Velocitron Speedia 500 Part 1: Difference between revisions

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**[[Swerve (G1)|Swerve]] idolized [[Blurr (G1)|Blurr]] in [[2005 IDW continuity]]; both Blurr's Velocitron Speedia 500 toy and the ''[[Transformers Legends (franchise)|Legends]]'' toy Swerve is depicted as here are based upon the characters' designs from that continuity.
**[[Swerve (G1)|Swerve]] idolized [[Blurr (G1)|Blurr]] in [[2005 IDW continuity]]; both Blurr's Velocitron Speedia 500 toy and the ''[[Transformers Legends (franchise)|Legends]]'' toy Swerve is depicted as here are based upon the characters' designs from that continuity.
**[[Nightbird (G1)|Nightbird]] and [[Road Rocket (G2)|Road Rocket]] were linked in their backstories in ''[[Transformers Legends (comic)|Legends]]'' (also by Sakamoto), due to the fact that they are both ninja. This version of Road Rocket being based on {{w|kunoichi}} (female ninja) also serves as another connection.
**[[Nightbird (G1)|Nightbird]] and [[Road Rocket (G2)|Road Rocket]] were linked in their backstories in ''[[Transformers Legends (comic)|Legends]]'' (also by Sakamoto), due to the fact that they are both ninja. This version of Road Rocket being based on {{w|kunoichi}} (female ninja) also serves as another connection.
**[[Lift-Ticket (Diaclone)|Lift-Ticket]] shares [[Burn Out (Diaclone)|Burnout]]'s origins as an initially unused ''[[Diaclone]]'' color scheme that was much later used for exclusive toys for [[BotCon 2015]]. In that convention's accompanying fiction, both were presented as mecha from a ''Diaclone'' universe with accompanying human pilots, a portrayal that influences at least Burnout in this comic.
**[[Lift-Ticket (Diaclone)|Lift-Ticket]] shares [[Burn Out (Diaclone)|Burnout]]'s origins as an initially unused ''[[Diaclone]]'' color scheme that was much later used for an exclusive toy for [[BotCon 2015]]. In that convention's accompanying fiction, both were presented as mecha from a ''Diaclone'' universe with accompanying human pilots, a portrayal that influences at least Burnout in this comic.
**[[Devastator (G1)|Devastator]], the [[combiner|combined form]] of the main six [[Constructicon (G1)|Constructions]], is linked to [[Hauler|Road Hauler]], presented in his initial backstory as a former Constructicon. Curiously, this comic uses the traditional Japanese name, "Buildron", to refer to this group.
**[[Devastator (G1)|Devastator]], the [[combiner|combined form]] of the main six [[Constructicon (G1)|Constructions]], is linked to [[Hauler|Road Hauler]], presented in his initial backstory as a former Constructicon. Curiously, this comic uses the traditional Japanese name, "Buildron", to refer to this group.



Revision as of 17:57, 26 August 2022

Transformers: Legacy #1
"Velocitron Speedia 500 Part 1"
ヴェロシトロンスピーディア500 Part 1
Publisher TakaraTomy
First published August 26, 2022
Manga Hayato Sakamoto

The Speedia 500 starts with a bang!

Synopsis

On Velocitron, the Speedia 500 race is held to determine the leader of the planet. Thus, many competitors from across worlds, each boastful of their own speed, have gathered to win! Cosmos provides commentary.

Blurr, having won many races prior, uses his superspeed to make an early lead. Road Rocket isn't so easily left behind, using ninja techniques to seemingly jump from one location to another. The human-AI robot duo of Dia Burnout takes another tactic, scaling the sheer cliff bordering the race track for a short cut. Road Hauler's own idea is to use his crane to nullify the danger of falling boulders; the former Constructicon hopes to build a big bridge on the planet with his friends if he wins.

A black tank lorry looms in the horizon... how will his race end?

(Numbers indicate order of appearance.)

Notes

Transformers references

  • The spectators (and race queen) correspond to the characters showcased in this comic:
    • Swerve idolized Blurr in 2005 IDW continuity; both Blurr's Velocitron Speedia 500 toy and the Legends toy Swerve is depicted as here are based upon the characters' designs from that continuity.
    • Nightbird and Road Rocket were linked in their backstories in Legends (also by Sakamoto), due to the fact that they are both ninja. This version of Road Rocket being based on kunoichi (female ninja) also serves as another connection.
    • Lift-Ticket shares Burnout's origins as an initially unused Diaclone color scheme that was much later used for an exclusive toy for BotCon 2015. In that convention's accompanying fiction, both were presented as mecha from a Diaclone universe with accompanying human pilots, a portrayal that influences at least Burnout in this comic.
    • Devastator, the combined form of the main six Constructions, is linked to Road Hauler, presented in his initial backstory as a former Constructicon. Curiously, this comic uses the traditional Japanese name, "Buildron", to refer to this group.

Trivia

  • Nightbird's outfit has the odd rendering of "NINJYA", which seemingly blends Hepburn romanization (which renders じゃ as ja and follows phonology) and Kunrei-shiki romanization (which renders the same syllable as zya and follows orthography).

References