Transformers: Legacy: Difference between revisions
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{{note|Almost all of Target's ''Legacy'' exclusives were sold under the ''[[Buzzworthy Bumblebee]]'' branding. So far only a single item, Red Cog, has been sold in normal ''Legacy'' packaging.}} | {{note|Almost all of Target's ''Legacy'' exclusives were sold under the ''[[Buzzworthy Bumblebee]]'' branding. So far only a single item, Red Cog, has been sold in normal ''Legacy'' packaging.}} | ||
{{comingsoontoy|Deathsaurus | {{comingsoontoy|Deathsaurus}} | ||
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Revision as of 01:46, 10 June 2023
| The name or term "Legacy" refers to more than one character or idea. For a list of other meanings, see Legacy (disambiguation). |
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Transformers: Legacy (aka Transformers Generations: Legacy)[1] is a subline imprint of the Generations toyline, and the successor to the War for Cybertron Trilogy.
First revealed in late 2021 at Hasbro Pulse Con 2021, Legacy commemorates the approaching 40th anniversary of the Transformers brand by featuring new toys of characters from across the Transformers multiverse. The toys are largely in the scale and style of those from the War for Cybertron Trilogy, including numerous 3 mm posts and 5 mm ports from the C.O.M.B.A.T. System. Characters from franchises known for more unique aesthetics, such as Prime and Animated, are updated with the modern Generations aesthetic to fit with the rest of the toyline, which can range from a significant redesign to the same basic model just rendered more like a modern "Generation 1" toy. The toyline also sees the return of combiners from Hasbro for the first time since Power of the Primes, starting with the Stunticons in 2022.
The storytelling of Legacy follows characters brought together from across the multiverse as their universes collide.[2] As such, non-"Generation 1" characters are (usually) given prefixes associated with their series of origin, such as "Cybertron Universe". Replacing the package bios of old is a QR code on the back of each box, or for Core Class figures, on the instructions, which leads to the character's bio on the Transformers website. Certain characters have also been given these prefixes to denote specific iterations, such as "Comic Universe" Impactor.
Unlike its predecessors, Legacy was not replaced by a new line with its own distinct title for its second year. Instead, it was merely given a refresh in the form of a subline imprint titled Legacy: Evolution, with the existing assortments continued in terms of distribution. Similar to its predecessors, the Legacy toyline features package refreshes of several figures from previous lines, even all the way back to Siege, though Legacy elects to remove the battle damage paint applications from these toys where applicable.
Toys
General retail

The first year of Legacy (theoretically) focuses on characters that can "harness the power of Energon", with as many toys including an often-translucent accessory that the figure can wield in multiple ways and combine with others branded an "Energon-infused weapon"[2], not too dissimilar to the 2003 Energon series. In keeping with this theme, the first wave of Core Class includes weapons specifically designed to combine into a large sword, but the gimmick was quietly dropped immediately after. Moreover, toys that do not utilize clear plastic in any part of their construction do not have these "energon infused" weapons, but some product descriptions do claim that the weapons are such.[3] Their random nature can be chalked up to them having been designed before the character roster was finalized.
Legacy: Evolution, the second year of Legacy product, was announced in fall 2022 at that year's Pulse Con. This subline imprint not only broadened the range of past Transformers franchises characters could be pulled from, it retired the Energon-infused weapons in favor of a series of integrated weapons referred to collectively as "Evo-Fusion." Admittedly, many of these are just the same "combine and mount weapons somewhere on the figure" play gimmick that has been part of the Generations line for years, but hey. Supporting this is a continuation of the "Weaponizer" concept with a new tribe of modular Junkions that can mix and match body parts and accessories to create your own robot and vehicle modes, or armor and weaponry for other bots. Following Menasor, this subline's combiner is Volcanicus, made up of six Dinobots in the smaller Core Class. Evolution also puts some more focus on Armada characters to commemorate the series' 20th anniversary, although these new releases do not include any of the series' original Mini-Cons. The line also notably features the first mainline Animated toys since the show's cancellation in 2009; 2023 also marks the 15th anniversary of the Animated cartoon, but we doubt this was intentional.
Core Class
| Wave 1 | Wave 2
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Wave 3
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Wave 4 (Evolution) | ![]() | ||||
| Wave 5 (Evolution) | Wave 6 (Evolution)
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Wave TBD (Evolution) |
Deluxe Class
| Wave 1 | Wave 2 | Wave 3 | Wave 4 (Evolution) | ![]() | ||||
| Wave 5 (Evolution) | Wave 6 (Evolution) | Wave TBD (Evolution) |
Voyager Class
Wave 1
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Wave 2
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Wave 3 | Wave 4 (Evolution) | ![]() | ||||
| Wave 5 (Evolution) | Wave 6 (Evolution)
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Wave TBD (Evolution) |
Leader Class
Wave 1
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Wave 2 | Wave 3 | Wave 4 (Evolution)
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| Wave 5 (Evolution) | Wave TBD (Evolution) |
Commander Class
| 2022 | 2023 (Evolution) | ![]() |
Titan Class
| 2022 | 2023 (Evolution) | ![]() |
Exclusives
Please note that the exclusivity listed for toys below applies to the United States. Also, most of Legacy's exclusives were available through Hasbro Pulse as well, but in much smaller numbers than their "main" outlets.
| Amazon Wreck N' Rule Collection | Amazon Pre-Cybertronian War Collection
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Hasbro Pulse / HasLab
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Target
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Walgreens |
Walmart
Walmart had a large number of exclusives; first came a trio of normal Legacy-packaged Deluxe beast-bots (which were sold as Farmers exclusives in New Zealand). This was soon followed by two different "capsules", each with its own name, theme and unique packaging across multiple size classes.
The Velocitron Speedia 500 Collection focuses on characters on the namesake planet participating in the namesake race. The first assortment was revealed on the June 23 2022 Fanstream, and the toys were exclusive to Walmart in the US and the Kmart department store in New Zealand. A second assortment of Deluxe Class toys was revealed in early October, without prior announcement.[6] Distribution of this second wave of product has been... let's politely call it varied.
The Toxitron Collection followed for Legacy: Evolution, featuring gloriously garishly decoed toys based on unreleased concept redecos from Generation 2. The series was revealed on March 13 in 2023 as part of Walmart's "Collector Con", showing off the first three toys as well as putting them up for preorder.
| Deluxe Beast Assortment | Velocitron Deluxes Wave 1 | Velocitron Deluxes Wave 2 | ![]() | |||||
| Velocitron Voyagers Wave 1 | Velocitron Voyagers Wave 2 (cancelled) | Velocitron Leaders Wave 1 | Velocitron Leaders Wave 2 | |||||
| Toxitron Deluxes | Toxitron Voyagers | Toxitron Leaders |
Generations Selects
Continuing on from the War for Cybertron Trilogy, the special edition Generations Selects line offers redecoes catering to fans, sold through Hasbro Pulse and numerous other online retailers in the US and Canada. Funnily enough, Black Zarak and Lift-Ticket were shipped before the general retail Legacy lineup arrived on store shelves, as was Magnificus for Legacy: Evolution.
| Legacy | Legacy: Evolution | ![]() |
Legacy (TakaraTomy)

TakaraTomy's normal-retail Transformers Legacy (トランスフォーマーレガシー Toransufōmā Regashī) toyline is largely the same as Hasbro's, with no notable changes to the toys proper; the one "big" change is that the packaging adds ID numbers for each item (sadly, Hasbro's Legacy toyline ditches the number system seen in the previous War for Cybertron Trilogy toyline). But the TakaraTomy line is markedly smaller than Hasbro's, having omitted all of the package-refresh figures and the first-year Core Class figures (the Cores were eventually picked up again with the Evolution Dinobots, et al.). On top of that, the list of exclusives for the line released by TakaraTomy is much, much, much smaller, currently limited to only the first assortment of the Velocitron Speedia 500 Collection.
Beginning with Wave 9 (corresponding to Hasbro's Evolution imprint), TakaraTomy's bios began making reference to the characters' arrival in "Legacy World," presumably the same enigmatic location featured extensively throughout Hasbro promotional images and stock photography.
Comic
TakaraTomy's iteration of the Legacy franchise is accompanied by a series of (very) short comics on their website by brand veteran Hayato Sakamoto, thus far uncharacteristically continuity-light for a TakaraTomy outing as befitting Legacy's grab-bag approach:
| Transformers Legacy | |||
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General retail
Exclusives
TakaraTomy Mall
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Notes
"Universe" designations
- The universes currently featured in the Legacy toyline include (as the line names them):
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- Though "G1 Universe" and "Beast Wars Universe" do not appear on the toys' boxes, they do appear on the QR-accessed bios on Hasbro's website.
- What toys get "____ Universe" prefixes is sometimes arbitrary even beyond the lack of "G1" and "Beast Wars" on the packaging. The Diaclone-adjacent items in the Generations Selects and Buzzworthy Bumblebee lineups are not given the "Diaclone Universe" label. Velocitron Blurr is based extensively on a comic-original redesign but doesn't get the "Comic Universe" tag. Galaxy Shuttle gets "Victory Universe" on his packaging, but Metalhawk and Minerva don't get "Masterforce Universe" on theirs. Just roll with it.
- Readers might notice that the original Robots in Disguise was released in 2001. However, Legacy basically treats both Robots in Disguise and the original Japanese version Car Robots as the same thing, and Car Robots was released in 2000. (Similarly, 2003 is considered the anniversary year for Armada; while the toys first arrived in both the US and Japan in late 2002, the overwhelming bulk of product was released throughout 2003.)
- In TakaraTomy's take on the line, everyone is established as visiting the "Legacy World" (レガシーワールド, alternatively "Legacy Spacetime" (レガシー時空) or "Transformers Legacy World" (トランスフォーマーレガシーワールド) in full). Their origin universe descriptions are largely similar, to the point of using Hasbro's names for the lines rather than their own (in line with their use of Hasbro's names for the characters), but there are still some notable differences:
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- The change from "Diaclone" to "Ancient Time Universe" is because TakaraTomy has a concurrently-running Diaclone revival line entirely separate from Transformers (focusing on the original pre-Car Robot aesthetic).
Other notes
- Emiliano Santalucia was responsible for the concept art of the various "energon weapons".[7]
- Prior to the toyline's reveal in October 2021, much of its roster was found through internal online listings from retailers such as Target.
- Some toy listings featured "Evolution" as part of the toyline's name in its first year,[8] far before the Evolution branding was officially introduced.
- Much like 2022's Studio Series lineup, Leader Class toys feature window-less packaging, which allows for expanded artwork. The others largely utilize the same minimized window and plastic tray-less boxes from the previous line, War for Cybertron: Kingdom, though with many hard-to-stack (but cool!) angles for the sides and no plastic window.
- The lack of a plastic window in the packaging has led to several drawbacks, most prominently the lack of support offered by the plastic window makes the packaging more susceptible to stress-based wear-and-tear, as well as tampering with the figures inside such as pushing Voyager Bulkhead's head into his chest cavity, making it appear as though the figure is missing his head.
- Due to the polarizing reception to the Generation-1-fied redesigns of Prime characters, Hasbro announced they were trying to find a better balance between preserving the original designs for non-G1 characters whilst updating them for the current aesthetic for later toys, particularly the Animated character updates,[9] and has not ruled out on Studio Series for more accurate redos of Prime characters.[10] Come Legacy: Evolution, the new Animated Prowl showed off this new approach, being basically the original design, just made more boxy. Meanwhile, Prime Skyquake ended up as a pretty even blend between the Prime and original Skyquake visually, while the Armada characters added to the line all had sculpts that were incredibly faithful to their original iterations (minus loads of gimmicks, of course, but the visuals were there).
- The original listings included a lot of entries titled "Energon Monster". As per Hasbro designer Mark Maher's Instagram post, these Fossilizer / Weaponizer style Core and Deluxe toys were dropped eventually, and last minute the Pretenders were approved to fill in these empty slots. Hence the different size classes between Skullgrin, Bomb-Burst and Iguanus.[11]
- A Legacy animated series, conceptualized as a sequel to the War for Cybertron Trilogy cartoon, was in the discussion stage at one point, but Netflix passed on the pitch,[12] as it didn't fit with Netflix's mandates at the time. Hasbro chose not to shop it to other platforms or services, as they wanted to maintain their good relationship with the streaming giant.[13] The show was intended to be much lighter in tone than War For Cybertron, and would have been set centuries after the events of Kingdom.[14]
References
- ↑ The official in-house title of the toyline is "Transformers Generations: Legacy", which is often used in online product descriptions given to retailers. The name used for the line's logo, however; is just "Transformers: Legacy".
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Pre-reveal of Legacy on the Transformers Facebook: "Celebrating an almost 40-year legacy of Transformers, universes collide as fan-favorite characters are brought together from across the multiverse, updated with Generations styling. You can harness the power of Energon, with all-new Energon-infused weapon accessories that come with figures across the line."
- ↑ Tarantula's product description says that he comes with a crossbow and an sic accessory, but Armada Starscream's product description claims that he comes with an energon sword despite both swords being casted in solid plastic.
- ↑ Design notes on Legacy Scarr and Swoop from Hasbro designer Evan Brooks on Instagram
- ↑ "You will see a regular Legacy box sitting on the shelf with all of our new Legacy: Evolution stuff for Wave 1 so that if you are a MIB collector you can actually collect these all in the right same packaging." -Ben MacCrae on the Legacy: Evolution panel at Pulse Con 2022
- ↑ Transformers Velocitron Speedia 500 Deluxe G2 Shadowstrip & Crasher Out In New Zealand – First In-Hand Images at TFW2005
- ↑ Then you will actually see the concept art Emiliano Santalucia drew up even before we had the rollout of characters planned for the year. I think this will provide great insight for all yall as alot of the planning for weapon combinations was to obviously utilize our 5mm peg across all scales but this was all sold in before character selects were figured out. -Mark Maher on Legacy Energon weapons, 2022/6/21
- ↑ BigBadToyStore listing : "Transformers Generations Legacy Evolution Voyager Wave 1 Set of 2 Figures" (outdated, "Evolution" has since been removed)
- ↑ "Q: For Legacy Animated stuff, would they be in the original style or more G1-ified like the TFP toys? A: The latter, however they have heard the stylization feedback about the TFP figures, so they are working on trying to find a better balance regarding G1-ification."—TFW2005 asking Hasbro about Animated updates in Legacy
- ↑ "Q: Could we also see more accurate versions of them and the TFP characters in Studio Series though? A: Entirely possible, they’re talking about expanding Studio Series beyond movies."—TFW2005 asking Hasbro about more accurate redos of Prime characters
- ↑ Mark Maher - Instagram
- ↑ "Per FJ DeSanto: they had a series for Transformers Legacy planned out, but Netflix passed on it. #TFconLA"—Mike Seibert, Twitter, 2022/3/13
- ↑ "To be clear Mike even though i may have said it, Netflix didn’t “hate” the pitch, in fact they liked it. But their mandates had changed and what we were proposing didn’t fit that. Hasbro didn’t want to shop it elsewhere cause they want to keep their relationship w Netflix."—F.J. DeSanto, Twitter, 2022/3/13
- ↑ "Also the show was a dramatic change from WFC as it was lighter and more colorful as it was set centuries after WFC and would emphasize the fun of everything. See how colorful the legacy packaging is and you’ll get the idea."—F.J. DeSanto, Twitter, 2022/3/13
External links
- Transformers: Legacy at the TakaraTomy website















