Introdump: Difference between revisions
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: '''Blitzwing''': As usual, Blackarachnia, your demeanor is as unpleasant as that accursed organic mode of yours.<br> | : '''Blitzwing''': As usual, Blackarachnia, your demeanor is as unpleasant as that accursed organic mode of yours.<br> | ||
: '''Blackarachnia''': Blow it out your actuator, three-face.<br> | : '''Blackarachnia''': Blow it out your actuator, three-face.<br> | ||
: '''Blitzwing''': Ze name is Blitzving, insect-''switches to Hothead'' remember it! Cause it's ze last thing you'll hear before I-''switches to Random'' express my feelings in song! (begins singing "The Itsy-Bitsy Spider" horribly off-key as the Decepticons continue to argue among each other) | : '''Blitzwing''': Ze name is Blitzving, insect-''(switches to Hothead)'' remember it! Cause it's ze last thing you'll hear before I-''(switches to Random)'' express my feelings in song! (begins singing "The Itsy-Bitsy Spider" horribly off-key as the Decepticons continue to argue among each other) | ||
==Beast Wars== | ==Beast Wars== | ||
Revision as of 12:08, 15 July 2011

An introdump (also known as name-dropping, name-checking, forced introduction, or "really awkward self-exposition") is a scene in which new characters are introduced, and the dialog goes out of its way to give each character's name. It is particularly prevalent in certain portions of Transformers fiction.
Sometimes the characters give their own names (referring to themselves in the third person). On other occasions, the characters will work each other's names into the dialog. The classic G1 Marvel Comic was particularly guilty of this, not least because they introduced on the order of 200 characters across only 84 issues (counting Headmasters). In that comic, it was usually signified by the writing of each new character's name in bold typeface.
Because most Transformers fiction exists to sell toys, it seems likely that Hasbro required the writers of the comic to make sure every new character was explicitly named, so the readers could then go out and ask the toy store employee for 'em by name.
Though the G1 comics were particularly notorious for it, introdumps pop up across the whole spectrum of Transformers fiction. In egregious examples, the characters also describe their "selling points" (weapons, etc.)
Here are four examples, from most graceful to least:
Transformers Animated
- Here, the Decepticons bicker, giving their names and at least one important fact per character:
- Lugnut: Megatron is wise! Megatron is bold! Megatron will return the Decepticons to Cybertron and...
- Blackarachnia: ...and wipe our homeland clean of the stench of Autobot tyranny, blah-dee blah blah blah! Did you memorize that speech, Lugnut? Or is it just hardwired into that thick, one-track processor of yours?
- Blitzwing: As usual, Blackarachnia, your demeanor is as unpleasant as that accursed organic mode of yours.
- Blackarachnia: Blow it out your actuator, three-face.
- Blitzwing: Ze name is Blitzving, insect-(switches to Hothead) remember it! Cause it's ze last thing you'll hear before I-(switches to Random) express my feelings in song! (begins singing "The Itsy-Bitsy Spider" horribly off-key as the Decepticons continue to argue among each other)
Beast Wars
| Painful Introductions
The Maximals introduce themselves. — 350 KB
|
- In the sound clip at right, from the first episode of Beast Wars, the writers at least have the justification that the characters are adopting new names at that moment.
- Why did... why did they need new names?
Marvel Comics G1

- At right, the Stunticons introduce themselves in "Heavy Traffic!". Bonus points for Drag Strip, who goes the extra mile by indicating his personality, too.

- A particularly heavy example, from the first issue of the US comic. (Note Rumble's ironic comment of "Can the speeches.")
IDW Comics
By contrast, the IDW comics seem to go out of their way to avoid introdumps, meaning that sometimes a character with an all-new design will go unnamed for several issues, forcing readers to guess who they are. And the occasional new character is tossed in (and left unnamed) just to make things even more of a challenge. (For instance, Drift, who isn't even named in his first appearance except on the retailer incentive cover.) The ongoing IDW series occasionally uses captions to identify some (but not all) characters by name rather than dropping these names in dialogue.
- The exception to the rule is IDW's Animated Movie Adaptation, in which writer Bob Budiansky gives characters whose toys had been available 20 years earlier (!) more blatant introdumps than in The Transformers: The Movie itself. Old habits, probably.

