Sandstorm (BW)

From MediaWiki
Revision as of 04:53, 19 January 2010 by 220.237.144.51 (talk) (Added disambig thingy)
Jump to navigationJump to search
The name or term "Sandstorm" refers to more than one character or idea. For a list of other meanings, see Sandstorm (disambiguation).
Sandstorm is a Predacon from the Beast Era portion of the Generation 1 continuity family.
Someone used a magnifying glass and the sun on Scorponok

Sandstorm is secretly the Covenant member Scorpius, a hard-shelled mystery of a robot, wrapped in a soft-shelled cover-identity and cemented by a tasty bean-paste of lies.

The Covenant's resident expert on court intrigue, Scorpius's billions of years of experience made him a natural to survey the deepening crisis on Cybertron due to Shokaract. He did so with gusto, immediately vanishing into a cover identity so thoroughly that even the Covenant couldn't contact him. His rise to power paralleled Shokaract's, and Sandstorm eventually ascended to become the leader of the (much diminished) Predacons, leading the anti-Shokaract rebels in the sub-levels under Iacon.

Fiction

Reaching the Omega Point

Duck, Covenant member, duck!

Herald, Covenant, Schism, Paradox


I want to tell you about the Transformers!

This character article is a stub and is missing information on their fictional appearances. You can help MediaWiki by expanding it.


Toys

Beast Wars

I am 60% Jolly Rancher.
Sandstorm is a grey/brownish and orange redeco of Scorponok. A lever on the tail makes it stab outward. One claw features a spring-loaded "cyberbee", while the other features two spring-loaded missiles. As with many early Beast Wars molds, Sandstorm has a regular robotic head as well as a mutant head that closes over his robot face.
This mold was also used to make Double Punch.

Trivia

  • Early in production, Sandstorm was going to be named Quicksand. The change marked a strengthening of the bonds between 3H and Hasbro, as both Botcon '99 toys were given names Hasbro already held trademarks for.

Insert non-formatted text here