More than Meets the Eye, Part 1: Difference between revisions
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:''Brazilian title:'' '''Mais do Que Os Olhos Veem Parte 1''' ("More than Meets the Eye part 1") | :''Brazilian title:'' '''Mais do Que Os Olhos Veem Parte 1''' ("More than Meets the Eye part 1") | ||
:''Russian title:'' '''Не всё так просто (Часть 1)''' ("Not all is so simple… (Part 1)") | :''Russian title:'' '''Не всё так просто (Часть 1)''' ("Not all is so simple… (Part 1)") | ||
:''Serbian ''Generation 2'' title, dub 1:'' '''Више него што се види први део''' (''Više nego što se vidi prvi deo'', "More than meets the eye part 1") | |||
:''Serbian ''Generation 2'' title, dub 2:'' '''Силе зла први део''' (''Sile zla prvi deo'', "Forces of evil part 1") | |||
:''Italian title:'' '''Molto più di quel che appare - I''' ("More than meets the eye - I") | :''Italian title:'' '''Molto più di quel che appare - I''' ("More than meets the eye - I") | ||
{{TOCclear}} | {{TOCclear}} | ||
Revision as of 15:34, 14 December 2010
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![]() Admit it. As a kid, you longed to own this, and were only marginally satisfied if your parents instead merely dubbed it from the rental tape. | |||||||||||||
| "More than Meets the Eye, Part 1" | |||||||||||||
| Production code | 4023 | ||||||||||||
| Production company | Sunbow Productions | ||||||||||||
| Airdate | September 17, 1984 | ||||||||||||
| Written by | George Arthur Bloom | ||||||||||||
| Animation studio | Toei | ||||||||||||
| Continuity | Generation 1 cartoon continuity | ||||||||||||
| Packaged with | Optimus Prime | ||||||||||||
In search of energy, the Autobots leave Cybertron and are pursued by the Decepticons.
- Japanese title: 地球への道 (Chikyū e no Michi, "The Road to Earth")
- German Generation 2 title: "Im Weltraum verschollen" ("Lost in Space")
- Brazilian title: Mais do Que Os Olhos Veem Parte 1 ("More than Meets the Eye part 1")
- Russian title: Не всё так просто (Часть 1) ("Not all is so simple… (Part 1)")
- Serbian Generation 2 title, dub 1: Више него што се види први део (Više nego što se vidi prvi deo, "More than meets the eye part 1")
- Serbian Generation 2 title, dub 2: Силе зла први део (Sile zla prvi deo, "Forces of evil part 1")
- Italian title: Molto più di quel che appare - I ("More than meets the eye - I")
Synopsis

On Cybertron, many millions of years ago, the Autobots are on the verge of extinction. Eons of war with the Decepticons, their bitter enemies, have drained the planet's once plentiful resources. Autobots Wheeljack and Bumblebee are scraping together energy conductors, and narrowly avoid capture by a Decepticon patrol. They arrive at Iacon, the Autobots' headquarters. There, Optimus Prime, the Autobot leader, confers with his lieutenants Jazz, Prowl, and Trailbreaker on the plan to leave Cybertron on a mission to search for new sources of energy. This plot is overheard by the Decepticon spies Soundwave and Laserbeak.
Inside their base, Decepticon leader Megatron plots to intercept the Autobots, and leaves his lieutenant Shockwave in charge of Cybertron.

The Autobots blast off aboard an Autobot spaceship, followed by the Decepticon cruiser. An asteroid collision forces them to use up most of their energy clearing a path through the resulting storm. The Decepticons take advantage of this vulnerability and attack. Both ships spin out of control, crashing on nearby Earth.
Four million years pass. It is the year 1984, and volcanic activity stirs the half-buried Ark, awakening the computer systems aboard. Teletraan I sends out a Sky Spy satellite to reconnoiter this new world, and scans examples of terrestrial machinery in order to reformat the Transformers into new alt modes. The Decepticon Skywarp is awakened first, and he revives the other Decepticons. Megatron observes that much time has passed since the crash. An impudent Starscream leaves a parting shot at the dormant Autobots, unwittingly knocking Optimus Prime into the repair beam and causing him to be the first Autobot to be revived.

Megatron decrees that their mission is to drain Earth of its resources in order to build an ultimate weapon and conquer the universe (as you do). To start, they'll need a base of operations, so he puts Starscream in charge of converting the area for the construction of a new star cruiser. The Decepticon Rumble trashes a nearby power station to serve as raw materials.
Meanwhile, Optimus Prime dispatches Hound and Cliffjumper to scout the area. They find the Decepticons, and Cliffjumper brashly takes a shot at Megatron. He misses, and the Decepticons unleash Laserbeak in pursuit. Hound is blasted and injured.
Autobot medic Ratchet and Hauler come to fetch Hound. Meanwhile, Decepticons Thundercracker and Reflector spot an Earth vehicle coming to investigate the destruction of the power station. Ravage intercepts the vehicle, frightening the human workers away.
Hound is repaired, and reports what he overheard: that the Decepticons are on the hunt for energy. Prime has Jazz assemble a battle group to go after them. The Decepticons attack an off-shore oil rig, where William "Sparkplug" Witwicky and his son Spike work. They begin gathering energon cubes, but are interrupted by the Autobots.

A battle erupts on the drilling platform. Megatron blasts the rig's supports, tipping it into the ocean. It bursts into flames. Realizing the humans are in danger, Optimus Prime tries to save Spike and Sparkplug while the Decepticons retreat with their energon plunder.
Featured characters
(Numbers indicate order of appearance.)
| Autobots | Decepticons | Humans |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Quotes
"Prime told me there'd be days like this."
"And you didn't believe him?"
"I do now!"
- —Bumblebee and Wheeljack under fire.
"When do we start the search mission?"
"Soon as you're ready to launch."
- —Prowl is told to hurry up by Optimus Prime.
"Fear not, Megatron. Cybertron shall remain as you leave it."
- —Shockwave, more accurate than he realizes.
"Leakin' lubricant!"
- —Ironhide
"What about materials?"
"Use your imagination!"
- —Starscream and Megatron
"Here's something to keep you warm."
- —Megatron as he ignites the oil spill.
Notes
Animation or technical glitches
Minor art and coloring errors
- Soundwave's mouthplate doesn't move during his "Autobots are set to launch" line.
- As Megatron gives Shockwave his orders, Starscream is missing his canopy lines, and Soundwave's eject button is blue, while his backpack is white.
- The retracting segments of Iacon's dome appear to come out of solid, unbroken metal.
- Sideswipe's missing his shoulder launcher as he mans an Ark console.
- Starscream has a red "collar" around his neck as he prepares the tractor beam.
- When Soundwave tosses Ratchet into a console aboard the Ark, the Autobot Medic is sporting a Decepticon symbol in the center of his chest windshield, most likely the result of the animator carrying over Soundwave's design.
- As Starscream fires on the Autobot ship, the top segment of his canopy is red instead of gray in some frames.
- Part of Megatron's fusion cannon is white as he says "we'll set up here".
- Soundwave's eject button is blue instead of white as Megatron orders him to plan the new space cruiser.
- Megatron is missing his barrel as he speaks to his newly revived troops. In a close-up, he has a "five o'clock shadow", as the central segment of his face is a darker shade than the rest of it.

- After landing at the power plant, Soundwave's eject button is blue, instead of... y'know what? Let's just say the colorists screwed up this little detail all the freaking time, and leave it at that.
- Cliffjumper's mirror housings are white instead of red as he delivers his "moonbeam" line.
- Ratchet's Autobot symbol is gray before he jumps off the cliff.
- Prime's running light housings are white instead of red as he orders Jazz to organize a battle unit.
- In the pan across the battle unit, Sideswipe's helm is red instead of black, and the top of Trailbreaker's chest is white instead of black.
- The center segment of Megatron's fusion cannon is white as the wrenches & etc. bounce off of him.
- Soundwave's cheekguards are blue instead of white as he starts making energon cubes.
- Starscream is missing his wing insignia as Megatron returns to his robot form.
Not-so-minor errors

- The Decepticon "welcoming committee" is often stated to contain a constantly-changing roster, but close examination reveals that it's almost consistent:
- The initial shot shows Starscream, Skywarp, and Thundercracker.
- The second shot shows a vaguely Thundercracker-colored Seeker (the blue is deeper than Thundercracker's color, and there's extra bits of white and gray) alongside two completely different Seekers (a purple one with a flamethrower, and an orange one).
- The third shot, as Wheeljack barrels through them, shows a total of five Seekers, too small to be identified. If that darker blue guy from the second shot was supposed to be Thundercracker, and you're willing to believe that several of the Decepticons managed to be off-camera in all the other shots, then the numbers actually add up. (Your wiki editors acknowledge that this probably was a goof.)
- The final shot of the group shows Starscream ordering Skywarp and Thundercracker to pursue the Autobots; both have lines in their normal voice, so they were clearly supposed to be there.
- Starscream's two lines during this scene are performed by two different actors in two different voices, neither resembling the high rasp he'll shortly establish as his normal voice. The second voice is clearly Frank Welker, sounding close to his Megatron voice.
- Bumblebee steps out of Wheeljack and immediately fires a shot in the completely opposite direction from their attackers. Was he testing his gun??
- Bumblebee is repeatedly shown to be a hovercar... yet somehow he's got wheels and an axle when the Seekers manage to hit him.
- Bumblebee is repeatedly shown to be wider than Wheeljack in vehicle mode, yet he has no trouble driving right into Wheeljack's cargo compartment. He keeps driving in until he's completely out of sight, even though we can see at least half of the compartment.

- The Ark's exhaust comes from behind the thruster ports.
- Bluestreak is colored like Prowl as the Autobots stumble around in the wake of the asteroid collision; Trailbreaker, meanwhile, has one white and one gray hand.
- Presumably, an impact is supposed to be knocking Jazz out of the pilot's seat; what the animation actually shows, however, is Prime saying "Jazz!", to which Jazz responds by spontaneously flying out of his seat.
- Immediately after a shot of Optimus Prime rallying his troops to prepare to repulse Decepticon boarders ("Prepare for battle!"), the same animation is re-used, but this time with Megatron's voice urging his troops to "Attack! Attack!" When the episode was re-done for the Generation 2 series, this scene was amended by placing a shot of Megatron sitting on this throne from earlier in the episode over the image, shouting the command. (In the same shot, Prowl's eye is missing.)
- A shot of Soundwave being kicked out of frame by Ironhide is immediately followed by Soundwave sparring with Ratchet.
- After Ratchet is thrown into the console, Optimus Prime and Megatron enter the frame, struggling with each other. Megatron is missing his fusion cannon in this shot, but it reappears when the angle changes to show them grappling as Prime asks for a status report.
- Ratchet is shown being thrown by Soundwave, but after Optimus Prime asks for a status report, Ratchet is seen fighting with Thundercracker on the other side of the room.
- As the above shot pans across the bridge to the right, we see Soundwave has teleported from one side of the bridge to the other, slumped against a console.
- In the pan shot on the Ark when the Transformers find out they're going to crash, there are TWO Soundwaves and TWO Starscreams.
- The voice that reports about g-forces is Prowl's, but he's struggling with Starscream and doesn't seem to have time to read a console or make a report or anything.
- Quite a few generic robots are mixed in among the identifiable inert Transformers in the crashed ship.
- The land around the volcano changes frequently between shots. Sometimes it's rocky desert; other times it's got forests and a river, sometimes both at once. This trend would continue throughout the whole series.
- Starscream has no transformation sound as he lands at the power plant.
- When Optimus Prime assigns Hound his mission, the establishing shot has Cliffjumper with Bumblebee's yellow colors.
- Hound's voice carries a soundproof-roof echo as he comments on how different Earth is.
- In the long shot of the Decepticons building their base, Soundwave appears in Sideswipe's colors.
- Hound says that he got shot in the drive train, but Laserbeak shot him topside. Did the shot go straight through him??
- Reflector's three component robots are standing shoulder-to-shoulder as they turn to look at the truck, but are standing in a line in the next shot.
- Right after the Insignia footage that comes after the scene in which Thundercracker is informing Soundwave about the approaching "Autobot", there is a picture of Spikes father and Wheeljack operating a console. It's just visible for a fraction of a second, but still...
- Rumble isn't a big guy, but he should at least be a few feet taller than a human. He's shown the same height as Sparkplug.
- Ironhide and Starscream are shown sparring with poles, while Prowl and Thundercracker have a shootout from cover. In the very next shot, Ironhide is taking on Skywarp and Thundercracker, while Starscream is now busy with Huffer and Gears, and Prowl is grappling with a Reflector. In the shot after that, Prowl is suddenly free from Reflector and charging toward Skywarp.
- A red robot of indeterminate character model is shown retreating with the Decepticons. It looks a bit like an upside-down Sideswipe.
- When Rumble knocks Spike into the water, his father yells "Pike!" instead of "Spike". Perhaps he was meant to be warning his son about carnivorous fish, but of course pike live in fresh water, not salt.
Continuity errors

- Later episodes will go to some length to establish that Cybertron is outside of our galaxy. There's even some implication that it's not inside any galaxy, but that unlikely notion is put to the lie by the very first shots of this episode, which show its surface illuminated by an unseen sun, and the space around it filled with stars.
- Whether for reasons of cost (unlikely considering how much effort was expended on this episode's artwork) or to avoid confusing the kiddies, hardly any of the Transformers were designed to have Cybertronian robot modes (Laserbeak is the sole exception). Thus we get the strange phenomena of, for example, Jazz having a Porsche 911 bumper on his chest, four million years before Porsches were invented. This also leads to some strange transformations, with guys like Bumblebee and Wheeljack not having a single part from their vehicle forms visible in their robot modes.
- Soundwave is in robot mode outside of Iacon, not transforming back to lamppost mode until Jazz is practically on top of him. How could Jazz have failed to notice the big blue Decepticon right in front of him?

Don't put Shockwave upon no shelf
She said don't gimme no lines
And keep your hands... hand... whatever... to yourself!
- During the scene in the Cybertronian Decepticon Headquarters, Shockwave is consistently drawn with two hands. This may not be an error per se, as he shows up a couple of other times with two hands, and plenty of characters can retract their hands and replace them with various gadgets and weapons, but it goes against his toy design and his established character model.
- Two asteroids in deep space just show up out of nowhere and collide? Right by the passing ship? The cosmic improbability beggars the imagination.
- Oddly enough, nobody opens fire during the scuffle when the Decepticons board the Ark... not even Megatron.
- The Transformers' interplanetary cruise is incredibly short. At no point do they engage any kind of faster-than-light drive, yet somehow they go from Cybertron to Earth in what seems to be a matter of minutes. The only possible gap that might account for this is the scene cut between the Decepticon launch and the asteroid collision.
- The animation would have us believe that the Autobot spacecraft has just been sticking out of the side of this active volcano for ages, without anybody noticing. The intended gist might have been that the eruption uncovered it, but the animation doesn't show it.
- Cliffjumper somehow stores on his person a cannon that's as big as he is.
- Okay, maybe it's not an actual error. But considering how many ordinary Transformers are shown to have enhanced visual abilities (Hot Rod, Rumble, Arcee, etc.) it seems a tad ridiculous that Thundercracker needs to use Reflector's camera mode to zoom in a little bit on the approaching truck. It's insanely ridiculous that Reflector produces Polaroid prints. He's not even that kind of camera! (More to the point, he should just be able to see what's visible through his own viewfinder.)
- While he is getting repaired by Ratchet, Hound refers to an Energon cube as "some kind of cube", implying that the Autobots don't know what Energon cubes are. The inference that energon cubes are a Decepticon invention holds true for almost the entirety of the pre-movie cartoon, during which time they are never used by the Autobots (something that is even made a plot point in "Traitor"). We say "almost" because of a contradictory flashback in "War Dawn" that shows what appear to be energon cubes being used by Autobots nine million years in the past. By the time of the movie, the Autobots are shown to have begun using the cubes, and continue to do so throughout the third season.
- How do the Autobots know where the Decepticons are planning to attack? They organize their battle unit before the Decepticons even learn about the oil platform!
- During Jazz's roll-call of the Autobots, he neglects to call out Cliffjumper's name. The little red guy transforms anyway.
- The large cast frequently gave the animators trouble in remembering which secondary characters should or should not be present, especially concerning the Autobots. Thus, we frequently must catalog appearing/disappearing Autobots:
- Jazz's battle group consists of Prowl, Cliffjumper, Trailbreaker, Wheeljack, Mirage, Sunstreaker, Sideswipe, and Ironhide. Even before they've left headquarters, the problems start, as Ironhide disappears and Ratchet takes his place. Ratchet is still with the group when they arrive.
- Bluestreak joins the group as they fly toward the oil rig.
- Huffer and Brawn are with them as they land on the platform.
- Gears is visible in a wide shot of the battle.
- In what universe is it legal for a fourteen-year-old American kid to be working on an oil rig, even with his father?
- Until the oil platform attack, the episode has consistently portrayed the Decepticon forces as Megatron, Soundwave, 3 tapes, 3 jets, and 3 Reflectors. Things start to fall apart here, as a dark blue jet is shown diving alongside Thundercracker. It gets much worse in the following episodes.
- The Transformers had a tendency to frequently exaggerate the capabilities of humans to survive being dropped, punched, swatted, hit, etc. As a main protagonist, Spike Witwicky was especially susceptible to this treatment; thus we catalog the adventures of Superhuman Spike!:
- Spike punches Rumble in the back without breaking or even seeming to hurt his fist.
- Spike survives being bashed aside by Rumble's metal fist without even bruising a rib.
- When Starscream fires his null-ray, ice appears on the machinery that the ray hits. However, a null ray only stops the flow of electricity; it doesn't cause freezing. (Megatron prompts him with the strange command to "activate the null ray", as if it's some external piece of equipment.)
- Flying Autobots:
- In this and the following two episodes, the Autobots are all shown flying just as easily as the Decepticons. Once the show went into full production, this ability mostly disappeared, with occasional exceptions due to special abilities (Wheeljack, Sideswipe, the Dinobots), and some scripting, animation and sound effect screw-ups. The change was, in part, to help distinguish the two forces (and perhaps because it doesn't make sense for the Autobots to drive places if they can just fly there instead).
Continuity notes
- As the first pilot episode, this episode establishes several iconic aspects of the cartoon and the entire Transformers brand. The planet Cybertron and its city Iacon both appear in many other media and continuities. The crash of the Ark and the four-million-year slumber of its inhabitants likewise recur in several other versions of the Generation 1 story.
- The orange Seeker from the "welcoming committee", visible for all of about two seconds, was retroactively established to be the neo-G1 character Sunstorm.

- We get a look at Cybertronian vehicle forms for Bumblebee, Wheeljack, Skywarp and Thundercracker, Jazz, Soundwave and Laserbeak. Soundwave's toy can totally be configured into that lamp-post mode.
- Trailbreaker's presence alongside Jazz and Prowl on Cybertron is just about the only indication of his "defense strategist" function in the cartoon.
- Three episodes from now, we will see that Shockwave was true to his word, and Cybertron has not changed one iota in four million years.
- The Decepticon vessel is last seen spiraling out of control, unpiloted, toward Earth. It will be rediscovered in the Season 2 episode "Microbots". The unnamed ship would finally be given a title almost 15 years later, when it was referred to as the Nemesis in the Beast Wars episode "Nemesis Part 1".
- The events of the Beast Wars cartoon take place during the 4 million years in which the Autobots and Decepticons lie dormant in the wreckage of the Ark... a time frame covered by about 5 seconds of footage in this episode.

- As the satellite-like probe (later dubbed a Sky Spy) leaves the Ark, we see a city skyline in the distance. While the cartoon's animation could never make up its mind about what was around the crashed ship (oceanside cliffs? desert? forests and rivers?), one might take this city to be Central City, later established to have jurisdiction over the land where the Autobot ship rests.


- Gadgets and powers:
- Wheeljack deploys a pair of tiny spinning blades from his front bumper, which lets him... drive through fire?
- Laserbeak spies with a pair of cylindrical doodads that come out of the side of his head.
- Rumble demonstrates his earth-quake-making power, which consists of banging the ground with a couple of big pile drivers that replace his arms. This will become one of the cartoon's most frequently-seen special powers, to the point that it eventually would carry over to the Marvel comics as well. (This power also seems to exclude Rumble himself from its effects, as the ground under him never cracks open.)
- Hound pops out a little wrist radar dish that lets him hear what the Decepticons are saying from some distance away.
- Soundwave can display graphics - the space cruiser, in this case - on his chest door.
- Cliffjumper somehow stores on his person a gun that's as big as he is. We don't want to know how he does this. Although it does look like it's collapsible.
- He also has a little cannon that pops out of his vehicle mode's backside. His line about "it's a gas" would seem to be a reference to this being his glass gas weapon, but it acts like a straight-up laser.
- Laserbeak can launch one of his cannons and have it chase down Autobots on its own.
- Ratchet is shown splitting into his robot form and his repair bay; however, the repair bay is never seen again.
- Reflector, being a super-advanced space robot, can take a photograph and instantly spit out a paper print of the resulting image. Instant photographs?! It must be THE FUTURE!
- Starscream "activates the
noalnull ray", which freezes the device it's aimed at.

- A Grapple-like crane named Hauler is seen with Cliffjumper, recovering Hound; he's never seen again, however. Fans have speculated that this was to be an earlier release of Grapple's toy, aborted for reasons unknown.
- Energon cubes make their first appearance here. They have to be compressed before they convert the fuel they have been filled with into energon, at which point they glow a sort of yellowish-white iridescent-y rainbow-y sort of color. The "compressing a stack" aspect of the cubes was quickly done away with after the pilot mini-series, but the rainbow-glow would stick around for a little while before being phased out in favor of a pink-purple coloration that became the standard representation of energon cubes down through Transformers history.
Real-world references
- The Transformers made heavy use of the sound effects library that sprung out of the movie Star Wars. Fans have a tendency to make tiresome shocked exclamations that Laserbeak sounds like a TIE Fighter; it is therefore instructive to catalog these sound effects, which are used far more extensively than just a couple of TIE engine roars. About half a dozen sound effects tend to appear in nearly every episode, and at least a dozen total are known to have been used on The Transformers. In this episode:
- The sound of the Death Star firing to destroy Alderaan, and Alderaan's subsequent explosion, is used as Skywarp and Thundercracker strafe Bumblebee and Wheeljack, and again as they abandon their pursuit.
- The sound of the Seeker training sphere aboard the Millennium Falcon, along with Luke's lightsaber humming and igniting, is used as Soundwave begins making energon cubes.
- We also get the lesser-used Star Trek sliding door sound effect as Soundwave sends Laserbeak after Hound and Cliffjumper.
Japanese version
- When the Seeker fires the ring of flame around Bumblebee and Wheeljack from his flame-thrower, he shouts out the name of his "special attack" Dragonball Z-style. It was called the "Fire Attack", by the way.
- When Teletraan I releases the Sky Spy, additional narration describing the scene is added.
- Cut: Immediately after Skywarp says, "Megatron, my leader, we are alive again", a few seconds of the close-up of him and Megatron staring at each other and the fade away into the next scene is cut. Megatron's line, "Quickly, we must revive the other Decepticons", followed by him carrying and dropping Reflector, was also cut. The sequence resumes right after Megatron sets Reflector down next to Soundwave.
Trivia

- Shockwave's appearance hints that Hasbro was already planning for expansion of the toyline. His toy was not among the initial 28 characters advertised by the 1984 Transformers catalog, yet there he is, making a short appearance that obviously sets up the possibility of future appearances. His toy would be one of the very first 1985 toys to see release, and his character would return in the very first post-pilot episode.
- The episode ends with a preview of "Part 2". While other multi-part Transformers episodes generally refer to the episode by its title ("Next time, on The Transformers: 'The Ultimate Doom'"), this preview uses the series title, The Transformers, as "More Than Meets the Eye" is a retroactive name for the three-part episode, which began as a mini-series before becoming a regular program.
- Many later episodes would mine this one for recycled footage, particularly the line up of transforming Autobots near the end. Transformation sequences (with and without new backgrounds) from this episode appear in "Heavy Metal War", "Blaster Blues", and others. Optimus Prime's transformation sequence from this episode is used in dozens of episodes.
- The mid-80s Family Home Entertainment VHS release of "More Than Meets the Eye" was granted the Film Advisory Board Award of Excellence, proudly displayed on the video box cover above. However, this particular "award" does not reflect the quality of any work submitted, but rather that the work is "family-friendly". Cheeky, that.
- The three parter was released on video in the United Kingdom in 1986 under the title "Arrival from Cybertron".
- Footage from the commercial featuring the Autobot Double Targetmaster trio was spliced into the Generation 2 version of this episode by way of the Cybernet Space Cube. Outside of this, they never actually appeared in the cartoon.
- Footage from this episode was used to represent a historical video in "Transform and Roll Out", the opening movie for Transformers Animated.
Home video releases
- VHS
1985 — The Transformers — Volume 1: "More than Meets the Eye" (Family Home Entertainment)
1986 — The Transformers — Arrival from Cybertron (A.M.T. Video Gems)
1988 — The Transformers — Arrival from Cybertron (V.I.P. Video Gems)
1991 — The Transformers — Arrival from Cybertron (Little Gems Junior Video Club)
1999 — The Transformers: Generation 2 — More than Meets the Eye (Seville Entertainment)
2001 — The Original Transformers — Exclusively from Blockbuster (Rhino Entertainment)
- Laserdisc
1994 — Fight! Super Robot Lifeform Transformers — Convoy Set (Takara) — Japanese audio only.
1998 — The Transformers — Autobot Edition (Pioneer LDC) — Japanese audio only.
- DVD
2001 — The Transformers — DVD Box 1 (Pioneer LDC) — Japanese audio only.
2002 — Transformers: Generation 2 (Sony Wonder)
2002 — Transformers — Original Series: Volume Two (Sony Wonder)
2002 — Transformers — Complete Original Series: Deluxe Edition (Sony Wonder)
2002 — The Original Transformers — First Season Collector's Edition (Rhino Entertainment)
2002 — The Original Transformers — Volume One (Rhino Entertainment)
2003 — Transformers — Collection 1: Series 1 (Madman Entertainment)
2004 — Transformers — Season 1 (Metrodome)
2006 — The Best of The Transformers (Madman Entertainment)
2006 — Transformers — The Complete Generation One Collection (Metrodome)
2007 — Transformers — The Classic Episodes (Metrodome)
2007 — Classic Transformers — Series One: Part One (Metrodome)
2007 — The Transformers — Complete Collection (Madman Entertainment)
2008 — Transformers — Volume 01: Stagione Uno Parte Prima (Medianetwork Communication) — English and Italian audio.
2009 — Transformers — Season One (Metrodome)
2009 — The Transformers — Complete Collection: Decepticon Edition (Madman Entertainment)
2009 — The Transformers — The Complete First Season: 25th Anniversary Edition (Shout! Factory)
2009 — The Transformers — More than Meets the Eye (Shout! Factory)
2009 — The Transformers — The Complete Series: 25th Anniversary "Matrix of Leadership" Collection (Shout! Factory)


