Action Master

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Alive! Alive! Alive!

Transformers who use Nucleon as a fuel source lose their transformation ability due to the fact that their figure alteration systems get converted into energy storage reactors. However, through this process, Action Masters become stronger, faster, and more alive. They have equipped themselves with transformable partners and vehicles to aid them in battle.

A few Action Masters managed to retain (or possibly regain) the ability to transform; they are known as Action Master Elites.

Action Masters are among the few Transformers to feature Power Plans on the packaging, in addition to the more traditional Tech Spec and bio.

Alt-modes are for wimps!{{#if:|{{{quote2}}}}}{{#if:Kick-Off's in denialLast Stand of the Wreckers #1|Kick-Off's in denial{{#if:Last Stand of the Wreckers #1|, Last Stand of the Wreckers #1|}}|}}

Fiction

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Toy packaging blurb

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Optimus Prime went searching for new energy sources and, within the heart of a black hole discovered Nucleon: a miracle fuel that made Transformers stronger, faster, and more alive, but cost them the ability to transform. Soon the Decepticons stole the technology and created Action Masters of their own, with Magmatrynon alloy being used for the construction of exo-suits.

This story was later referenced with the Japanese release of Nucleon Quest Super Convoy, a black redeco of Powermaster Optimus Prime who was given the backstory of being Prime specially outfitted for this trip into the black hole.

Marvel Comics continuity

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Marvel The Transformers comics

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Events from the UK-only comic stories are in italics.

Grimlock heard about a risky new miracle fuel on the planet Hydrus Four. Against orders he stole the non-functioning bodies of his fellow Dinobots and headed there to find out. Eye of the Storm What he discovered was a ruined world filled with creepy, obsessive, rotting zombie-like beings warning him that it was all because of Nucleon. Being Grimlock, he then went ahead and used the fuel anyway, first on himself and then to revive his fallen teammates. The Pri¢e of Life!

Grimlock soon found parts of his body inexplicably seizing up, and began to fear that he should have listened to the creepy dying robots after all. ...All This and Civil War 2 After returning to the Ark Grimlock used the Nucleon to repair all the damaged Autobots in the ship's medical bay (as well as Megatron, whom he didn't know was there). The Void! Following the Transformers' battle with Unicron, Grimlock froze up entirely. It was then that Hi-Q (in the process of merging with Optimus Prime) saw with "Powermaster eyes" that Grimlock wasn't malfunctioning, but changing. He used his Powermaster abilities to speed up the process and Grimlock burst forth in his new, more-powerful Action Master form. Still Life!

Meanwhile, Hi-Q's own mental merger with Prime was also accelerated by his contact with Nucleon. Soon afterward, the Last Autobot re-created Hi-Q as Optimus Prime in a new body. End of the Road!

Another Time & Place
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As time progressed more and more Autobots, including Prime, Sludge, Snarl and Swoop, also succumbed to mode-lock. Prowl and Slag were among the few that could still transform, but they had doubts that this would remain much longer. Hearing rumours of further developments on Hydrus Four, Grimlock led the Dinobots there to see if a cure could be found. Amidst a Decepticon ambush, he discovered a new version of Nucleon that lacked the side effects of the original and restored the ability to transform. Another Time & Place

Transformers Comic-Magazin

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The Decepticons on Earth had a team of Action Masters. These sinister types had the power to combine into ground stations, super-heavy vehicles and air units! Transforming Robots in Action: The Case of Optimus Prime

Classics

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Classics continues from the Marvel US series, and does not include the UK stories or any subsequently published stories.

Snarl was still an Action Master.

Japanese Generation 1 cartoon continuity

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Optimus and Megatron's pre-G2 bodies share a striking similarity to their Action Master toys. Likewise Optimus Prime has been documented as searching out a New Energy source called Nucleon that's located within a black hole. Finally, Optimus Prime's Action Master was sold with New Years Convoy, and described as the intermediate form between Prime's various G2 Bodies. G-2

2005 IDW continuity

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In the 2005 IDW continuity, nucleon does not appear to affect ability to transform. Life After the Big Bang Cybertronian Homesick Blues The Permanent Revolution However, some Cybertronians had their transformation cogs removed for medical, political or religious reasons, and were known as monoformers. Life After the Big Bang Some Of My Best Friends Are Autobots

2019 IDW continuity

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After the starship Iron Hope crash-landed far from Cybertron, the surviving crew—who would come to be known as the "Iron Hope Hundred"—were forced to subsist on nucleon, rendering them permanently mode locked. Survivors of the disaster included Treadshot, who was locked in robot mode, and Catgut, who was locked in a quadrupedal form. All Fall Down As well as Axer, Circuit Tread & Circuits Part 2 and Charger, although his partner Fire Beast's ability to combine might exclude him. Swindle's II Members of the Hundred found themselves victims of discrimination, especially on alt-mode oriented colonies like Velocitron. A number of these mode-locked bots made use of exo-suits or personal vehicles as essentially mobility aids, able to provide them additional speed and power in lieu of alternate modes. Tread & Circuits Part 2

Upon learning that her teleport rig used nucleon as a fuel source, Jumpstream noted that the substance was notorious for causing mode-locking. Perceptor pointed out to her that it took sustained amounts of nucleon abuse over a long period of time to affect one's physiology. Test Flight I

Alternate future

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In an alternate future where Exarchon had triumphed, he began beaming Cybertron's energon supply into space, forcing the resistance to use nucleon, depriving them all of their alternate modes. Test Flight II

Reception and legacy

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I DEFINITELY like my transformers to transform. Down with the action masters.{{#if:|{{{quote2}}}}}{{#if:Josh Freeman Frankel, 25 February 1994alt.toys.transformers|Josh Freeman Frankel, 25 February 1994{{#if:alt.toys.transformers|, alt.toys.transformers|}}|}}

The Action Master toyline, depicting the obvious oxymoron of "Transformers who don't transform," generated initial ire ("BLASPHEMY!") from some fans. This was magnified as Action Masters were released in the final year of the original Transformers toy line in the US. When Transformers was summarily canceled in North America, some fans blamed the gimmick for the death of the franchise (despite the wide variety of other factors that doubtlessly were involved).

One aspect Action Masters is notable for, however, is the mass reintroduction of "classic" characters. New toys for old characters was not a theme the original toy line visited very often–in fact, Bumblebee's re-imaged Throttlebot form Goldbug released in 1987, 1988's Powermaster Optimus Prime and the Classic Pretenders from 1989 were the only notable exceptions. In other words, to have a single sub-line with so many recurring favorites was, at the time, a novelty. In addition, the classic characters were designed to resemble their cartoon counterparts more closely. For much of the Season 1 and 2 cast, the original figures having been designed years before they were stylized and simplified for the cartoon, these Action Masters were the closest likenesses of their fiction representations until the advent of the Masterpiece line, in which screen accuracy is one of its primary selling points. Notably the first television commercial for the Action Masters featured a segment where the animated character models dissolved into film of the actual toys, suggesting that "show accuracy" was Hasbro's intended marketing strategy for the line.

As with many other changes to the Transformers brand, initial hostility towards Action Masters from the fandom eventually became less intense and diversified into a broad range of opinion, with many of the original characters introduced getting cult followings and prominent appearances in later fiction (likely helped by how the toys weren't restricted by the somewhat samey designs that predominately made up the later years of the toyline). Some of the most in-demand vintage (and therefore expensive) Transformers toys are Action Masters, and new characters from this subgroup continue to appear in newer toy lines. For example:

In 2013, James Roberts could even say he'd have liked to see more Action Masters and they were "cool".<ref>Moonbase2's second interview with James Roberts - 58:20</ref>

Toys

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The Transformers

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In addition to the original line-up of Action Master product released worldwide in 1990, several additional assortments were introduced in European markets for 1991.
Action Master Figures Asst. 1 Action Master Figures Asst. 2 Action Master Figures Asst. 3 Action Master Figures Asst. 4 (Europe)
Blaster with Flight-Pack
Axer with Off-Road Cycle
Action Master Action Blasters Action Master Autobot Action Vehicles Action Master Decepticon Attack Vehicles Action Master Autobot Armored Convoy
Exo-Suit Action Masters (Europe) Motorized Exo-Suit Action Masters (Europe) Action Master Elites (Europe)

Notes

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Weaponry sponsored by Silver Shamrock Novelties.
  • It appears that the name "Action Masters" for this segment of the toy line was a late decision: Hasbro's Spring 1990 "Pre-Toy Fair" catalog,<ref name="vendor">Spring 1990 Hasbro "Pre-Toy Fair" catalog at Botriot (archived)</ref> published in mid-to-late 1989, consistently refers to the toys simply as "Action Figures", with no mention of the term "Action Master". It also makes mention of a different back story wherein the Transformers give up the ability to transform to transfer these powers to their weapons and vehicles. The "Action Master" name was evidently decided on sometime between the "Pre-Toy Fair" vendor event and the Toy Fair of February 1990, as the finalized term appears in Hasbro's standard 1990 catalog.
  • In an interview with Transformers Collectors' Club, Simon Furman said that had the comic not ended at issue #80, Optimus Prime's return would not have come when it did.<ref>Club magazine #2</ref> Additionally, Furman said that he hated the idea of using Action Master Prime at the time, and hoped that by the time Prime came back, this Action Master plot would be over—finished!<ref>Club magazine #1</ref> Conclusion—the use of Optimus Prime in his Action Master version may very well have not occurred had the comic not ended when it did.
  • Bob Budiansky's treatment for the Action Masters was printed in the Titan Books trade Transformers: Last Stand. Bob can't remember writing it.<ref>Bob Budiansky interview</ref>
  • In a case of "too little, too late", the fourth (and final, only being released in Europe) assortment of Action Master figures made some minor course corrections in terms of figure design and accessories. The fourth assortment figures no longer have blocks sculpted into the hips that forced the legs to move in 90° increments or awkward side angles. Additionally, in keeping with other late Action Masters such as the Elites, there are minor uses of the then-new technique of textured plastic, as well as having sculpts that were mildly bulkier than previous waves. Lastly, in lieu of animal weapon partners or action feature backpacks, fourth assortment figures all had partner machines that unfolded into helmets and backpacks, strictly split between beasts for Decepticons and artillery units for Autobots.
  • Speaking of that final wave's backpacks, the earliest gimmick considered for the Action Masters was a less complicated version of the helmets before spring-loaded partner weapons were decided upon instead.
  • The Action Masters' weapon handle pegs, being 3 mm wide, are compatible with any number of modern toys due to the now standardized 5mm and 3mm pegs and clips.
  • Excluding the Action Master Elite, regular Action Masters utilized elastic-and-hook joints (similar to many G.I. Joe toys and the Laser Rods) in their hips. This gave them their relatively wide range of motion, but it also made them somewhat floppy, and the elastic could harden and become brittle with age. Legless Action Masters are sadly common on the aftermarket.
Totally new character. Yup. (We were robbed!)

Foreign names

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  • Italy: Super Azione ("Super Action")

References

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