While some might try to disagree, try to call it out as a form of forced inclusivity, it's hard to deny that Transformers is a toyline mostly aimed at boys, and for a while, female characters were a no-show. While female characters have existed since G1, it took until Beast Wars for the girls to be getting toys, with Blackarachnia's first toy being a repaint of Tarantulus, and the first toy to be made from the ground up to be a girl being Transmetal Airazor. "What about Arcee!" I hear you say, well, while she apparently had prototypes and sketches, her first toy was a retool of Transmetal 2 Blackarachnia, as a convention exclusive in 2001. her first toy was in the same wave as today's review, in 2014. And people wonder why we're getting at least one female Transformer each line now? Granted, that wasn't her first toy, as every time she's had appearances in a show of even the live action films, she's had a toy. The reason I say that is because Chromia here is a repaint of one of those toys, from Transformers Prime, something that is surprisingly common because, for all her appearances, she's never had a unique mould. How well does this look work for her? Well, one way to find out.
Sunday, 16 September 2018
Sunday, 9 September 2018
Transformers Power of the Primes Leader Class Orion Pax/Optimus Prime: Two toys for the price of one
Optimus Prime combining with his trailer to get stronger is not something new. Powermaster Prime did it (originally), I know off the top of my head that it's something that the Robots in Disguise 2001 toy did along with Armada and Cybertron. one of the toys for Dark of the Moon even did it (I couldn't tell you if he did in the film, other then it's implied that he did). However, there is something that the others haven't really done, and that was introduced Prime's identity before he became a Prime into this formula, Orion Pax. See, the gimmick of the Leader Class Power of the Primes toys was the ability to turn a toy that's roughly Deluxe sized into a Leader Class toy with some extra armour. For some characters, this worked out well. Others... not so much. Apologies Primal, this is one case where Truck is better then Monkey... oh you thought fans complaining about changes was something new in this Fandom? It's been going on longer then I've been alive. Anyway, how well does this hold up? Is this the superior Prime Wars trilogy Prime? Ok, that one I can answer now as yes because it looks the closest to what many fans consider Optimus Prime to look like, but that's beside the point.
Sunday, 2 September 2018
Transformers Titans Return Leader Class Powermaster Optimus Prime: When the white one gets to be the original
Oh Titans Return, a line of strong potential, great figures with few duds, but alas, unable to capitalize on its full potential, with many believed shoe in faces never to get the light of day. Apeface and Snapdragon, a pair of triple changer headmasters in a line of triple changing headmasters? Nope. Star Saber and the other Brainmasters? Nope. Well known and well-loved headmasters in the community? Maybe as standalone Titan Masters. The first two waves even had teases of returning cassette bots and cons in the Legends class to connect to Leader class Blaster and Soundwave (yes I know the irony of not reviewing that figure still, even though I go by Blaster, in some form, online), yet neither Blaster or Soundwave got their full set of iconic cassettes. The line as a whole really felt like, at least to me, it had some more room to grow, especially in Japan where the figures eventually started getting Targetmaster companions to go alongside the figures that were originally Targetmasters in the Generation 1 toyline. What was also very annoying was the distribution from wave 3 onwards here, let alone the exclusives. "No Hasbro, absolutely no one here in Australia wanted those exclusives. No one wanted Nautica, or Tidal Wave, or Magnus Prime, or Brainstorm, or Quickswitch, or Arcee, or a full set of Monsterbots". (I'd love to give a review of those three, but the only one I have is Twinferno). Apparently they also really didn't want to make a Godbomber and left Takara to do him and a Powermaster Prime that can connect to it. What did we get at general retail? A repaint of Combiner Wars Ultra Magnus. Well seeing as Magnus isn't here to defend himself, let's see what this Prime's made of as we delve into a somewhat mini-marathon of Combining Primes, starting with the one who can't combine unless you get him from Japan!
Sunday, 26 August 2018
Tamagotchi Mini: Unnecessarily simplifying for the modern day before it was cool
Yes, this is the best tie into Digimon that I can do at the moment. In my defence, this is basically what Digimon started off as. It wasn't a Pokemon rip off, it was a Tamagotchi rip off.
It's somewhat surprising what things just won't die. I don't know if it's a testament to how beloved Tamagotchi's are, or that people really don't want real pets. While the original Tamagotchi's were released just before my time (I was alive, but you don't give small electronics to a one-year-old), they did get a small resurgence when I was in Primary School with the "Tamagotchi Connection" line around the mid-2000's. Now in 2018, they're back again with a re-release of the Tamagotchi Mini's, and the originals apparently getting a re-release in a few months (at least in the US according to a Wiki I'm using to make sure I get some dates roughly right). Aimed purely at nostalgic fans of the original toys, I figured it would be somewhat interesting to see how well these things hold up by today's standards. Will this appeal to kids nowadays? One way to find out.
It's somewhat surprising what things just won't die. I don't know if it's a testament to how beloved Tamagotchi's are, or that people really don't want real pets. While the original Tamagotchi's were released just before my time (I was alive, but you don't give small electronics to a one-year-old), they did get a small resurgence when I was in Primary School with the "Tamagotchi Connection" line around the mid-2000's. Now in 2018, they're back again with a re-release of the Tamagotchi Mini's, and the originals apparently getting a re-release in a few months (at least in the US according to a Wiki I'm using to make sure I get some dates roughly right). Aimed purely at nostalgic fans of the original toys, I figured it would be somewhat interesting to see how well these things hold up by today's standards. Will this appeal to kids nowadays? One way to find out.
Sunday, 19 August 2018
Sixshot Showdown: Hasbro's Titans Return Leader Class Sixshot vs Iron Factory Legends Scaled Shadow Tengu
Yes, I know, this should be a review of a Tamagotchi, but I got one of the Iron Factory one in recently, and wanted an excuse to review it and the official one from last year. Two bots, six modes each, I'm sure it'll be fun, right? Want to see who the better Phase Sixer is?
I'll start off with one flaw they share. They share it with each other, they share it with the G1 toy, it will be a problem Sixshots will have so long as they look anything like this and do the six-changer gimmick (the one exception I can think of was that one time in Energon he was a Shockblast repaint, "Who in itself was totally not meant to be Shockwave, totally different character, ignore the similarities!"... it was something Hasbro did back then if they couldn't get the name rights again. At least it's better than Shockwaveblast). The problem is a problem the gimmick has built into it. See, Sixshot's whole gimmick is that he is a Six changer, a toy that officially has six modes. In the case of Sixshot, we have a robot, a car, a tank, a gun, a jet, and a wolf mode. The problem is that with any Transformer, the more modes you have in a toy, the worse each mode gets. Generally, a Sixshot's best mode is his robot mode, with any others being hit or miss at best. On the plus side, this means that this character is far more playable than any other Transformer toy, and the multiple modes encourage fan mode finding like the now infamous flying wolf mode, but if you're looking for a feasible looking car, or tank, or jet, or gun, or wolf, you might want to go get a Transformer that only turns into one of them.
I'll start off with one flaw they share. They share it with each other, they share it with the G1 toy, it will be a problem Sixshots will have so long as they look anything like this and do the six-changer gimmick (the one exception I can think of was that one time in Energon he was a Shockblast repaint, "Who in itself was totally not meant to be Shockwave, totally different character, ignore the similarities!"... it was something Hasbro did back then if they couldn't get the name rights again. At least it's better than Shockwaveblast). The problem is a problem the gimmick has built into it. See, Sixshot's whole gimmick is that he is a Six changer, a toy that officially has six modes. In the case of Sixshot, we have a robot, a car, a tank, a gun, a jet, and a wolf mode. The problem is that with any Transformer, the more modes you have in a toy, the worse each mode gets. Generally, a Sixshot's best mode is his robot mode, with any others being hit or miss at best. On the plus side, this means that this character is far more playable than any other Transformer toy, and the multiple modes encourage fan mode finding like the now infamous flying wolf mode, but if you're looking for a feasible looking car, or tank, or jet, or gun, or wolf, you might want to go get a Transformer that only turns into one of them.
Who here better lives up to the legacy of this guy? |
Sunday, 12 August 2018
Transformers Combiner Wars Leader Class Armada Megatron: And people thought Optimus was stretching the definition of a combiner...
The move away from Generation 1 into Generation 2 was not kind to Megatron, was it? Well, that depends on how you look at it honestly as he was one of a few characters that got new toys in Generation 2, mostly because he wasn't allowed to be a gun anymore. Since then Megs has bounced around between alt mode, but the one he always comes back to after he's done being weird by being a space car, or a dragon, or a hand, or a Nerf gun in order to try and please both fans and people that have real power, is a Tank. Why? Your main villain is a gun, what else are you going to turn him into when you need to change him other than a giant gun on tracks? Normally that would be the end of it, make a new Tank Megs, make it a Voyager or a Leader, shove it out in a wave in a new toy line and be done with it. Combiner Wars Wave 1 though did actually try to keep the Combiner label for its Leader class figures. There was just one small problem... Megatron doesn't really do combining, does he? There are only two that I recall, being the Cybertron one where he combined with an evil Lion (cause they needed some excuse to keep the Nemesis name), and Armada, where he combined with Tidal Wave. To Hasbro though, connecting Minicons is close enough to combining so a few additions to the mould, a new head and a new colour scheme later and you've got yourself a Combiner Wars Armada Megatron!
Sunday, 5 August 2018
Lego Star Wars; The Clone Wars set number 7675; AT-TE: Six legs are better then four!
I, like many others, enjoyed Star Wars The Clone Wars when it was originally airing. I enjoyed the character interpretations, the story ideas, the story structure, to me, it is the best thing set in the Prequel era, the second being Revenge of the Sith. The pilot movie was honestly the first Star Wars film I saw at cinemas. Like many others, I am looking forward to the final season finally being made, even if it's for a streaming service. Do I think it's going to live up to the hype? No, mostly because we know they're sticking to the original plans for the season, and some of those episodes have already been released (albeit in a very, very unfinished state). Unlike some people, I'm not calling for Lucasarts management to be sent to the internet equivalent of the Gallows, and am not believing the "management's going to ruin Clone Wars". To take a stab at that fandom, it's hard to believe anything's "the worst thing to happen to Star Wars" now when the same thing has been said about a lot of things. Do I need to bring up the joke I made when I was reviewing the Flash animation version of Clone Wars where the "let's look at the version of Star Wars fans love to forget exists" could be said about Episode 1, Episode 2, Episode 3, Episode 7, The Clone Wars, something I can't remember because this was when I was using linked imaged rather than uploading them so its now a dead link, the Christmas Special and Clone Wars? (Before anyone brings it up, the inclusion of Clone Wars and Episode 7 was a stab at the "Star Wars is only the original trilogy" crowd, and the review was actually done before Episode 7 came out, back in September 2015).
Back on topic, ever since 1999, Lego has been making Lego sets based on Star Wars and its films, original expanded universe, current expanded universe, shows, games, Lego made spin-offs, basically if you can name a vehicle in Star Wars that is somewhat recognizable to general audiences, there's a good chance Lego has made at least one set based on it and the more well known the vehicle is, the more versions of it Lego has made (on Brickpedia under Star Wars, there are 16 results of sets that have X-Wing in the name, just as an example). With the 20th anniversary next year, it's a safe bet Lego is going to keep this IP as long as possible and will try to renew the licence in 2022. For now though, let's look at the Prequel Walker five years in the making (the one before this one came out in 2003 for Attack of the Clones), let's look at The Clone Wars AT-TE.
Back on topic, ever since 1999, Lego has been making Lego sets based on Star Wars and its films, original expanded universe, current expanded universe, shows, games, Lego made spin-offs, basically if you can name a vehicle in Star Wars that is somewhat recognizable to general audiences, there's a good chance Lego has made at least one set based on it and the more well known the vehicle is, the more versions of it Lego has made (on Brickpedia under Star Wars, there are 16 results of sets that have X-Wing in the name, just as an example). With the 20th anniversary next year, it's a safe bet Lego is going to keep this IP as long as possible and will try to renew the licence in 2022. For now though, let's look at the Prequel Walker five years in the making (the one before this one came out in 2003 for Attack of the Clones), let's look at The Clone Wars AT-TE.
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