Combiner Wars (toyline)

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Prime Wars Trilogy
« Combiner Wars »
Like most Deluxe Class figures, Swindle was available with a comic book in the U.S., Australia, New Zealand, and Asia (left), and with a character card in Canada and Latin America (center) as well as Europe (right).

Combiner Wars is a subline imprint of the Generations toyline, constituting the first portion of the Prime Wars Trilogy.

Debuting in 2015, it saw Deluxe, Voyager and some Legends figures able to form combiner robots. The format for Legends Class was changed once again, dropping the small partner figures of the Thrilling 30 line.

The tradition of including IDW comic books with U.S.[1] Deluxes (started by the Thrilling 30 segment) continued, whilst Legends, Voyagers, and non-U.S. Deluxes gained collector cards featuring art taken either from the Transformers Legends mobile game, or simply the toy's package art (which doubles as the comic book cover for the U.S.[1] version). However, due to production schedule problems,[2] Deluxe wave 1's initial U.S.[1] release featured the collector cards. Along with the concurrently released Robots in Disguise line, Combiner Wars also heralded the return of multilingual packaging to the United States[1] market, now in English, French, Spanish, and Portuguese. The sole exception to this was the Deluxe figures packaged with comic books, which retained English-only packaging.

After the general retail assortments had run their course, the line was extended for several months via giftsets of complete teams featuring redecos and retools, referred to as "Collection Packs" in official promotional materials. Those sets were typically "shared exclusives" between online retailers and the online storefronts of "big box" retailers, though they were also available at brick and mortar retail in several non-U.S. markets.

Courage is stronger when combined

—Official tagline for the Combiner Wars line

Toys

General retail

Legends Class

Wave 1 Wave 2 Wave 3 Wave 4


Legends Class Viper.
Wave 5 Wave 6


Deluxe Class

Wave 1 Wave 2 Wave 3 Wave 4


Deluxe Class Firefly.
Wave 5 Wave 6
For the US market, each figure from wave 2 on came with a reprint of an IDW comic that supposedly featured the character, but that whole "featured the character" thing didn't always pan out. A comic-book-pack-in variant of Decepticon Dragstrip was later released in a revision of wave 2. Some time later, the full set wave 1 comics (which were originally solicited for normal retail) were released in a bundle at a Taiwanese comic convention, separate from the figures.

Voyager Class

Wave 1 Wave 2 Wave 3 Wave 4
Voyager Class Optimus Prime.
Wave 5 Wave 6


Leader Class

Wave 1 Wave 2 Wave 3 Wave 4
Leader Class Thundercracker.
Wave 5


Titan Class

Your childhood has returned- but this time it's after your wallet.


Exclusives

"May Mayhem" Deluxes

Wave 1 Wave 2


Convention multi-packs

While these toys premiered at conventions, many ended up available through other venues, like the Hasbro Toy Shop online store, and even occasionally at retail in certain chains. See individual entries for more information.

Devastator 2015 Special Edition Combiner Hunters Predacus


"Online exclusive" Collection Packs

Most of these box sets are "shared exclusives" sold by numerous online retailers. Liokaiser, however, is a Platinum Edition set completely exclusive to Entertainment Earth.

Superion (G2 deco) Menasor (G2 deco) Victorion Bruticus (G2 deco)
Liokaiser
Computron Liokaiser

Notes

Advertising is stronger when using social media
  • Early in the toy line's life cycle, Hasbro advertised the figures with two "movie" style posters published on Facebook, alternatively depicting Superion and the Aerialbots, or Menasor and the Stunticons.[3] The same artwork was later used for the posters included wth the "Generation 2" Superion and Menasor Collection Packs. While awesome in their own right, none of those posters were ever featured at public transport stations, so there was still room for improvement!
Clues hidden in a stock photo. What's next? Alternate heads depicted in instructions?
  • The existence of Huffer and the name of Blackjack in the Combiner Wars subline imprint were first revealed by a stock photo of Menasor released during San Diego Comic-Con 2014. What appeared to be a plain white background was, with color correction, revealed as a Mac OS screenshot displaying filenames for those two characters. Blackjack could easily be identified as the then unnamed black-and-purple car revealed at SDCC, whilst Huffer's toy was later announced at New York Comic Con.
  • The limb robots substituted out of Combiner Wars Superion, Menasor, and Defensor, namely Slingshot, Wildrider, and Groove, also happen to be the same members whose Kre-O incarnations were sold separately from their teams. Coincidence? Probably.
  • No wave 2 products of any size classes of Combiner Wars were ever released in any European markets, with the sole exception of Legends Class Blackjack, who was eventually released as part of a revision of wave 4. Even Motormaster, who was re-released as part of wave 4 of the Voyager Class assortment alongside Battle Core Optimus Prime, was omitted from then European wave 4 case assortment in favor of Silverbolt and Hot Spot.
  • Coupled with fact that the wave 1 Deluxes in English packaging including comic books remain unreleased (except for Dragstrip) as mentioned above, this means Canadian/Latin American packaging is the only packaging version all generel retail Deluxes were officially available in. To make things even more confusing, the wave 4 Deluxes were initially released at Canadian retail in English-only packaging including comic books (an unusual, though not unprecedented, occurrence for Canada), before the "regular" versions in multilingual packaging including character cards became available.
  • Lastly, clearance stores in the US such as T.J. Maxx later sold Deluxe figures from waves 4, 5 and 6 in Canadian/Latin American packaging.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Australia, New Zealand and Hasbro's Asian markets typically get toys in whatever format is also used for the United States. The markets that traditionally get multilingual packaging are Canada, Latin America, and Europe. See the image to the right for a comparison.
  2. Interview with Jerry Jivoin at BWTF.com
  3. Combiner Wars "movie poster" adverts at TFW2005