Female Transformer: Difference between revisions
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As for Decepticons, [[Fracture (Movie)|Fracture]], based off of the aforementioned Crasher, was recently added to the end of the movie toyline as a Wal-mart exclusive. She has been featured in Titan Magazine's comics, as of issue 18, and in IDW's ''[[Alliance (comic)|Alliance]]'' series as of issue 3. | As for Decepticons, [[Fracture (Movie)|Fracture]], based off of the aforementioned Crasher, was recently added to the end of the movie toyline as a Wal-mart exclusive. She has been featured in Titan Magazine's comics, as of issue 18, and in IDW's ''[[Alliance (comic)|Alliance]]'' series as of issue 3. | ||
In all the comics where female Transformers do appear in the Movie continuity, their gender is never considered an issue. This raises questions about just how necessary "explaining" them would be in [[Revenge of the Fallen (film)|future movies]]. | In all the comics where female Transformers do appear in the Movie continuity, their gender is never considered an issue. This raises questions about just how necessary "explaining" them would be in [[Revenge of the Fallen (film)|future]] [[Dark of the Moon (film)|movies]]. | ||
====''Revenge of the Fallen''==== | ====''Revenge of the Fallen''==== | ||
Revision as of 14:55, 19 July 2011
| This article is about female Transformers in general. For the Autobot resistance group led by Elita One, see Female Autobots{{#switch:{{#sub:Female Autobots|-1}} | != | .= | ?= | .
}} |

Despite being robotic lifeforms with generally non-sexual methods of reproduction, the Transformer species has almost always been shown to include both male and female gender analogues, at least mentally if not physically. Female Transformers are usually portrayed as comparatively rare, but are considered an official part of the Transformers brand in pretty much every continuity.
A List of female Transformers from all continuities is available.
Fandom and Terminology
Probably because of their rarity in official fiction and toylines, female Transformers are popular plot devices in fan fiction, where the term "femme" is often used to describe them, with "mech"<ref>While "femme" obviously is related to the French word for "woman", it's occasionally claimed that the use of "mech" as a name for male Transformers is derived from "mec", the French word for "guy" or "dude". This is probably more coincidence than anything, though.</ref> likewise being applied to "male" Transformers. Both terms have recently appeared in a piece of official fiction: Venus magazine. This is the first instance "mech" has been used to specifically refer to a male Transformer, whereas the term has been used as a gender-neutral common noun for Transformers in various stories.
Alternative words to denote a female Transformer, all used about twice in canon, include: femme-bot,<ref>"Just imagine all the colony worlds: naive small planetoid femme-bots, unsuspecting targets, Unguarded Energon Reserves..." -Buzzsaw, "Force of Habit" p4 (2008)</ref> fembot,<ref>Rattrap refers to Blackarachnia as "Ya emasculatin' fembot!" after she cuts the tip from his tail/sword in "Nemesis Part 2", while Animated Optimus Prime wonders in "Endgame, Part II" what chance he has in flying combat against the Lugnuts Supreme if he "couldn't handle Starscream's fembot clone" on his test run.</ref> girl-bot<ref>"When we take over Cybertron, I'm gonna have a whole harem of girl-bots! Blue ones, red ones..." - Overkill, "The Art of War issue 5"</ref> and perhaps robotessa.<ref>In "Enter the Nightbird", "Robotessa" is the word missing from the line "Say good night to your [Robotessa], Megatron!"</ref>
Appearance

The appearance of female Transformers in most continuities would seem to suggest a level of "sexual" dimorphism is present in at least the more humanoid members of the Transformers species (the term sexual is used in a gender-based, rather than physical sense, see the reproduction link above for that whole kettle of robo-fish). In almost all cases female Transformers are portrayed as comparatively more graceful of form, and more rounded and curved in general, than their male counterparts. Often they have a more than passing resemblance to an attractive human female made of metal and wearing armor and kibble.
There are exceptions to this rule, and bulky, less overtly human-female-like characters have become more common, particularly among those who have toys. These are especially common in the Unicron Trilogy series and in latter expansions of the Generation 1 series out of Japan, when the characters are often assigned to pre-existing "masculine" toys. Perhaps the best counter-example of this type is Strika, who is female yet neither looks nor acts stereotypically feminine at all.
Fiction
Generation 1
Generation 1 cartoon

Within this continuity, female Transformers are a rarity, but established to have been around from the species' start. A female named Beta existed back in the slave days under Quintesson rule, and thus it seems clear females were produced alongside the males as part of the Quintessons' product lines.
No females were explicitly shown to exist among the Decepticon ranks, although the introduction of Nightbird and implications of an eventual upgrade didn't raise any questions or remarks, suggesting that female Decepticons exist (or that the Decepticons royally don't care about a soldier's gender).
27 episodes after Nightbird's appearance, female Transformers were introduced formally through the Female Autobots. Shockwave at various points expresses surprise they aren't extinct, which would seem to imply females were thought to be no longer part of the Cybertronian race. While at the time a decent (though certainly not perfect) explanation for the scarce appearances of female Transformers, it didn't stop more females from showing up in the movie and season 3. Possibly Shockwave's "statement" could be considered as retconned and overwritten, or one of the following explanations applies:
- They were all built/"discovered" after the events of "The Search for Alpha Trion".
- Shockwave constantly calls them Autobots, never Transformers or Cybertronians. It is possible female Neutrals' (and the aforementioned female Decepticons') existence was never thought over... and that none of them changed allegiance any time recently.
- "Female Autobot" is not used as a description, but as the team's name.
- This is the Generation 1 cartoon. You're not watching it for the flawless storytelling.
Females can be seen here and there among the Junkion tribe, mostly sharing Arcee's model. Wreck-Gar has a "Junkion lady" companion according to "The Big Broadcast of 2006". Just how relationships function in this isolated, media-based Transformers society is unclear, although it's notable that Wreck-Gar and his lady friend "slept" sitting up next to each other on giant thrones between television broadcast cycles. The lady's character model is actually that of a female Lithone, another mechanical race, but whether this is meaningful in any way or simple model recycling is uncertain.
In the French dub of The Transformers: The Movie (but not in the TV series), both Starscream and Shrapnel were referred to as female, with Megatron calling Starscream "une imbecile" at one point (French articles are gendered), and Shrapnel referred to as "Mademoiselle". The reason for this gender-switch was never fully explained, though it presumably has something to do with both Starscream's and Shrapnel's rather high-pitched voices.
Super-God Masterforce

A female Transformer was created through the introduction of Minerva to the ranks of the Headmaster Juniors. The transtector she was bonded to eventually evolved into a being of her own.
Meanwhile, the Godmaster Overlord existed out of two humans before becoming sapient: husband Giga and wife Mega. Despite the double gender, Overlord is regarded a "he".
Victory
In the manga, Decepticon females make their first (yet still to this day very rare) appearance in official fiction as Esmeral (Deszaras's wife) and Lyzack (Leozack's sister). Both show up to show the Autobots just what it is Deszaras and his crew have been fighting for all this time: their poor families back home. This spares the Decepticons' lives in the final battle between the two forces. This certainly casts an odd light on the matter of Transformer reproduction (and on the manga author).
Meanwhile, in the animated series, the Micromaster Holi is shown to have a girlfriend on the planet Micro, Clipper.
Operation Combination
Operation Combination introduced a total of 24 Micromasters, none of which got a bio. Ten years later, Micromaster did provide them, and the Micromasters Windy and Discharge were established as females.
Generation 1 Marvel Comics continuity

No female Transformers are ever seen or referred to in the US stories, and when Cloudburst is pressured into a relationship with the beautiful First One of Femax, he explains that Transformers, as a species, have no gender. Recipe for Disaster! The UK stories corroborate this, and Arcee is intentionally created by the Autobots to be the sole female Transformer in an attempt to placate human feminists. Prime's Rib! (See her picture above for a hint of how well that went over.)
Despite this, the Marvel continuity was actually the first in introducing a female Cybertronian: Aunty, the onboard computer of the Ark, who was introduced in the very first issue. Theoretically, she is not that different from other Cybertronians and one can only guess how to combine her existence and the "no girls gender"-statements.
The letter pages mentioned another two females: Decepticon Clio and presumed Autobot Karmen. Provided they are real and Blaster didn't just make them up, they might have been built after Arcee's example.
BotCon's Classics fiction, while not including the UK material, introduced Elita One in a similar manner as UK Arcee. Games of Deception
Dreamwave comic continuity
According to DK's Transformers: The Ultimate Guide, "Transformers are inherently non-gender specific, and only some quirk of their timelost origins can account for [female Transformers'] difference in appearance and attitude." Dreamwave was in the process of introducing more female Transformers and explicating their links to the Quintessons in this continuity when it went out of business.
IDW comic continuity
Originally Simon Furman stated that he would not use female Transformers in IDW continuity until he came up with a reason for them to exist that made logical sense to him. He did not rule out doing so, as he said he had found a similar justification for the Pretenders, which led to the Stormbringer miniseries.
Despite this, in Megatron Origin Alex Milne drew what are clearly intended to be female Transformers in a good number of "easter egg" cameo appearances. (Cameos included female GoBots character Crasher, Elita One, Chromia, and a number of generic background femmes.)
This was finally resolved in "Spotlight: Arcee", where it was revealed that the malevolent Golden Age Cybertronian scientist Jhiaxus introduced gender to the Cybertronian genome just to see what would happen. Tampering with the CNA of the titular character at her creation to make her Female, he discarded his experiment once he was finished, only to find she had an inherent homing instinct for his creations. Arcee's systems were severely messed up by this experiment, causing her to become tremendously unstable to the point of psychosis and fixated on getting revenge on Jhiaxus.
While the story implies that she is something very rare and unique it does not say that she was the only female Transformer Jhiaxus created, merely the first, leaving it open for the cameos in Megatron Origin to remain in continuity.
Jhiaxus specifically alters Arcee's CNA to make her female and introduce gender to the species. Exactly how deep these alterations went, how closely her form was designed to match the females of organic species on which she was based (particularly in relation to reproduction) is unknown and will likely remain so.
Another female Transformer appears in a flashback to Sunstreaker's glory days, staring up at him in doe-eyed adoration. She is presumably less killy than Arcee. Replay
Beast Wars
Beast Wars cartoon

Female Transformers seem to be common here, with no one showing any surprise over their presence. Some of the Transformers also appear to have picked up human-style attitudes of women as a fairer and more vulnerable gender, with Silverbolt refusing to fight a female out of lust chivalry. Most of the other Transformers, however, seem unconcerned about this.
Blackarachnia and Airazor both engage in romances with male Maximals, the former blatantly and the latter far more subtly.
Over the course of the show Rattrap makes numerous innuendos, especially involving Silverbolt and Blackarachnia's relationship, that suggest that, at least by that era, there may have been something sex-like between Transformers. He also makes references to a bar on Cybertron where the wait-staff go "without their torso-plates on"... which frankly sounds like it'd be really messy.
Beast Wars II cartoon continuity
Scylla is the impetus for a big ridiculous love triangle of hilarity and embarrassment in both the animated and manga continuities. She is in love with the squid-bot Scuba, who wants nothing to do with her. Meanwhile, the Maximal Bighorn is in love with Scylla, who wants nothing to do with him.
The non-Transformer female robot Artemis harbors a crush on both Scuba (poor guy) and Starscream.
Beast Machines cartoon continuity
Beast Machines' technorganic reformatting raises even further questions about what it means to be a "female transformer". It is possible that the technorganic female Transformers, being merged organic and technological life to a cellular level, might actually be physically female.
Rattrap and Botanica end up in a romantic relationship towards the end of Beast Machines ("So, I'm a tree-hugger!" Rattrap remarks). What this means for his bar-hopping days is never explored.
The Vehicon general Strika is referred to as the "consort" of Obsidian, and has been serving by his side, seemingly as an equal, for centuries. Some have taken this to mean the two have a romantic interest in each other, but the show itself does not offer any hints to this.
Beast Wars IDW comic continuity
In the spin-off comics, Manta Ray and Sonar were both established as female Transformers.
Unicron Trilogy

The existence of female Transformers throughout the Unicron Trilogy is portrayed as slightly uncommon (it is a fiction aimed at young boys, after all), but hardly remarkable. They just exist, as do "males", and no special attention is called to them. Quite a few appear in various places in "civilian" roles, as nurses, and even on colony worlds.
There are examples and hints of romantic interest between males and females in both Armada (Redline and Falcia in the Linkage comics, plus Nightscream's eagerness to appease and defend his bulk partner Airazor), and Cybertron stories (most obviously Thunderblast's intense infatuation with Megatron, Ransack's secret crush on Override, plus Downshift reportedly has an unnamed "fembot life partner" lost somewhere on Earth). This too is treated as a fairly common event.
There are female Transformers in positions of very high power as well: in the Energon cartoon, Arcee is the leader of the entire Omnicon race, while in Cybertron, Override is the leader of the planet Velocitron. So far, the Unicron Trilogy is the only Transformers continuity to explicitly give female Transformers that level of responsibility.
In the French version of the Energon cartoon, Arcee is dubbed by a man. Why she was is currently unknown.
Live-action movie
2007 movie

Arcee was originally going to be featured as part of the cast of the Transformers film, but was cut early on in the movie's development. The script writers felt they would need to explain the presence of a female in an entirely robotic race, and there was not enough time in the film to do so. Arcee was replaced in the movie by Ironhide. Even so, Arcee was featured in IDW's Movie Prequel comics and remains in the movie toyline as both Deluxe and Scout-class toys.
One other female Autobot is featured in the movie continuity family, another Scout-class toy, Elita-One. Both Elita and Arcee, however, are featured in Titan Magazine's alternate reality stories as regular characters, with Arcee getting more prominence. Both also appear in IDW's Movie Sequel comic series The Reign of Starscream, with Arcee playing quite a prominent leadership role. Surprisingly, Elita-One does not fare as well as her sister-in-arms, dying at the claws of Starscream himself. Although it is unusual for a female Transformer to die in fiction (compared to how often Transformer death happens in general), it has happened before.
As for Decepticons, Fracture, based off of the aforementioned Crasher, was recently added to the end of the movie toyline as a Wal-mart exclusive. She has been featured in Titan Magazine's comics, as of issue 18, and in IDW's Alliance series as of issue 3.
In all the comics where female Transformers do appear in the Movie continuity, their gender is never considered an issue. This raises questions about just how necessary "explaining" them would be in future movies.
Revenge of the Fallen
And apparently, two years later gender was no longer an issue at all, as Revenge of the Fallen featured Arcee, who now inexplicably existed in three separate bodies, as well as Alice, a Decepticon Pretender. No comment was given on the subject of the characters' femininity. Frankly, not explaining Pretenders is a bigger oversight than not explaining robot gender.
Animated

Female Transformers were present in Transformers Animated from the very beginning of the cartoon, starting with Blackarachnia. What this meant for the state of females in the continuity at large was not immediately apparent; in "Along Came a Spider", both Bulkhead and Bumblebee expressed confusion as to what Blackarachnia was. Though they were referring to her partially organic nature, Sari jokes "Duh, she's a girl." as a nod to the rarity of the fairer sex among Transformers.
As the series proceeded, multiple lady-bots were progressively introduced, among which were a female clone of Starscream, the obligatory Arcee and many more. Although they remain distinctly outnumbered by the male Transformers, this makes it clear that while female Transformers may be relatively uncommon, they aren't considered very remarkable or noteworthy—unless you're a young, male Autobot who's spent waaaaayy too much time fixing space bridges.
Despite Optimus's confusion over where organic babies come from in "Transform and Roll Out", implying that there is no Cybertronian equivalent to sexual reproduction in Animated, Transformer relationships are implied to be a possibility, as in "Along Came a Spider" and "Black Friday", respectively, Blackarachnia takes advantage of Bulkhead's and the Dinobots' obvious interest in her, especially Grimlock's. There's also the fact that Strika is said to be the "consort" of Lugnut.
Ratchet's role as the Autobot medical officer was originally supposed to be assigned to a character named Red Alert, who was originally designed as a female, but then turned male. When brought in at the start of Season 3, Red Alert was female once again as an homage to the original design.
Because Sari was originally a Cybertronian protoform, she could be considered a female technorganic Transformer, although her origins were not revealed until Season 3.
Shattered Glass
While in most universes the number of females on the side of good is significantly larger than the number on the side of evil, this universe has more evil ladies as a result of its status as a mirror universe. The first two introduced were Arcee and Crasher—an (evil) Autobot and a (good) Decepticon respectively—but since then the balance has tilted.
It would seem that female Transformers in this universe are as they are in most: few in numbers, but nothing remarkable. Crasher appeared bewildered when Cliffjumper (who hails from the Marvel Comics universe) tried to tell her that he thought her feminine shape was unusual, and no one else seems to regard the females as something noteworthy.
Aligned
One-thirteenth of Cybertron's population is female and are descended from the first female Transformer, Solus Prime. <ref>According to @HubTVNetwork and comments made at BotCon 2011. </ref>
Toys
Though many female Transformers were featured in the fiction from the early days of Generation 1, for many years they tended to either: a) not have toys made of them at all, or, b) for those very few that did get a release, end up as repaints of other molds clearly not designed with a female aesthetic in mind. Transmetal Airazor is likely the first Transformer toy designed to intentionally represent a female character.