Hasbro Heroes Sourcebook issue 2
From MediaWiki
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| Publisher | IDW Publishing | ||||||||||||
| First published | August 2, 2017 | ||||||||||||
| Cover date | June 2017 | ||||||||||||
| Written by | various | ||||||||||||
| Art by | various | ||||||||||||
| Edits by | David Mariotte and David Hedgecock | ||||||||||||
Eclipse to Oziron Rael!
Profiles
- Eclipse (written by Brandon M. Easton; art by Robert Atkins and Ander Zarate)
- Marissa Faireborn (w. John Barber; a. Guido Guidi)
- Grand Slam (w. Aubrey Sitterson; a. Giannis Milonogiannis and Lovern Kindzierski)
- Grimlock (w. John Barber; a. Guido Guidi)
- Gulliver (w. Brandon M. Easton; a. Sam Lofti and Jordi Escuin)
- Gung-Ho (w. Aubrey Sitterson; a. Paolo Villanelli and John-Paul Bove)
- Helix (w. Aubrey Sitterson; a. Robert Atkins and Simon Gough)
- Ice Queen (w. Brandon M. Easton; a. Marcelo Ferriera and Jordi Escuin)
- Jazz (w. John Barber; a. Casey Coller and John-Paul Bove)
- Klain (w. JimmyZ Johnston; a. Robert Atkins and Ander Zarate)
- Knights of the Solstar Order (w. Chris Ryall and David Mariotte; a. David Messina, Michele Pasta, and Alessandra Alexakis)
- Garrison Kreiger (w. John Barber; a. Ron Joseph and Jay Fotos)
- Kup (w. John Barber; a. Fico Ossio and Sebastian Cheng)
- Lady Jaye (w. Aubrey Sitterson; a. Steve Kurth and Simon Gough)
- Larissa (w. JimmyZ Johnston; a. Jed Dougherty and David Garcia Cruz)
- Livia (w. Chris Ryall and David Mariotte; a. Paolo Villanelli and Alessandra Alexakis)
- Mainframe (w. Aubrey Sitterson; a. Steve Kurth and Simon Gough)
- Major Bludd (w. John Barber; a. Igor Lima and Ander Zarate)
- Darby Mason (w. Chris Ryall and David Mariotte; a. David Messina, Michele Pasta, and Alessandra Alexakis)
- Mayday (w. John Barber; a. Igor Lima and Ander Zarate)
- Miles Mayhem (w. Brandon M. Easton; a. Marcelo Ferriera and Jordi Escuin)
- Megatron (w. John Barber; a. Alex Milne and Joana Lafuente)
- Microtron (w. Cullen Bunn and JimmyZ Johnston; a. Jed Dougherty and David Garcia Cruz)
- Doctor Mindbender (w. Aubrey Sitterson; a. Marcelo Ferriera and Jordi Escuin)
- Optimus Prime (w. John Barber; a. Guido Guidi)
- Oktober Guard (w. John Barber; a. Fico Ossio and Sebastian Cheng)
- Orphion (w. Chris Ryall and David Mariotte; a. David Messina)
- Oziron Rael (w. Cullen Bunn; a. Jack Lawrence and Ander Zarate)
Other content
- "Upgrade" comic strip
- Pin-up of the regular cover, by Fico Ossio and Jordi Escuin
- Metrotitan/Autobot City map by Guido Guidi
- Papercraft model of Scarlett, by Kelly Blake
Notes
Profile notes
- Previously alluded to in Optimus Prime #4, Marissa profile explicitly explains that her mother is Claire Austin, an old college-age girlfiend of Flint's who he dated while he was still in his teens, introduced in 2013's The Cobra Files #6. Flint casually mentioned in that issue that he had heard Claire had a child with her later husband; unbeknownst to him, this profile explains, Claire had been pregnant when they broke up, and the child was his. By the time Marissa learned of her true parentage, from her second step-father (Claire having been noted in Cobra Files to have been divorced twice), Flint had faked his death, as was G.I. Joe standard protocol at the time; Marissa's profile reveals that she learned he was still alive from Mayday, who had worked with him on the Joe team.
- Established only in the letters page of G.I. Joe vol. 5 #3 prior to this issue, Grand Slam's profile notes that he is the same Grand Slam who appeared to die waaaay back in 2009's G.I. Joe Origins #7, who had survived his injuries.
- Following hints about Grimlock's divided allegiance dropped in More than Meets the Eye #3, #8, and #46, his profile establishes that he was a Decepticon at one point. We still don't know any more than that, though!
- Kup's profile states that he was around in the time of Nova Prime, and saw the formation of the Golden Age after the war between the Thirteen and their tribes. This is new information that hasn't yet been related in any comics.
- Mayday's profile gives her first historical appearance as the first episode of the G.I. Joe Extreme cartoon, "A Summoning of Heroes," establishing that she is the IDW version of that first, and otherwise very different, bearer of the "Mayday" codename. Her profile also namechecks Joshua Red, head of the original version of Skywatch (of which she was a member), not seen since 2009's Maximum Dinobots.
- Doctor Mindbender's profile corrects the error that's been running through M.A.S.K. that identifies the doctor's real name as "Verstal Bender," rather than "Armand Singh," his actual real name as provided in IDW's Joe titles. "Verstal Bender" is here established to be an alias.
- Major Bludd is noted to have had the arm he lost in Revolutionaries #1 replaced with a Talisman-tech prosthetic, which hasn't been shown to have happened on-panel. Spoiler for a future issue...?
- As in issue #1, most profiles get new art, but a few have recycled pieces from other sources, including Grand Slam (from G.I. Joe #1), Jazz (from Optimus Prime #8; this is art of Jazz in his earliest Cybertronian form, rather than his regular modern-day appearance), Kup (from Revolutionaries #2), and the Oktober Guard (from Revolutionaries #1).
Errors, omissions, and inconsistencies
- This issue includes the individual episodes for the "first appearances" of the M.A.S.K. characters that was missing from Gloria Baker's profile last time. But where Gloria was credited as "AURA (GLORIA BAKER)," this issue just lists the character by their codenames alone.
- Lady Jaye and Mainframe's profiles give their first appearances as issues #32 and #58 of Marvel's G.I. Joe comic, respectively. Though those are the correct issues of the comic in which they debuted, they actually first appeared in episodes of the G.I. Joe cartoon broadcast before those issue's releases; Lady Jaye in September 1984's "In the Cobra's Pit" (versus of #32's October 1984 publication date, cover-dated February #85), and Mainframe in September 1986's "Arise, Serpentor, Arise!" Part 1 (versus December '86 for #58, cover-dated April '87).
- Even accounting for the late publication of this issue (see "other notes," below), Megatron's profile is outdated, giving his base of operations as Necroworld, which fails to account for his relocation to the Functionist Universe in May's Lost Light #6.
Other trivia
- Originally solicited for release in June, this issue arrived noticeably late, in the first week of August, two months after the already-month-late issue #1.
Other printings
Several of the profiles shown were previously published as backmatter in issues of Revolution and other Hasbro Universe comics:
- Helix in Revolution #5
- Mainframe in Revolution #3
- Microtron in Micronauts Annual 2017
- Miles Mayhem in Revolution #3 and M.A.S.K. Annual 2017
- Optimus Prime in Revolution #5
- Oziron Rael in Revolution #4
Shortened versions of Marissa, Grimlock, Gulliver, Helix, Ice Queen, Lady Jaye, Mainframe, Miles Mayhem, Microtron, Optimus Prime, and Oziron Rael's profiles were also released as trading cards through a Revolution-themed Humble Bundle.
Covers (3)
- Regular cover: Wraparound cover of the characters profiled in this issue, by Fico Ossio and Thomas Deer
- Subscription cover: Kup, along with the forces of M.A.S.K. and V.E.N.O.M., by Sam Lofti and Jordi Escuin
- Retailer incentive cover: Matt Trakker and G.I. Joe, by Marcelo Borstelmann
Advertisements
- CubeCraft.com
- "The Hasbro Tribune" editorial page promoting June's Hasbro Universe titles, including this issue, G.I. Joe #7, Optimus Prime #8, Revolutionaries #7, Lost Light #7, Salvation one-shot, and Till All Are One #11.





