Optimus Prime (Transformers)
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- This article refers to the character from the original Transformers universe. For other uses see Optimus Prime (disambiguation).
Optimus Prime is a fictional character from the Transformers franchise. According to the character's backstory, after his ship crashed on Earth, Optimus remained unconscious for millions of years until an earthquake on Tuesday, May 8, 1984 awoke the ship's repair system, which then repaired him and adapted him to have the ability to transform into an Earth vehicle. Prime is the leader of the Autobots, a faction of heroic Transformers from the fictional planet Cybertron who wage their battles to destroy the evil forces of the Decepticons. He is depicted as a heroic, brave and compassionate character who puts all his talent to use to improve the universe around him. Optimus has a strong sense of justice and righteousness, and has dedicated himself to the protection of all life, particularly the inhabitants of Earth; he will battle his foes with unyielding resolve.[1]
The original Optimus Prime transforms into a cab over truck. The truck's cab transforms into the robot mode of Prime himself, with vast strength and armed with a laser rifle. Contained within his chest is the mystic talisman known as the Autobot Matrix of Leadership (or Creation Matrix, depending on the continuity), carried by all Autobot leaders and passed down through the ages. The comic book continuities tend to claim that Optimus' direct predecessor as Prime and thus bearer of the Matrix was Sentinel Prime, a fact which is part of the Dreamwave comics canon. In the cartoon continuity, it is unknown from whom Optimus inherited the talisman, as Optimus is already named as a Prime when Alpha Trion rebuilds him from his former self—which appears to indicate that Alpha Trion may have given Prime the Matrix at that point, just after the transformation of Orion Pax into Optimus Prime. This change is depicted in the episode War Dawn. The truck's trailer disconnects and transforms into the Combat Deck, a mobile battle-station/command headquarters with an "Auto-Launcher" robot armed with assorted artillery and beam weapons. It can also serve as a radio antenna for battlefield communications between the Autobots. The Combat Deck can launch Prime's third component, Roller, a mobile scout buggy that can easily slip behind enemy lines. Optimus' senses are tied into Roller's, and can perceive what Roller does. Injury to one component is felt by each of the others, and while Prime could survive the destruction of either, despite the slight degree of autonomy they possess, the Combat Deck and Roller would not be able to survive without him.
Additional powers included in the animated series and comics are short-range optic blasts, holographic map projections and deployable hydro-foils designed by Wheeljack which allowed Prime and the other Autobots to traverse bodies of water with ease. One of Prime's abilities was the ability to retract his right hand unit and replace it with a glowing axe.
Across the assorted continuities of the original Transformers universe, there have been various interpretations of Optimus Prime. One of Prime's most notable characteristics in any form was his adamant commitment to leadership by example, and avoidance of any hypocrisy in his command, but beyond this, the animated series leaned towards Optimus Prime as a straightforward, wise and essentially upbeat battlefield general. The Marvel Comics series, on the other hand, in addition to these more obvious characteristics, suggested a Prime secretly plagued by self-doubt and, more importantly, a conflicted sense of pacifism that often made him an extremely reluctant warrior. It was occasionally implied that the conflict with the Decepticons lasted as long as it did primarily because of his unwillingness to take a more aggressive stance.
The animated series revealed other minor details about Optimus Prime's personality and personal life — for example, his dislike of rap music ("Blaster Blues" and "Quest for Survival"), which set him at odds with music-loving characters like Blaster and Jazz. Prime also enjoys televised sports, most notably basketball which he even plays ("The Master Builder"), as well as setting up a basketball court outside the Ark. Though Prime's personality is like that of a human man age 40-50, he is not above watching afternoon soap operas (in the episode "Prime Target", he is heard groaning out loud when the soap opera he is watching with the other Autobots gets interrupted for a news report).
Comic series
Marvel Comics
Note: Stories from the U.K. Marvel Transformers series are in italics.
In Marvel Comics' comic series, before the Great War broke out on Cybertron, the robot who would be Optimus Prime (before he received the Matrix of Leadership from Sentinel Prime) was a Transformer of note, displaying his skills in the Infraformers Sharpshooting Competition. Subsequently, when the war began, Prime quickly made a name for himself as a combat leader of the Autobots.
On a mission with the Triggerbots to stop Megatron from claiming the Underbase, Prime was forced to jettison the massive databank into space to prevent anyone from acquiring its power, and with this action, he proved his wisdom and skill to the Autobot Council of Elders. This led to even more rapid advancement, eventually leading him to field command over the Autobot armies.
Four million years ago, Cybertron — shaken from its orbit and drifting through space — came under threat when it floated into the path of an asteroid swarm. Prime led a group of elite Autobot warriors on the Autobot starship, the Ark, on a mission to destroy the asteroids, and although successful, in the aftermath of this mission the Ark was attacked by Decepticons, hoping to overcome their weakened foes. Intent on keeping the secrets of the Ark from the Decepticons, Prime set the craft on a suicide course, crashing it into the prehistoric planet Earth.
In 1984 A.D., a volcanic eruption re-activated the Ark, which in turn brought the Transformers back on-line. Prime led the Autobots in their opening battles to prevent the Decepticons from plundering Earth's resources, but following their initial victory, the Transformers were all deactivated by Shockwave. Prime was decapitated by Shockwave, and had the energy of the Creation Matrix leeched from his mind to give life to Shockwave's creations, the Constructicons (although Shockwave was unaware that the Matrix was not merely a program in Prime's mind, but a physical object in his chest). Before Shockwave could give life to his next Decepticon, Jetfire, Prime transferred the Matrix energy into the mind of Buster Witwicky, who used the energy to turn Jetfire on Shockwave, allowing Prime to reclaim his body and retake leadership of the Autobots, giving Jetfire true life as a reward.
Around this time, he would even meet Ronald Reagan in a story in the 1985 U.K. annual.
Meanwhile, however, the U.K. offices of Marvel Comics were producing their own storylines. Here, writer Simon Furman offered a different take on Prime, one that was weary of the war he had been forced to fight. In the "Prey" storyline beginning in U.K. #96 Prime arranged for a Wheeljack built copy of himself to be destroyed to see how the Autobots could cope without him. Unfortunately the plan was derailed by Megatron and the Predacons, who attacked him. During the battle Prime, Megatron and Ultra Magnus were transported to Earth — with Prime accidentally interrupting his own funeral service. This theme of war-weariness would again come to the fore in the U.K. strips detailing Prime's U.S. death.
After a period of effective leadership which saw the activation of several new Transformers including the Aerialbots, who Prime infused with life using the Matrix, Prime engaged Megatron in a video game duel for possession of a super fuel. Prime was victorious, but Megatron implemented a cheat code that killed Prime later. Autobot surgeon Ratchet's subsequent efforts to restore him were unsuccessful, and his body was launched into space, the Autobots unaware of the presence of the physical Matrix object within the corpse. The funeral barge eventually crashed on a giant moon; as it lay there for an untold time, the Matrix reached out to nearby living organisms, studying and recreating them. One such recreated being became known as Death Bringer.
Prime's personality had been copied onto a floppy disk by the technician running the game, Ethan Zachary, who employed him in various video game scenarios he developed. Prime's damaged mind led him to believe that he himself was a video game character, and in an attempt to bring him back to life, Goldbug, Joyride, Slapdash and Getaway took the disk to the planet Nebulos. They built a new body for Optimus Prime, and even upgraded it with the ability to combine with the trailer to form a larger robot. In an effort to keep Transformers off their planet, however, the Nebulans had poisoned their fuel, and the sensation of dying convinced Prime that he was truly alive, and not a game character. To save his life, the Nebulan scientist Hi-Q bonded with him, creating Powermaster Optimus Prime. A UK story set around this time in UK #198 would see Prime as the star of his own Christmas special, as he returned to Earth and tried to rekindle his feeling for the planet. After a battle between his own forces and an advance force from Cybertron ruined a small town's Christmas festivities he realized bringing the Transformers to Earth was far worse than anything his troops could have done and vowed to protect its inhabitants from Decepticon aggression.
Optimus Prime's first actions as leader were to ally the Autobots with Scorponok's Decepticons in defeating Starscream when the latter gained the power of the Underbase.
In the U.K. Transformers stories, Prime and his Autobots later battled a murderous mechanoid named Death Bringer, which Prime recognized as a creation of the Matrix.
Later, the Transformers were all transported to Cybertron by Primus to battle Unicron, Prime managed to successfully reacquire and purify the Matrix after Unicron killed Thunderwing and his taint upon it. Prime then sacrificed his life one more time to destroy Unicron by plunging the Matrix into his maw. However, the Powermaster process had been working to fully bond Prime and Hi-Q, and with Prime now destroyed, the process completed itself in Hi-Q's body, and the two minds and souls became one. Hi-Q's biomechanical body was stripped down and reconstructed by the Last Autobot, resurrecting Optimus Prime once more with the two minds now one. Prime joined with the other Transformers on the planet Klo and routed Bludgeon's Decepticons.
Prime would appear in the U.K. Marvel comic issue #234, "Prime's Rib!" This story is set in the near future, 1995, where Optimus Prime, Jazz and Hot Rod introduce the latest Autobot, Arcee, to the human feminists. She was met with displeasure by the humans, being called a token female and disliked for her pink color. They were then attacked by Shockwave, Fangry, Horri-Bull and Squeezeplay, who thought the Autobot would be unveiling a new weapon. The Autobots fought off the Decepticons, who escaped, but nothing seemed to please the human feminists.
An undisclosed period of time later, at the beginning of the Transformers: Generation 2 comic book sequel series, Prime was restored to a form resembling his original body, and he and the Transformers found themselves caught in the schemes of a "second generation" of Cybertronians led by the icy Jhiaxus, who were colonizing and cyber-forming other worlds. Plagued by nightmarish visions of a life-destroying entity called "the Swarm," Prime looked into Cybertron's past and discovered that Jhiaxus and his kind were the result of further unintentional Transformer reproduction, their nature and intent distilled to the purest, most unemotional form of conquest, and that the Swarm was the by-product of this process. Entering into an alliance with the recreated Megatron's Decepticons to combat the Swarm and Jhiaxus, Prime was consumed by the abomination and destroyed, but at the last moment, unleashed the energies of the Matrix into the Swarm, purifying it. In parting, the Swarm recreated Prime in a new form, (based on his "Hero" toy), and he and Megatron set out to lead the united Autobots and Decepticons into a new age.[2]
Fun publications
Based on the Classics toy line, the Timelines 2007 story is set 15 years after the end of the Marvel Comics story (ignoring all events of the Marvel U.K. and Generation 2 comics). Megatron survived the crash of the Ark on Earth, reformatted himself into a new form and now leads Ramjet, Skywarp, Soundwave, Starscream and the Constructicons. Optimus Prime has also returned to Earth commanding Bumblebee, Cliffjumper, Grimlock, Jetfire, Mirage and Rodimus (formerly Hot Rod).
In Crossing Over when the Cybertronians Skyfall and Landquake arrive on Earth unexpectedly Megatron attempts to destroy them, but Optimus Prime and his Autobots are able to drive Megatron away.
Convention comics
During Simon Furman's 'Alignment,' a text story available through the British Transformers convention called 'Transforce,' it is mentioned Prime fell during what was intended to be the final conflict with the Decepticons at Pinea Omicron, long after the events of the Generation 2 comic book. He managed to defeat Galvatron II but in doing so was damaged such that Grimlock had to engage a stasis field around him to save his flickering Spark, making Prime a "living war monument."
Though Prime's ultimate fate is unknown, in a story entitled 'The Last Days of Optimus Prime,' also from Transforce, Prime laments the new Transformers age without war and it seems he passes on to a Transformers afterlife referred to as 'J'nwan.' However the story is vague and may be a metaphor for Prime rejoining the Matrix as his time had come. In this realm, he was approached by the Predacon Sandstorm, who tried to plead for the help of Prime and the other legendary Transformers in dealing with a Unicron/Predacon hybrid named Shokaract. Prime refused, but later led a group of Transformers (including Megatron, Grimlock and Soundwave) to distract the creature while Primus dealt the killing blow.
IDW Publishing
When IDW Publishing received the comic rights to The Transformers, author Simon Furman was hired to oversee the line. Furman decided that the Generation 1 continuity "was in need of ... a contemporary restart" so that the comic could retain a modern audience.[3] Furman's revised continuity establishes Optimus Prime as the present-day leader of an Autobot army spread across the galaxy in small units, waging a covert war against teams of Decepticon infiltrators over resource-rich worlds. The Stormbringer miniseries explains that the Transformer homeworld of Cybertron is a dead planet, ravaged by an ancient cataclysm caused by the Autobot-Decepticon War, one which forced Prime to ally with his arch-rival Megatron to eventually halt. In the series, the interference of Jetfire and the Technobots in a plot organized by the Decepticon Bludgeon alerts Prime to the possibility that the Cybertronian cataclysm might be re-ignited and spread to other planets. Prime calls in the Wreckers, meeting them on the surface of Cybertron in time to witness the return of the being called Thunderwing, the focal point of the apocalypse. The combined efforts of Prime, the Wreckers, Jetfire, Predacon-led Decepticons and a unit of aging Centurion drones are barely enough to render Thunderwing inert.
Bludgeon's recovered files bring Optimus Prime to Earth, where an Autobot detachment led by Prowl has discovered that a Decepticon infiltration unit led by Starscream has broken standard protocol after discovering a new form of Energon. This Ore-13 appears to be the same "Ultra-Energon" that Bludgeon used to restore Thunderwing, dormant for millennia after the apocalypse, to life, and Starscream has already used it to fuel a failed attempt to usurp Megatron's leadership (as detailed in the Infiltration miniseries).
In the Escalation miniseries, Megatron himself engages Prime and, boosted by Ore-13, overcomes him. Believing their leader dead, the rest of the Autobots attempt to buy the newly-arrived Hot Rod time to collect the clone, but Prime — who has transferred his consciousness to a backup memory in his trailer command post — advises them to exploit Ore-13's weakness and assault Megatron all-out, catalyzing the Decepticon leader's Energon supply and crippling him.
New Avengers/Transformers
Bumblebee, Jazz, Optimus Prime, Prowl and Ratchet appeared in New Avengers/Transformers crossover by Marvel Comics and IDW Publishing in 2007.[4]
Dreamwave Productions
In the 21st century reimagining of the original continuity by Dreamwave Productions, Optimus Prime started life as Optronix (Orion to his friends), a data archivist. After taking note of a battle in which the Autobot leader Sentinel Prime had been killed by Megatron, he was summoned to the Council of Elders and informed that the Matrix had chosen him to be the next leader of the Autobots. He received the Autobot Matrix of Leadership shortly thereafter, and almost arranged for the Autobot evacuation of Cybertron, intending to leave the Decepticons to their own devices, until a battle with Megatron beneath the planet's surface, accompanied by visions from the Matrix, stirred him on to fight for the safety of his homeworld. It is interesting to note that in this reimagining, Optimus actually was physically changed in appearance and size by the Matrix during the events of the first volume of War Within.[5]
Some time into his role as leader, Prime disappeared in a spacebridge experiment along with Megatron, but returned some time later, having spent a period of time on Quintessa. Events during this period have gone unrecorded as a result of Dreamwave's closure.
The actual events of the Autobots and Decepticon coming to Earth were never printed by Dreamwave comics, but flashbacks of the events were seen which suggest evenkening of the Transformers on Earth, the Autobots allied with humankind and eventually defeated the Decepticons at the turn of the century. They planned to return to Cybertron aboard the newly constructed Ark II, but the ship was destroyed as part of a military conspiracy to take control of the Transformers. However, a terrorist organization run by the enigmatic Lazarus was able to seize control of several of the Transformers that fell back to Earth, while the U.S. military located Prime's body. Before his departure, Prime had entrusted a small portion of the Matrix to Spike Witwicky, who was forced by the product chief, General Hallo, to use it to reactivate Prime. Functional again, Prime used the Matrix to reactivate more of his fallen comrades, and then faced off against Megatron in San Francisco.
Following this, Prime began to experience subconscious urgings, leading both the Autobots and the Decepticons to the Arctic Circle, where Shockwave arrived to greet them — and arrest them as war criminals. Shockwave had succeeded in ending the war on Cybertron, but Prime soon fell in with a rebel Autobot group that had discovered Shockwave had greater agenda. Rallying Transformers across Cybertron to the cause, Prime faced Shockwave in battle but was defeated and had the Matrix ripped from him and used to activate Vector Sigma. Before Shockwave could make full use of the mega-computer's data, however, Ultra Magnus (in this continuity, Prime's brother) arrived and bested him. The injuries Prime took in this conflicted necessitated a prolonged restoration period in stasis but Dreamwave's closure meant that Prime never appeared in their pages again.
Art from unreleased issues later showed Optimus Prime awakening from the cryo regeneration chamber and freeing Alpha Trion from Shockwave's lab.
Prime would make one further surprise appearance in Dreamwave's Transformers: Armada comic series, although it would not be the Prime of the Dreamwave first series. When the Optimus Prime of the Armada universe disappeared, pulled into another dimension by the power of Unicron, the Chaos-Bringer sent something back in his stead — a nearly dead Optimus Prime from that universe, who warned the Transformers of Unicron's coming into their universe before dying.
Cartoon
Animated series
As seen in the episode "War Dawn", Optimus Prime began his life as a robot named Orion Pax, a mostly defenseless dock worker during the Golden Age of Cybertron nine million years ago, with a girlfriend named Ariel, and a best friend named Dion. At the time, a new breed of robot had recently appeared on the planet with new flight capabilities in robot mode that made Orion idolize them. Unfortunately for Orion, when Megatron, the leader of the new group of robots, approached him with inquiries about using one of the dock warehouses, Orion was swayed by Megatron, and he and Ariel were severely wounded when Megatron and his forces then attacked in order to claim the energy stored there. Searching for someone to help them, the time-displaced Aerialbots took Orion and Ariel to the ancient Autobot, Alpha Trion, who used them as the first subjects for the new reconstruction process he had developed — rebuilding the frail Autobot frames into battle-hardy configurations. With this reconstruction, Orion Pax became Optimus Prime, the first of the Autobot warriors.
Optimus took the mantle of leadership as the civil war against the Decepticons erupted, and would remain in that position for the next four million years. Ariel was rebuilt into Elita One, the commander of the Autobot resistance on Cybertron. The fate of Dion is left unrevealed. It has been speculated by fans that Dion might have become Ironhide or Ultra Magnus just as Orion and Ariel became Optimus and Elita, but this remains fan speculation only, and there is no evidence to support the idea, Ironhide's close friendship with Optimus notwithstanding.
As leader of the Autobots, Prime headed up their mission to search out new worlds with new sources of energy to revitalize the depleted Cybertron. Optimus vowed to Elita that he would return from his mission for her, but just before the launch of the Ark, Optimus was mistakenly led to believe Elita was killed. Shortly after its launch, the Autobots' craft was attacked by the Decepticons' space cruiser, the Nemesis, and boarded by Megatron and the Decepticons. In the ensuing struggle, the G-forces of a nearby planet pulled both craft down, and the Autobots' ship crashed into a volcano, thrusting all the occupants into emergency stasis. Four million years later, in the Earth year 1984 A.D., a volcanic eruption jarred the ship's computer, Teletraan I back to life, and it reactivated the Decepticons, programming them with new Earth-based disguise modes. As a parting gesture, Starscream fired upon the Autobot ship, creating a landslide. The vibrations from that landslide knocked Prime into the path of the computer's restoration beam, restoring him to life, and beginning the war anew on Earth.
Prime was perpetually at the forefront of the action throughout the early years of the war on Earth, usually confronting Megatron, and, in some rare instances, being forced to team up with him for the greater good (or the lesser evil) - such as against the Insecticon-controlled Decepticons or the Combaticons. He has suffered his fair share of battlefield scrapes, almost meeting his end when his vital cosmotron component was critically damaged by the Decepticon jets and Laserbeak, having his body be disassembled and turned into Decepticon trophies (such as turning much of his body into a pet "alligaticon" and one of his arms into a defense laser).
Prime suffered a severe — though unfair — defeat when Megatron challenged him to one-on-one combat while imbued with the different abilities of all the Decepticons. The loser would leave Earth. However, Teletraan I discovered the deception in time and the Autobots were able to drive the Decepticons off. In "Prime Problem", Megatron created a clone of him, which cause confusion with the other Autobots which lead to tests. However, Windcharger and Spike were able to identify the clone before it led the Autobots into their demise.
In "Prime Target", the big game hunter Lord Cholmondeley set his sights on the ultimate trophy, the head of Optimus Prime. In order to lure Optimus in, Cholmondeley captured the Autobots Tracks, Bumblebee, Jazz, Beachcomber, Grapple, Blaster and Inferno. Windcharger and Huffer were able to avoid being trapped. When Cosmos learned of the location Cholmondeley was keeping the captured Transformers, Optimus Prime accepted Cholmondeley's challenge to meet him alone. Although interrupted by the Decepticons Astrotrain and Blitzwing's attempt to ally the Decepticons with Cholmondeley, Optimus defeated the big game hunter and freed the Autobots. Cholmondeley and the stolen jet were handed over to the Soviets by the Autobots as punishment for his actions.
Throughout the first two seasons, Optimus Prime has led the Autobots to many victories, like stopping Megatron from controlling the crystal of power ("Fire on the Mountain"), stopping the Dinobots' rebellion by saving Grimlock ("War of the Dinobots"), defeated Devastator with his detach arm ("City of Steel"), helped capture Nightbird ("Enter the Nightbird"), rescued Blaster and Cosmos from the Decepticons on the Moon with the help of Omega Supreme ("Blaster Blues"), and help saved Perceptor and the other Transformers from the cosmic rust disease ("Cosmic Rust").
Over the course of the next twenty years, the Decepticons succeeded in seizing control of all of Cybertron, forcing the Autobots to operate from their new city on Earth, and from two bases on Cybertron's moons. In the Earth year 2005 A.D., Prime was stationed on Moonbase One, and dispatched troops to Earth to acquire energy for an upcoming strike on Cybertron. The Decepticons, however, got wind of the plan and used the shuttle run to attack Autobot City; a distress call summoned Prime and support troops to Earth, and in the fearsome ensuing fight with Megatron, Optimus Prime sustained fatal injuries, but not before turning the tide of battle and forcing the Decepticons to flee. Despite the efforts of Perceptor, Optimus Prime went offline. The Matrix, and with it leadership of the Autobots, fell into the hands of Ultra Magnus, Galvatron, and subsequently to Rodimus Prime. His last words were "Until that day... 'till all are one."
Prime's body was entombed in a massive deep-space mausoleum with the many other fallen Autobots, but his corpse was desecrated by the Quintessons in 2006, when they reanimated it as part of an attempt to destroy the Autobots by using Prime to lure their space fleet into a trap. However, the Matrix was able to purify Prime of the Quintesson influence, and he ordered the other Autobots to clear out while he piloted his flagship into the Quintessons' detonator, triggering the explosion of a nearby sun. Prime was believed to have been destroyed in the explosion. According to "The Return of Optimus Prime", Prime's body was recovered from the craft by two human scientists, Jessica Morgan and Gregory Swofford, just minutes before the explosion. However, as their ship departed, it was coated with solar spores released by the explosion of the sun. Jessica's father, Mark Morgan, loathed the Transformers (both Autobot and Decepticon), and his hatred only grew when an attempt by the Decepticons to steal a heat-resistant alloy he had developed resulted in Jessica being paralyzed. Swofford and Morgan reconstructed Optimus Prime's body in an attempt to use it as a delivery system for the spores, which induced enmity and madness in every sentient being they came into contact with, in order to destroy the Transformers.
However, when they could not reanimate him, they used his body as a lure instead, bringing the Autobots to their lab, where they were infected. As this "Hate Plague" proceeded to spread across the galaxy, Sky Lynx retrieved a Quintesson, who fully restored Optimus Prime to life. Coating himself in Morgan's heat-resistant alloy, Prime reclaimed the Matrix from Rodimus and unleashed its concentrated wisdom to destroy the Hate Plague.
In 2007, Prime began to suffer from visions following the release of the Matrix's energy, which foretold a great transformation for Cybertron. Events began with the Decepticons' theft of the key to the Plasma Energy Chamber, which forced Prime to consult Alpha Trion within Vector Sigma, and Prime learned that the mega-computer had orchestrated events in order to restore Cybertron's Golden Age. When the Plasma Energy Chamber was opened and threatened to drive Earth's Sun supernova, Spike Witwicky and the Nebulans who had become involved in the conflict as a result of these events were able to drain off the excess solar energy and revitalize Cybertron. With the Decepticons driven off Cybertron, and Nebulon free from tyranny, Cybertron enters into a Golden Age of peace and prosperity under the leadership of Optimus Prime and the Autobots.
The seldom-seen "5th season" re-airing of the show featured the G1 episodes retold by a stop-motion Powermaster Optimus Prime to the live-action youngster Tommy Kennedy. No real back story was ever established for Prime becoming a Powermaster, but the new sequences were said to take place after the four previous seasons, indicating that in the original Sunbow continuity at least, Prime became a Powermaster at some point.
Although the animated series ended in the U.S. after The Rebirth, Optimus Prime continued to appear in animated sequences in the Transformers toy commercials, progressing from Powermaster to Action Master, and even appearing as a computer-generated Combat Hero Optimus Prime. Many episodes of the series are re-aired again to promote Transformers: Generation 2. During these sequences, computer-generated scenes featuring key (recolored) G1 characters are borrowed from Generation 2 commercials to serve as an opening, closing, and commercial bumpers. Optimus Prime is shown in the opening and closing fighting Generation 2's Ramjet.
While the Transformers animated series came to an end in America with The Rebirth in 1987, across the Pacific, in Japan, it was decided to continue production of the show with three new, exclusive animated series (spin-offs) to continue the story. The first of these series, Transformers: The Headmasters, supplanted the events of The Rebirth, picking up one year after the events that saw Optimus Prime's return to life. In the beginning of the series it generally shows Optimus Prime alive again.
In the interim year, with the Decepticons not having been heard from, the Autobots had entered into an even closer relationship with Earth, and had begun the colonization of other worlds, the first of which was the planet Athenia, where Optimus Prime was stationed. It soon became apparent, however, that when Prime had released the energy of the Matrix to cure the Hate Plague, the consequences were more far-reaching than he had anticipated — without the energy of the Matrix to act as a balancing factor, Vector Sigma had become destabilized, and the Decepticons suddenly returned to exploit this, assaulting Cybertron in order to seize control of the mega-computer. Prime took a squad of troops to aid in the battle on the planet, and when the arrival of the Autobot Headmasters tipped the battle in their favor, Prime broke off from the main attack and headed down into the depths of the planet, planning on stabilizing Vector Sigma at any cost.
Guided through the dangers of the planet's catacombs by the spirit of Alpha Trion while the other Autobots searched for the Matrix on Earth, Prime eventually arrived at the computer, only to find his way barred by Cyclonus and Scourge. Hot Rod then arrived with the Matrix, with which Alpha Trion merged, re-energizing it and transforming Hot Rod back into Rodimus Prime; for the first time, the two Primes fought side-by-side and defeated Galvatron.
Before Rodimus could implement the Matrix to stabilize Vector Sigma, however, Optimus Prime sacrificed himself to perform the task, merging with the computer and restoring its balance to save the planet — dying again only a few short episodes after his rebirth.
The second of the Japanese-exclusive Transformers series, 1988's Transformers: Super-God Masterforce did not actually feature Optimus Prime himself, but it did feature one of his bodies. This series sees human truck driver Ginrai merge with and control a Transtector, a lifeless Transformer body, which bears a striking resemblance to Optimus Prime. Although not revealed in the main forty two episodes of the series, an additional clip show episode produced after the series explained that this was because the body was intended to be used by Prime, only to be stolen and hidden on Earth by the series antagonist, Devil Z.
Later Prime would make a final and permanent return in the Japanese Transformers continuity, Battlestars: Return of Convoy. This entry was only available in print form appearing in the Japanese publication, TV Magazine.
Generation 1 Prime makes a cameo in an episode of Transformers: Armada alongside other characters from the original cartoon.
Beast Wars
Optimus Primal, leader of the Maximal faction in the Beast Wars animated series and toy line, is not Optimus Prime — Primal is one of the Maximal descendants of the Autobots, who took the name to honor the Autobot leader. The same applies to the Megatron of this era. However, before the animated series began, Hasbro did actually envision Prime and Megatron as their beast counterparts — design elements such as Prime's mouth-plate (slitted to add an actual mouth for the animated series) suggest it, and the first mini-comic that came packaged with the toys makes it clear. However, once the animated series began, this had already been changed. Nonetheless, Optimus Prime and Megatron were a major reason the Beast Wars began.
The Beast Wars were waged on prehistoric Earth, eventually leading to the discovery of the buried Ark. Megatron, following the original Megatron's instructions in a desperate gambit, decided to attempt to change history by killing Optimus Prime, who was still lying in The Ark in stasis lock. Megatron hoped that this would result in the Decepticons winning The Great War and eventually the rule of Cybertron by the Predacons, the descendants of the Decepticons. Megatron unleashed a full-power weapon blast at Optimus Prime's face, near-fatally injuring him. However, Optimus Primal proceeded to take Prime's spark into his body to protect it from surgical trauma while his injuries were repaired. The subsequent power increase caused by Prime's spark's connection to the Matrix augmented Primal into the large, transmetal "Optimal Optimus" form with three alternate modes (jet, land vehicle, and transmetal gorilla). Then, with the repairs complete, Prime's spark was restored, and he briefly activated before sinking back into normal stasis.[6]
When animating the scene in which Primal removes Prime's spark, Mainframe's animators consulted The Transformers: The Movie for reference on the interior of Prime's chest. However, not realizing the importance of the Matrix of Leadership, they rendered it as a container for Prime's spark. Beast Wars writers Larry DiTillio and Bob Forward have since claimed that in their view, Prime had not received the Matrix from Alpha Trion at this point, but a later comic produced for Botcon indicated that the Matrix was in fact stored in a secondary compartment, hidden behind Prime's spark. In this comic, the alien Vok used the Matrix, the Transmetal Driver and a control suit once piloted by the Predacon Quickstrike to create Primal Prime.
Beast Machines
A giant statue of Optimus Prime holding two Golden Disks standing in front of the Cybertron Archives appeared on Cybertron in the Beast Machines series. The statue was destroyed by the Vehicons in the episode Fires of the Past. When show writer Bob Skir was asked what these two disks were he said that neither the statue nor disks were in the script, but he suggested that they were either the disks from Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 probes or that Optimus won them in the 2,395,989th Annual Cybertronian spelling bee.
Later in the series Optimus Primal discovered the ancient city of Iacon deep within Cybertron where he was approached by a hologram statue of Optimus Prime, but it ended up being Megatron in disguise, who used the opportunity to steal Optimus Primal's access to the Oracle. Obsidian also comments on how Optimus Primal is not as great a leader as Prime.
Kiss Players
This Japanese series, told through radio plays, and using the Transformers: Alternators (Binaltech in Japan) Optimus Prime toy mold (see "Toys"), branches off from the original animated series, and is set in a different universe than the both the original G1 and Binaltech continuities. Set in the year 2006 (which, in Japanese continuity, is one year after Prime's death in The Transformers: The Movie, but four years before the third season), it sees Prime's corpse covertly transported to Japan by the government organization, the Earth Defense Command. The convoy transporting his body was then attacked by a group of female commandos, led by Marissa Faireborn, who had known Prime years ago as a child. Believing they had secured Prime's body, the commandos were taken by surprise by EDC "Kiss Player" operative Ringo and her Autrooper mechanoid partner, who killed them all except Marissa. Marissa went to Prime's body, just as an Autrooper began to fuse with it; reflecting on her childhood memories of Prime, she gave his faceplate a final kiss, which initiated an amazing transformation — Marissa and Prime were fused together, and Prime was reborn with a new body, now transforming into a Dodge Ram SRT-10.
Marissa and Prime are now on the run from the EDC, and are also frequently opposed by the mysterious "Legion" Transformers. Faced with such foes, Marissa unleashes her "Kiss Player" ability by kissing Prime, fusing with him once again, and increasing his power so that he can best their opponents. Prime is armed with the "Surf Blade," a weapon formed out of Marissa's surfboard, wielded expertly thanks to the knife skills Marissa passes on to him when they merge.[7]
Binaltech
Due to the interference of Ravage (the same future Ravage who appears in the Beast Wars), most of the events of the original animated feature do not transpire; most importantly the Battle of Autobot City does not occur, and Optimus Prime and Megatron do not have their final showdown, meaning that Optimus Prime does not die, and Megatron is never reformatted into Galvatron. As a result, Optimus Prime is present to lead the Transformers during the Binaltech saga.
Equipped with knowledge of the future and the danger that would soon be threatening the Transformers, Ravage's machinations included trapping Megatron and a large army of Decepticons in a spacial rift, with the intention of protecting the Decepticons from the approaching Unicron, and forcing the Autobots to face the planet-eater unaided. The Decepticons would then be in a position to conquer whoever was the victor of that battle.
Aware of the changes to the timestream, as well as the potential for the entire Autobot race to be annihilated by Unicron, Optimus put into motion Operation Distant Thunder, a plan to undo the damage to the timeline caused by Ravage, restoring the events that were seen in the movie. In a damned-if-they-do, damned-if-they-don't situation, it would mean that saving all the Autobots from Unicron would result in Prime and others such as Prowl, Wheeljack, Ironhide and Ratchet still dying per the original events. But it was hoped they may be able to at least partly avoid such an outcome by sending a "ship in a bottle" back in time — a message to their past selves about all they had learned.
Upon discovering that the Matrix was the key to destroying Unicron, Optimus Prime and Ultra Magnus went on alone to face Unicron, while the rest of the Autobots executed the plan to restore the original timeline, Operation Distant Thunder. It was hoped that at least one of these plans would be successful. Prime was injured in the confrontation with Unicron, and although his injuries were not mortal, he passed the Matrix to Magnus, who shed his outer armor and managed to successfully complete the mission, resulting in the destruction of Unicron.
Distant Thunder was ultimately unsuccessful, however as the universe started to rip apart, a black Optimus Prime clone appeared, splitting the Binaltech universe into its own separate continuity, while also restoring the original timeline and stabilizing the multiverse. The clone, obviously friendly to the Transformers, proclaimed that the Binaltech universe must be allowed to continue, as it was important to the future. Optimus Prime questioned the black doppelganger, who explained only that he carried "the Protector's" spark, but refused to reveal any more detailed information than that. Soon after however, the clone, who was originally developed by Dr Archeville as a weapon of evil, ejected the "good" spark that had invaded and taken over the black figure, reverted to its original evil programming and, now no longer just a black version of Optimus but the malevolent Nemesis Prime (Black Convoy), escaped.
Per Ravage's original plan, with Unicron defeated, the Decepticons returned to conquer the Transformers. However, Optimus Prime also planned for this event, and sent Mirage to press a switch, buried deep within Cybertron, that would render all Transformers inert. (This was seen at the conclusion of the "Five Faces of Darkness" story arc from the original animated series.) Optimus hoped that although all the Transformers would be rendered inoperative, the war would be stopped, and that the humans would be able to reactivate the Transformers in the future. However, this plan had the surprising side-effect that only those with original Cybertronian bodies were deactivated — those with Earth-made Binaltech bodies continued to function. And thus, the Autobots effectively won the war, with the large army of Binaltech Autobots easily outnumbering the few Decepticons who had managed to procure Binaltech upgrades (effectively just Nemesis Prime and Shockwave, who escaped with Megatron and their other inert comrades).
With the major threats taken care of, Optimus Prime turned his and the Autobots' attention to identifying and shutting down the rogue projects taking place across Earth using stolen Binaltech technology and secrets. It was during one of these missions that Optimus Prime faced off against Nemesis Prime, with both of them in Binaltech Dodge Ram forms. Initially, things looked bad for Optimus Prime, as he was no match for his opponent's spectral armor. However, the Protector merged with Prime, and the enormous power that resulted allowed Prime to reflect Nemesis Prime's final attack, obliterating the evil Decepticon. Optimus Prime recalls the union of the two sparks being familiar, from an event in the distant past, and is also reassured by the Protector about "the seeds of the future", revealing the Protector to be Optimus Primal.[8]
Toys
Through the years, there have been many action figures representing the original incarnation of Optimus Prime, some of which have featured in fiction, others of which have not.
- Generation 1 Optimus Prime (1984)
- The original Optimus Prime toy, with Combat Deck and Roller. Originally part of Takara's 1983 Diaclone line under the name "Battle Convoy," the figure was designed by Hiroyuki Obara and Shoji Kawamori (famous for his work in Macross).[9] The figure's definitive mouth-plate has become a design element in most incarnations and variants of Optimus Prime down the years, let alone for a few exceptions, noted individually following. Integrated into the first year of the Transformers toy line, the toy was given its new name, Optimus Prime, by comic book writer/editor Dennis O'Neil. His removable fists are one of the most easily-lost parts of the figure, and have proven to be a step in transformation that future toys based on this body have striven to eliminate. Roller was included in many colors, including silver (matching his trailer), indigo (matching his fists and legs), and blue (matching the trailer legs on a unique variant).
- As a Diaclone mold, the toy features an opening "cockpit" in his chest where two Diaclone drivers can sit. Diaclone drivers can also sit in the cockpit of the missile launcher, as well as in Roller's 4 seats. The Matrix accessory which shipped with Galaxy Force/Cybertron Optimus Prime fits perfectly inside this compartment.
- A special promotional version of the figure was released in 1985, with a Pepsi sticker on the trailer. In Japan, the toy was released again twice within the original line, in multi-figure packs, both times with blue windows to more closely represent the cartoon.
- The toy was reissued in Japan in 2000 in its original incarnation, but with Roller molded in indigo, covered in silver paint. At the same time, it was recolored almost entirely in black as an exclusive for the JAFCON convention. The toy was reissued again in Japan for New Year's Day in 2002 with blue windows, sky blue eyes (inspired by the cartoon), a die-cast Matrix accessory. It was reissued again in 2003 with a new energy axe accessory. Reissued in the West by Hasbro in 2002, the toy had to be modified for safety reasons, and features shorter smokestacks and longer missiles, as well as having Roller's spring-loaded launcher deactivated.
- The cab of the toy was later redecorated into the cab of Ultra Magnus and Pepsi Convoy.
- Generation 1 Kabaya Gum Convoy (1985)
- Part of the original gum toy series by Kabaya. Each package comes with a stick of chewing gum and an easy-to-assemble kit. The completed robot looks and transforms almost the same as the larger, original Takara version, minus the opening chest. In addition, the toy comes with a smaller version of the Powered Convoy (Ultra Magnus) gun instead of the original weapon.[10]
- Generation 1 Decoy Optimus Prime (1986)
- A small, red rubber model of Optimus Prime, part of a large number of similar figures of other Transformers that were packaged as promotional items with figures in the 1986-87 toy line.
- Generation 1 Lucky Draw Convoy Trophy (1987)
- The very first in a series of "Lucky Draw" Transformers toys, this gold chrome remold of the Optimus Prime toy came with a trophy base. Two versions of this trophy were released: one was given to 100 winners in a coloring contest by TV Magazine, while the other was given exclusively to Takara employees. The difference between the two versions is the plaque on the trophy base.[11]
- Generation 1 Powermaster Optimus Prime (1988)
- Two years after his original toy left store shelves after his "death" in The Transformers: The Movie in 1986, Optimus Prime was restored to life as part of the new Powermaster sub-group. As before, he transforms into a red truck cab with a gray trailer, and when his Powermaster engine parter Hi-Q is plugged into place, the cab becomes a robot, while the trailer transforms into a battle station. The major new feature of the toy, however, is the ability of the cab and trailer to combine together to form a giant "super robot" version of Optimus Prime.
- The head for the super robot is a separate piece which must be attached, and the original design for the toy was to have this be an upgraded Roller, who would transform from buggy, to robot, to head. This did not come to pass, however, and the head is left to sit separately with no function in any other mode (although it can be stored in the trailer in truck mode).
- Generation 1 Super Ginrai (1988)
- Another version of Powermaster Optimus Prime was released in Japan the same year and given the separate identity Ginrai for the anime Transformers: Super-God Masterforce. While the American version of his cab was made of plastic with decals for windows, Ginrai's cab was cast in diecast metal with translucent plastic windows. His smokestacks were shortened and chromed, his small robot mode's eyes were painted sky blue and the plastic used for his trailer and shoulder weapons was molded in a silver or metallic gray. In addition, the arms for Super Ginrai had retractable blue fists, as opposed to Optimus Prime's solid red arms. Ginrai, called Super Ginrai when combined with his trailer, was sold together and separately with a tandem trailer named Godbomber which turned into an additional robot, as well as combined with Super Ginrai to form a larger robot.
- Ginrai was reissued in Japan in 2001, in both his original color scheme, a red and orange "Fire Guts" eHobby exclusive, and in black as "Nucleon Quest Convoy." This reissue, in its original colors, was later released in North America by Hasbro, branded as Powermaster Optimus Prime (the name of its American counterpart), with Godbomber renamed Apex Bomber.
- Generation 1 Action Master Optimus Prime (1990)
- Part of the new sub-line of Transformers figures which did not actually transform, Action Master Optimus Prime was a poseable action figure resembling a composite of the original toy and his animated appearance. The Action Masters' articulation was based in part on that of 3¾" G.I. Joe figures. Instead of transforming himself, he came packaged with the "Armored Convoy," a large truck which could transform into a battle station and an aircraft. This body was the basis for the new form the Last Autobot reconfigured Hi-Q/Prime into at the conclusion of the original U.S. Marvel Comics series.
- In 2000, Takara released L-20 Micro Trailer with Secret Breaster Pilot Edison in Japan, which was a recolor of Optimus Prime's Armored Convoy truck in green and white, with a Microman pilot named Edison.
- Generation 1 Star Convoy (1992)
- A Japanese-exclusive from the final year of the toy line, Star Convoy was the reborn form of Optimus Prime, and came with a Micromaster version of Hot Rodimus. He transformed from a truck into a robot (without the usual cab/trailer separation), and also became a battle station for Micromasters. His electronic "Tread Unit," apparently a new form for Roller, allowed him to roll forward or backward in vehicle or robot mode, and became a conveyor to roll out Micromasters in base mode. These electronics could also be linked with Star Convoy's fellow Autobot Grandus to operate that toy's base-mode elevator. A third Autobot, Sky Garry, could also connect in base mode, and the three could link up in vehicle mode, with Grandus hitched to the rear of Star Convoy, and Sky Garry atop him, in a combination called the "Battlestars."
- Star Convoy was reissued in Japan in 2005; his white parts replaced with metallic silver and his yellow chest cross in chromed gold.
- Generation 2 Optimus Prime (1993)
- A redecorated and slightly remolded version of the original Optimus Prime toy, this was the form to which Prime returned at the beginning of Marvel's Generation 2 comic. With his trailer now black instead of gray, Prime was also equipped with an electronic sound box which emitted various laser noises and the phrase "I am Optimus Prime!" Two firing missile launchers could plug into the side of this box, which could be wielded in Prime's robot fists, while the box itself mounted either on the front of the trailer, or on Prime's back.
- Generation 2 Combat Hero Optimus Prime (1994)
- This new figure's primary feature was a bellows-operated cannon; by slamming down on the small plastic bellows attached to the toy by a hose, a jet of air blasted a rubber-tipped missile through the air. This figure was the form into which the Swarm reconfigured Prime at the conclusion of Marvel's Generation 2 comics, although it was rendered with his traditional color scheme instead of the toy's more novel one. Prototypes of Combat Hero Optimus Prime in dark blue were made, but the toy was never sold in that color.
- Hero Prime was released in Europe as a different character named "Sureshot," changing the chest stickers which displayed Optimus's name. The toy was later redecorated in black, gray and teal and released as Destructicon Scourge for the Transformers: Robots in Disguise line in 2002.
- Generation 2 Laser Optimus Prime (1995)
- Part of the "Laser Rod" sub-group of 1995 (hence leading him to often be incorrectly referred to as "Laser Rod Optimus Prime"), this incarnation of Prime had a light-up electronic fist which illuminated his clear plastic sword, and light-up heads for his tanker truck vehicle mode. In traditional fashion, the cab became Prime himself while the trailer transformed with spring-loaded action into a very heavily armed battle station with missile launcher, disk launcher and bellows-operated cannon. Highly poseable for the time, this toy was for a long period viewed as one of the best Transformers toys created.
- Laser Prime was later redecorated in black, gray and teal as Black Convoy for Takara's 2000 Car Robots line, who was then in turn imported and turned into Scourge for Transformers: Robots in Disguise in 2001. In 2006, the figure was redecorated again into the Japanese eHobby exclusive Laser Ultra Magnus.
- Generation 2 Go-Bot Optimus Prime (1995)
- As part of the large sub-line of free-wheeling, simplistic "Go-Bots," this was an unusual Optimus Prime figure: a redecoration of an earlier figure named Firecracker, which transformed into a red Lamborghini Diablo. Go-Bot Prime was the first Optimus Prime figure to lack the character's distinctive mouth plate, but was the first Optimus Prime to score a perfect set of 10s in his tech spec numbers. Additionally, the toy's tech spec gave an explanation for the large number of bodies Prime had been going through during the Generation 2 toy line, crediting an "Internal Reconfiguration Matrix" with the transformations. The US version of the toy came with no Autobot symbol and a plain chest, whereas the Japanese version has a blue Transformers logo on it.
- Generation 2 General Optimus Prime (unreleased)
- There were plans and prototypes to release a toy called General Optimus Prime, a re-coloration of the Decepticon Autoroller in white and gray camouflage deco, but the toy was never released. The figure could be seen, along with Sgt. Hound, and Road Block and Dirtbag, in a picture from the 1995 Hasbro Toy Fair Boy's Toys Catalog. It appears that the repaints are incorrectly listed, because of the colors of the two figures.
- Beast Wars Basic Optimus Primal (1996)
- Although the later storyline of Beast Wars would go on to depict Optimus Primal as a different character than Optimus Prime, the comic which shipped with the original Beast Wars toy versions of Optimus Primal and Megatron depicted them as new incarnations of Optimus Prime and Megatron. Presumably these forms — Primal as a bat, Megatron as a crocodile — were their new bodies after Generation 2.
- This toy was redecorated into the BotCon 1996 exclusive toy, the black and gray Onyx Primal, and the Japanese-exclusive Convobat, in traditional red and blue Prime colors.
- Machine Wars Optimus Prime (1997)
- Originally sold exclusively at Kay-Bee Toys stores, the short-lived Machine Wars toy line from Hasbro featured an Optimus Prime figure that was a recolored version of Thunderclash, a 1992 Turbomaster — part of a line of Transformers exclusive to Europe, Australia and New Zealand. Thunderclash was not well-suited to the job, given that he was a truck with a cab that became a robot and a trailer that became a battle station. As a repaint of an existing character, this incarnation of Prime also lacked the characteristic mouth-plate, although the toy's box art depicted him with one, being as it was retooled art from Laser Optimus Prime's packaging. He continued the trend of perfect 10s in his tech specs, but was for a long period regarded as one of the worst Prime toys, not because the toy itself was bad by some fans, but because it was visibly un-Prime-like.
- Generation 1 Lucky Draw Convoy (2000)
- Limited to 25 units, this remold of the G1 Optimus Prime toy differed from other Lucky Draw toys, wherein only the chrome parts (wheels, smokestacks, fuel tanks, lower torso and thighs) were repainted gold.[12]
- Smallest Transformers Convoy (2003)
- A miniature, two-inch-high version of the original Optimus Prime figure sold in the first wave of the blind-packaged Smallest Transformers series. Despite its small size (roughly 2 inches in robot height), the toy is virtually faithful to the original G1 toy's design and transformation.[13] His trailer, sold separately as a "chase item" (only one out of a case of 24 toys), opened into a mobile command center and included a Roller unit like the original.[14]
- Also sold through Dengeki Hobby in a VSX two-pack with the Smallest Transformers Megatron toy.
- This toy was remolded in white as Ultra Magnus and sold as a chase item (one in a case of 48) in wave 2 of the toy line.
- In 2006, this toy was to be released along with a redeco of Energon Optimus Prime as a Target exclusive in the U.S., but plans to release the toy were canceled.[15]
- Smallest Transformers Convoy (Animation Colors) (2003)
- A redeco of the Smallest Transformers Convoy toy, wherein the chest windows are painted blue and the waist bumper has added yellow highlights for a show-accurate look.[16]
- The trailer for this toy was a chase item (one in a case of 48) in the toy line's final wave. In keeping with the show-accurate appearance, it only had a white stripe, lacking the blue stripes of the original release.[17]
- Masterpiece MP-01 Convoy (2003)
- Released in December 2003 to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Transformers franchise, this 12" tall, 3 pound version of Optimus Prime strove to reproduce his cartoon appearance in the most intricate detail, going so far as to feature a particularly complex torso transformation in the name of featuring a different design of grill for truck and robot modes. The figure featured diecast metal parts, chrome-plated plastic parts, a working rear suspension and rubber tires. In robot mode, the chest opened to reveal a light-up box containing a removable Matrix of Leadership. The head had a button on the back that moved the mouth-plate, giving the impression of Optimus Prime talking. The flip-up wrist communicators had pictures of Bumblebee and Starscream. Weapons consisted of his traditional Ion Blaster, his clear orange Energon axe and even a gun-mode Megatron complete with stock, scope and silencer. The box packaging could be folded up to create a cardboard trailer to hitch up to the back of the cab.[18]
- In 2005, this figure was repainted in white as Masterpiece MP-02 Ultra Magnus.[19]
- Masterpiece Lucky Draw MP-01 Convoy (2004)
- Part of a mail-in contest by Takara, this gold chrome repaint of Masterpiece Convoy was limited to only five units.[20][21]
- 20th Anniversary Optimus Prime with Megatron (2004)
- The U.S. release version of Masterpiece Optimus Prime by Hasbro featured shorter smokestacks (to conform to child safety regulations) and battle damage effects, depicting his battered form in The Transformers: The Movie. The Ion Cannon was initially molded in gray; later releases had the more-accurate black cannon.[22]
- This toy was featured on page 18 of the book Transformers: The Fantasy, The Fun, The Future by Erin Brereton published by Triumph Books.
- Universe Spy Changer Optimus Prime (2004)
- A repaint of the Spy Changer Scourge from the Robots in Disguise line, painted to resemble the original Optimus Prime. Two packaging versions of this toy existed — a Kaybee version which did not attribute the toy to Universe and was packaged in vehicle form, and a version for discount stores which did and was packaged in robot mode. His function is Leader and his motto is "Freedom is the right of all sentient beings." Dedicated to protecting all life, Optimus Prime leads the Transformers in unceasing battle against the evil Decepticons. His courage and wisdom know no bounds, and he is respected throughout the universe as a powerful champion of peace. Carries a blaster rifle as well as the ancient Autobot Matrix of Leadership.
- Robot Masters G1 Convoy (2004)
- The Japanese Transformers: Robot Masters toy line naturally featured a new toy of Prime, here referred to as G1 Convoy in order to distinguish him from the also-appearing Optimus Primal, also called Convoy in Japan, and here equipped with the qualifier of "Beast Convoy." Designed to look like a small version of the 20th Anniversary figure, the Robot Masters incarnation of Prime featured an overly simplistic transformation that resulted in an unimpressive truck mode, but came with his gun and axe. The figure was redecorated in black as a Dengeki Hobby exclusive in 2005.
- Robot Masters G1 Convoy DVD (2004)
- A metallic redeco of the Robot Masters figure with two missile launchers and a DVD featuring the toy line's commercials and video clips of Generation 1 and Beast Wars.[23]
- Generation 1 Orion Pax and Barrelroller (2005)
- A red/blue redeco of the 2005 reissue of Kup as Orion Pax, available exclusively through the Japanese online retailer eHobby. Kup's Targetmaster partner Recoil was included as Barrelroller, a droid who transformed into a loading tool, intended as an earlier form of Roller.[24]
- Robot Masters Lucky Draw G1 Convoy Custom Color Version (2005)
- A remold of the Robot Masters figure in translucent orange, blue and green, which was the winning entry of a coloring contest hosted by TV Magazine and limited to 10 units.[25]
- Alternators Optimus Prime (2006)
- Originally, Hasbro intended for the Dodge Ram SRT-10 toy they had created for the licensed vehicle line, Transformers: Alternators to be a different character, but Takara insisted on the toy's identity as Optimus Prime, as pick-up trucks are an uncommon sight on Japanese roads, and Prime's character would help to sell the toy. This toy features a vanity license plate featuring the Autobot logo and the word "PRIME". Although it stylistically resembles the California license plate, Optimus Prime's plate identifies him as being registered in "Cybertron".
- This toy was featured on page 7 of the book Transformers: The Fantasy, The Fun, The Future by Erin Brereton published by Triumph Books.
- Oddly, however, when originally solicited, the Japanese version of the toy (the line known there as "Binaltech") was named Ginrai, after the Prime lookalike from Masterforce, but this solicitation was cancelled. When it appeared again, as part of the "Binaltech Aterisk" line — which featured small PVC figures of girls that could ride in the vehicles — it was as "Black Convoy." This too vanished, and Prime was finally released as himself, with different paint applications, in the "Kiss Players" line, with Marissa Faireborn, though on the box her name is listed as Melissa.
- Alternators Prime was redecorated into Nemesis Prime for the 2006 San Diego Comic Con. Only 3000 of these were produced, and are highly sought after by collectors. It was also redecorated into Binaltech Black Convoy for Wonder Festival 2007 and released in even fewer numbers, regularly selling for more than US$200. Black Convoy was the only version of the Optimus Prime Dodge Ram mold featuring diecast components, until BT-22 Convoy was released in October 2008.
- Hybrid Style T.H.S.-02 Convoy (2006)
- This version of Prime, based on his original form, follows on from T.H.S.-01, a highly poseable version of Transformers: Cybertron Optimus Prime. Redesigned by noted mecha creator Shoji Kawamori (who co-designed the original Prime toy), this Prime included die-cast metal parts and interchangeable hands including his energy axe, rifle, Matrix and a replica of the jetpack from the episode Dinobot Island Part 2. As with the original figure, the trailer opened into a battle station, and came with Roller. The toy has divided opinions among collectors, praised for its high level of articulation and innovative new ways to represent Prime's classic transformation, but likewise derided for its lackluster truck mode, looking like nothing so much as Prime's torso balanced on a set of wheels.
- This figure was also redecoed in black as "T.H.S.-02B Convoy". Although wearing the color scheme often associated with Nemesis Prime, this figure still represents Optimus Prime. This version includes additional weapons and two spare heads which are intended to be used on the original red version of the figure. Coupled with the black trailer included with the "02B" figure, these extras can be used to make the red "02" into a Generation 2-style Optimus Prime.
- Titanium 6 inch War Within Optimus Prime (2006)
- Based on Optimus Prime's Cybertronian mode from Dreamwave's Transformers: The War Within comic book series, this transforming die-cast figure is part of the 6" "Cybertron Heroes" size class of Transformers Titanium Series figures. This figure was initially released by itself, and later in a Toys-R-us exclusive 2-pack with War Within Megatron. A repaint of this figure in white as Ultra Magnus was announced by Botcon 2006.
- Titanium 3 inch War Within Optimus Prime (2006)
- Based on Optimus Prime's Cybertronian mode from Dreamwave's Transformers: The War Within comic book series, this non-transforming figure is part of the 3" "Robot Masters" size class of Transformers Titanium Series figures.
- Titanium 3 inch Optimus Prime (2006)
- Based on Optimus Prime's original form, but actually his 20th Anniversary/Masterpiece figure, this non-transforming figure is part of the 3" "Robot Masters" size class of Transformers Titanium Series figures.
- Classics Voyager Optimus Prime (2006)
- Intended to update classic characters into modern forms, Transformers: Classics included in its first wave a new version of Optimus Prime, who once again transforms into a red COE truck cab, though modernized and more aerodynamic than the original. This Optimus Prime does not have a trailer, and the attachment point for one is awkwardly rectangular. The exhaust stacks convert into a laser cannon with the appearance of two Submachine guns grouped side-by-side, though they are not intended to be separated. The air deflector atop the cab converts into an Ion Blaster. Connecting the exhaust stacks to the air deflector makes it into dual shoulder cannons.
- This toy was featured on page 16 of the book Transformers: The Fantasy, The Fun, The Future by Erin Brereton published by Triumph Books.
- This figure was redecorated in white and blue as Ultra Magnus, sold in a two-pack with Skywarp. A later released 2-pack included both Optimus Prime and Ultra Magnus variants.
- This figure was released a third time, in black and teal colors, for the 2007 Comic Con as Nemesis Prime, under the Transformers Universe line.[26]
- Classics Ultimate Battle Optimus Prime vs. Megatron (2006)
- Part of the Classics line. This toy is Deluxe sized and is made in the style of his original toy, but with "Power punch action!". Also includes an Ultimate Battle Megatron and a DVD narrated by Optimus Prime. The disk features a photo gallery slide show with photos of the wave 1-2 Classics figures. It also features 22 minutes of clips starting with the Cybertron theme song over a montage of various Cybertron scenes and a story of who the Transformers are, what they can do, what Mini-Cons and Planet Keys are, etc.
- Later releases of this pack included two random bonus Mini-Cons chosen from Cybertron Longarm, Overcast and Deepdive.
- In late 2007, this set was repackaged in Transformers: Universe packing without the DVD available at Dollar General stores.
- This Optimus Prime figure was also sold alongside the Fast Action Battlers Optimus Prime figure at Walmart in the gift set Leader for the Ages, as part of the 2007 Transformers live-action movie toy line.
- 20th Anniversary DVD Edition Optimus Prime with Megatron (2006)
- To commemorate the 20th anniversary DVD release of The Transformers: The Movie, the U.S. version of Masterpiece Optimus Prime was re-released with a new electronic display base which speaks re-recorded phrases from the film. This figure was repainted in the cartoon-correct colors, without the "battle damage" scorch marks from the 2004 version. The Ion Cannon, however, was molded in blue instead of black.[27]
- This toy was voted the top toy released in the last 10 years by Toyfare Magazine.[28]
- Masterpiece MP-04 Convoy Perfect Edition (2006)
- The figure is essentially the same as the original MP-01 Masterpiece Convoy, but comes with the addition of a proper detailed plastic trailer. The trailer unfolds into a repair bay/mobile base and can hold a single Alternators figure while closed. Most Alternators figures can be accommodated, with the exception of the Ford Mustang and Dodge Ram molds. The wrist communicator monitors now show Megatron and Grimlock on the left and right wrists, respectively. However, a Roller figure is not included.[29]
- Revoltech Convoy (2006)
- Based on, what primarily seems to be, Pat Lee's interpretation of Optimus Prime from the Dreamwave comic series, Revoltech Convoy is the 19th of the Revoltech line, using the key Revolver Joint which gives the figure incredible poseability for numerous dynamic poses. The figure included three optional hands apart from the regular clenched fists, including a right hand to hold the gun or to give a "Come hither" finger movement, a pointing right hand, and an open left hand used to hold the Matrix or for more choices in posing. Accessories include Prime's characteristic rifle, with the handle held to the main cannon by a peg to enable it to rotate, and the Matrix which cannot be held in the fists or put into the chest but can be held with the aforementioned open hand. However, this is a purely display figure and although it does bear the Transformers name it does not actually transform.
- Attacktix Optimus Prime (2007)
- Part of a 4 pack starter set for Attacktix, Optimus comes with the original Megatron, Energon Landquake and San Diego ComicCon inspired Skywarp.
- Classic Pepsi Optimus Prime (2007)
- A prize in the Mountain Dew-sponsored "Transform Your Summer" contest, Pepsi Optimus Prime is, for all practical purposes, nearly identical to Pepsi Convoy, but packaged in an English-language box that identifies him as the original Prime and having shorted mufflers on the arms (for U.S. toy safety laws). He was later sold at BotCon 2007 and then on the Hasbro Toy Shop web site. His package style places him with the Classic line, although it does not specifically mention the Classics in the text.
- Softimus Prime (2007)
- A plush doll version of Optimus Prime that transforms into truck mode by simply folding the upper body inside out.
- Optimash Prime (2007)
- A Mr. Potato Head doll with parts and accessories to dress him up like Optimus Prime. Also includes a mini Optimus Prime truck.
- Music Label Convoy (2007)
- A reissue of the G1 figure with a working iPod speaker dock as a trailer. This version is painted white to match the iPod's main color.[30]
- Music Label Optimus Prime (2007)
- Similar to the Music Label Convoy figure, but in his original G1 colors with the speaker dock in gray.
- Sports Label Convoy feat. Nike Free 7.0 (2007)
- A special collaboration with Nike and Takara Tomy called "Transformers: Sports Label" features both Optimus Prime and Megatron with the ability to transform into 1:2 scale replicas of the Nike Free 7.0 shoe. Optimus' shoe form is colored white, red, and black but manages to retains his classic red, blue, white colors in robot form. Keeping with the shoe theme, he is come packaged in a Nike shoebox and his feet are patterned after the very shoe he transforms into.[31]
- This figure would be redecoed into Ultra Magnus, with the shoe colored white, black, and yellow and the robot with the standard white and royal blue.
- Binaltech BT-22 Convoy feat. Dodge Ram SRT-10 (2008)
- The third use of the Dodge Ram mold to represent Optimus Prime, the first being Alternators Optimus Prime and the second being Kiss Players Convoy, this is also the only version of him which features diecast components, and the only diecast incarnation of this mold which was sold as a general release (the first diecast Dodge Ram, representing Black Convoy, was an exclusive). The figure includes the same amount of diecast in the same places as Black Convoy, and while based on the deco for Kiss Players Convoy, also includes elements from Alternators Optimus Prime, such as red arms and blue eyes. The figure came in traditional Binaltech packaging, however the box is scaled up somewhat to accommodate the figure's larger size. Like the other late-run Binaltech figures (Bluestreak, Argent Meister and Arcee), Convoy does not include the trading card or glossy booklet found in most earlier Binaltech figures.
- Universe Generation 1 Series 25th Anniversary Optimus Prime (2008)
- A remold of the original Optimus Prime toy with slightly altered colors. The toy comes with larger missiles and smaller smokestacks for safety purposes. The toy comes with a reprint of issue #1 of the original Marvel Transformers comic book. A sound box included in the package plays the transformation sound and a portion of the TV series theme, along with sound clips of Peter Cullen as Optimus Prime ("I am Optimus Prime.", "Autobots, transform and roll out!" and "Megatron must be stopped, no matter the cost.").
- The North America release includes a DVD featuring the 3-part "More Than Meets the Eye" TV pilot.[32]
- Universe Deluxe Special Edition Optimus Prime (2008)
- A redeco of Classic Deluxe Optimus Prime in more accurate Generation 1 colors. A Hasbro Toy Shop exclusive.[33]
- Music Label Exile Perfect Year 2008 Convoy (2008)
- A red/yellow redeco of the Music Label Convoy figure sold exclusively at LDH stores in Japan to promote the band Exile.[34]
- Henkei! Henkei! C-01 Voyager Convoy (2008)
- The Japanese version of Classics Voyager Optimus Prime by Takara Tomy sports a chrome silver grille and smokestack guns.[35]
- Henkei! Henkei! C-01 Voyager Convoy Clear Version (2008)
- A Tokyo Toy Show exclusive clear plastic remold of the Henkei Convoy figure.[36]
- Henkei! Henkei! C-01 Lucky Draw Voyager Convoy (2008)
- A gold chrome remold of the Henkei Convoy figure as part of TV Magazine's Lucky Draw campaign. Limited to only 5 units.[37]
- Henkei! Henkei! C-01 Voyager Convoy Black Version (unreleased)
- A slightly different version of the Nemesis Prime redeco of the Henkei Convoy figure that was originally planned for release at the 2008 Wonderfest in Japan.[38]
- Masterpiece MP-01B Convoy Black Version (2009)
- An eHobby exclusive black repaint of the Masterpiece Convoy figure.[39]
- Alternity Convoy (2009)
- A Deluxe-sized figure that transforms into a Nissan GT-R. Available in red or silver, and redecoed in black as Convoy Super Black.[40] As the line is the successor to the Binaltech/Alternators line, the figure features a complex transformation and extreme levels of detail and poseability.[41]
- Generation 1 25th Anniversary Kabaya Gum Convoy (2009)
- A re-issue of the original Kabaya Gum Convoy toy kit to commemorate the toy line's 25th anniversary. Unlike the first release, this version comes with a blue replica of the original toy's Ion Cannon.[42]
- Generation 1 25th Anniversary Kabaya Gum Henkei Convoy (1985)
- Similar to the regular Kabaya Convoy toy, but based on the Classics/Henkei design. Parts swapping is required during transformation.[43]
- Masterpiece MP-04S Convoy Sleep Mode (2010)
- Limited to 2010 units, this figure is a paint of MP-04 Masterpiece Convoy Perfect Edition in black, white and gray, which depicts him before dying in The Transformers: The Movie. His left wrist communicator monitor has a picture of Hot Rod. The trailer is molded in clear plastic.[44]
Other merchandise
Optimus Prime, Ironhide and Grimlock are the three Autobot figures available to play in the Monopoly Transformers Collectors Edition game.[45]
As the figurehead of the entire Transformers franchise, Optimus Prime has been on more pieces of merchandise than one can comfortably count, with one of the most outrageous being the "Optimus Prime Oral Care Station". Several statues and busts of Prime have been released by various companies since the return of Transformers to prominence, and other figures released include various PVCs as part of Takara's "Super Collection Figure" line, which were later imported as part of Hasbro's "Heroes of Cybertron" series. Larger "Mega Collection Figure" PVCs were articulated and came with energy axe and gun figures.
Video games
This article is missing information about Error: you must specify what information is missing..(August 2009) |
Prime has appeared in numerous Transformers video games.
Optimus Prime is a regular character in the Nintendo GameCube and PlayStation 2 fighting game DreamMix TV World Fighters.
Prime makes a cameo in the Beast Wars Transmetals video game, where he is killed by Megatron in his story mode ending, which displays what would have happened in the Beast Wars series with a Predacon victory.
Prime is also playable in Hasbro's Net Jet Transformers fighting game Transformers Battle Universe. The G1 incarnation of the character is one of three playable Primes, the other two being his incarnations from the 2007 live-action film and Transformers Animated. Optimus Primal is also a playable character.[46]
The Generation 1 version of Prime is also offered as downloadable content for some versions of the Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen video game.
The Classic line appeared in a simple Flash-based video game on the Hasbro web site. In this one-on-one fighting game you press the right and left arrow keys to try to overpower your opponent. In the game you can play Rodimus, Bumblebee, Grimlock, Jetfire, Starscream, Astrotrain, Trypticon or Menasor. Optimus Prime and Megatron each appear as the boss you must defeat to win the game.[47]
Optimus also appears in the game Transformers: War for Cybertron.
Other appearances
Generation 2 Optimus Prime and Ramjet were featured battling in the trailer for Botcon 2010.
- Megatron and Optimus Prime made a cameo on the television series Scrubs.
- A forty foot (12.2 m) statue of Optimus Prime exists in Kunming city in Yunnan Province, China. It is located near several automobile dealerships. The Transformers cartoon was broadcast in China (PRC) from 1990 onwards and had a large following among youths of that generation.[48]
- The 20th Anniversary figure was featured in a print ad for Nokia 6820 phones, stooped over and scratching his head with a slightly puzzled look on his face.[49] The ad uses only a few digital alterations, as the possibility of the figure allows it to accomplish most of the presented pose.
- Prime has also been advertising for the Newspaper Association of America.
- A semi that parodies Optimus Prime appears in the first season's finale of the G4 show Code Monkeys, an animated comedy series known for lampooning pop culture.
- In the South Park trilogy "Imaginationland," Optimus Prime is one of the warriors who fight on the side of the good imaginary characters.
- Many gamers swear to the fact that Optimus Prime appears in the form of a pattern of windows and other markings on the background of the game Assassin's Creed.[50]
- According to the staff of Beast Wars, Optimus Prime became a space explorer in the Beast Era.[51]
- Optimus Prime was parodied in several episodes of Robot Chicken voiced by Abraham Benrubi. The creators once asked Peter Cullen to reprise the role but he refused because he took the role seriously and wouldn't want to make fun of the character.
- In 2003, a National Guardsman legally changed his name to "Optimus Prime" on his 30th birthday.[52]
- In conjunction with the release of the 2007 live-action film, Hasbro made a Mr. Potato Head parody on the Autobot commander, named "Optimash Prime".Photo They also released a transforming plush toy called "Softimus Prime."
- The 10/2007 banner of the tdctrade.com (Hong Kong Trade Development Council's official web site) contains a small Optimus Prime toy in it.
- A Seattle-area musician uses the stagename Optimus Rhyme.
- Powerpop/Ska Band Attila and the Huns has a hidden track on their 2007 Christmas Album "Christmas Socks" entitled "Optimus Prime (At Christmas Time)", about the Autobot leader's significance to the holiday season.
- Optimus Prime is also mentioned in the song "The Ultimate Showdown of Ultimate Destiny".
- In the 2006 comedy movie Clerks II, Elias states that his screen name is Optimus Prime.
- A Western Australian based yacht is called Optimus Prime
- A Canadian military operation in Afghanistan was code-named "Op Timis Preem".[53]
- British Prime Minister Gordon Brown told the news media that, "Optimus Prime could solve the current problems in our world."[54]
- In an episode of Family Guy ("When You Wish Upon a Weinstein"), Peter finds out that Optimus Prime is Jewish.
- The 2008 Xbox 360 game Fable II includes a beverage named "Hoptimus Prime." Legacy Brewing Company, based in Pennsylvania, also makes an Imperial India Pale Ale by the same name.
- In the Retro Starburst pack there is a flavor called "Optimus Lime".
- In the video game Fallout 3 there is a robot called Liberty Prime which makes a reference to Optimus Prime.
Books
Optimus Prime appeared in the following books:
- The 1984 sticker and story book Return to Cybertron written by Suzanne Weyn and published by Marvel Books.[55]
- The 1984 sticker and story book The Revenge of the Decepticons written by Suzanne Weyn and published by Marvel Books.[56]
- The 1985 Find Your Fate Junior book called Dinobots Strike Back by Casey Todd.[57]
- The 1985 Find Your Fate Junior book called Battle Drive by Barbara Siegel and Scott Siegel.[58]
- The 1985 Transformers audio books Transformers Lightning Strike, Megatron's Fight For Power, Transformers Fight Back, Laserbeak's Fury and Satellite of Doom.
- The 1985 audio story Sun Raid.
- Decepticons Underground and Autobot Hostage from the 1988 series.
References
- ^ "Who's Who in the Transformers Universe". Ntfa.net. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ Seibertron.com (1993-11-01). "Transformers: Generation 2 #1: "War Without End!"". Seibertron.com. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ "Transformers from IDW with Simon Furman: Interviews & Features Archive - Comics Bulletin". Silverbulletcomicbooks.com. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ "New Avengers/Transformers". Comics Continuum. 2007-02-28. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ "Comics Continuum". Comics Continuum. 2002-08-08. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ Seibertron.com (1969-12-31). "Transformers Cartoon Series - Episodes". Seibertron.com. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ "Transformers: KissKiss, a Transformers KissPlay information site". Toyvey.com. 2007-07-11. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ "Transformers Toys". TFArchive. 2003-09-26. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ Igarashi, Kouji (1999.11). タカラSFランド大全集. Tokyo: Kodansha. ISBN 4-06-330086-2.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - ^ TFW2005.com - Kabaya Gum Convoy
- ^ TFW2005.com - Lucky Draw Convoy Trophy
- ^ TFW2005.com - Lucky Draw Convoy (Gold Wheels)
- ^ TFW2005.com - WST Convoy
- ^ TFW2005.com - WST Convoy Trailer
- ^ TFW2005.com - Optimus Prime with Mini Optimus Prime (Unreleased)
- ^ TFW2005.com - WST Convoy (Animation Colors)
- ^ TFW2005.com - WST Convoy Trailer (Animation Colors)
- ^ TFW2005.com - Masterpiece Convoy
- ^ TFW2005.com - Masterpiece Ultra Magnus
- ^ TFW2005.com - Masterpiece Lucky Draw Convoy
- ^ "GoldOptimusPrime.com". GoldOptimusPrime.com. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ TFW2005.com - 20th Anniversary Optimus Prime
- ^ TFW2005.com - Robot Masters G1 Convoy DVD
- ^ Optimus Prime Toys
- ^ TFW2005.com - Lucky Draw Robot Masters Convoy
- ^ 07:15 AM. "Optimus Prime in advertisment @ bus stop - Cybertron.CA - Canadian Transformers News and Discussion". Cybertron.CA. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ TFW2005.com - 20th Anniversary DVD Edition Optimus Prime
- ^ Toyfare Magazine issue #122
- ^ TFW2005.com - Masterpiece Convoy Perfect Edition
- ^ TFW2005.com - Music Label Convoy
- ^ "Nike Free 7.0 x Transformers Megatron & Convoy". Hypebeast. 2007-04-27. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ "Universe Generation 1 Series Optimus on OptimusTranformers". Optimustransformers.com. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ "Product Categories - action figures, dolls, electronic toys, and games". Hasbrotoyshop.com. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ TFW2005.com - Music Label Convoy (Exile Perfect Year 2008)
- ^ TFW2005.com - Henkei Convoy
- ^ TFW2005.com - Henkei Convoy (Clear)
- ^ TFW2005.com - Lucky Draw Henkei Convoy
- ^ TFW2005.com - Henkei Convoy (Black, Unreleased)
- ^ TFW2005.com - Masterpiece Convoy Black Version
- ^ Alternity Convoy Super Black Bio - Transformers News
- ^ Seibertron - New Transformers Alternity Convoy Pics - Red & Silver Versions!
- ^ TFW2005.com - Kabaya Gum Convoy (25th Anniversary)
- ^ TFW2005.com - Kabaya Gum Henkei Convoy (25th Anniversary)
- ^ TFW2005.com - Convoy (Sleep Mode)
- ^ "Collectors Edition Transformers Monopoly". 80stees.com. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ Seibertron.com. "Transformers NetJet Game Screenshots". Seibertron.com. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ "Entertainment/OnlineGames/GameSelect/Action Games/Transformers/Transformers Battle Circuit". Hasbro.com. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ "Chairman Prime". KarateParty.org. 2006-10-16. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ http://seibertron.com/images/misc/uploads/1102543764_NokiaPrime.jpg
- ^ "Assassin's Creed: Optimus Prime Lights Altair's Darkest Hour". Kotaku.com. 2007-11-19. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ Beast Wars Universe ISBN 978-4766938005
- ^ "Man Who Legally Changed Name to Optimus Prime Loves Gizmodo". Gizmodo. 2007.
- ^ "Canadian Forces deal 'huge blow' to Taliban: official". Ctv.ca. 2008-08-25. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ Prince, Rosa (2009-01-09). "Brown's hero is Transformer Optimus Prime". Telegraph. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ "Marvel Books- Transformers Sticker Book: Return to Cybertron". Physics.ohio-state.edu. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ http://www.physics.ohio-state.edu/~sstoneb/tf/books/sticker/revenge/revenge.html
- ^ "Dinobots Strike Back". Gamebooks.org. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
- ^ "Find Your Fate Junior - The Transformers". Gamebooks.org. Retrieved 2010-04-27.
External links
This article's use of external links may not follow Wikipedia's policies or guidelines. (August 2010) |
- Template:Dmoz
- tfu.info's page on the original toy and other variations/editions of Optimus Prime
- Collection and pictures of every Optimus Prime toy
- ToyBin Optimus Prime Gallery
- A Letter to Optimus Prime from His Geico Auto Insurance Agent, by John Frank Weaver
- Transforce: Alignment by Simon Furman
- Optimus Prime Collection
- Transforce: The Last Days of Optimus Prime by Simon Furman
- Pages on Optimus Prime at the Transformers Wiki
- The Optimus Prime Toy Store
- Wikipedia external links cleanup from August 2010
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