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{{bigquote|I saw the end!  They died in a cosmic funeral pyre!|[[Shawn Berger]], "[[Megatron's Master Plan, Part 2]]"}}
{{bigquote|I saw the end!  They died in a cosmic funeral pyre!|[[Shawn Berger]], "[[Megatron's Master Plan, Part 2]]"}}


[[Image:Armada 52 - Prime hangon to Galvatron.jpg|right|175px|thumb|Galvatron died to save everyone and came back ''twice''—you lose, [[Jesus]]!]]
[[Image:Armada 52 - Prime hangon to Galvatron.jpg|right|175px|thumb|Trukk not loser!]]


Plasma, energy fields, and stellar atmospheres can all utterly destroy a Transformer's body.  Like being melted, being reduced to one's component molecules would seem to be a surefire way of getting killed, but quite a few characters seem able to survive the process as ghosts and/or disembodied sparks:
Plasma, energy fields, and stellar atmospheres can all utterly destroy a Transformer's body.  Like being melted, being reduced to one's component molecules would seem to be a surefire way of getting killed, but quite a few characters seem able to survive the process as ghosts and/or disembodied sparks:

Revision as of 20:43, 4 July 2010

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. Sometimes just a laser blast or two will do the trick. Other times, characters survive being melted, crushed into cubes, and even utterly disintegrated. 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!"
{{#if:|{{{quote2}}}}}{{#if:Spider-Man, Sparkplug Witwicky, and Optimus Prime"Prisoner of War!"|Spider-Man, Sparkplug Witwicky, and Optimus Prime{{#if:"Prisoner of War!"|, "Prisoner of War!"|}}|}}

In-fiction causes of death

Scorponok is just as puzzled as the rest of us.

There is little consistency in what can kill a Transformer. Sometimes it takes just a shot. Other times, even totally annihilating a Transformer's body still doesn't do the trick. 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

This was almost too easy, Starscream!{{#if:|{{{quote2}}}}}{{#if:Megatron (like the fandom) is surprised to find how easily Autobots die, The Transformers: The Movie|Megatron (like the fandom) is surprised to find how easily Autobots die, The Transformers: The Movie{{#if:|, {{{3}}}|}}|}}
We're here aboard the Autobot shuttle, where we've secretly replaced Brawn's hyper-dense metal armor plating with styrene plastic. Let's see if anyone can tell the difference.
Prepare for your death today. Yer gonna die!!
Ow! Hey! Cut it out, guys! That hurts!
Sorry, nameless guy, your generic nature means you will never be miraculously resurrected.

Like humans, Transformers can be killed by damage caused by energy, projectile, and chemical weapons. Just how many shots it takes is widely variable, however.

  • In the Beast Wars cartoon:
    • Dinobot dies after incurring severe damage from numerous Predacon weapons. Code of Hero The apparent cause of his demise is his refusal to enter protective stasis lock, as other characters have survived similar or worse levels of damage.
    • Tigerhawk is disintegrated by the main cannon of the starship Nemesis. 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. Nemesis Part 2

Big explosions

{{#if:Prowl, "The Wrath of Grimlock!"|
They're going to blow us all to pieces! Guardian's booby-trapped - packed with enough explosives to level this whole mountain!
{{#if:Prowl, "The Wrath of Grimlock!"|

Prowl, "The Wrath of Grimlock!"{{#if:|, {{{3}}}}}

}}

}}

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. The Wrath of Grimlock! Gone but Not Forgotten! The Agenda (Part 2) Nevertheless, a few characters have been permanently killed by explosions. (This list omits characters who exploded from within, like Ultra Magnus up above.)

  • In the Marvel comics:

Impact trauma

Falling off a cliff or mountainside or tall building is usually just as fatal to Transformers as it is to, say... Wile E. Coyote. Only on rare occasion does it result in death:

Crushing

DO NOT WANT
Before time began, there was... THE CUBE.

Quite a few characters have been crushed into deactivation:

  • Animated cartoon: Blurr is (possibly) killed by a garbage compactor-like crushing device. (An "out" by writer Derrick Wyatt was intended to show his still-pulsing spark within his cubified remains, but this did not make it into the show, leaving his fate ambiguous at best.) TransWarped

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. This is one of the more fool-proof methods of killing a Transformer; few if any have survived it.

  • In the Beast Era cartoons:
    • Terrorsaur and Scorponok were apparently melted to death after tumbling into a lava pit within the Predacon base. Aftermath
    • 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. Fallout

Incineration

{{#if:Shawn Berger, "Megatron's Master Plan, Part 2"|
I saw the end! They died in a cosmic funeral pyre!
{{#if:Shawn Berger, "Megatron's Master Plan, Part 2"|

Shawn Berger, "Megatron's Master Plan, Part 2"{{#if:|, {{{3}}}}}

}}

}}

Trukk not loser!

Plasma, energy fields, and stellar atmospheres can all utterly destroy a Transformer's body. Like being melted, being reduced to one's component molecules would seem to be a surefire way of getting killed, but quite a few characters seem able to survive the process as ghosts and/or disembodied sparks:

  • 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. Mortal Combat Megatron Resurrected
    • Demolishor's body was obliterated by an expanding energon grid, but his spark survived the process and was placed in a new body. Go for Unicron!
    • 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. Farewell Inferno
    • And finally, Megatron (Galvatron, whatever) threw himself into Primus's new energon sun to prevent Unicron from possessing him, killing himself yet again. The Sun This death was so inconsequential that his subsequent resurrection wasn't even explained! Fallen

Consumption

{{#if:Longtooth, "Deadly Obsession"|
...If we don't find the Matrix, some bad guy's gonna eat us! Right?
{{#if:Longtooth, "Deadly Obsession"|

—Longtooth, "Deadly Obsession"{{#if:|, {{{3}}}}}

}}

}}

The shocking death of the barely-seen guys with hardly any lines!
Cannibalism is hilarious, kids!

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

  • In the G1 cartoon:
  • The Sharkticons killed two of the Mutants by gobbling them up. Or ripping them apart. Or both. We don't really know. Betrayal

Disassembly

"HERE'S what I think of your resemblance to your G1 counterpart!"

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

Decapitation

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"CHUK!" is good, but I could really go for a "Shakkooosh" right about now.

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

  • In the Marvel comics:
    • The Megatron clone killed Cyclonus by ripping his head off. Dry Run!
    • Several of the Wreckers were killed by having their heads ripped or blasted off, including Twin Twist and Topspin, respectively. Time Wars
    • Razorclaw had his head cut off by a propeller fired by Leadfoot, presumably (given the Generation 2 book's emphasis on body count) killing him. A Rage in Heaven!

Vivisection

Ahhhh, there we go...
{{#if:Tracks, "Make Tracks"|
I have no desire to be carved up into Auto-sushi.
{{#if:Tracks, "Make Tracks"|

—Tracks, "Make Tracks"{{#if:|, {{{3}}}}}

}}

}}

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

Destruction of brain

{{#if:Death's Head, "Fire on High!"|
Next strike in the neural cluster, yes? Weakest spot on all Transformers...
{{#if:Death's Head, "Fire on High!"|

Death's Head, "Fire on High!"{{#if:|, {{{3}}}}}

}}

}}

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.

Destruction of spark

{{#if:Depth Charge to Rampage, "Nemesis Part 1"|
RAW energon! Right through your twisted spark!
{{#if:Depth Charge to Rampage, "Nemesis Part 1"|

—Depth Charge to Rampage, "Nemesis Part 1"{{#if:|, {{{3}}}}}

}}

}}

And then he hung Skyfall from his ceiling.

Getting stabbed right through the spark is almost always fatal:

  • In Beast Wars: The supposedly immortal Rampage was killed when Depth Charge pierced his spark with an energon blade. Nemesis Part 1
  • TransTech: Skyfall died when Alpha Trion rammed his sword right through his chest. Transcendent: Part 6
  • Cybertron: Galvatron died after being impaled with Rhisling by Optimus Prime. Unfinished
  • Movie continuity: Optimus Prime died from a stab wound through the chest, quickly followed by a cannon blast through the spark chamber from Megatron's swordcannon weapon. Revenge of the Fallen
  • Beast Machines continuity: Rhinox - already reduced to a spark within the matrix - ceased to be when Megatron annihilated his spark from existence. Singularity Ablyss
  • Titan's Movie comics: Transformers have forcefields shielding their sparks, which can be externalized to protect bodywork. Jazz loved doing this, leaving him far more vulnerable to death by destruction of spark than he would otherwise be. Lost in Space 4: Jazz

Loss of spark

{{#if:Dinobot's internal computer, "Code of Hero"|
Warning. Further expenditure will result in permanent loss of spark. Stasis lock must commence.
{{#if:Dinobot's internal computer, "Code of Hero"|

Dinobot's internal computer, "Code of Hero"{{#if:|, {{{3}}}}}

}}

}}

Sometimes sparks can survive outside of a body; sometimes they cannot. In the Beast Era, there is some indication that a spark left outside a body will soon begin to return to the Matrix/All Spark/another dimension.

  • When Dinobot expires after his final battle, his Spark is seen exiting his body. The implication is that a sufficiently damaged body can no longer hold a spark within this dimension. Code of Hero
  • Beast Machines subsequently showed living sparks existing outside of bodies on a regular basis. The sparkless bodies were simply considered shells, rather than "dead".
  • Animated cartoon: Prowl dies when he intentionally relinquishes his own spark. Endgame, Part II
  • Movie continuity: Jetfire rips out his own spark chamber to give Optimus a fighting chance. Revenge of the Fallen

Energy overload

{{#if:Optimus Primal, "Beast Wars (Part 1)"|
We may need energon for power, but this is too much of a good thing.
{{#if:Optimus Primal, "Beast Wars (Part 1)"|

Optimus Primal, "Beast Wars (Part 1)"{{#if:|, {{{3}}}}}

}}

}}

Death — the Optimus version of a power nap.
He's got an Underbase in his underpants.

The average human needs a lot of water to survive. But too much water results in a horrible death. Similarly, Transformers need energy to survive, but too much of it can be a very bad thing. Sometimes it's just plain old energy; other times it some special god-like force that does them in.

Energy depletion

On rare occasion, Transformers can simply run out of energy completely and expire.

  • Marvel comics: the ancient Overlord died from a lack of energy. State Games
  • Movie continuity: Jetfire explains that a lack of energon causes the Transformer equivalent of aging, such as rusting joints, mental confusion, and pieces falling apart, followed by an indefinite period of stasis that can only be reversed by an infusion of Allspark energy. Revenge of the Fallen

Non-fatal deactivation

"You mean he's still alive?!"
"No! But neither is he what you would term 'dead'!"
{{#if:|{{{quote2}}}}}{{#if:Spider-Man and Optimus Prime, "Prisoner of War!"|Spider-Man and Optimus Prime, "Prisoner of War!"{{#if:|, {{{3}}}|}}|}}
Braiiiiiin mooooodulllllles....

For almost every single cause of death listed above, there's been one or more Transformers who have survived it, sometimes without so much as a period of unconsciousness.

In particular, "deactivation" is the Transformers equivalent of being in a coma. Numerous Transformers are seen to enter this state and eventually recover, such as the Autobots deactivated by Shockwave The Last Stand, who later were repaired. However, the line between death and deactivation is a blurry one. Sometimes the two words are used interchangeably, even in reference to characters who are later revived. Most of Starscream's Underbase victims were described as deactivated, and were sometimes lamented as "dead" while at other times were shown undergoing repairs. Back from the Dead Gone but Not Forgotten! The Gathering Storm

"Stasis lock" would eventually give a more concrete name to the state of deactivation. The inert Transformers on the crashed Ark were retconned as being in stasis lock. Various Beast Wars characters would go into stasis lock to maintain their spark when their body had sustained too much damage from weaponsfire or energon absorption. Animated showed a crew of Autobots voluntarily entering protective stasis lock in anticipation of a crash landing.

Some of the quasi-fatal things which can cause a Transformer to "deactivate" include:

Impact trauma

Smashing into something usually knocks out a Transformer, but almost never actually kills them:

Decapitation

In the movie continuity, this would've been fatal. In Animated, it's just embarrassing.
{{#if:Landmine jokes about Cloudburst's near-death experience, "Recipe for Disaster!"|
Anyone who can lop your head off in one blow is alright by me!
{{#if:Landmine jokes about Cloudburst's near-death experience, "Recipe for Disaster!"|

Landmine jokes about Cloudburst's near-death experience, "Recipe for Disaster!"{{#if:|, {{{3}}}}}

}}

}}

Like we said before, decapitation is sometimes fatal... and other times it isn't.

Dismemberment

Transformers get ripped to pieces all the time, and recover from it:

Spark removal

{{#if:Rhinox, "Optimal Situation"|
His spark can't exist outside a living body!
{{#if:Rhinox, "Optimal Situation"|

Rhinox, "Optimal Situation"{{#if:|, {{{3}}}}}

}}

}}

A Transformer's spark—their "soul", their living essence—can be removed from their body, or the body can be destroyed around them

  • The destruction of Starscream's body, and his subsequent survival as a ghost, was eventually retconned to be his Spark enduring without a physical form. The Transformers: The Movie Starscream's Ghost Possession
  • Beast Wars cartoon: Tigatron and Airazor's sparks spent quite some time wandering around behind Tigerhawk, before combining and entering his body. Other Victories

The treatment of bodiless sparks in Beast Machines is seen by some fans as contradicting the canon established by Beast Wars, particularly the quote above.

Limbo

Sometimes Transformers get shunted out of creation as we know it, and into various alternate, sub- and non-dimensions.

  • Marvel comics:
  • IDW comics: Megatron severely damaged Optimus Prime in battle and planned on finishing him off by crushing his spark core. Optimus Prime feigned death by downloading his "consciousness" into his trailer section, causing his robot mode to appear dead. In the time it took for Prime's consciousness to transfer to his trailer, he briefly entered limbo, the transitional infraspace between life and death. Escalation

Resuscitation

Robots are machines. They can be switched off, taken apart, blown to bits, and put back together. Ergo, in many continuities and cases, "death" is not nearly as permanent a condition as it is for us fragile fleshy types.

Reconstruction

{{#if:A random Quintesson, "The Return of Optimus Prime, Part 1"|
I've done it! Optimus Prime lives!
{{#if:A random Quintesson, "The Return of Optimus Prime, Part 1"|

—A random Quintesson, "The Return of Optimus Prime, Part 1"{{#if:|, {{{3}}}}}

}}

}}

  • Generation 1 cartoon: Optimus Prime was simply repaired back to life by a Quintesson. Some fixing of this and that, a burst of power, and boom, suddenly he was alive again. The Return of Optimus Prime, Part 1
  • Marvel Comics: Optimus Prime's mind was encoded on a disk. After a new Powermaster body was constructed for him, the disk's contents were loaded into it, and Optimus Prime lived again. (One wonders why they couldn't make as many Optimus Primes as they pleased.) People Power!

Spark transfer

Transferring a Transformer's spark into a new body constitutes a form of resurrection, particularly if the Transformer's previous body was destroyed.

  • Beast Wars cartoon: Optimus Primal was restored to life when Rhinox managed to recall his spark from the Matrix, a special circumstance only enabled by a temporary window into transwarp space. Coming of the Fuzors (Part 2)
  • Armada Smokescreen was shot through the chest at point blank range by the Requiem Blaster Sacrifice but his spark survived and was put into a new body. Regeneration
  • Energon cartoon: Inferno and Demolishor both had their bodies atomized; however, their sparks both survived, and were placed into new bodies. (The upshot of all of this is that it's nigh-impossible to kill a Unicron Trilogy Transformer, unless they do it themselves.) Go for Unicron! Farewell Inferno
  • Animated cartoon: The spark of a dying Yoketron was placed into a new protoform body by Prowl; however, Yoketron consciously chose to let his life end, and expired anyway. Five Servos of Doom

"Magical" substances

  • Marvel Comics: The miraculous healing properties of Nucleon brought many Autobots back to life, as well as a few Decepticons. The Void! (US)
  • Energon cartoon: Megatron was revived by the all-encompassing power of energon, as was Unicron. Megatron Resurrected
{{#if:Optimus Prime explains his latest revival, "End of the Road!"|
Where the Last Autobot is concerned, even death, it would appear, is an abstract concept!
{{#if:Optimus Prime explains his latest revival, "End of the Road!"|

—Optimus Prime explains his latest revival, "End of the Road!"{{#if:|, {{{3}}}}}

}}

}}

Anything tied to the primordial life-force of the Transformers' god Primus tends to be a cure-all for death. This includes Primus himself, his various power-wielding avatars and servants, and the assorted Matrixes and Allsparks, all of which can deliver an infusion of the essence of life itself. In some continuities, this is parsed as a Transformer's spark being brought back out of the Allspark dimension.

  • In the Marvel comics:
    • The Last Autobot was granted the power of recreation by Primus, which he used to raise numerous fallen Autobots from the battlefield. End of the Road! (US)
    • Optimus Prime was eager to find the lost Creation Matrix, stating that it would be able to restore many deactivated warriors to life. Bird of Prey!
    • Optimus Prime was restored to life by the Swarm after it had ingested the energies and knowledge of the Matrix. A Rage in Heaven!
  • In the movie continuity:
    • The Allspark is shown repeatedly to be capable of restoring just about anything. Frenzy gets a whole new body from its power, Transformers (2007) and Megatron is restored to life by merely a fragment of it. Revenge of the Fallen (film)
    • Optimus Prime was restored to life by the Matrix of Leadership, an Allspark-related talisman. Revenge of the Fallen
  • Beast Machines cartoon: Optimus Primal's body was destroyed, but the All Spark granted him the choice of uniting with it or being reborn. He chose the latter, and poof, just walked right out of the Oracle bubble in a brand new version of his previous body. Fallout
  • Armada cartoon: Optimus Prime was brought back to life by the power of the Mini-Cons after his body was disintegrated. Miracle
  • "Shattered Glass": Skyfall was resurrected when he and his gestaltmates were combined together and reborn by Primus into Nexus Prime. Reunification: Part 5 Nexus Prime then brought Megatron back from the other side of the Allspark and infused him with some of Primus's power to become Galvatron. Reunification: Part 6

Zombies

Immortality

Immortal sparks

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

Other

  • Multiversal singularities 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), due to the varying properties of different dimensions (reverse-time, dimensions, for example are key to revival of the singularities).
  • 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.
  • Waspinator can never completely die no matter what for some reason.

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. Code of Hero
  • Sunstreaker's death in All Hail Megatron is intended to follow a similar style of arc... only it's missing the whole choices, flaws and history thing. Oh well!
  • Optimus Primal's death(s) in Beast Machines are likewise the outcome of his own choices and character. End of the Line Endgame Pt. III: Seeds of the Future His death in Beast Wars, by contrast, was more a moment of dramatic pathos -- knowingly walking into danger, his enemy got the better of him. Other Voices, Part 2

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. The results can range from high drama and pathos to numbingly pointless body counts.

  • 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. Target: 2006
  • 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. Devices and Desires!

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.

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, especially the Marvel Comics.

  • In the Marvel comics:
    • The "Time Wars" storyline got rid of the Wreckers and quite a few Decepticons as well.
    • The Underbase Saga even more explicitly cleared out dozens of characters, leaving perhaps 2 dozen characters from each faction in the story.
    • The battle with Unicron in "On the Edge of Extinction!" likewise got rid of a lot of older characters, leaving the story free to concentrate on more of a core cast (and associated newer toy characters.)
  • Wreckers #2 dealt with its oversized cast by killing off scads of characters right up front.

Clear space for new toys

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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 necessitated 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 "The Transformers: The Movie" were fairly explicitly removed from the story to make way for a wave of new toy/characters.
  • Terrorsaur and Scorponok had to be removed -- quickly -- to make room for the two upcoming Fuzor characters, hence their sudden, blink-and-you-miss-it death in "Aftermath".
  • Airazor and Tigatron were removed for similar reasons. When their plot was finally resolved, it was, surprise, via a new toy!

Fleshling death

In general, Transformers fiction is pretty squeamish about showing the deaths of Earth's organic creatures. But it's a war, and sometimes it does happen. The out-of-universe reasons generally fall into three categories: Consequences of War, Emotional Pathos, and BLOOD IZ KEWL.

The various cartoons tend to show organic death the least, as they are most clearly aimed at, and easily accessible by, children. Comics tend to be less reluctant to show the impact of the Transformers' war on innocent lives, though the death rate varies by series. Latter-day Generation 1 books especially revel in high body counts, because squishing stupid humans is killer and awesome and radical and hardcore. Even the occasional children's storybook has been known to off mass quantities of the dumb fleshies.

Animal death

One dead dog
Two dead dogs

Cute little animals are almost always killed off for reasons of Emotional Pathos:


Human death

This didn't happen much.
  • Marvel US: The original Marvel book ignored or glossed over human casualties, which were rarely if ever shown; the panel at right, from US #37, shows a very unusual instance of a human dying right in front of us. One of the few human(oid)s to die on-panel was Galen, killed off to make way for Spike. Generation 2 was much more explicit about human death, as Bludgeon and later Jhiaxus attacked Earth for the purpose of inflicting casualties.
  • Marvel UK: The UK-original stories were much less reluctant to show human death; within the first year or so, humans had died in Autobot-induced car wrecks and at the hands of mind-controlled Autobots.
  • In every US-aired cartoon series, humans essentially never die. Even Transformers Animated, which features the city of Detroit getting smashed by robot battles virtually every week, never once mentions humans getting killed.
  • Contemporary toyline-based comics (Armada, Energon) seem to follow a similar policy, avoiding mention of human death -- even when human cities are being directly attacked, as in "Multiplicity, Pt. 2".
  • Japanese cartoons, by contrast, don't seem to mind showing human deaths (or dog deaths, for that matter).
  • The Dreamwave G1 comics really thought it was totally awesome and cool and radical to kill off those stupid humans. Thus, they start off with Megatron smushing some stupid humans. More smushing and killing and blowing up follows. DIE, dumb stubbies, DIE!
  • IDW comics managed to avoid this for a long time, showing human death only when it was particularly integral to the plot... then All Hail Megatron came down the pike. DIE, stupid fleshies, DIE!
  • The live-action movie continuity implies a great deal of human death. Revenge mentions a body count of over 9,000, and massive damage is done during the battle of Mission City), though little of it is shown on screen. And of course, the first film begins with Blackout wiping out an entire military base. A handful of humans are killed directly on-screen, most notably Donnelly.
  • The alternate timeline arc in Titan's Movie comic featured big wars on Earth and lots of destruction, clearly insinuating human death while not being explicit. The exceptions were in issue 10, where NATO is said to be suffering losses of 11,506 and the Palais Bourbon is blown up when people are still clearly inside. Sam Witwicky, meanwhile, was stated to have died.
  • Titan quite blatantly stated that the Free Men had caused great loss of life at an air base, a rare example of humans killing humans. In the same story, Robert Epps opened fire on militia men, which kinda implies he was killing them. Bring Me the Head of Optimus Prime Similarly, Wheelie of all people was seen zapping humans at close range during a Decepticon attack; with no "oh it was a stun beam" handwave and the 'Cons not pulling punches, it sure seems like he's murdered 'em! Outlaw Blues

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.
  • Starscream (Animated) - the unlucky guy that constantly gets killed, decapitated, or maimed by others, only to be brought back to life.

See also