"Transformers, pour un monde meilleur" is a song that was sometimes used as an opening for the French broadcast of Transformers original cartoon. It was first released on vinyl, with the song on side A and a remix of the original theme song on side B.
It was re-released for the broadcast of The Transformers: The Movie in 1987, performed by a different person and edited with a brand new sleeve. The first version has then been re-released in several TV cartoon compilations.
To this day it is still unknown who actually sings this song in both versions, since the artists were not credited for any disc. The most probable candidate for the first version (the most popular one) is Joël Prévost, but we can sometimes read names including Bernard Minet, Cyril Assous, Marc Pascal or Lionel Leroy. Some early cartoon compilations vinyls credited Bernard Minet for the song, despite most people denying that possibility. Next compilations credited "unknown".
The singers pronounce "Deceptican" like the dubbing team did for the cartoon.
The second singer pronounces "Cybetron" and "Alcaza".
Part of the song focuses on Alcazar and his anti-matter formula, despite the fact that they only appear in one episode of the series. They seemingly watched an episode before writing the theme song, which was pretty rare at that time.
Cosmotron is chosen to describe a potential spaceship that Optimus Prime uses, it has no link to the cosmitron.
This song was used for several episodes as the ending credit theme. However, most episodes kept the original song. Some episodes edited by UFG Junior feature that song for the credits, it is unknown if it is intentional or kept the original way.