Universal stream

From MediaWiki
Revision as of 22:40, 24 July 2015 by Giggidy (talk | contribs) (This page is getting much cleaner! Perhaps listing just a few tentpole streams might make sense? I don't want to add clutter, but I think this looks pretty decent.)
Jump to navigationJump to search
"Hey, let's call this new stream 'Phartz'."
"Heh heh. Cool."

A universal stream is the designator used by the TransTech to describe a single universe/dimension/reality within the Multiverse. The TransTech have catalogued 15,962,782 universal streams (1,176,325 of which have "come to termination"), grouping related universes into what are known as universal clusters and devising a classification system used to give each individual stream an alphanumeric designation.

Universal clusters

There are six "main" universal clusters:

Other minor clusters include:

Clusters in the farthest reaches of the multiverse only tenuously connected to the Transformers include:

Deciphering the terminology

Basically, you could classify this as a universe, Tyran 1208.04 Lambda cos it's a movie cover from 4th December 2008.

Someone will do it too.
For further information, see: List of universal streams

Each universal stream's name consists of three parts, beginning with the continuity family of origin, a number that indicates the "real world" date of creation, and a Greek letter that denotes the form of media. Supplied by writers Greg Sepelak, Trent Troop, and Jim Sorenson, the list of Greek letters and the media to which they refer are:

  • Alpha—animated series
  • Beta—tech spec/toy/pack-in comic only ("box")
  • Gamma—comic book series
  • Delta—motion picture/live action
  • Epsilon—club/convention fiction
  • Zeta—text stories, storybooks, and other prose works (printed)
  • Eta—radio/audiocentric universes, books on tape
  • Theta—live performance/spoken word
  • Iota—Internet-only information (not involved with club/convention)
  • Kappa—games (video and otherwise)
  • Lambda—covers, still images, and advertisements (there's so many Lambdas these days that Vector Prime stopped keeping track Ask Vector Prime)

So, for example, Primax 984.17 Alpha refers to the continuity of the original Generation 1 cartoon, with "Primax" referring to the Generation 1 continuity family, "984.17" indicating the first episode's airdate of September 17, 1984, and "Alpha" denoting an animated series. Using this information, we could, in theory, determine the names of yet-unnamed universes on our own—for example, the Galaxy Force manga would be designated "Aurex 105.15 Gamma".

How many streams?

The size of the multiverse is vast and unknown. While the TransTech have records of just shy of sixteen million universes, there are certainly many more. When the Autobots of universal stream Aurex 402.0 Gamma began scanning alternate realities when their Optimus Prime became lost in the multiverse, they worked through 75,890,007 realities in addition to their own before locating him. Worlds Collide, Part 4 of 4 Dimensional traveller Bug Bite from Gargent 984.08 Alpha, meanwhile, has claimed that there are over fifteen quadrillion concurrent realities, Games of Deception though it seems likely this figure includes the entire Omniverse.

Major streams

Well over a hundred streams have been named, over half of which are Primax realities. The most influential realities, to date, have been:

See also