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What transformer are you?


thr339z
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whos cooler?  

17 members have voted

  1. 1. whos cooler?

    • the autobots
      7
    • the deceptacons
      10


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According to wikipeida he was like the best one. He has a rocket on his hip bone.

 

Hahaha.. that Wiki article is classic, check this. Wtf?!?!

 

Although never fully explored, it is safe to assume that Ravage, along with his other fellow cassette tapes share some sort of close bond to Soundwave, whether this be as a leader or as a parental-type figure. Whatever the relationship is, the cassettes must coexist with Soundwave for both protection and possibly regeneration, after all they stand more chance of survival housed in his compartment than on their own due to sheer size and power output. As Soundwave's loyalties ultimately rest with Megatron, the cassettes follow suit, obeying their leader's orders without question. Ravage would most likely come to Soundwave's defense or protection in battle, much like a dog and his owner.
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Camshaft is an ironic name, ironic because the signature feature of the RX-7, a rotary engine, does not have a cam. The toy is one of the least known of the 1985 releases as his sub-group, the Omnibots; were three Autobots that were only available by mail-order.

 

The Omnibots were based on the Diaclone line of toys made in Japan, and unlike many other toys imported and turned into Transformers, they remained their original Diaclone colors.

 

Another little-known fact is that the Omnibots were the Autobots' first "triple changers" -- a talent identified more with the Autobots Tracks, Perceptor, and (until 1986) the Decepticon Triple Changers.

 

The original Omnibots' instruction booklets described them as such new additions to the Autobot team that no tech spec data or statistical information was available about them. This left kids and collectors able to use their imagination regarding what personalities and roles the characters would play. No hint was given at possible profiles until a 1987 mail-order catalog was published, with Ultra Magnus giving synopses of each Omnibot's function.

 

He did not appear in any cartoon series and did not make it into an American comic until Dreamwave's "War and Peace" story, but even then he only made a cameo appearance.

 

In the Dreamwave profile books, he was described as a scout who is good at his job as he doesn't want to get damaged or worse meaning he stays away from danger.

 

 

 

Thats probably my favourite, the living contradiction,

mean

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I just think its cool that they based the cartoon on real life cars - and that was all pre-sponsorship product-placement marketting hype crap.

 

Im seeing the film tonight... Still think it will be a better film if the transformers took the same forms as the cartoon series and if they were not bout 3x the size =/

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Thats probably my favourite, the living contradiction,

mean

 

 

That is fuckin badass....

 

Go the fuckin rotor Transformer... talk about form

 

 

Anyone notice that in the movie all the Cars/Trucks/Utility Vehicles are all GM (General Motors)?

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yeah - kinda kills it.

 

Oh well, what can you do aye? Saw the film last night and got what I wanted. Cool robot fights and mindless action. Could have been a lot better but ill stay happy with what the film was.

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Camshaft is an ironic name, ironic because the signature feature of the RX-7, a rotary engine, does not have a cam. The toy is one of the least known of the 1985 releases as his sub-group, the Omnibots; were three Autobots that were only available by mail-order.

 

The Omnibots were based on the Diaclone line of toys made in Japan, and unlike many other toys imported and turned into Transformers, they remained their original Diaclone colors.

 

Another little-known fact is that the Omnibots were the Autobots' first "triple changers" -- a talent identified more with the Autobots Tracks, Perceptor, and (until 1986) the Decepticon Triple Changers.

 

The original Omnibots' instruction booklets described them as such new additions to the Autobot team that no tech spec data or statistical information was available about them. This left kids and collectors able to use their imagination regarding what personalities and roles the characters would play. No hint was given at possible profiles until a 1987 mail-order catalog was published, with Ultra Magnus giving synopses of each Omnibot's function.

 

He did not appear in any cartoon series and did not make it into an American comic until Dreamwave's "War and Peace" story, but even then he only made a cameo appearance.

 

In the Dreamwave profile books, he was described as a scout who is good at his job as he doesn't want to get damaged or worse meaning he stays away from danger.

 

 

 

Thats probably my favourite, the living contradiction,

mean

 

I have that one at home.

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