Salvage!
| The name or term "Salvage" refers to more than one character or idea. For a list of other meanings, see Salvage (disambiguation). |
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![]() The new series of Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased) doesn't go well. | |||||||||||||
| "Salvage!" | |||||||||||||
| Publisher | Marvel Comics | ||||||||||||
| Cover date | 9th April 1988 - 16th April 1988 | ||||||||||||
| Script | Simon Furman | ||||||||||||
| Art | Lee Sullivan | ||||||||||||
| Colour | Euan Peters | ||||||||||||
| Letters | Tom Frame (160), Glib (161) | ||||||||||||
| Continuity | Marvel Comics continuity | ||||||||||||
Shockwave resurrects Megatron and primes him as a weapon to use against Galvatron.
Synopsis
In London, Virgin boss Richard Branson finances a clean-up operation to remove the remains of Megatron and Centurion from the bottom of the River Thames where they had been since their battle a bit ago.

No sooner have they been lifted clear than the Seacon Jawbreaker leaps from the water and cuts the chains holding them to the cranes. Thrust, Dirge, Ramjet, and Blitzwing then swoop in and attach suction cups and carry them away to Shockwave.
A few hours later, the Sparkler Mini-Bots finish digging Ultra Magnus out from underneath Mount Verona. Ultra Magnus is at first disoriented; haunted by the memory of Galvatron and the many defeats he had suffered at his hands. Catching sight of Megatron and Centurion being flown past by the Decepticons, the Autobots decide to follow after them.
Some time later in the Decepticon Fortress, Snap Trap has repaired Megatron's body but his mind is broken. Shockwave is planning to use him as a weapon against Galvatron and so orders Snap Trap to use the psycho-probe in an attempt to repair his mind.
Ultra Magnus and the Sparklers have made their way to the base of the fortress and are discussing how they will stop the Decepticons from reactivating Megatron, when, to Ultra Magnus's dismay, Galvatron, who has been spying on Shockwave, reveals his presence and tells them that he cannot allow them to interfere with Megatron's resurrection.
Inside the fortress, the psycho-probe is forcing Megatron to confront his deepest fears through a series of visions; unfortunately, he is not handling this very well and is terrified of an image of Optimus Prime.
Ultra Magnus is having similar problems outside when confronted by Galvatron and is also cowering in fear, much to Galvatron's amusement.
Megatron is confronted by a second image, this time of Lord Straxus, the Decepticon leader from Cybertron, who had attempted to take over his body. Straxus taunts Megatron and destroys the image of Optimus Prime, telling Megatron that, soon, he will be in control. When this finally snaps Megatron from his fearful state, he attacks and rips the image of Straxus apart.
Having finally defeated his inner demons, Megatron's mind snaps back to sanity. Shockwave takes advantage and uses the psycho-probe to brainwash Megatron into believing that Galvatron is his enemy and that he must destroy him.
Outside, Galvatron is taunting Ultra Magnus, who has become paralysed with fear. Galvatron begins to beat up the Sparklers, while Ultra Magnus stands impotently by. Still haunted by his many defeats, Ultra Magnus ultimately forces himself to confront his fear and he attacks Galvatron. Driven by fear turned to rage, he manages to beat Galvatron who retreats. Ultra Magnus, with a renewed confidence, declares that the next time he meets Galvatron will be the last.
Featured characters
(Numbers indicate order of appearance.)
| Autobots | Decepticons | Humans | Others |
|---|---|---|---|
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Notes
- Shockwave decided to use Megatron as a weapon against Galvatron at the end of "Enemy Action!"
- Here Megatron is forced to confront a vision of Lord Straxus, whose mind has infected Megatron’s after the botched mind swap in "Resurrection!" He defeats him subconsciously, thereby giving him the strength to reassert his own personality. Ironically this Megatron is later shown in "Two Megatrons!" to be a clone created by Straxus that became infected with Megatron’s personality.
- Despite Ultra Magnus's vow to defeat Galvatron once and for all the next time they meet, this is actually the last time the present day Magnus would come face to face with his foe. So he didn't really break his promise; the opportunity just never came up. (It would have but the plans had to be dropped.)[1] The future version of Ultra Magnus would travel back in time during Time Wars to confront Galvatron but the Autobot's actions in no way led to Galvatron's defeat.
- The Decepticon Fortress was first built by the Decepticons in "Power Play!" and later abandoned.
- Dirge is uncharacteristically alive in this story because the UK continuity ignored the events of the G.I. Joe and the Transformers mini-series in which he was killed off.
- Lee Sullivan only had one reference photo of Branson to work off of, which is why two of the three clode shots of his face are pretty much identical.
- For some reason, Snaptrap's head is permanently hidden by shadow in every panel he appears in. Perhaps Sullivan had spilt tea all over the top of his reference sheets?
- In the letters page, Grimlock says that Primus recreated Hot Rod in his own image as Rodimus Prime[2]. (Which is a bit wonky, as Hot Rod and Rodimus Prime look pretty much the same as each other, and therefore BOTH of them look like Primus, but hey ho.)
Back-up stories
Issue #160:
- Action Force - "Serpentor" Part 4
- Combat Colin
Issue #161:
- Action Force - "Road Safety - from the Air!"
- Action Force - "Battle Island"
- Combat Colin
Covers (4)
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Issue #160
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Issue #161
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Summer Special 1994
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Space Pirates TPB
- Issue #160 cover: Ultra Magnus rising from the lava, by Bryan Hitch.
- Issue #161 cover: Megatron confronted by Prime, by Bryan Hitch.
- Summer Special 1994 cover: Optimus Prime opening the Matrix, by Stewart Johnson.
- Space Pirates TPB cover: Rodimus Prime, Arcee and Wreck-Gar have a little problem with Quintessons, by Geoff Senior and Oliver Harud.





