Transformers The Reusable Sticker Book

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Movie continuity
The Reusable Sticker Book
Publisher HarperCollins Publishers
Imprint HarperFestival
First published 2007
Adapted by Lana Jacobs
Illustrated by N/A, Various stock images from DreamWorks and simple gamesheets.
ISBN 0060888334
978-0060888336
Page count 12
Price $2.00

Transformers The Reusable Sticker Book is a children's activity book for the 2007 live-action movie.

Contents

  • Sworn Enemies: place stickers of the Autobots and the Decepticons in the appropriate columns, denoting their factions.
  • Shape-shifters: match the transformers with their alternate modes.
  • Draw your own comic: Using character stickers, speech bubble stickers, and your own drawing skills, create up to three four-panel comics.
  • Step by Step: six sets of illustrations, each depicting three steps of a Transformer performing an action, with one of the steps left blank. Use stickers to complete each set.
  • Jazz it up: find the appropriate sticker puzzle pieces to complete a puzzle of Jazz.
  • Transformers Tic-Tac-Toe: Use stickers of Decepticon and Autobot faction symbols to play Tic-Tac-Toe with a friend.
  • Autobots versus Decepticons: a basic board game. Using stickers of Optimus Prime and Bumblebee as game pieces, play with a friend. Flip a coin on your turn; on heads, move ahead two spaces; on tails, move ahead on space.
  • Badges, badges everywhere: Count the number of Decepticon badges (with Barricade's face atop of them) and the number of Autobot badges (with Jazz's face atop of them). Use your stickers to add to the count!

Notes

  • This book was the largest and most expensive of the various coloring/activity/sticker books put out in 2007 by Harper Entertainment. It sold at a premium price, $2.00 more expensive than the others, and was printed on higher quality paper.
  • This book contains no original art, no story or character content, and even the games and puzzles lack the 'scenario' usually used to introduce such things.
  • The CGI art within is small and even then noticeably fuzzy, as though printed at a low-resolution.