Transformers: Cybertron (toyline)
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The final act of the "Unicron Trilogy", Transformers: Cybertron vastly expanded the scope of the Transformers universe, bringing in the theme of "lost colonies" with different styles, while still unifying the toyline under a central play-gimmick, the Cyber Planet Keys.
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Overview
After Energon's rather muddled gimmick/theme presentation, Hasbro dialed it back for Cybertron by sticking with a single unifying play gimmick: the Cyber Keys. These large discs, with designs based on the planet of their origin, unlocked pop-out weapons and action features in each toy once plugged into the key slot. Any planet's key would work with any toy. With the spring-loaded gimmicks less complex than those in Armada, they freed up the designs to allow for more robot-mode posability.
Where Cybertron gets its diversity is in its aesthetics, through the different planets each Transformer could hail from. Each planet has its own theme, with the toy designs reflecting the culture of each world.
- Cybertron and Earth toys are the most traditional of the series, with future-tech-vehicle and close-to-real-life vehicles respectively, and more "traditional" proportions and detailing.
- The Speed Planet toys are naturally all about the fastness. The vehicle modes are futuristic and fantastical, with transparent plastic tires and other accents. Even the bulkier vehicle modes at least look like they were built for raw horsepower. Colors are bright and clashing, the robot modes themselves streamlined. The Cyber Key gimmicks are typically tied to their swing-out blaster weapons.
- The brutal Jungle Planet is full of robotic beasts, with deeply-complex, nigh-organic sculpting that brings to mind the Transmetal IIs of Beast Wars or the technorganic Beast Machines Maximal toys. Robot modes feature limbs made from beast-bits, clawed hands, and fanged mouths. Melee weapons rule the land, with most Cyber Key gimmicks focused on pop-out blades.
- The Giant Planet is about heavy machinery. Very heavy machinery. Though few in number compared to the rest of the planets, they live up to their planet's name by being some of the largest toys in the line. These heavy construction (or destruction) vehicles are bulky and industrial, plus each one has a tiny Mini-Con partner to operate a work station somewhere on each bot's vehicle or robot mode.
- Planet X bots are similarly few in number. Their only real unifying style is "futuristic danger". The vehicle modes are sleek and deadly-looking, robot modes vicious and pointy.
The tail-end of the line was again heavy on the redecoes (by then a practice that had become expected and largely accepted), but also brought micro-play back into the line. Mini-Con two-packs were released to bolster the ranks of the still-popular Mini-Con class. But the history-making addition to the Transformers franchise was in the Legends Class toys. These sub-Scout, simple and above all inexpensive toys were based on the larger toys of popular/major characters, giving kids the chance to own an Optimus Prime or Megatron they could keep in their pocket. From this point on, Legends-sized toys would continue on in some manner through every major Transformers toyline.
The Cybertron toyline was one of the first lines to create an almost perfect representation of robot mode scale between figures within the line. The previous two toylines in the Unicron Trilogy had almost achieved similar results but a lot of the time characters in the cartoons would either be drawn or have their CG models resized into exaggerated proportions, creating a huge difference between the figures in-hand and the characters presented on-screen. It's likely feasible that the Cybertron cartoon copied the toyline's scale between characters rather than the other way around. This is further evident as a lot of the vehicles in the toyline are out of scale with one another, however the show usually fixed this issue by resizing vehicle animation models to fit a realistic scale. While most of the toyline scale is consistent with what is on-screen, the Giant Planet Natives and Primus are the main exceptions to this, as they were greatly exaggerated in size on-screen to further support the "giant" aspect of their race, and Primus is... well... obviously a planet. Supreme Class Starscream can also be displayed with other figures in the line to create a fairly well-scaled representation of the episode which inspired the toy or next to fellow Supreme Class figure, Primus, to imitate another scene, much like Energon's Omega/Optimus Supreme and Unicron.
Hasbro Cybertron toyline
For Hasbro's line, every Cyber Key (packaged with every toy Scout Class or larger) has a short alphanumeric code printed on its back. These Cyber Key Codes, when plugged into the official Cybertron website (now defunct), unlocked design sketches and extra biographical info on each toy.
General retail
Mini-Con Class
Though we're listing these first as part of our standard "go up in size class" organization, it should be noted that these releases came out in the back half of the Cybertron line, with the fourth (and ultimately final) wave suffering from "tail-ender syndrome" as the line shut down.
Wave 1 (Sky Attack Team vs. Air Defense Team)
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Wave 2 (Lunar Assault Team vs. Exploration Team) |
Wave 3 (Sky Terror Team vs. Council of Sages)
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Wave 4 (Deep Space Team vs. Street Action Team)
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Cancelled (Predator Attack Team vs. Night Rescue Team)
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Cancelled (Council of Sages) |
Legends of Cybertron
Like the Mini-Cons, these toys were not part of the early line, coming out in the back end of the series, but presented here as per our "scaling up" organization.
Wave 1 | Wave 2 | Wave 3 | Wave 4
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Scout Class
Wave 1 | Wave 2 | Wave 3 | Wave 4 | |||||
Wave 5 | Wave 6
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Wave 7 | Wave 8 (Primus Unleashed) | |||||
Wave 9 (Primus Unleashed)
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Wave 10 (Primus Unleashed) |
Deluxe Class
Wave 1 | Wave 2 | Wave 3 | Wave 3.5 | |||||
Wave 4 | Wave 5 | Wave 6 | Wave 7 (Primus Unleashed) | |||||
Wave 8 (Primus Unleashed) | Wave 9 (Primus Unleashed) |
Voyager Class
Wave 1 | Wave 2 | Wave 3 | Wave 4 | |||||
Wave 5 | Wave 6 (Primus Unleashed) | Wave 7 (Primus Unleashed) | Wave 8 (Primus Unleashed) |
Ultra Class
Wave 1 | Wave 2 | Wave 3 | Wave 4 | |||||
Wave 5 (Primus Unleashed)
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Wave 6 (Primus Unleashed) |
Leader Class
Wave 1 | Wave 2 | Wave 3 (Primus Unleashed) | Wave 4 (Primus Unleashed) |
Supreme Class
Wave 1 | Wave 2 (Primus Unleashed)
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Wave 3 (Primus Unleashed) |
Exclusives
BotCon 2005 | Costco | San Diego Comic-Con 2005 | Toys"R"Us
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Target |
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Walmart |
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Denotes a figure that was released in both standard packaging and the "Primus Unleashed" subline packaging, indicating a change over in the line.
Hasbro European market-only releases
As with Energon before it, the European Cybertron line was mostly just the US line outlined above. However, two sets of Micromaster combiner teams that were released as part of the 2003 Universe toy line (which was never officially distributed as such in Europe) in the US, exclusive to KB Toys, got released under the Cybertron banner, using a different assortment number (29514) than their own Universe counterparts as well as the earlier Energon/Universe figures (all of which were released under the assortment number 29460).
Micromasters Series III | Micromasters Series IV |
Takara Galaxy Force toyline
Premiering roughly half a year before Cybertron (as Hasbro's lines tended to run approximately 18 months while Takara stuck with 12 months), Galaxy Force would mostly feature slight alterations from the Hasbro versions. Some of the additions to the line, like the Armada retools (sold in Vs packs in Japan) would eventually make their way to the States.
Store-promo Mini-Con giveaways returned in a big way, with full teams devoted to some of the major characters in the line.
Presumably due to lackluster sales, the line ended even earlier than its projected twelve-month run, after only nine months. Several characters and redecos that appeared on the show were either never released in Japan at all, or were given a limited production run and/or only made available as exclusives: First, "Dark Ligerjack" (aka Nemesis Breaker), despite being initially assigned the ID number GD-14, was relegated to a Toys"R"Us Japan exclusive; then "Master Megatron" was given a "limited edition" release; the "Dark Crumplezone" redeco of "Landbullet" (named "Armbullet" in the anime), despite being initially assigned the ID number GD-15, was never officially released in Japan at all; Primus was released in an unaltered Hasbro deco (complete with a tampographed Cyber Key code that was only relevant for the Hasbro release) in special retro packaging marketed as part of the Fight! Super Robot Lifeform Transformers toy line; and "Blendar" (Quickmix) and "Moledive" (Menasor) were only released as e-HOBBY exclusive "USA Editions", also in unaltered Hasbro decos in Hasbro packaging with additional stickers on the packaging, more than a year after the Galaxy Force line had run its course at retail.
Regular retail
Wave 1 (Dec 28, 2004)
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Wave 2 (Jan 20, 2005)
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Wave 3 (Feb 10, 2005)
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Wave 4 (Feb 24, 2005) | Wave 5 (Mar 17, 2005)
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Wave 6 (Mar 31, 2005)
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Wave 7 (Apr 14, 2005)
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Wave 8 (Apr 28, 2005)
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Wave 9 (Jun 9, 2005)
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Wave 10 (Jun 23, 2005)
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Wave 11 (Jul 14, 2005)
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Wave 12 (Jul 28, 2005)
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EZ Collection (Aug 25, 2005) | Wave 13 (Sep 22, 2005)
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Wave 14 (Sep 29, 2005)
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Exclusives
e-HOBBY
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(USA Edition) (w/ Unicron head, USA Edition) |
Hello Mac | Ito Yokaido | |||||
Joshin Denki | JUSCO
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"TF Station" affiliates
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Toy's Dream Project
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Toys"R"Us
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- Media exclusives
Dengeki Hobby magazine
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Galaxy Force DVDs | TV Magazine
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Mocom Toy Galaxy Force toyline
TakaraTomy/Hasbro licensee Mocom Toy released a selection of Cybertron/Galaxy Force toys in Korea, under the name Transformers: Galaxy Force (트랜스포머 갤럭시포스).
Cybertron | Destron | Other | ||||||
Multipacks |
Post-Cybertron releases
Titanium Series | Universe (2003) |
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Classics | Universe (2008) |
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Kre-O | Siege | Generations Selects | Legacy |
Notes
- Fun fact: a large majority of figures in the Cybertron toyline have to have their heads rotated 180° degrees for transformation; whether it be absolutely necessary for clearance/design intent, or for cosmetic reasons (e.g. Thundercracker, whose face gets exposed in vehicle mode whenever his Cyber Key gimmick is activated). Since the cartoon models were heavily based on the toys, this would also be frequently shown in the stock footage transformation sequences.