Transformers: Historia

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This article is about the well-researched IDW recap comic. For the poorly-researched IDW recap comic, see The Transformers Continuum.
Transformers Historia
Publisher IDW Publishing
First published January 16, 2019
Written by Chris McFeely
Illustrated by various.
Continuity IDW Generation 1 continuity
Page count 59

Transformers Historia is a double-sized one-shot book that documents the IDW Generation 1 continuity. A "capstone" released after the finale of said continuity, Historia serves as a retrospective guide to the universe, documenting its chronological history from beginning to end.

The year was 2005. The treacherous Decepticons and their heroic Autobot counterparts descended upon the Earth and unleashed a new era of Transformers comics through IDW Publishing. Thirteen years and hundreds of issues later, that universe has come to a close. Join Transformers historian Chris McFeely on a guide distilling the past 13 years of publishing history and remember the masterful storytelling of the first IDW Transformers run.Solicitation blurb

Synopsis

Historia is a prose guide to IDW Publishing's first Transformers continuity in advance of the 2019 reboot. In rough chronological order, the book describes:

Notes

Continuity notes

As the final sendoff for the original IDW Generation 1 continuity, Historia takes the opportunity to engage in some last-minute smoothing of continuity, plugging in some lingering discrepancies and unanswered questions.

  • Lost Light never stated how Epistemus's head wound up in the care of the Omega Guardians and became the Magnificence; Historia reveals that, following the God War, Epistemus joined up the Knights of Cybertron and voluntarily stayed behind with the Omega Guardians during the early day of the Knights' quest across the galaxy, eventually giving up his body in pursuit of knowledge. Shockwave was noted to have theorized a similar sequence of events in Lost Light issue #14.
  • The Omega Guardians are specifically noted to have been organic, which suggests that they might have been one of the vectors for the outbreak of atrophosia that drove the Knights of Cybertron to Mederi.
  • The concept of the "thirteen colonies" formed an integral part of the IDW mythos in the final years of the continuity; however, thanks to some loose-end tying by John Barber, the concept was folded in with Shockwave's thirteen Regenesis planets in Unicron, and as a result only a handful of these thirteen planets could truly be called "colonies" that had been inhabited by Cybertronian settlers: Caminus, Devisiun, Eukaris, Velocitron, and (possibly) Arduria. Historia smooths over this discrepancy by noting that this idea of "thirteen colonies" was merely a legend, one that conflated the existence of these five planets with the seven other worlds that had been touched by the dark legacy of the Primes.
  • Seemingly corroborating Centurion's profile in Hasbro Heroes Sourcebook #1, the narration notes that the Maximals came to Earth in search of the Enigma of Combination... though it's as vague as ever if that was truly why "Onyx Prime" sent the crew of the Axalon into space, or if it was simply a pretext so that they could be shot down over Earth and fulfill the ontological paradox posed by Shockwave's younger self.
  • Why exactly Merklynn came to Earth, of all planets, was never expounded on; here, it's established that he came in search of sufficient magical energy in order to restore his lost homeworld of Prysmos, finding such an artifact in the Talisman.
  • Following on from revelations in the Hasbro Heroes Sourcebook and First Strike issue #5, Historia explicitly confirms that the Decepticon Insecticons and the "swarm" of failed clones that precluded their creation were the product of genetic experimentation on a naturally-occurring subterranean subspecies.
  • The two non-Hasbro Universe crossover stories, New Avengers/Transformers and Infestation, are ignored entirely, presumably for reasons of space and them not really having much to do with the main IDW storyline.
  • The discrepancy between the timeframes of Lost Light versus Till All Are One and Optimus Prime—the former playing out over a matter of weeks, the latter two over a much longer timeframe—is not addressed, though (as we humbly propose elsewhere on this wiki) travel through the Warren might go a ways towards no-prizing this error.
  • The exact correlation between the "real" Unicron—the transformed Antilla—and the mythical Unicron, the dreaded "uncreator" of Cybertronian legend, had not previously been made clear in the IDW continuity; Historia reveals that it was the Talisman's energy burst in Transformers vs. Visionaries #5 that dubbed the planet "Unicron" after the latter.
  • The book ends with the events of Unicron #6, with the Lunarians of Luna One receiving a mention, but otherwise omitting Lost Light #25's quantum duplication of the Lost Light and that issue's glimpse into the far-distant future.

Transformers references

Other trivia

Cover

See also

IDW timeline