Liege Maximo

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This article is about the Liege Maximo that first appeared in Generation 2. For the Liege Maximo from the Aligned continuity family, see Liege Maximo (WFC).
Here I go again on my throne.

Evil is infinite, a natural counterforce to good in the universe that cannot be truly defeated. So when the first Prime was created, so was, necessarily, the Liege Maximo, the robot who now considers himself his opposite, the ultimate evil.

Fiction

Marvel Generation 2 continuity

Marvel Generation 2 comic

From the Liege Maximo were Megatron and the Decepticons descended. The Liege Maximo's throne sat at the Hub, a network of planetoids created by the Cybertronian Empire that existed in the outer fringes of known space.

With the Liege Centuro Jhiaxus destroyed, Jhiaxus's fleet wiped out by The Swarm, and the Autobots and Decepticons united in peace under one banner, Rook reported to the Liege Maximo on the day's devastating events. The Liege Maximo, an ancient and monumental titan, accepted the destruction of Jhiaxus's forces as merely a minor disruption. Sneering at the Transformers' alliance as a fragile thing, the Liege Maximo promised a day of reckoning. A Rage in Heaven!

Alignment

"Alignment" was written by Simon Furman without permission of Hasbro and is included here as pseudocanon to provide insight into authorial intent.

Liege Maximo was one of the thirteen original Transformers created by Primus. Unlike his fellows, he had chosen not to subdivide repeatedly, doing so only selectively. This created a small taint in the Transformer race which spread through subsequent generations, ultimately flowering with the rise of the Decepticons. Because of this sparse sub-division, the Liege Maximo's connection to the divine origins of the Transformer race was comparatively undiluted, and he sought to embrace it. To this end, he instructed Jhiaxus and the Cybertronian Empire to subject various planets to eco-structuring. These planets were steadily woven together to form the Hub, a massive, resonating structure that would allow him to ascend to the realm of the gods. Two Transformer groups, one led by Grimlock and one by Ultra Magnus and Megatron, disrupted this process by forcing the Liege to leave his corporeal body, then destroying both it and his portal. Left with nowhere to go, the Liege Maximo's essence dissipated, and he was destroyed. Alignment

3H comics

The Covenant witnessed a vision of the ancient past, in which the Liege Maximo tore the Matrix of Leadership from the defeated Primon. When and why this happened remain unanswered questions. Covenant

TransTech

The peaceful universe of Axiom Nexus was able to achieve unimaginable feats in technology and scientific discovery, but these were secretly possible by the amoral experiments of Shockwave and his master Jhiaxus under a secret government partnership with the Liege Maximo.[1] An archivist named Optimus and the military professional Megatron exposed Sentinel Prime's ties with the Liege Maximo. After a dramatic, violent battle with the Liege Maximo,[2] much of the government was caught in this controversy, and as a result, few were left standing when the legal proceedings ended. Optimus became the new Prime, and Cybertron entered a new Golden Age, but it was not a complete fresh start, as Megatron convinced the High Senate to allow Shockwave to continue performing experiments under his guidance, and Starscream miraculously emerged unscathed from the incident despite his heavy involvement.[3] The TransTechs thereafter considered this incident to be the closest that their Cybertron had ever come to a Great War as most other universal streams had. Rook - Axiom Nexus News: Investigative Journalist

IDW Generation 1 continuity

Nexus Prime claimed that Liege Maximo collaborated with Megatronus to start a war between the Thirteen Primes and their respective tribes. The war forced most of the Thirteen, including Liege Maximo, to leave Cybertron. He resided on another planet, the location of which was later discovered by Shockwave. As with the other Primes, Shockwave sent one of his Regenesis ores to Maximo's hiding place. The Crucible

Beast Wars: Uprising

Ser-Ket claimed to be part of a warrior lineage that stretched back to the Liege Maximo and others. Head Games

Ask Vector Prime

Vector Prime explained that before the gulf that occurred between Liege and the rest of his siblings, Liege was exceptional at social gatherings, using his fluid tongue to compose legendary lies about adventures throughout the multiverse (and also spun many tales of the Covenant). Vector Prime also noted that he shared many happy moments with his brother in spite of Liege going down in history as a monster.

Vector Prime also noted that Liege and Onyx both utilized female holomatter avatars when dealing with humanity.

In universal stream Primax 994.0 Gamma, Liege Maximo's plot for ascension was foiled by the Autobots, prompting Liege Centuro Firecrest to move the remnants of the Cybertronian Empire to Planet X.

In Primax 490.0 Gamma, the Maximo actually became a heroic figure: devouring Cybertron had caused Primus' essence to be scattered among the surviving Transformers, most of whom were the Cybertronian Empire. The Liege Maximo would lead this reformed army and the survivors of Cybertron against Unicron, finally battling the Chaos Bringer himself on the astral plane. He saved this reality at the cost of his own spark. Ask Vector Prime

Notes

  • "Liege Maximo" was likely meant to be this character's title or rank, while his proper name remained unknown. Whether this holds true with the current interpretation of the character is uncertain. Jhiaxus has a similar title, Liege Centuro.
  • Liege Maximo's name was frequently misspelled as "Leige Maximo" in the Generation 2 comics. Sometimes, both versions were even used on the same page, and once, even in the same sentence.
  • Simon Furman cryptically hinted in comments on his blog that the Liege Maximo would make a return in 2008 in IDW's comics. It didn't happen. The Liege Maximo's presence in the continuity was eventually established in "The Crucible".

References


The Thirteen