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* Zombies
* Zombies
* Through the power of the [[Matrix]], he was resurrected by the [[Mini-Cons]] shortly afterward.  {{storylink|Miracle|Miracle}}
* Through the power of the [[Matrix]], he was resurrected by the [[Mini-Cons]] shortly afterward.  {{storylink|Miracle|Miracle}}
* Restored to life by the [[Swarm (G2)|Swarm]] (G2 Prime, is there a better way to describe this?)


==Immortality==
==Immortality==

Revision as of 07:28, 21 July 2009

And lo, the children did weep.

Transformers is a children's franchise, but at its core, it's a story of war. This means that the death of major and minor characters sometimes figures into the fiction.

Given the ambiguous nature of Transformer physiology, there is very little consistency regarding what is fatal to a Transformer, even within a single storyline. Damage that one Transformer might shrug off can prove fatal to another, or even to the same character in a different story. It does not take a terribly cynical viewer to conclude that the threshold of survival is generally determined by the needs of the plot.

The out-of-universe reasons for a character's death can vary from plot development to the arrival of new toys. Conveniently enough for writers who are beholden to the whims of a toy company, the majority of Transformers characters are machines, which means that death isn't necessarily permanent. Across the various universes, characters that appear to have been killed have been known to pop up alive again at a later date, or go through some sort of resurrection.

"How can you all be so cold and unfeeling? He died a hero!"

"Don't you even have mechanical hearts?"

"The humans don't understand! Our form of life is vastly different from theirs!"
Spider-Man, Sparkplug Witwicky, and Optimus Prime, "Prisoner of War!"

In-fiction causes of death

There is little consistency in what can kill a Transformer. Even the most basic method of killing, which is to destroy or otherwise cause the loss of a Transformer's spark, varies quite a bit in its details from story to story, character to character, and series to series.

Weaponsfire

Who knew Autobots could be killed by shooting their shoulders?
Blades in Generation 2: a violent, gritty, pointlessly graphic nightmare... in Generation 2.

Like humans, Transformers can be killed by damage caused by energy, projectile, and chemical weapons.

  • Most of the casualties of the Battle of Autobot City (and its run-up), including Prowl, Brawn, Ratchet, Ironhide, were victims of energy weapons.
  • Ultra Magnus subsequently "dies" after being shot a few times by the Sweeps, exploding into pieces. He is soon revived by the Junkions, however.
  • Most deaths in the Generation 2 comic occurred from energy weapons, including Red Alert, Smokescreen, Runabout, Quake, and numerous generics.
  • Dinobot dies after incurring severe damage from numerous Predacon weapons in "Code of Hero".
  • Tigerhawk is disintegrated by the main cannon of the starship Nemesis in "Nemesis Part 2". The same cannon subsequently blasts Inferno and Quickstrike, apparently killing them, though their "death" may be permanent simply because there was nobody around to put them back together.

Vivisection

Getting chopped in half is pretty graphic for a kids' story, even one about robots, so it doesn't happen very often.

  • In a dream sequence, Grimlock slices Megatron in half, killing him.
  • Predaking gets sliced in half by Dai Atlas.
  • Sideways dies when Sideswipe slices his car mode in two in Revenge of the Fallen.

Destruction of brain

In the early days of the franchise, a Transformer's life force was sometimes understood to be entirely contained within their brain module, most prominently in the Marvel comics. Destroying the brain would kill the Transformer. This premise was eventually passed over in favor of the more esoteric concept of sparks.

  • In an alternate future, Shockwave is blasted by Death's Head, who kills him by extracting and crushing his brain module.
  • The Throttlebots avoid death by having their brain modules removed from their bodies shortly before a planned execution.

Big explosions

Transformers characters often assume that explosions are more lethal than they really are; characters survive explosions all the time. An explosion's messy nature makes a good "out" for a writer to fake a character's death. Nevertheless, a few characters have been permanently killed by explosions:

  • Straxus was the victim of an interdimensionally triggered explosion that destroyed his body. (In UK continuity, he survived as a raggedy, bodiless head.)
  • Depth Charge was killed by the explosion that resulted from Rampage's death (either his exploding spark, or the exploding energon shard that pierced it.)
  • Several of the Beast Era Wreckers (Sonar, Spittor, the Deployers) were destroyed when part of their ship exploded with them in it.

Consumption

The shocking death of the barely-seen guys with hardly any lines!

Quite a few critters in the multiverse are equipped to devour giant robots. Being eaten (and, presumably, digested) generally proves fatal:

  • Various life forms were routinely devoured by the Sharkticons on Quintessa. This included Kranix,

a mechanical life form, though not a Transformer. Kup and Hot Rod might have suffered this fate as well, but fought their way free.

  • The Mechanibals ate quite a few Transformers during their sojourn on Cybertron. There is some indication that they could actually reconstitute their victims from their "recycled" parts, though this is never explicitly shown.
  • The Sharkticons killed two of the Mutants.
  • Unicron skewered Brainstorm and ate him. Quite a few other Transformers found their way into Unicron's gullet, though their exact cause of death was generally something more specific.

Melting

Even having a new toy couldn't save Terrorsaur!
Primal's diet had gone horribly wrong.

They're made of metal; therefore, with enough heat or sufficiently acidic material, they can melt.

  • Victims of the Deception smelting pools on Cybertron were reduced by intense heat into their base metals.
  • The Cybertronian Empire used some kind of acid to rather messily eradicate their Decepticon ancestors.
  • Terrorsaur and Scorponok may have been melted to death after tumbling into a lava pit within the Predacon base.
  • Optimus Primal's body was seemingly melted into the floor after his climactic face-off with Megatron. Considering how many god-like forces were unleashed and conflicting during the battle, his demise may be due to more than simple temperature-induced melting.

Incineration

Galvatron died to save everyone and came back twice—you lose, Jesus!

Plasma, energy fields, and stellar atmospheres can all utterly destroy a Transformer's body.

  • Quite a few characters met this fate in the Unicron Trilogy, but all survived it in some fashion:
    • Megatron's spark persisted within his burnt-out body when he was dropped into the exploding Unicron.
    • Demolishor's body was obliterated by an expanding energon grid, but his spark survived the process and was placed in a new body.
    • Inferno was destroyed when he threw himself into a star, but his spark was salvaged by the Autobots and, again, placed in a new body.
    • And finally, Megatron (Galvatron, whatever) threw himself into Primus's new energon sun to prevent Unicron from possessing him, killing himself yet again. This death was so inconsequential that his subsequent resurrection wasn't even explained!

Disassembly

Taking a Transformer apart into its component parts can occasionally kill them:

  • Bludgeon met this fate in an alternate future, when Swoop used a machine to pull him apart into his component pieces.

Dismemberment

  • Being ripped in half killed Jazz.

Crushing

Quite a few characters have been crushed into deactivation:

  • Inferno is apparently killed when a very large building collapses on top of him.
  • Thrust is killed when caught between two folding sections of Unicron's external armor.
  • Shockblast is crushed by Unicron's hand on Blizzard Planet.
  • His brother Six Shot meets a similar fate, crushed under the heel of a super-sized Galvatron.

Decapitation

Sometimes cutting a Transformer's head off is fatal. Sometimes!

  • The Megatron clone killed Cyclonus by ripping his head off.
  • Several of the Wreckers were killed by having their heads ripped or blasted off, including Twin Twist and Topspin, respectively.
  • Characters from the live-action movie frequently die by decapitation of some form: Bonecrusher, Grindor, and the Fallen.

Stabbed in the spark

Getting stabbed right through the spark is almost always fatal:

  • The supposedly immortal Rampage was killed when Depth Charge pierced his spark with an energon blade.
  • Skyfall died when Alpha Trion rammed his sword right through his chest.
  • Movie Optimus Prime died from a stab wound through the chest.

Loss of spark

Sometimes sparks can survive outside of a body; sometimes they cannot.

  • When Dinobot expires after his final battle, his Spark is seen exiting his body.
  • Prowl dies when his spark leaves his body.

?????

Death — the Optimus version of a power nap.
  • Animated Optimus Prime


Non-fatal deactivation

  • Stasis lock / deactivated (Ark crew / early Marvel Autobots / BW / Animated)
  • Decapitation (Cloudburst, City of Steel, BW Inferno, Animated-Headmaster)
  • Dismembered (Cold War!)
  • De-Sparking (BM / Starscream / BM Megs)
  • Falls (Gears) - has this ever killed anyone?

Resuscitation

  • Rebuilt (cartoon G1 Prime)
  • Spark placed in new body (Primal, E. Inferno, Demolishor)
  • Restored by Primus/Allspark/magic (Movie Prime, BM Primal)
  • Power of Primus (Last Autobot)
  • Power of Energon (E. Megs)
  • Nucleon (numerous Marvel)
  • Matrix (implied but never seen - marvel)
  • AllSpark fragment (Movie Megs, Animated Prime)
  • Zombies
  • Through the power of the Matrix, he was resurrected by the Mini-Cons shortly afterward. Miracle
  • Restored to life by the Swarm (G2 Prime, is there a better way to describe this?)

Immortality

Immortal sparks

Certain sparks have mutant qualities that allow them to, potentially, exist forever.

  • Starscream
  • Rampage, created as an attempt to duplicate Starscream's immortal spark. He was eventually killed by Depth Charge, so the attempt may be seen as unsuccessful.

Other

  • Multiversal singuarities such as Unicron and the Fallen can be killed off in one dimension, only to still be alive and well in another (or many others).
  • Animated Starscream could not be killed so long as he retained his Allspark fragment embedded in his forehead.
  • Denizens of the Dead Universe could essentially regenerate themselves out of nothing, no matter how much damage was inflicted on them.

Out-of-fiction causes of character death

Drama / character culmination

At its best, character death can be a moving plot development, the fruition of an ongoing character arc.

  • Suspecting that they would have to remove a character from the show, the writers of Beast Wars began planning for Dinobot's death several episodes ahead of time. Thus, when it came, it was the outcome of the character's own choices, flaws, and history, and played a crucial role in the show's plot.
  • Sunstreaker's death in AHM is intended to follow a similar arc... only without the whole choices, flaws and history thing.

Consequences of war

It's hard to take a war story seriously when nobody actually dies. The reality of war can be more readily portrayed when characters die. Generics are particularly handy for this, allowing death to be shown while not removing primary characters (retail toys!) from the story.

  • Impactor's death was used to drive home the threat of the Decepticons as well as the risks taken by the Autobots and their commanders.
  • The Generation 2 book featured several deaths which drove home the realities of war. Most notably, Red Alert's destruction served to make Grimlock acutely aware of just how badly he'd screwed up.

Increased threat

An enemy that kills is an enemy to be taken seriously. Thus a writer will frequently throw in some preliminary deaths to point out how seriously the bad guy should be treated.

  • The generic who dies at the beginning of "City of Fear!" serves to show the zombies as a true life-threatening menace.
  • Likewise for Runabout's death at the hands of the demons; knowing they can devour a Transformer makes the reader more concerned about the Dinobots' subsequent fate.

Cast thinning

Transformers stories are notorious for acquiring gigantic casts as they roll on; Generation 1 was particularly notorious for this because of its longevity. A simple way to make things more manageable was simply to kill off large numbers of characters in battle. Examples are rife in the fiction:

  • The Transformers: The Movie
  • Time Wars
  • The Underbase Saga
  • The battle with Unicron
  • Wreckers #2

Clear space for new toys

Some fiction has an inherently limited capacity for characters. Beast Wars and Beast Machines are by far the most prominent examples; their CGI animation made character animation expensive and necessiated removing an old character before a new one could be brought in. But any medium can be susceptible to this toy-driven phenomena.

  • The numerous casualties of TF:TM
  • Terrorsaur and Scorponok
  • Airazor and Tigatron
  • Dinobot


Characters who die a lot

  • Optimus Prime
  • Dirge (G1) — the unlucky guy who gets killed off in many continuities
  • Quake — the unlucky guy who gets killed over and over in the same continuity, but doesn't seem to mind.
  • Waspinator — the unlucky guy from Beast Wars who gets sliced, diced, and fricasseed every other episode only to be fully functional in time to get slagged again.
  • Cy-Kill, a Go-Bots character transferred to many Transformers comics just to be killed off violently. For no other reason than the lolz of ending his toyline, his universe, and finally his life...repeatedly.
  • Sentinel Prime (G1) — the unlucky Prime who must die.

See also