Transformers Legends (comic)

From MediaWiki
Revision as of 16:48, 16 December 2022 by TransFormersfan1 (talk | contribs) (Adding Controversy, I realize this may take some workshopping)
Jump to navigationJump to search
The name or term "Legends" refers to more than one character or idea. For a list of other meanings, see Legends (disambiguation).


Japanese G1 continuity
« Legends »
It's like Kiss Players, but with more transphobia.

Transformers Legends (トランスフォーマーレジェンズ Toransufōmā Rejenzu) is a series of comic strips by Hayato Sakamoto, showcasing the adventures of toy otaku Rattrap. It is published online to promote TakaraTomy's Transformers Legends toyline, with special Bonus Edition (出張版 Shutchōban) chapters of the comic packed with the toys themselves.

Main Transformers Legends comic
Headmaster Chapter:
Targetmaster Chapter:
The Road to Legends' Revival Chapter:
Additional Transformers Legends comics
—Spin Off—
Other:

Overview

Legends begins as a four-panel black-&-white comic strip set in a world known as the "Legends World", where Transformers is a franchise of toys and fiction—essentially the real world, but instead of people it's populated by super deformed Beast Wars characters who don't consider themselves Transformers. The main characters of the comics are the Beast Wars Maximals, reimagined as a group of salarymen working at the "Axalon Trading Company" in Japan. They retain their quirky speech patterns from the jovial Japanese dub of the show. Early jokes revolve around the characters being Transformers fans themselves, each representing a different facet of the fandom, the main cast being:

  • Rattrap, the company's new recruit who grew up with and unconditionally loves Beast Wars
  • Rhinox, a middle-aged man who doesn't care for anything newer than the Generation 1 of his childhood
  • Optimus Primal, the serious-minded boss who has no interest in toys himself, but does buy them for his son Minor
  • Silverbolt, a young excitable part-timer and fan of the recent live-action film series
  • Tigatron, a moe otaku who only likes Transformers franchises with cute girls, like Kiss Players
  • Waspinator, an employee of Tera-Kura Co., fan of all things Transformers and expert on minor trivia, he serves to fill the other characters (and readers) in on the more obscure portions of the franchise

Other recurring characters include the lazy, irresponsible Cheetor, hungry Dinobot, and gender-ambiguous office ladies Airazor and Nightscream. Later strips introduce the Axalon Co.'s rivals, the "Tera-Kura Co." led by Megatron. Various other inhabitants of the Legends World are versions of Beast Wars II, Beast Wars Neo, and Car Robots characters.

In its earliest days, the comic revolved primarily around the Axalon employees' everyday misadventures at and around their office, with the full-color toy pack-in strips (Bonus Editions) serving as spotlight adventures for the relevant characters. Over time, the online strips were increasingly used to provide "prologue" and "sequel" chapters for the pack-in comics (often in full color and several pages themselves), creating ongoing serialized storylines. When the toyline began releasing Titans Return moulds and dramatically increased its output, the accompanying comics became more story-heavy than ever before, and told a continuing storyline that saw large numbers of characters from the Generation 1 cartoon universe take up residence in Legends World. Online chapters became almost entirely reserved for linking story material, with the original-format four-panel gag strips a very infrequent occurrence.

Creative team

The series is written and drawn by Hayato Sakamoto, but many others have collaborated with him.

Continuity and timeline

The Legends World exists in a complicated place in the Japanese Generation 1 cartoon continuity. Outside of traditional space and time, the Legends World is an ongoing narrative that is visited by Cybertronians from various eras, often decades apart. For simplicity's sake, the major eras involved are listed below.

  • 2035 - 2038:
    • Next, several characters emerge from the 2030s, the furthest point in the Japanese G1 timeline prior to the Beast Era (as of Legends' publication). This is the post-G2 era, briefly chronicled in several eHobby pack-in comics. The resurrection of Ultra Magnus LG14 Ultra Magnus Prologue and Megatron being overthrown by Galvatron II date to this era. Legends Vol. 23 When the Legends world was destroyed, these characters also returned to their original era, thereby arriving in the Japanese cartoon continuity roughly 15 years after other characters who left the collapsing world at the same time. The local inhabitants of the Legends World primarily ended up in this time period after departing. Targetmaster Finale, Part Two
  • Other:
    • Several examples also exist of "one-off" travels from different universal streams or time periods. The Quintessons of 11 million years ago invaded the Legends World in the present stories with their Military Hardware drones, including a young Blitzwing. Slipstream and an alternate universe Megatron & Starscream also arrived from the Animated and Armada continuities, respectively. The cast of Beast Machines also briefly touched upon the Legends World after their series ended.
  • Origin:
    • Finally, the Legends World itself emerged from an ontological paradox. The universe was created in the 2030s by the Jumpstarters Topspin and Twin Twist, with the assistance of the Zodiac, proton energy, and the telepathic power of Katsu Don and the Zamojin. The Jumpstarters agreed to help Katsu Don create this world because, in 2004, they had already met and befriended Legends natives Whirl and Roadbuster. Thus, Topspin and Twin Twist knew the Legends World was destined to be created because it had already happened. Trippy, right?

Controversy

The Legends manga has come under attention for its frankly offensive stabs at humor, particularly at the expense of the characters Airazor and Nightscream, whose gender-nonconformity is played for laughs. Both of the characters are depicted as otokonoko "office ladies", whose female presentation while being male is the focus of several individual strips, and their depiction jumps headfirst into a number of transphobic tropes. While this is meant to "poke fun" at the historical discrepancies of Airazor's gender in Japanese Beast Wars media (see here for more on that), Nightscream is depicted this way based on his Beast Wars Reborn incarnation being flamboyantly gay, conflating gay men with cross-dressing, being trans, and playing into the frankly disgusting concept of feminine-presenting LGBTQ people trying to "trick" men. This makes for a sad contrast with the contemporary IDW comics, which, while not perfect, received widespread acclaim for their thoughtful handling of gay and trans representation.

As later comics shifted towards a more G1 cast, another trend emerged: blatant sexism. Heavy, heavy use of fanservice, along with making every female characters easily defeated and prone to "comedically" ending up in compromising poses. The only women who aren't used (mostly) for comic relief are Megaempress and her 4 Guards, who come with their own can of worms, depicted as symbolically "castrating" male Autobots for their joint energon and Megaempress trying to dominate both Optimus Prime and Megatron and make them her "husbands".

When Legends gave way to Generations Selects Special Comic, the sexist comedy fell toward the wayside, but we dare you to find a female character who appears for more than a few panels who doesn't die, get immediately defeated, or need a man to save them.

Notes

  • As is to be expected, the characterizations for the cast are derived from the Japanese version of Beast Wars and Beast Machines. In most instances, these characterizations were extremely different from their Western counterparts. As such, some of the "gags" might fly over the heads of those unacquainted with the radically different Japanese version of the show.
  • In the above promotional image, a version of Depth Charge accompanied by an Armada Megatron toy (suggesting that he may have been a fan of the Unicron Trilogy) can be glimpsed, but he never appears until near to the very end of the epilogue chapter.