Forever Is a Long Time Coming (issue)
| This article is about the IDW issue. For the Generation 1 episode, see Forever Is a Long Time Coming (episode). |
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| "Forever Is a Long Time Coming" | |||||||||||||
| Publisher | IDW Publishing | ||||||||||||
| First published | June 2014 | ||||||||||||
| Cover date | 2014 | ||||||||||||
| Story by | John Barber | ||||||||||||
| Art by | Livio Ramondelli | ||||||||||||
| Letters by | Tom B. Long | ||||||||||||
| Continuity | 2005 IDW continuity | ||||||||||||
| Chronology | Current era (2014) | ||||||||||||
| Price | Free (Windows 8 Madefire app, initial) ??? (Other digital platforms) | ||||||||||||
Optimus Prime has finally fingered the culprit...
Synopsis
Slug, still fuming after his confrontation with Optimus Prime, takes the Dinobots to the Optimus Prime statue, which he summarily decapitates. Slug threatens to kill Optimus and drags the other Dinobots into following him, just as an explosion goes off and sends the four flying. In reality, exposing the Dinobots' old war crimes was a feint by Optimus; the unknowing Dinobots fall through a trap door with Barricade's help and are caught in mid-air by Windblade and Starscream.
All of this was to draw out the killer—Sandstorm, who Optimus confronts. Gone off the deep end, Sandstorm shoots Prime with an infernus bullet, only to show regret afterwards. Optimus rips the bullet out of his body and places Sandstorm under arrest. Sandstorm tells his side: he had seen too much, too terrible, to allow others to go unpunished for their crimes during the war. All of the Cybertronians he had killed or attempted to kill had committed unspeakable acts and had to be killed in the name of justice; he only pretended to befriend those in Gutcruncher's bar to make it easier to kill them all. After asking whether Optimus knew of the Autobot atrocities and how he could manage knowing them, Sandstorm tries to flee, but Optimus simply knocks him out and answers that he tries to stay "grounded".
The murders solved, Optimus goes on his personal errand: bringing the remaining half of the Matrix of Leadership to the site where he received it all those years ago. It is the anniversary of when he became Prime. Optimus shares with Windblade that he was honest about his calling out of the Dinobots, believing that bots like them who refuse to change are the greatest threat to the future; but still, he has faith that the future can be a peaceful one.
Featured characters
(Numbers indicate order of appearance.)
| Autobots | Decepticons | Others |
|---|---|---|
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Quotes
"You're under arrest, Sandstorm. You're guilty of murdering fourteen Cybertronians, and attempting to kill seven more."
"Seven. Really, Prime? You really care enough to count the Firecons? If their lives mean so much to you... MAYBE YOU ALL DESERVE THE SAME!"
- —Optimus Prime and Sandstorm
"This is where my future began, built on past crimes—the kind Cybertron can never escape".
"Don't give up, Optimus. You saved the Dinobots"—"
"After I said they should die."
"You needed to lie big to draw Sandstorm out."
"You don't know me very well. I never lie. At least Sandstorm saw Cybertron united, even if it was united in atrocity. Slug's refusal to change is the greater threat to our future."
"Then why come here? What did you hope to find?"
"The memory of believing in tomorrow, Windblade. No matter what I feel... Cybertron needs me to hold on to that.
- —Optimus Prime and Windblade
Notes
Continuity notes
- When Sandstorm talks about the things he saw as a Wrecker, he mentions "killing unarmed prisoners"—a clear allusion to the deaths of Squadron X by Impactor's hand, as seen in Last Stand of the Wreckers #5. Previously, the prose story "Zero Point" had depicted Sandstorm as the only Wrecker who didn't try to get Springer to absolve the team of any role in the killings, suggesting that unlike his teammates he did not approve. Foreshadowing!
- In the panel where Sandstorm recalls this, he's correctly drawn to the specifications of his Last Stand design, looking very different to his appearances in the rest of this mini-series, which is based on his Thrilling 30 toy.
- Heavy Barrel and team's crime was the siphoning of "pseudo-energon" from a mechanoid world; it's not really been elaborated upon, but that seems to be a not-really-the-real-thing variant of energon that occurs on other planets, which we saw before in Spotlight: Thundercracker.
- The Matrix half was given to Bumblebee by Prime back in The Death of Optimus Prime (the other half was given to Rodimus and wound up being destroyed in More than Meets the Eye #21). Prime reclaimed 'Bee's half in Robots in Disguise #29.
- Prime visits the Undergrid where he found the Matrix, as chronicled in Autocracy #9.
- This issue continues directly into The Transformers #39.
Transformers references
- This issue is named after the Generation 1 cartoon episode, "Forever Is a Long Time Coming".
Real life references
- Given Sandstorm's motivation and modus operandi, the title of Punishment would seem to be a reference to Marvel Comics' own one-man war on crime, the Punisher.
Covers (2)
- Digital cover: Optimus Prime's decapitated statue, from the issue's first page, by Livio Ramondelli
- Print cover: Optimus Prime and the Dinobots, by Ramondelli
Reprints
- The IDW Collection Phase Two: Volume 8 (December 19, 2018) ISBN 1684053722 / ISBN 978-1684053728
- Contains More than Meets the Eye #35 to #40, Robots in Disguise #35 to #38, The Transformers: Punishment and The Transformers: Drift - Empire of Stone.



