hasbro tried to grant the fandom's request for "tech specs," they didn't realize that the most important part was the bio, not the actual Tech Spec ratings. So some more time passed before bios were finally written, released on trading cards only available in packs. And, for the first time, Hasbro used its website to present bios and Tech Specs as well.


Notes

Aaron Archer said at the time that Hasbro went to trilingual packaging because they believed in the near future all products, down to mundane items such as sticks of butter, would require it; they were attempting to get "ahead of the curve." Five years later this obviously has not come to pass, to the relief of most Transformers fans, but not necessarily everyone.



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