Swerve (Chevy)
From MediaWiki
| The name or term "Swerve" refers to more than one character or idea. For a list of other meanings, see Swerve (disambiguation). |
- Swerve is an Autobot from the Universe continuity family
"A mystery wrapped in a riddle inside an enigma, blindfolded" would be a charitable way to describe Swerve. He transforms into a Chevrolet Aveo. Since he is not part of the live-action movie toyline, any relationship he may have to Aveo and Sphinx should be totally coincidental.
Toys
Universe
- Swerve (Deluxe, 2008)
- Swerve transforms into a licensed Chevy Aveo, though he does not match the design of the Aveo robot from the "Transformers: Rise of the Chevy Autobots" game. He has no gimmicks whatsoever, not even a non-firing weapon of any kind.
- On March 25th 2008, the Chevrolet online store began to offer Swerve as a "special featured item"... but only from its branches in Switzerland and the United Arab Emirates. He cost approximately $20~$30 before shipping (depending on which location you ordered from thanks to conversion rates), but a rather hefty "processing/shipping" fee was applied to every order, well over $50 (again, actual price varying by where it shipped from).
- Whether Swerve will be made available in other venues—specifically, US-based ones—is currently unknown.
Miscellaneous trivia
- Swerve has had an...interesting past. The Swerve toy surfaced on Asian auction websites in August 2007. Samples were packaged in polybags that had English text printed on them and came with English instruction manuals. All "final" samples were the same red color. (One specimen appeared to be yellow, but in fact had been hand-painted.) The instructions lacked an "assortment number", leading to the conclusion it was an exclusive...but to what?
- Early reports throughout the fandom, tepidly verified by Hasbro sources, said that the mold's creation had been commissioned by Chevrolet for that company's exclusive use, so neither Hasbro or TakaraTomy could use it in their own lines. It was unknown for quite a while if the toy would even be released at all. Even calls to Chevrolet centers turned up nothing. (The prevailing theory before its release was that the toy was commissioned as part of an advertising budget tax writeoff. "We spent X amount of money so we don't have to pay Y amount of taxes on our profits, thanks Byzantine corporate tax laws!")
- Some claimed the figure would only be made available upon test-driving a Chevy Aveo, others claimed the figure would only be made available upon test-driving a Chevy Aveo at dealerships in China only. Such rumors were never verified.
- We knew Chevy/General Motors had gotten close with Hasbro, but, damn.
See also

