Transformers One Sourcebook

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Transformers One Sourcebook
Publisher Renegade Game Studios
First published September 2025
Written by Jacob Blackmon, Carlos Cabrera, Ryan Costello, Kim Frandsen, Paige Leitman, Brandon Perdue, Mike Pohjola, Erin Roberts, and Jim Sorenson
Page count 112
Price $45.00 USD

Transformers One Sourcebooks is an expansion sourcebook for the Transformers Roleplaying Game. Based on the animated movie, the book highlights settings and characters from the film, along with a new Origin to represent the film's cogless miners and seven new Influences.

It was released digitally in May 2025, with a physical release in September of the same year.

Contents

Character Options

  • Origins
  • Influences
  • New Factions
  • General Perks
  • Equipment Options

Chapter 2: Your Characters, Your Group

  • Family Play
  • Teaching the Rules
  • Ensemble Play
  • Splitting the Party
  • Playing Together
  • Character Development
  • Session Zero

Chapter 3: Threats & Allies

Profiles marked with asterisks * are designated as "non-canon".
Main Characters Antagonists The High Guard Notable Cybertronians Common Cybertronians
    • Archivist
    • Commuter
    • Miner
    • Mine Overseer
    • Politician *
Cybertronian Surface Beasts

Chapter 4: Locations

Chapter 4: Campaigns and Variations

  • The Thirteen Primes
  • Origins
  • Alternate Allegiances
  • Alternative Origin Stories
  • Side Stories & Unanswered Questions

Notes

Continuity notes

  • As a tie-in with Transformers One, the book (unsurprisingly) draws quite heavily from the characters, concepts, and mythology laid down the film—profiles include Sentinel Prime, the various members of the High Guard, cogless energon miners, and soforth. Presumably in order to avoid conflict with any potential future media, certain profiles and names are marked as "non-canon"—in the case of character profiles, those that describe the characters' proficiency in battle or include alt-mode rules are marked as non-canon, while those that only describe the Bot characters in the context of being energon miners are unmarked. (However, see "Errors", below.)
  • As in the film, but unlike in most other modern media (including Transformers One tie-in media), the term "Transformer" is used exclusively refer to Cybertronians with the ability to transform; "T-cog" is also explicitly noted to be short for "transformation cog". Cybertronians unable to transform are instead referred to as "Bots".
  • The last chapter of the book shifts to a more multiversal focus, speaking broadly about the origins of the Thirteen, their exploits, and the history of the Cybertronian race across multiple continuities. To this end, the book includes profiles for seventeen Primes, and notes that what's true in one universe may not be true in another.

Transformers references

Real-world references

  • The Buzz-Boar, an example of a surface beast, is named after the vehicle of the same name from G.I. Joe.
  • Tying back to a decade-old bit of lore from Fun Publications' "Ask Vector Prime" column, Transformers One Sourcebook revisits the idea that the Thirteen visited ancient Earth, inadvertently mythologizing themselves as various Greek deities. Transformers One Sourcebook reiterates this bit of lore, and invents some new identities for those Thirteen members who didn't appear in "Ask Vector Prime", which include...
    • The ever-shifting Amalgamous Prime went by the name Poseidon.
    • The heroic tale of the Arisen gave rise to the myth of Heracles.
    • The tragic Logos Prime adopted the guise of Demeter.
    • The diminutive Micronus Prime became known as Pan.
    • Nexus Prime, a powerful protector, was also known as Juno.
    • The intellectual Quintus Prime adopted the identity of Janus.
    • Zeta Prime's ambitious feats of nation-building were immortalized in the exploits of Romulus and Quirinus.

Errors

  • Even allowing for the "non-canon" disclaimer, the descriptions of Arcee as a "seasoned sniper" and Ironhide as a "rugged veteran of countless battles" really don't feel in keeping with the spirit of the film, which was very explicit about the miners lacking such opportunities in life. The profiles of Ironhide, Prowl, Sideswipe and Sunstreaker are also illustrated with screencaps and stock art of their cogless forms, while the profiles—cut down from those printed in Decepticon Directive—include rules for their vehicle modes.
  • On page 62, "Quintesson" is misspelled "Quientessons".
  • On page 109, Gigantion is misspelled as "Gigantian".