However, a year later, Jim Sorenson (the writer of this story) and Bill Forster's book, Transformers Animated: The AllSpark Almanac II, included a Transformers Animated incarnation of Sideways that WAS the dimension hopper, and who was heavily implied to be the live-action movie Decepticon as well, hinting that Sideways was a multiversal singularity. In 2009, the live-action film Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen included a Decepticon grunt named Sideways, who again seemed to have no connection to the dimension hopper. Sideways is a character whose massively changed over time he's most famously been depicted in the "Unicron Trilogy" cartoons of Transformers: Armada and Transformers: Cybertron as a servant of Unicron the name was previously used in Transformers: Robots in Disguise for an Autobot who seemingly had no connection to the herald of Unicron, but when a Sideways toy was released in the Japanese Transformers: Robotmasters toyline, set in the world of the Japanese Generation 1 continuity, all of the characters named Sideways were linked as dimension hoppers. Maccadam's Old Oil House is the most famous bar on Cybertron, first introduced in issue #82 of the Marvel UK The Transformers comic, having since gone on to appear in many new stories. The film properly introduced Cybertron's moons, Moonbase One and Moonbase Two. Section 1: The story opens with a paraphrased version of the iconic "It is the year 2005" narration that Victor Caroli provided in The Transformers: The Movie. I'll break each chapter up by sections, delineated by the five stars. Each one has a title, taken from IDW Publishing's four-issue mini-series adapting the movie, Transformers: The Animated Movie. The story is split up into four chapters. Moto/Motosan replaces Blurr, and Tri-Trak (who seems to have been accidentally colored as Cy-Kill) replaces Rodimus Prime. Fracture replaces the transforming Cyclonus, Deadlift replaces Scourge, Squirt replaces Wheelie, Bent Wing replaces Springer, Tail Pipe replaces Arcee, Major Mo replaces Ultra Magnus, Throttle replaces Kup, Mr.
Otherwise: Galvatron's ship (named as the Revenge in Jim's co-written book with Bill Forster, Transformers: The Complete Ark) is replaced with a modified version of a Thruster-I'll explain more as we get to the actual terms in story-while the Autobot shuttle (seen several times in the movie, with one being piloted by Ironhide and crew at the start, and two latter seen in the middle of the movie after the Autobots flee Autobot City) is replaced by a Command Center, with the Decepticons chasing it being replaced by the Sweeps of Deadlift. Unicron and Galvatron are the only ones who are the same as on the poster, and even then, Galvatron is drawn based on his IDW Publishing Cybertronian body, created by artist Guido Guidi for Spotlight: Galvatron. And so, we begin the story off with the "cover image", based on the American poster for The Transformers: The Movie.
GOBOT CRANE SERIES
Applied Multiversal and Megaversal Studies, Quarterly is just patterned after a typical academic journal the idea of the Megaverse comes from the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe-the Megaverse covers series published by them that don't really fit into the main Multiversal model, such as the New Universe or the Ultraverse for Marvel. He mentioned that one of his students, Blueshift (a TransTech version of the Velocitronian theoretical scientist mentioned in Transformers: Exiles), had written a paper about this brief universe, thus the question here. Vector Prime (specifically, the TransTech version of the character), indicated it was a game between two incarnations of Cybertron and GoBotron that created a brief, unstable Iocus cluster, merging aspects of the two universes. Over on Renegade Rhetoric, Cy-Kill mentioned an "invasion" of Cybertron by GoBots that Gong had mentioned. Let's start with the opening post, published on January 10, 2016. I'll go a bit more in-depth on the characters as they appear in the story. It retells the events of The Transformers: The Movie, altered by multiversal menace Sideways and interdimensional trickster Gong to include aspects of the universe of the GoBots. "Echoes and Fragments" is a brief, four-chapter prose story published on Ask Vector Prime, written by Jim Sorenson and with illustrations by Chris Colgin.