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Due to the greed of [[Ultra Magnus (RID)|Ultra Magnus]], [[Optimus Prime (RID)|Optimus Prime]] was forced into a combination with his brother.  Ultra Magnus merely wanted the power of the [[Matrix of Leadership|Matrix]] for himself, thinking that a combination would let him access that power.  The result of their combination is '''[[Omega Prime|Omega Prime]]''', a seemingly unique individual bringing out the best of each brothers' abilities but not hampered by their disagreements.  A true [[combiner]] rather than a mere [[Super Mode|super mode]], Omega Prime possesses neither Magnus's temper nor Optimus's reserve. He is a jocular superman with all the power to back up his quips, limited only by the capacity of the two brothers to cease bickering inside his head long enough to push in the same direction.  
The timeline of the '''[[Japanese Generation 1 cartoon continuity]]''' is a dense and multi-layered epic that charts billions of years of history, from before the beginning of time to the distant future, all the way to the very end of the universe. The continuity is primarily organized around the first three seasons of the original The Transformers cartoon and its various Japan-exclusive continuations: these include, but are not limited to, The Headmasters, Super-God Masterforce, and Victory, as well as Beast Wars, Beast Machines, and a slew of ancillary media, which includes Robotmasters and Micromaster.


More powerful than the sum of his component parts, Omega Prime's importance in the fight against evil cannot be over-estimated, stretching beyond even his own universe.
From 2006 to 2007, the Kiss Players franchise published two official chronologies (which can be read here) that amalgamated most of the stories that had come before into a grand, unified timeline. Along with linking existing events from these series together, they recorded several new events and retconned other developments to make everything fit more or less together, and in doing so provided a foundation for future authors to build around these pre-existing stories.


He's also got a [[Matrix Blade|really big sword]].
Within the fictional Transformers multiverse, the Japanese cartoon continuity frequently crosses over with other universes—most often with the comedic inhabitants of the Legends World, but also the BT World, a notable splinter timeline that branches off from the "main" Japanese cartoon universe just before the events of The Transformers: The Movie, and the advanced Cybertronians who inhabit the Cloud World. Given the vast breadth, depth, and scope of this timeline, some inconsistencies are unavoidable—in 2015, the Ask Vector Prime Facebook feature handwaved some of these details away by explaining that MegaZarak's destruction of Cybertron destabilized the fabric of reality, and that any inconsistencies can be blamed on an unseen observer's haphazard attempts to repair the local space-time. (Although it should be noted that Ask Vector Prime was not accessible to a Japanese audience and created plot points that were disregarded by later fiction.) In the real world, authors and artists have generally developed a much tighter approach to canon and continuity. Subsequent stories throughout the 2010s and 2020s have more-or-less adhered to this chronology of events—stories such as Legends, Generations Selects, and Ask Vector Prime have filled in notable gaps in the timeline by telling interquel tales weaving in and around the various cartoon "eras".


Convalescing on an island after a brutal fight with Ultra Magnus, Optimus was attacked by [[Megatron (RID)|Megatron]] and the [[Decepticon]]s.  Ultra Magnus showed after having followed [[Sky-Byte (RID)|Sky-Byte]] via a hidden tracking device. Feigning compassion and understanding his brother's heavy burden in carrying the Matrix, Ultra Magnus pretended to offer Prime his helping hand, only to seize it and force the two of them to combine.  What he didn't expect, though, was that Optimus had as much control over their new body as Magnus did.  His plan to steal the power of the Matrix backfired and he had to cooperate with Prime to defeat the Decepticons.  {{storylink|Ultra Magnus: Forced Fusion!}}
'''[[Japanese Generation 1 cartoon continuity|continued...]]'''
 
'''[[Omega Prime|continued...]]'''


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Revision as of 02:12, 1 March 2024

The timeline of the Japanese Generation 1 cartoon continuity is a dense and multi-layered epic that charts billions of years of history, from before the beginning of time to the distant future, all the way to the very end of the universe. The continuity is primarily organized around the first three seasons of the original The Transformers cartoon and its various Japan-exclusive continuations: these include, but are not limited to, The Headmasters, Super-God Masterforce, and Victory, as well as Beast Wars, Beast Machines, and a slew of ancillary media, which includes Robotmasters and Micromaster.

From 2006 to 2007, the Kiss Players franchise published two official chronologies (which can be read here) that amalgamated most of the stories that had come before into a grand, unified timeline. Along with linking existing events from these series together, they recorded several new events and retconned other developments to make everything fit more or less together, and in doing so provided a foundation for future authors to build around these pre-existing stories.

Within the fictional Transformers multiverse, the Japanese cartoon continuity frequently crosses over with other universes—most often with the comedic inhabitants of the Legends World, but also the BT World, a notable splinter timeline that branches off from the "main" Japanese cartoon universe just before the events of The Transformers: The Movie, and the advanced Cybertronians who inhabit the Cloud World. Given the vast breadth, depth, and scope of this timeline, some inconsistencies are unavoidable—in 2015, the Ask Vector Prime Facebook feature handwaved some of these details away by explaining that MegaZarak's destruction of Cybertron destabilized the fabric of reality, and that any inconsistencies can be blamed on an unseen observer's haphazard attempts to repair the local space-time. (Although it should be noted that Ask Vector Prime was not accessible to a Japanese audience and created plot points that were disregarded by later fiction.) In the real world, authors and artists have generally developed a much tighter approach to canon and continuity. Subsequent stories throughout the 2010s and 2020s have more-or-less adhered to this chronology of events—stories such as Legends, Generations Selects, and Ask Vector Prime have filled in notable gaps in the timeline by telling interquel tales weaving in and around the various cartoon "eras".

continued...


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