Seeker (body-type)

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This article is a featured article, and considered to be one of the most informative on this wiki.

The name or term "Seeker" refers to more than one character or idea. For a list of other meanings, see Seeker (disambiguation).
Well, they keep the toy-repainting fans off the streets, at least. (Generic Seekers from, clockwise: (1) MtMtE Part 3, (2) sticker sheet, (3-6) Five Faces of Darkness)

The term Seeker refers to Decepticon jet troopers who share Starscream's body-type but with different colors or minor variations in wing and head shapes. This is most clearly and commonly known from Generation 1, but any franchise with a Starscream is almost inevitably going to feature a similar "family" of redecoed jet-formers.

The word "Seeker" hovered a long time in a strange gray area between official and fan-coined terms. It seems to have originated in extremely obscure official or semi-official writing, but somehow became widely used among fans. (See below.) In 2002, the term appeared in dialog from the first issue of The War Within from Dreamwave Productions, making it truly official after years of controversy. It has subsequently appeared in many other places such as on toy packaging, books, and in other stories.

Generation 1 Seekers

List of named Seekers

Originals

The original Seekers

In Generation 1, there were six Seekers originally given names and characterization: Starscream, Skywarp, Thundercracker, Thrust, Dirge, and Ramjet. The first three, the season one Seekers, had animation designs done primarily by Shōhei Kohara.

Coneheads

The Coneheads.

The last three Generation 1 Seekers are usually designated as "Conehead" Seekers by fans for their distinctive transformation that leaves the jet nosecone pointing up. The animation models for the Conehead Seekers were designed by Floro Dery.

And all the rest

Aw, not "When Continents Collide" again...

In the Generation 1 cartoon there were large numbers of generic, unnamed Seekers in addition to the named characters. They came in a wide variety of colors, from extra duplicates of Starscream or one of the other named guys, to original and distinct looks all their own. They seem to have formed the bulk of the Decepticon forces on Cybertron, as well as among Megatron's initial troops on Earth. They gradually became less common, perhaps as a result of casualties... or the cartoon's production team becoming more careful, or more-likely having more "actual" Decepticons to work with as the toy line expanded. (Extra Reflector units and alternate color cassettes were also used along with these Seekers, early on, to fill out the comparatively thin Decepticon ranks.)

These unsung Seekers would be recognized years later in Heroes of Cybertron toy form as the Air Warriors (all using the common lavender/white color scheme). Soon afterward, the Dreamwave Generation One comic series introduced an army of similarly-colored Seeker drones.

You talking to me? Or him? Or the other one?

Around the same time, another background Seeker was also given a new life through toys and Dreamwave's Generation One ongoing series: Sunstorm. This yellow-orange Seeker was a nameless background character in the first episode of the Transformers cartoon, until e-HOBBY turned him into an exclusive toy (available with an Autobot also based on a first-episode cameo). Now Hasbro can't get enough of him. Another generic Seeker was given attention: Acid Storm. Like Sunstorm before him, he was based on one of the background Seekers from the original cartoon, in this case the episode "Divide and Conquer" (see below). And in 2013 Fun Publications got in on the act by dubbing Sunstorm's partners Bitstream and Hotlink after two Seekers from Aligned continuity. Additionally in 2015, FunPub dubbed Acid Storm's partners Nova Storm and Ion Storm.

Unnamed Seekers with their own distinct color schemes appear in the following episodes as noted below:

Sunstorm, Nacelle, Hotlink, and Bitstream attack. One for all, and all for one.
In the "return to Iacon" scene on Cybertron, five to seven Seekers appear (wide shots depict a group of five, but the close-ups give us seven distinct color schemes.) The first three are (as far as colors are concerned) Skywarp, Starscream (with a deeper voice provided by Frank Welker), and Thundercracker. In a following shot, we see a lavender Seeker with a flamethrower pack who would years later be named Hotlink; a medium-blue Seeker with white trim, holding his arm gun like a rifle, who would eventually be named Bitstream; a yellow/orange Seeker, who would become Sunstorm... and lurking in the back, a very dark-blue Seeker with white trim barely visible, but there if you look, who is apparently Nacelle.
More Than Meets The Eye Part 1 Seekers: Sunstorm, Nacelle, Hotlink, and Bitstream.


Lots of generic Seekers from this one.
The mother lode of unnamed Seekers. Especially if you like variations of blue and lavender. Crowds of them appear at the start of the final battle. At least six different Seekers of various shades and decos of blue and at least four of various shades and decos of lavender (two with black tail fins in jet mode, two with white). Also, a blue variant (seen in the picture above) missing his wings and shoulder vents appears in "Part 3".


File:DivideandCon.gif
Divide and Conquer Seekers: Ion Storm, Acid Storm, and Nova Storm
Avert your eyes! One deep blue, one eye-burning bright green, and one garishly bright yellow. This trio is often referred to by fans as "the Rainmakers" because they started an acid rain shower to irritate a group of Autobots. The green jet in this grouping was made into the Universe Acid Storm character, whose name was initially supposed to be "Rainmaker", then "Acid Rain". A few years later, the other two received the names Nova Storm and Ion Storm.


Ultimate Doom Seekers
Two blue variants and one really nice looking pine-green Seeker appear as part of Shockwave's forces trying to prevent the rescue of Sparkplug on Cybertron.


One all-gray Seeker, one with Onslaught's coloration, and one with Silverbolt's. There's also an interesting Conehead variant. (All of which appear in the main image above.)


Dark Awakening Seeker
One season 1-style Seeker with Dirge's colors appears in jet mode in the attack on Autobot City in the movie, and next to the actual Dirge in the episode.


  • Puffy stickers
A sheet of Transformer puffy stickers featured a rare generic with a Starscream-based color scheme. He is pictured above as well.


In addition to Starscream, Skywarp, and numerous identical copies of both of them, this construct-it-yourself battle scene features two distinct color schemes. Each features a solid grey body with solid color wings and tail wings: one red, one yellow.


While Ramjet, Thrust, and Dirge are named and Skywarp is identifiable, there are numerous unnamed Seekers including a second individual with Thrust-style wings.



Return to Cybertron Seeker.
This relatively obscure Sticker Adventures tale gives us a brief glimpse of a Seeker with a Thundercracker/Skywarp mix; blue body, purple tailfins and wing stripes. You can't tell much more about him, given that he is A: partially obscured and B: exploding.


"Classic Pretender" Seekers.
The box art (also used for adverts in the Marvel UK comic) for this line of toys shows Starscream attacking his Autobot counterparts alongside three others sharing his body-type. All have a silver front half in jet mode, while one has green rear fins, one has red and one is in shadow.


The German comic, well known for its often wacky coloring, contained a Seeker with a suspiciously familiar color scheme.


An unnamed Seeker with a light blue body with white face, light red helmet and thighs, and yellow cockpit cover was hanging around when Megatron boarded the Ark.


A green Seeker can be seen to the left of frame, behind the bartender, in the image of Maccadam's Old Oil House.


Wings Universe

Wings Universe is based on the Generation 1 cartoon, but deviates from it in cosmetic ways and continuity points.
New guys, same ol' body-type.

The term "Skyraiders" (see alternate terms) was assigned to the prototype Starscream-like air warriors that Skyquake developed at the very beginning of the war. The ranks of the Skyraiders did not seem to include any of the usual Seekers, but instead comprised other flying Decepticon characters. In addition to Skyquake himself, the Skyraiders were Leozack, Hellbat, Hooligan, and Guyhawk. Wings of Honor Starscream himself was captain of Deathsaurus's Skyraider-Seeker Brigade until he was promoted following Falcon's death. A Team Effort

The Decepticon Shadowcaster appeared to use the Skyraider body-type. One of his soldiers also looked very much like Thrust.

So useful a body type that even the waiters have it.

Wings Lyzack was never referred to as a Skyraider, but she had a chassis nearly identical to that of her brother Leozack.

On the lower side of the picture to the left of Megatron.

A generic mostly red-colored Skyraider was among the audience of Megatron's victory over Deathsaurus. Battle Lines, Part 5

File:Redwing.jpg
Red Wing
Red Wing was part of a joint Autobot/Decepticon assault on the Cybertronian clone army. In the ensuing battle, Red Wing was shot in the back by Skywarp. Termination


IDW Generation 1 continuity

Seekers are elite officers in the Decepticon army, and are expected to fulfill a leadership role on the battlefield in commanding other Decepticon troops. Seekers are expected to show absolute loyalty to the Decepticon cause. Seasons in Flight All Hail Megatron #12

The Seekers all take on the same body type out of respect to their commander, Starscream, and hold a position of prestige within the Decepticon ranks All Hail Megatron #6

Confusingly, the human organisation Skywatch referred to Ravage and Laserbeak as "Seekers" Devastation #4 while Galvatron also referred to Scourge and Cyclonus with the term Rebirth Heart of Darkness #2. Neither use has any apparent connection to Starscream's corps.


Unicron Trilogy Seekers

According to one minor source in Armada, when any Transformer converts to a jet, he is called a "seeker".[1] But the closest specific characters to the Generation 1 Seekers are this universe's own Starscream/Thundercracker/Skywarp trio. All three even used the same toy mold in their first release, although Skywarp was heavily retooled from the others (including getting an entirely new-mold Mini-Con partner). While new Decepticon-allied jet characters named Thrust and Ramjet were released in Armada, they each had their own unique molds. However, whereas Ramjet was simply the Mini-Con partner of Tidal Wave, Thrust was a bulk who even had a VTOL engine in jet mode, a conehead and vertically-oriented wings in robot mode. Although Thrust's original toy was green, one of his redecos looked much more like his G1 incarnation while the other redeco looked like an inverted version of G1 Dirge. It was also redecoed into Universe Sunstorm.

Though only Starscream appeared in the follow-up franchise, Energon, several Seekers appeared in the final portion of the Unicron Trilogy, Cybertron. Starscream was back in a form heavily inspired by The War Within Starscream design (itself based on the "tetrajet" (see below)), while Thundercracker received a completely different body. A Skywarp was also released as a redeco of Thundercracker.

Further, the Legends of Cybertron Starscream toy, a tiny, simplified version of his main toy, was redecoed three more times: Skywarp as a giveaway at Comic Con 2005, Ramjet as a giveaway at BotCon 2005, and Sunstorm as part of the last wave of the LOC line at retail.

Live-action film series Seekers

Main article: Seeker (Movie)

In the letters page for Titan's tie-in comic, the movie versions of Starscream, Thundercracker, and Ramjet were first referred to as Seekers—by Starscream himself, no less. Dreadwing was noticeably absent from Starscream's list, despite also being a jet and Thundercracker also being the name/body for a line of drones. This left it unclear what a Seeker is. #9's Star Screams

Later, the term was clarified to mean a particular unit led by Starscream. The Reign of Starscream #2

Similarly to the IDW cases above, the second movie would use the term "Seeker" to refer to an entirely unrelated group of Transformers!

Animated continuity

Aligned continuity family Seekers

The Seekers were a pre-existing group long before the formation of the Decepticons. There is some indication that the Seekers are an elite group of the best of the best fliers, although what (if anything) distinguishes a Seeker from any other flying Transformer is open to question. They tend to mostly, though not always, share a common design.

In an effort to placate the eternally feuding cities of Vos and Tarn each was given something of value. Vos thus became the home of the Cybertronian Air Command home base of the Seekers. Starscream was one of their leaders before the war, and High Councilor Contrail seems to have been another. The Seekers were employed in ancient times to guard the secret of Dark Energon hidden aboard Trypticon Station. They kept this charge even when Starscream allied with the Decepticons, though for the most part they remained largely independent in the civil war.

Shockwave, apparently upset at being pulled away from the Crystal City, maneuvered Vos and Tarn into destroying each other, wiping out most of the Air Commanders that formed the basis of Starscream's power and bolstering his own position as Second-in-command.

In the aftermath of this betrayal, many of the surviving Seekers from Vos joined the Autobots, becoming the Aerialbots. Jetfire was one notable Seeker who defected from the Decepticons to the Autobots, helping them exploit their own flight skills further.

As part of his power play with Starscream, Megatron sent gladiators to kill many of the Air Command's scientists to finally take control of Trypticon away from the Seekers. Transformers: Exodus

The jet-based Vehicons (specifically the silver "Ace" types) used by the Decepticons in the present day have been recognized as Seekers by Starscream. Scattered

Known Seekers:

The term "Seeker"

Origin of the term

Although "Seeker" is the most well-known name for these Decepticons, the reason for its wide use is a bit of a mystery.

No, you fool, we're following orders: We were told to scour the countryside, so we're scouring it.

There are only a handful of official uses of the term in the 20th century, most of them in department-store advertisements from 1984 holiday season. The J.C. Penney catalog (sometimes called a "wishbook") featured a page dedicated to Transformers that included this statement in its description of Starscream: "Airplane with sensational F-15 styling scours the countryside searching for Autobots. When they're found, the Seekers set out to destroy them." It also said Soundwave "sends out messages to the Seekers and other Decepticons".[2] J.C. Penney and (now-defunct) chains Zayre and Dahlkemper's put out ads in November 1984 listing Starscream and either Thundercracker or Skywarp as "Decepticon Seeker". In addition, one of the earliest known ads for Transformers toys period is a Zayre circular from April 1984 that uses the term.[3]

Some fans interpret these instances to mean that the capitalized term "Seeker" was handed down by Hasbro in promotional materials, and those retailers happened to run with it. It's impossible to know one way or the other with any certainty, but the most curious aspect is that the online Transformers fan community was already using the word in the early '90s, when the fandom was just getting on its feet. Were those obscure toy ads strong enough in the fandom's collective memory to determine common parlance almost ten years after the fact? Or were there more official usages that have since disappeared?

Even the '90s-era fandom didn't know where the term had come from, as evidenced by confused conversations from that time on alt.toys.transformers.[4] While no one cited those toy ads, there were plenty of wrong answers, which may explain the term's staying power. The strongest of those erroneous explanations was that it had come from the phrase "hunter-seeker skyship" used in issue 17 of the Marvel US comic. However, the Decepticons it is applied to are shown only in their flight modes, which look nothing like the jets in question. In fact, the Coneheads make their first appearance in the same issue, and their Cybertronian flight modes appear very similar to their Earth jet forms (if not completely identical), and completely different from the craft which are referred to as hunter-seekers. The only real connection between the hunter-seekers we were shown and the "Seekers" is that there's more than one of them and they fly.

During this phase of questionable canonicity, fans flirted with other terms such as "Skyraider" (see below), but in 2002 Simon Furman used "Seeker" in a Dreamwave War Within script, which sealed the deal of officiality and set the tone not just for the fandom, but for the Transformers fiction that came afterwards as well.

Alternate terms

File:86Planes.jpg
I don't know what to call you, Scourge, but I know "plane" isn't it.

The most obvious alternate name for these Transformers—and the one generally used by toy pack-in catalogs—is Decepticon Planes. While usually clear enough from context, this term has the weakness that there are many Decepticon planes who do not share this body-type. Also, the term is rarely, if ever, used outside of toy-specific contexts. The first UK toy pack-in catalog referred to the group as strike planes.[5] The 1985 European Milton Bradley catalog calls them "Decepticon Aeroplanes".[6] In Japan, they were called Jetrons.

Within the fiction, the cartoon episode "Atlantis, Arise!" features Brawn calling Thundercracker a Deceptijet. And the 1985 Listen 'n Fun audio book "Sun Raid" has Megatron ordering the Deceptiplanes (Starscream, Skywarp, and Thundercracker) to break off an attack. The audio book "Jaws of Terror" referred to them as Decepticon superjets. The multipath adventure book "Dinobots Strike Back" has Megatron order his warrior jets to attack the Autobots, just before a "good" ending which they fail to prevent.

Did you ever wonder why we had to run for shelter...

For a long time, it has been common among fans to refer to the Seekers' cartoon Cybertronian forms (from the episode "More than Meets the Eye, Part 1" among others) as tetrajets because their shape resembles a tetrahedron, a pyramid with a triangular base.

If there was ever an official term that could've given "Seeker" a run for its money, it was the one used on the European Generation 2 packaging of Starscream and Ramjet: Skyraiders.[7] That term also appeared in those characters' profiles in the UK Generation 2 comic. When the modern fandom dug this information up, "Seeker" was still considered a fan-generated term, so there was a push to supplant it with "Skyraider". But Furman's use of "Seeker" in the The War Within, coupled with the rediscovery of the J.C. Penney wishbook, put a damper on that movement. Some years later, the term "Skyraider" was officially resurrected to describe the jet warriors in the BotCon 2009 set "Wings of Honor" (based on the Energon Starscream mold). Skyquake was indicated as the body-type's developer in-universe.

Games

Transformers: Mystery of Convoy

Transformers: Mystery of Convoy


The Game Full of Death and Suffering...!

This character article is a stub and is missing information on their video game appearances. You can help MediaWiki by expanding it.

The Transformers: Battle to Save the Earth

In this iteration of the Autobot/Decepticon conflict, it seems all the Decepticon possess the Seeker body-type. There are also innumerable amounts of them. The Transformers: Battle to Save the Earth


Transformers: Cybertron Adventures


The Game Full of Death and Suffering...!

This character article is a stub and is missing information on their video game appearances. You can help MediaWiki by expanding it.

Transformers: Cybertron Adventures

Transformers: Devastation

Besides Starscream, Thundercracker, and Skywarp, generic Conehead-style Seekers were encountered by the Autobots during Megatron's plan to cyberform the Earth. There are only three types encountered: Warriors (standard), Heavy Weapons (uses missiles), and Elites (uses swords). Transformers: Devastation


The Game Full of Death and Suffering...!

This character article is a stub and is missing information on their video game appearances. You can help MediaWiki by expanding it.

Toys

Because of the bodytype-sharing nature of the Seekers, this section includes only molds that have been decorated as two or more Seeker characters, omitting a large number of molds unique to a single character.

Generation 1

File:Redeco.jpg
The original Seekers.
  • Decepticon Planes (1985)
The original Seeker mold was the F-15 Diaclone design, noted for its detailed jet mode, extremely limited robot-mode articulation, and the need to remove/add many parts during transformation.
The mold was initially decorated as Starscream, Skywarp, and Thundercracker. In 1985, Ramjet, Dirge, and Thrust were created out of this mold, each with unique new wing toolings and color schemes. Redecorated retools of the mold also appeared in Generation 2 as Starscream and Ramjet, featuring new accessory soundboxes.
This mold subsequently has been extensively reissued and redecorated; see Starscream (G1) toys for a ridiculously long list of examples. The reissues have included the original six characters as well as the retro-Generation-1 character Sunstorm.
File:Thundercrackeram.jpg
Action Master Thundercracker
This non-transforming action figure mold was sold as Starscream, and later redecorated as Thundercracker for the European market.


Machine Wars

File:MWSkywarp.jpg
Machine Wars Skywarp
  • Basic (1997)
A small flipchanger mold, originally intended for Generation 2, was issued as Thundercracker and Skywarp.


Armada

File:Universe2003-toy Ramjet.JPG
Universe Ramjet
  • Max-Con (2002)
An all-new mold sold at the $20 price point was originally issued as Armada Starscream, redecorated as Armada Thundercracker, and retooled as Armada Skywarp. The retooled version was later issued as the new character Ramjet in the 2003 Universe toyline.


Smallest Transforming Transformers

Smallest Transforming Transformers Thrust
The Smallest line, issued in Japan in 2003, featured a reduced-scale version of the original Generation 1 Seeker mold.
It was issued as Starscream, Skywarp, and Thundercracker, and retooled as Thrust.


Robotmasters

Robot Masters Starscream Limited Black Version
A new Seeker mold was created for Japan's Robotmasters subline. It is based on the original toy, but redesigned at a smaller size and with enhanced articulation.
It was issued as Starscream (regular and black versions), Skywarp, and Thundercracker.


Energon

Timelines Leozack
  • (Deluxe, 2004)
An all new mold transforming into jet loosely based on an F22 raptor, this figure was initially released and then redecoed as Starscream, and was later redecoed into Timelines Leozack and Skyquake for their BotCon 2009 "Wings of Honor" "Skyraider" bodies.


Titanium

Titanium Thundercracker
A new Seeker mold created for the Titanium Series subline features a Cybertronian-based alternate mode, derived from the characters' appearance in The War Within (itself loosely based on the original pyramid jets seen in "More than Meets the Eye, Part 1".) This mold has been issued as Thundercracker, Starscream, Skywarp (a convention exclusive), Sunstorm, and Thrust (a Target Exclusive).

Cybertron

Legends of Cybertron Sunstorm
  • Legends of Cybertron (2006)
A tiny version of the Voyager mold, issued as Armada Starscream, and redecorated as Universe Ramjet, Armada Skywarp, and Sunstorm, and Generation 1 Ramjet and Thrust.
A small version of the Deluxe mold was available as Thundercracker and was redecoed as Starscream for the Universe toyline.


  • Deluxe (2006)
Cybertron Skywarp
Though Thundercracker wasn't the same mold as Starscream in this series, his deluxe toy was redecoed as Skywarp.


  • Voyager (2006)
Universe Dirge
This mold, based on G1 Starscream's The War Within appearance, was issued as Armada Starscream, and later redecorated as Generation 1 Dirge.


Classics

Timelines Hotlink
  • Deluxe (2006)
An all-new mold at the $10 price point, the Classics Seeker design retains the F-15 alternate mode, but with a new transformation scheme and modern articulation.
Like the original, this mold has been redecorated and retooled numerous times. In addition to the original six Seekers, it has also been issued as Acid Storm, Bitstream, Hotlink, Nacelle, and Sunstorm. In addition to its original release in Classics, the various uses of this mold have occurred in the Henkei!, Universe, Generations, Timelines, Shattered Glass, and United toylines. Versions of this mold have been mass retail releases, store exclusives, specialty exclusives, convention exclusives, and fan club exclusives.

Masterpiece

Masterpiece Acid Storm
A larger-scaled, highly complex mold. Issued as Starscream in 2005, with later retools as Skywarp, Thundercracker, and most recently Ghost Starscream, with transparent parts. The mold was heavily retooled in 2012 for another release as Starscream along with redecoes as Thundercracker, Sunstorm, and Acid Storm with Skywarp being released later as an Asian exclusive.


Movie (2007)

  • Legends
2007 Live Action MovieLegends-class Starscream
This Legends-class mold is a highly simplified, low-cost version of Starscream in his F-22 Raptor body. As such, he has a greatly compromised transformation sequence due to the smaller parts count, with limited articulation and detailing. In addition to numerous redecoes sold as Starscream, it was also used to make Revenge of the Fallen Thundercracker.


  • Voyager
Revenge of the Fallen Skywarp
The mold used for the Transformers live-action movie Voyager class Starscream figure was retooled and redecoed into Thundercracker (as well as a G1 recolor of Starscream.) For the Revenge of the Fallen line of toys, the original mold and the retool were recolored again as Ramjet and Skywarp respectively.


  • Fast Action Battler
2007 Live Action Movie Fast Action Battler Ramjet
The Fast Action Battlers version of Starscream was recolored into Ramjet in 2007.


Animated

  • Legends
File:AnimatedLegendsStarscreamBlackClone.jpg
Animated Legends-class Starscream Clone Black Version
The tiny Legends Class Starscream mold was recolored into clear versions of Thundercracker, Skywarp, Sunstorm, Ramjet, and a black clone.


  • Voyager
File:Sunstormratchetanimatedtoys.jpg
Animated Sunstorm
The Voyager class Starscream from Animated was recolored into two of his clones, Skywarp, and Sunstorm, with a third one, Thundercracker, going unreleased.


  • Activators
File:Animated Dirge Activators.jpg
Animated Activators Dirge
Starscream's Activators mold, a smaller, auto-transforming design based on the larger toy, was redecoed into Thundercracker, Dirge, Skywarp, and Ramjet, also based on the clones from the cartoon.



Transformers (2010)

Chronicle Thundercracker
  • Legends
Legends Class Starscream is a new sculpt based on his Generation 1 jet appearance with many fuselage details borrowed from the Masterpiece version. This sculpt was also used to make Chronicle Thundercracker, Starscream, and Skywarp.



Alternity

Alternity Starscream
Rather than a jet, this mold transforms into a licensed 1:32 scale Mitsuoka Orochi and features die-cast metal parts and rubber tires, as well as an opening hood, trunk and doors. It was used to make the usual three (as well as non-Seeker Banzai-Tron). In the Alternity storyline, these three are known as Questors. Y'know, quest like seek.


Dark of the Moon

Dark of the Moon Skywarp
  • Deluxe (2011)
This all-new sculpt transforms into a surprisingly accurate F-22 Raptor while hiding the robot mode parts much better than previous molds. It was later redecoed into Thundercracker and Skywarp.


Generations

File:TFGenerations Legends Acid Storm.jpg
Generations Acid Storm
  • Legends (2013)
This mold is based on based on Guido Guidi's Seeker design from IDW's original ongoing series and transforms into a hybrid F15/F22. The mold was originally released as Starscream, and was redecoed into Acid Storm, Thundercracker, and Skywarp.


Generations Thrilling 30 Thundercracker
  • Deluxe (2012)
This mold is based on the Seekers' appearance in War For Cybertron and Fall of Cybertron. Transforming into a jet loosely resembling previous "Tetrajets," it was issued as Starscream, Thundercracker, and Skywarp. The molds simultaneously represent both Aligned incarnations of the characters as well as their IDW counterparts' appearances in the IDW Generation 1 continuity.


Generations Starscream
  • Deluxe (2014)
Armada Starscream, as the name of the figure implies, is an updated representation of Starscream in his body for during Armada. Like the Fall of Cybertron Starscream figure, it also represents Starscream in the IDW Generation 1 continuity, even including a comic book in which he takes this form. It has been retooled into Jhiaxus, who resembled the Seekers throughout his appearances in the Generation 2 comics. The mold will also be retooled into Skywarp and Ramjet.


Generations Leader-class Thundercracker
  • Leader (2015)
A heavy retool of Generations Jetfire, this figure is sculpted to resemble the same design by Guido Guidi as the Generations Legends-class Seeker mold. Unusually, the retooled version of the mold was initially released as Thundercracker before being later redecoed as Starscream and Skywarp.


Prime: First Edition

  • Deluxe (2011)
Timelines Slipstream
The first toy to represent Starscream as he appears in Transformers: Prime, this mold would later be redecoed and retooled into Skywarp and Thundercracker in TakaraTomy's Prime line, as well as Timelines Slipstream.



Merchandise

I am he as you are he as you are me and we are all together.

Super Collection Figure

A small, PVC plastic figure based on the Seekers' animation model design. It was imported from Takara in the 2002 Heroes of Cybertron line.
It was issued as Starscream, Thundercracker, Skywarp, Sunstorm, and as a six-pack of the three original seekers and three generic light purple Air Warriors. It was retooled and redecorated as Ramjet, Thrust, and Dirge.


Titanium Series

Stop, in the name of love...
A small, non-transforming die-cast metal figurine, based upon the Generation 1 cartoon appearance of the Seekers was available decoed as either Starscream or Thundercracker.


MyClone

Myclone Ramjet
A super-adorable figurine mold of Starscream was issued for this line, and redecorated as the chase figure Thundercracker. A Coneheads mold was also available, issued as Ramjet and chase figure Dirge, and retooled as Thrust.


Palisades

Ghost of Starscream statue
Issued in 2005, this six-inch-tall polystone statue with articulated head and arms was sculpted by 3L Creation Group from a design by George Tremarco. It was later redecoed as Skywarp, Sunstorm, Thundercracker, and the Ghost of Starscream.


Robot Heroes

Robot Heroes Skywarp
Another super-adorable figurine of Starscream, this time launching himself into the air. Redecorated as Skywarp and Thundercracker. A Thrust mold from the same line has yet to be redecorated.


3D Battle-Card Game

This release is a 38-point "Uncommon" piece from the 3D Battle-Card Game composed of punch-out parts from two different cards that can be reconfigured to make a robot or a fighter jet. The parts layout was used to produce Movie versions of Starscream and Thundercracker (as well as non-Seeker characters Dreadwing and Jetfire) in the initial release and Generation 1 Starscream, Skywarp, and Ramjet in the "Energon Wars" expansion set.


Notes

VOGUE!
  • Generation 2 concept art revealed in the Transformers Vault book shows an unreleased desert camo variant on the Ramjet toy (previously seen in toy mock-up form) that would have been named Sandstorm.
  • A mostly black and grey mock-up of Generation 2 Starscream was also seen from the same source as the Sandstorm mock-up. This toy has "Black Death" written on the nosecone and may perhaps have also been intended as a new character of that name. In 2012, a production colors test shot of this figure concept was found.
  • Another mock-up deco variant of the Starscream toy in jungle colors is also known to exist. As with "Black Death" Starscream and previously mentioned desert camo Ramjet, this may have been intended to be a new character.
  • Lastly, another mock-up deco variant of the Ramjet toy in cloud camo is also known to exist. As with all the above mock-up decoes, this may have been intended to be a new character.
  • The Transformers fandom has long mused upon the possibility of female Seekers (and produced countless self-insertion characters that are variants on the theme). A piece of Hasbro concept art of what appeared to be a female Seeker design appeared on the BotCon 2005-exclusive cover of Infiltration #0, but the idea didn't fully see fruition until Animated Slipstream, the first canonical female character to share a body template with a Starscream. This development is either great or horrible, depending on your perspective.

Foreign names

  • Japanese: Jetron (ジェットロン Jettoron)
  • Mandarin: Sōu-suǒ chě (Taiwan, 搜索者, "Seeker"), Yóují (China, 游击, "Guerilla")
  • Polish Szperacz ("Seeker"/"Scout")

References