The Transformers Continuum: Difference between revisions
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* [[Scorponok (G1)|Scorponok]]'s fight with [[Ultra Magnus (G1)|Ultra Magnus]] on Nebulos (''Continuum'' remains vague on the actual location of this encounter) in "[[Spotlight: Ultra Magnus]]" is placed chronologically ''after'' the beginning of Scorponok's involvement with "Skywatch" (in actuality, the Machination), even though a caption points out that "The ensuing carnage led Scorponok to Earth", ''despite the previous page having already placed him there''. (The Reading Chronology in the back orders this correctly.) Worse, the same caption claims that "Ultra Magnus, ever fearless, was not far behind", even though the events of "Spotlight: Ultra Magnus" occurred about 20 years before the events of ''Infiltration'' etc., and Magnus wouldn't arrive on Earth until picking up a distress call from [[Hot Rod (G1)|Hot Rod]] in ''[[The Transformers: Maximum Dinobots|Maximum Dinobots]]'' [[Maximum Dinobots issue 4|#4]]. | * [[Scorponok (G1)|Scorponok]]'s fight with [[Ultra Magnus (G1)|Ultra Magnus]] on Nebulos (''Continuum'' remains vague on the actual location of this encounter) in "[[Spotlight: Ultra Magnus]]" is placed chronologically ''after'' the beginning of Scorponok's involvement with "Skywatch" (in actuality, the Machination), even though a caption points out that "The ensuing carnage led Scorponok to Earth", ''despite the previous page having already placed him there''. (The Reading Chronology in the back orders this correctly.) Worse, the same caption claims that "Ultra Magnus, ever fearless, was not far behind", even though the events of "Spotlight: Ultra Magnus" occurred about 20 years before the events of ''Infiltration'' etc., and Magnus wouldn't arrive on Earth until picking up a distress call from [[Hot Rod (G1)|Hot Rod]] in ''[[The Transformers: Maximum Dinobots|Maximum Dinobots]]'' [[Maximum Dinobots issue 4|#4]]. | ||
* There's even chronology problems ''within the issue itself'': Page 14 highlights the discovery of [[Grimlock (G1)|Grimlock]] and the other [[Dinobot (G1)|Dynobots]] by Skywatch, when they were already revealed to be in Skywatch's custody ''three pages earlier''! | * There's even chronology problems ''within the issue itself'': Page 14 highlights the discovery of [[Grimlock (G1)|Grimlock]] and the other [[Dinobot (G1)|Dynobots]] by Skywatch, when they were already revealed to be in Skywatch's custody ''three pages earlier''! | ||
Revision as of 15:41, 22 October 2011
| This article is about the barely-researched IDW recap comic. For the extensively-researched TFWiki.net chronology, see IDW timeline. |
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![]() If IDW won't even read their own material when they're getting paid for it, why should we give them money to read it? | |||||||||||||
| Publisher | IDW Publishing | ||||||||||||
| First published | November 11, 2009 | ||||||||||||
| Written by | Andy Schmidt | ||||||||||||
| Illustrated by | Please see individual issues for credits. | ||||||||||||
| Continuity | IDW Generation 1 continuity | ||||||||||||
| Page count | 32 | ||||||||||||
The Transformers Continuum is a one-shot comic book set in the IDW Generation 1 continuity chronicling the history of the Transformers. In theory.
I think a lot of people wanted the book to do something it was never intended to do and a lot of people read the book not realizing for whom it was intended.IDW writer/editor Andy Schmidt does not want your money, TFormers interview with Andy Schmidt
Synopsis
Take the IDW timeline, put it in a blender, add some spelling errors, and you've got Transformers Continuum. New descriptive prose accompanying reused art from appropriate moments leaps wildly between truncated generalization of long arcs with many important plot points left out and over-detailed recollections of irrelevant minutiae. At the very end is what is intended to be a chronological listing of IDW's Transformers comic books and promotion for their Transformers trade paperbacks.
Errors
Unfortunately, instead of correcting errors, Continuum presents the reader with new ones, such as:
- Pre-Decepticon Megatron is said to be a slave, when in actuality, he was a paid energon crystal miner who lost his job. Apparently, Megatron objected to being freed.
- The Autobots' stand against Thunderwing is said to be on Nebulos, when it was actually on Cybertron.
- It's implied that Thunderwing was still alive (rather than a reanimated corpse), and no mention is made that he was a puppet under Bludgeon's control.
- Bludgeon is misspelled on page 7. Also, it seems to imply that he learned Pretender technology from Shockwave, when it was actually Thunderwing who discovered it. It's also said that Bludgeon acquired the technology during the events in Stormbringer, when it was actually before it.
- The Autobots befriended "two young humans". Jimmy Pink no longer exists, even though we see him show up on the page detailing the end of Maximum Dinobots.
- It is said that the "Autobots believed Sunstreaker and Hunter were dead, and thus did not search for them", despite the immediate discovery that Sunstreaker's "body" was a decoy and the subsequent rescue attempt being half the plot of Escalation.
- The Machination and Skywatch are treated as the same group. In fact, the Machination itself is never mentioned; instead, everything that either organization did is credited to Skywatch.
- Scorponok's fight with Ultra Magnus on Nebulos (Continuum remains vague on the actual location of this encounter) in "Spotlight: Ultra Magnus" is placed chronologically after the beginning of Scorponok's involvement with "Skywatch" (in actuality, the Machination), even though a caption points out that "The ensuing carnage led Scorponok to Earth", despite the previous page having already placed him there. (The Reading Chronology in the back orders this correctly.) Worse, the same caption claims that "Ultra Magnus, ever fearless, was not far behind", even though the events of "Spotlight: Ultra Magnus" occurred about 20 years before the events of Infiltration etc., and Magnus wouldn't arrive on Earth until picking up a distress call from Hot Rod in Maximum Dinobots #4.
- There's even chronology problems within the issue itself: Page 14 highlights the discovery of Grimlock and the other Dynobots by Skywatch, when they were already revealed to be in Skywatch's custody three pages earlier!
- Megatron is said to have died when Spike Witwicky shot him at the end of All Hail Megatron, despite this never being the case and him being shown to be on life support in All Hail Megatron # 13.
- Skywarp "fired into [Thundercracker's] back", yet Thundercracker was shot in the face.
- On page 23, there should be a space between "every" and "day" ("everyday" is an adjective, "every day" an adverb).
Notes
- Events in the past are said to be "legend" and "unknown" when almost everyone who experienced those events are still alive and on active duty to this day.
- Unfathomably, despite covering "Spotlight: Wheelie"—one of the most stand-alone Spotlight stories, almost entirely unconnected to anything else going on in the IDW universe—no coverage is given to highly important, relevant, tied-in Spotlight stories like Nightbeat, Hot Rod, Sixshot, Kup, Soundwave, Optimus Prime...
- Nova Prime's matrix-like "Darkness" is now the "Heart of Darkness".
- Any reference to New Avengers / Transformers is omitted from the issue, but then, that's because of Marvel's hand in it. Crossovers are complicated like that!
- One of IDW's forum (fan) moderators quit over the reaction to this issue, calling parts of the board a "festering cesspool" and giving the two-finger salute:[1] Soon after, the more argumentative posts (including the moderator's outburst and the subsequent replies) were deleted.
- In an interview with TFormers,[2] Andy Schmidt revealed that all of these changes were intentional, in order to simplify things, because he hopes to attract new, younger readers who can relate to the concept of slavery more easily than blue-collar workers being laid off, and who would be confused by the presence of two different organizations with mostly human members. Uh.
- To his credit, Andy Schmidt formally admitted to the poor quality of this book. Five months after it was released. He also states that Denton J. Tipton and Carlos Magno make fun of him at the office for it.[3]
Cover
- Various classic 1985-style Autobots and Decepticons (though with some mild heavier tech detailing) surrounding Spike Witwicky, by Ken Christiansen.
References
External links
- Critical review at Tformers.com
- Another review pointing out each error
- Five-part video review/rant: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5 (46 minutes)
- David Willis making fun of The
Half-AssedDefinitive Chronology.


