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Transformers, Micronauts. Rom from IDW

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  • monitor_ep
    Talkative Member
    • May 11, 2013
    • 7362

    Transformers, Micronauts. Rom from IDW

    At its annual Investor Day presentation (via TF2005), Hasbro reportedly revealed that the Transformers and Micronauts franchise will be crossing over in a new "initiative." No details outside of the crossover itself and a graphic were stated according to TF2005, but it's described as a new brand by Hasbro. There's no word on any comic book component to this initiative, but long-time Transformers publisher IDW announced that it'll be launching a new Micronauts series in early 2016. Both the Transformers and Micronauts originated as toys from the Japanese company Takara, both since acquired by Hasbro.

    Transformers-Micronauts.jpg

    Updated October 9, 2015: Friday at their IDW & Top Shelf: The Best Panel of All-Time at NY Comic Con, IDW announced more details about the return of ROM and Micronauts, the holy grails of liscensed comic books. Micronauts by Cullen Bunn and David Baldeon and ROM the Space Knight by Christos Gage & Chris Ryall (writing) and David Messina & Paolo Villamelli (art) will launch next year at previously announced. "Chris Gage and I are ROM nerds!" Ryall, IDW's editor-in-chief declared. Ryall added ROM will debut as part of their Free Comic Book Day 2016 offering with a full series rollout in July.

    http://www.newsarama.com/
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  • cjefferys
    Duke of Gloat
    • Apr 23, 2006
    • 10180

    #2
    Kinda interesting considering that Microman toys (it's Micro Change line in particular) made up much of the original Transformers toys (eg. Megatron, Soundwave, Perceptor, Bumblebee, etc).

    It's also funny that Hasbro now owns Micronauts, whose family tree traces all the way back to Hasbro's GI Joe.

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    • monitor_ep
      Talkative Member
      • May 11, 2013
      • 7362

      #3


      Rom the Space Knight #0 will make its debut

      On the first Saturday in May as IDW’s “Gold” offering for Free Comic Book Day. The annual FCBD event sees thousands upon thousands of comics from all publishers given away for free at participating comic shops. The comic will be co-written by IDW Chief Creative Officer/Editor-in-Chief Chris Ryall and acclaimed comic-book/TV writer Christos Gage. Art on Rom #0 will be handled by David Messina, who will also be sharing artistic duties on the ongoing Rom series. The cover art for Rom #0 is by the Wild Blue Yonder team of Zach Howard and Nelson Daniel.

      Rom the Space Knight #0 will feature an introductory 10-page story of Rom’s arrival on Earth, an incident that sets up an ongoing Rom series launching in July 2016.

      As an added bonus, the issue will contain additional content including character sketches, creator interviews and a glimpse of things to come. This debut represents a major launch for IDW and Hasbro next year, and this special first story will be free throughout the universe next May!
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      • Starroid Raiders Dagon
        Persistent Member
        • Apr 28, 2013
        • 2162

        #4
        I am so in for this and Micronauts. The bar is high but you can tell these guys love the property and I can see them doing justice to both. I hope they knock it out the park.

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        • emeraldknight47
          Talkative Member
          • Jun 20, 2011
          • 5212

          #5
          This news tickles me s**tless! I love both ROM and MICRONAUTS, but I was always a ROM lover first! This is one book I will definitely be picking up come next May (unless it sucks and then I'll just pull out all my old MARVEL back issues and reread those)! Looks like they gave the Spaceknight fingers instead of mittens this time around and his head looks a little less toastery. Plus, do my eyes deceive me or is someone ACTUALLY using zip-a-tone (or the current digital equivalent thereof)?!Hope they do both titles justice.
          Last edited by emeraldknight47; Dec 10, '15, 9:15 PM.
          sigpic Oh then, what's this? Big flashy lighty thing, that's what brought me here! Big flashy lighty things have got me written all over them. Not actually. But give me time. And a crayon.

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          • monitor_ep
            Talkative Member
            • May 11, 2013
            • 7362

            #6
            I am really curious about how they are going to tell Rom story without is Marvel backstory.
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            • monitor_ep
              Talkative Member
              • May 11, 2013
              • 7362

              #7
              To get ready for the new Hasbroverse and Rom #0 this weekend I have updated my Rom wiki site on both Marvel and IDW. I even have a new live action Rom with Canadian Thor music group.
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              • monitor_ep
                Talkative Member
                • May 11, 2013
                • 7362

                #8


                From USA TODAY:

                Any kid who rushed home to watch G.I. Joe and Transformers after school probably had M.A.S.K. on their TV and in their toy boxes, too. And this fall, superpowered masks and transforming vehicles are revving up pop culture again with a high-octane hero's origin story.

                Writer Brandon Easton and artist Tony Vargas are putting a Fast and Furious spin on the mid-1980s franchise with a new M.A.S.K. comic book debuting from IDW.

                Also in the works is a M.A.S.K. feature film as part of Paramount Pictures’ Hasbro Cinematic Universe, but according to Easton, the comic won’t be a cookie-cutter retread of the TV show where Matt Trakker’s good guys in M.A.S.K. (Mobile Armored Strike Kommand) battled Miles Mayhem’s antagonistic organization V.E.N.O.M. (Vicious Evil Network of Mayhem) to a catchy soundtrack.

                “This is a M.A.S.K. for the 21st century with a diverse team of specialists who are chosen for a top-secret program with a painful learning curve,” the writer says. “Ultimately, each participant will have to choose a side — and no matter which side they choose, the consequences will be great.”

                There will be throwbacks — Vargas says they’ve kept “color combinations and vital identifiable components” relating to key players. Plus, expect modernized takes on vehicles like Thunderhawk, a Camaro that became a jet plane back in the day, and motorcycle-turned-helicopter Condor.

                Yet Easton promises M.A.S.K. will look very different in some ways. “We won't be going too grim, gritty or dark. However you're not going to see a teenage kid riding a cowardly robot across the battlefield.”

                This Matt Trakker is a cross between Elon Musk and Idris Elba — Easton describes him as “an engineering genius and intellectual bad boy who has been in search of stability since the loss of his father at an early age.” Matt’s had a troubled adolescence, and as an adult, “he's given one last chance at redemption: going through the M.A.S.K. boot camp.”

                And instead of being a bumbling villain, Miles "Mayhem" Manheim is a master manipulator, brilliant military strategist and control freak whose plans to rule the world are extremely close to fruition.

                “V.E.N.O.M. will be a true force. They don't lose often nor do they accept defeat with grace,” says Easton, promising that the group and its leader will be deadlier than portrayed in the past.

                Matt and Miles have almost a father-son bond, the writer adds, but when Matt learns what the older man has done for power, “it provides the catalyst for Matt to stop searching for a ‘role model’ and figure out what it means to follow his own heart and soul.”

                The supporting cast also reflects 21st-century occupations and motivations, but will have some familiarity. Easton’s giving V.E.N.O.M. henchman Sly Rax a totally new identity, and he thinks readers will like the two female leads, villainess Vanessa Warfield and heroine Gloria Baker. The latter is one of several characters getting mask upgrades — Gloria’s is capable of “a bunch of cool holographic hacker-interface things,” says Vargas.

                The new M.A.S.K. on the whole speaks to the current zeitgeist of constant upgrades and need for immediate gratification, according to Easton.

                “Imagine if your car, motorcycle, SUV or yacht could change into a more powerful vehicle complete with state-of-the-art weapons systems and other cutting-edge technology,” the writer says. “The possibilities are as fun as they are disastrous.”
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                • monitor_ep
                  Talkative Member
                  • May 11, 2013
                  • 7362

                  #9


                  I thought I was crazy when I kinda remember seeing live action M.A.S.K. I was always asking at the convention about it and they would look at like I was crazy. Know thanks to this collection of commercials you can see the first live action characters and vehicles from the M.A.S.K. lineup.
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                  • monitor_ep
                    Talkative Member
                    • May 11, 2013
                    • 7362

                    #10


                    IDW editor-in-chief Chris Ryall insists this isn’t a reboot.

                    “We didn’t want this to be what fans have seen from so many others, which is a reboot or a relaunch where you’re asked to forget about all these characters and stories you’ve been following for years,” Ryall says. “It’s just now everybody will be acknowledging each other in a much greater way than ever before.”

                    ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: How did this whole thing come about?
                    CHRIS RYALL: It happened in a stealthy way. When I was bringing back ROM, the co-writer Christos Gage and I were talking about a nice way to make something big and impactful happen in that issue. So at the end of the issue there’s a big reveal that shows ROM might be a part of a larger universe than fans expected at the start. We were going to stealthily seed things along the way, so that fans would think these guys might exist in ROM’s world and then, in talking about it internally, it just made sense, now that we’re launching Micronauts and ROM, and we’ve already got G.I. Joe and Transformers, and were looking to do M.A.S.K. All these things should exist together. That’s what fans want to see.

                    When we first launched G.I. Joe, fans asked us, “Are they gonna meet the Transformers?” And every time we’ve added a Hasbro title since then, it’s been the same question. Are the Micronauts gonna meet the Transformers? Is ROM gonna meet the Micronauts?

                    [...]

                    What will the event involve?
                    Revolution is its own thing. It’s a five-part biweekly series that we’re launching in September, and that series will detail the reasons why these characters are all drawn together. It centers around something called Ore 13, which is an unstable version of Energon, the material that gives the Transformers their power and life. There’s a version of that on earth, that has an adverse effect on tech, which adversely affects ROM, and changes the status of him and his villains, the Dire Wraiths. It affects the Micronauts universe in a way they didn’t expect, and then it also gives birth to M.A.S.K., which is a big new title we’re launching out of this.

                    So that series details the reason for all these characters to be drawn together. Then all the series will be relaunched with new number ones and this new status quo. The plan is to have the characters go back to occupying their own spaces. I don’t want G.I. Joe or Transformers fans to feel like they have to buy every issue of everything we publish now just to get the whole story. If they do, certainly that’s a nice outcome, but I still want them to read a Transformers book and have it feel like a Transformers book. It’s just, now within that universe, ROM is somewhere in the background and may be drawn back in at some point.


                    Barber:

                    I'm very excited about Revolution, and it's absolutely not going to scale anything back from what's happened in any Transformers comics.

                    Revolution will get these comics where I think they always should have been, and since I like where they are already...

                    ...I don't think we'll be losing anything we already like.

                    Oh--important note, the list of creative teams in the press release is for the Revolution tie-in stories.

                    Just to make clear--post Revolution, @SaraLePew and @Max_Dunbar will still be there!

                    Ryall:

                    How do the other Transformers books play in (MTMTE, TAAO), renumbered? ending? untouched?

                    We'll get into more specifics soon but some will end and restart differently; TAAO will keep rolling as is.

                    It won't affect Titan Wars. We've been threading this needle very carefully for some time know, building to this.

                    MTMTE untouched?

                    Rather, you can assume that any involvement will make sense to that series and not change what James has built.

                    OK now I'm panicking. Restarting MTMTE is just about the craziest thing to do to a book with such a hardcore fandom.

                    I understand the trepidation but we're not abandoning plans, characters or stories. Just moving things forward.

                    Not a reboot in any way, shape or form, actually. All the stories you read here before still happened.

                    We'll get into new-title specifics & teams before long. If you like the way things are, you'll be happy. Only moreso

                    Courtesy of Entertainment Weekly, we have some more information on the IDW Publishing crossover event REVOLUTION, featuring all the Hasbro licensed series and restarting the comics numbering at #1 for the books involved. Chris Ryall answered some of the q
                    Last edited by monitor_ep; Jun 1, '16, 4:45 PM.
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                    • monitor_ep
                      Talkative Member
                      • May 11, 2013
                      • 7362

                      #11


                      Describing the event's plot, Ryall said, "It centers around something called Ore 13, which is an unstable version of Energon, the material that gives the Transformers their power and life. There’s a version of that on earth, that has an adverse effect on tech, which adversely affects ROM, and changes the status of him and his villains, the Dire Wraiths. It affects the Micronauts universe in a way they didn’t expect, and then it also gives birth to M.A.S.K., which is a big new title we’re launching out of this."

                      He added, "It’s sort of like the Marvel universe, how Spider-Man’s book can be his own thing but occasionally he may come into contact with the Avengers or the Guardians of the Galaxy. As a kid reading comics, that was actually something I loved, that you could read an issue of Spider-Man and Thor flew by in the background. He had no bearing on the story, but reminded you that there are other gods and heroes in the universe."

                      The announcement of the "Revolution" event follows speculation that Hasbro is building a shared cinematic universe with its properties -- which many speculate will kick-off with a ROM cameo in 2017's "Transformers: The Last Knight."

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                      • monitor_ep
                        Talkative Member
                        • May 11, 2013
                        • 7362

                        #12


                        From CBR

                        Though it stars dozens of characters best known for their animated adventures, IDW Publishing's "Revolution" will not be televised. It will, however, impact the world of comics in a major way when writers John Barber and Cullen Bunn, and artist Fico Ossio join forces to gather various Hasbro brands including G.I. Joe, Transformers, Micronauts, M.A.S.K., Action Man and Rom into a single comic book universe in the September-launching limited series.

                        IDW Unveils "Revolution" Crossover, New Status Quo for Several Hasbro Titles

                        The move reflects a similar one in the works between Hasbro and Paramount Pictures to incorporate the already-existing Transformers and G.I. Joe franchises with up-and-comers like M.A.S.K., Rom, Micronauts and Visionaries. While details on the movie project remains somewhat secretive at this time, IDW has already announced that its comic story will go continue beyond the initial series through a series of one-shots.

                        CBR spoke with the creators involved in the five-issue unifying series, not only to find out how it came about, but also to learn what -- if any -- relationship it has to the film side of things, as well as what it is that will bring these various groups together.

                        CBR News: John, you've been involved on the editorial side of things for these books for a while. How did you feel about bringing the universes together?

                        John Barber: I'd always thought if I could go back in time, I'd make sure the IDW G.I. Joe comics took place in the same universe as the Transformers comics.

                        I grew up with these big universes from Marvel and DC and Image and Valiant and Wildstorm and everybody. I've always liked the idea that you can have divergent characters interact and bump into each other and be friends and be enemies and all that stuff. AThere was some of that with the classic Transformers and G.I. Joe comics in the 1980s and '90s, but it's, let's say, a little inconsistently applied in those comics.

                        In real life, though, the way the IDW Hasbro comics rolled out, IDW did the Transformers comics for a few years before they got the rights to do G.I. Joe, and this was all pre- "universes" being part of the everyday parlance. I mean, all of us entrenched in comics got the idea, but the perception was those comic book universes could alienate casual readers -- and forget about viewers of film and TV in those days! The past 10 years have totally changed cultural perceptions.

                        I always really liked that idea, but as a writer and an editor, I was happy to roll on with the status quo of Transformers in one box, and G.I. Joe in another. As we started doing these other Hasbro brands, they were all going in their own boxes -- and that was a lot of boxes.

                        How did the decision to combine the contents of those boxes come about?

                        Barber: One day, the IDW editors were brainstorming ideas, and this notion of doing a crossover came about -- but I'm never totally sold on big crossovers that don't impact the subsequent status quo. Like, it's fun to cross over two properties and see how they interact, but I mean, if you're getting a lot of characters together, it has to have some impact on the world. Meanwhile, I think what Tom Scioli -- and me, a little -- did on the "Transformers vs. G.I. Joe" comic was great, really fun stuff. But that story was ending; Tom and I had it all planned to wrap up.

                        Then I remembered something Andrew Griffith, who draws "Transformers," suggested one time: the IDW G.I. Joe comics could fit in between big Transformers comics events. At the time, it wasn't anything we were really serious about, but now -- I started thinking about that. Did that actually kind of make sense?

                        The more I thought about it, the more it kind of fit together. If G.I. Joe was there, but they've become smaller, more covert-ops like they were in the last series we did, and now Optimus Prime in "Transformers" has annexed Earth to be part of Cybertron's Council of World. Well, G.I. Joe is who you should send in there, right? And that fit in perfectly with the conclusion of "All Hail Optimus," the story where Prime takes his unilateral action, and then Rom and Action Man and Micronauts could all be in there. And we talked seriously about Jem being there, and, hey -- what about M.A.S.K.? All this just came together.

                        I was super-excited, really energized about what this would mean for doing a Transformers comic set largely on Earth -- there were suddenly characters on the planet with as much conceptual weight as Optimus and company. And, I mean, I can't explain this without spoiling like 18 months of stories (at least), but it all fit so well into what I was planning in "Transformers" and "Action Man." And when I called Cullen, it seemed like it fit really well in where he was heading in "Micronauts" -- I mean, I edit that, I know for a fact it fit, but he was really into it.

                        Cullen and Fico, you're both working on "Micronauts." What was your reaction when you first heard the idea to bring all of these properties into one shared universe?

                        Cullen Bunn: My first reaction: This kind of craziness was something that 10-year-old Cullen would have loved. I mean, I threw all of my action figures into massive team-ups when I was playing anyhow. The idea of seeing these vastly different characters interacting is absolutely thrilling.

                        My second reaction: This is a very ambitious project, and it will be a challenge to tell this story in a way that makes sense and honors each and every one of these properties. It's one thing to be a kid mixing all of these characters together while playing. It's something completely different when you're talking about telling an exciting, satisfying adventure comic.

                        My third reaction: This is the kind of challenge I really, really love! It's not the kind of project I could possibly pass up.

                        Fico Ossio: The first time I heard the idea of the shared universe, I thought it was fantastic, and how was it not done before?! It was last year during SDCC when I met all the team, but I was't involved at all at the time so we were just discussing ideas that were going around. I could only hope that all aligned so that it could be done just to read it!

                        When David Hedgecock first approached me to work on this, it was quite the shock! I was thrilled to be part of the team to make that a reality. As I got to know more about how the story that John and Cullen wrote would unfold, it sounded even better. The story to unite all the universe is fantastic, as epic as one would hope. Plus, it does't get better than this. I get to work on all the best characters of IDW -- minus the Turtles, of course -- and on one of the most important events. I was excited, and a bit freaked out, too! But I do love challenges.

                        This effort seems to reflect a similar plan for Hasbro's big screen adaptations. Do you have any communication with the people working on the films?

                        Barber: Hasbro Studios is very aware of what we're doing, and there's some back and forth sharing of information and ideas. I don't think there's been any big thing where we've seen things one way and they've seen things other ways. We've been remarkably in sync, I think it's fair to say. There've been some characters that have specifically come from the studio here and there -- some of these brands have been dormant for a while, and there are new angles they have on characters that they've shared with us, like Phenolo-Phi in "Micronauts." They have some amazingly talented people working in that writer's room -- like, seriously extraordinary people who have done amazing film, comics and television. The few I know personally are great human beings, too.

                        The funny thing with this was, it wasn't like a mandate came down and said, "Do this." Totally the opposite. IDW Editor-in-Chief Chris Ryall and I flew out to Hasbro headquarters in Rhode Island to try to convince them to do this, because we really wanted to have this universe exist. And it turned out we were all on the same page. It was great, the people running the brands at Hasbro were all very into this and really supportive, and offered great ideas and angles on what we could do.

                        As always, Michael Kelly, Senior Director, Global Publishing at Hasbro has been with this project since the day we thought of it, and he interacts with the brand teams in Rhode Island and the studio in Los Angeles, coordinating with IDW and all of us.

                        Bunn: As John mentioned, the folks working on the cinematic versions know what we're doing, and we've been kept apprised of some of their plans. That said, I don't think our stories are following similar paths at all. The folks from Hasbro have been so supportive of us when it comes to creating a universe that stands on its own.

                        Fico, how is it for you bringing all these different characters who come from various backgrounds and realities together into one cohesive look?

                        Ossio: It sort of built up from my first take on G.I. Joe. David and John asked me to work on a cover/pinup of the characters and gave me license to give them an "upgrade."

                        I didn't want to really stray too far from the original cartoon, which I watched as a kid and loved. I had a bunch of G.I. Joe toy,s as well, so I wanted to just take those uniforms and give them more of a body armor look. Especially considering these guys were about to clash against 10-foot-tall robots. I could't grasp the concept of keeping them in regular army outfits or spandex -- sorry Snake Eyes. I think it works, because they still look true to their original design, but with a modern and updated look. Then, I took the new design of Action Man and applied the same as I did on G.I. Joe.

                        Next was Transformers. A lot of artists had worked on Transformers, and I found most of the designs Andrew Griffith had done were great. I respect his designs and pushed to make them more complex, with new, flexible parts and more of an organic look, which I thought would bring them closer to the combined universe. I also wanted to bring some of the elements from the movies. Except for Optimus. I couldn't help myself, and with him I pushed as far as the guys would let me.

                        M.A.S.K. has maybe the biggest update of them all. I just got to work on some of the designs, so far. I felt they needed new vehicle models. If this was all-new, groundbreaking technology, the cars and truck needed to have more of a "concept car" look. But, of course, you still want to have them be easily recognizable as the original cartoon.

                        Micronauts was brilliantly redesigned by David Baldeon, and same with Rom, who was designed by David Messina. I just drew them in my style with some minor takes on them.

                        The whole process was a lot of fun, and hopefully the fans feel it does justice to all these great characters. The real challenge was to be able to have them all interact with each other in one scene, having so many size differences!

                        Was it difficult trying to figure out how they can all co-exist in the same world?

                        Barber: I wrote a little prologue story that we're going to be giving away that sort of outlines how the history of Transformers and G.I. Joe and a little bit of Micronauts, Rom and Action Man. M.A.S.K. is coming directly out of "Revolution," so it's a little mind-bending, but in terms of continuity, it all fits in.

                        There's a thing I always bring up: Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips did a comic called "Sleeper" that was my favorite comic for a while. "Sleeper" was a noir spy drama set in the Wildstorm Universe, which was populated by superheroes. The characters in "Sleeper" had powers, but it was all very low-key and grounded. During the run of "Sleeper," the super-team, the Authority, took over the world. And in "Sleeper," the only time the fact that superheroes were now running the planet was even mentioned was a line like -- I'm saying this from memory, so I might be off -- "with the new administration in place, there will be different protocols."

                        I'm comfortable with compartmentalizing and allowing for scale. Like, I've always been okay with the idea that Daredevil can be fighting a mugger and that can mean everything in that story, even though in that same universe Thanos might be invading a galaxy. I think putting all these characters together only increases the possibilities of storytelling, it doesn't diminish it. "G.I. Joe" can be a radically different style than "M.A.S.K." or "Rom," and they can still interact.

                        Bunn: The challenge is bringing all of these characters together in a way that seems natural. The creators working on these books have worked together to build a lot of connective tissue between the different properties. What's nice is, it doesn't seem forced at all. It already feels like a fully-formed, shared universe. For instance, I was absolutely blown away when I heard about the setup for "M.A.S.K." It makes so much sense. It was a, "Why didn't I think of that?" moment.

                        As "Revolution" kicks off, what kind of threat or event is it that's big enough to bring all these different groups together? And what was the design process like developing that individual or force?

                        Barber: The background is, Optimus Prime has publicly declared Earth to be under his protection and part of Cybertron's Council of Worlds. This isn't Dark Optimus; he's doing good things -- at least from his point of view -- but the people of Earth are naturally going to be concerned about this turn of events.

                        Now, one of the reasons Earth has been important to the Transformers is this substance called Ore-13. This has a long history in the Transformers comics, but the short version is it can be converted to Energon, which is the Transformers' fuel source. That means the Earth is one of the few places in the galaxy where Transformers can live -- it has a food source, basically. But Ore-13 has always had other properties -- an ability to supercharge Cybertronians, for one.

                        Something starts happening to Ore-13 around the world, making it unstable, and all signs point to Optimus Prime, who has no idea why this is happening. That sets the stage for "Revolution."

                        Bunn: Ore-13 is the key to this event. For various reasons, everybody wants it or wants to destroy it. For some, the mineral is the source of great mystery. Others covet Ore-13. Some are willing to share their knowledge, for a price. Others know just enough about Ore-13 to be very, very dangerous.

                        What kind of conflict arises from within the various groups and individuals as they're thrust together?

                        Barber: There's a natural tension between the Cybertronians and the humans. Optimus Prime wants to protect humans, both from Cybertronians and from what he sees as problematic human authority. G.I. Joe is brought into the fold in response to this big, big potential threat on Earth. I mean, the humans know Optimus; this isn't like a random alien shows up, but still, he's overreaching, from the President's POV.

                        Meanwhile, Rom's been going around, as we saw on Free Comic Book Day, and executing Dire Wraiths. This puts him at odds with human authorities, as well. They don't even know about Dire Wraiths, but the Wraiths sure know what Cybertronians are.

                        The web quickly becomes complex -- lots of different points of view, many of them valid, with people who should be friends fighting one another, and people who should be enemies becoming allies.

                        Bunn: There are a lot of moving parts in this series. Each faction has goals that will bring them into allegiance or conflict with the other factions. Sometimes, those allegiances change on a dime, just like sometimes the conflict will turn into team up based on circumstances. I think as the event wraps up, there will be battle lines drawn very clearly between these various groups.

                        How will your own ongoings look different after the events of "Revolution?"

                        Barber: Lots of the Transformers comic I write will be different, including the title. But at the same time, it's building the same story I started writing five years ago. You don't need to know all that stuff, but if you do, rest assured this is all part of the big story we've been telling. It's an unexpected benefit -- I mean, 2011 John had no inkling that Rom or Scarlett or Acroyear or Windblade or Action Man would be there, but this all fits into the tale Andrew Griffith and I set out to tell.

                        But coming out of "Revolution," there are some big changes. Lots of stuff is going to happen between now and November, when "Revolution" ends.

                        Bunn: As you can imagine, all of the books will be shaken to the core by "Revolution." With "Micronauts," the secrets revealed in the crossover will impact all of Microspace. We're going to dig deep, all the way back to the origins of this alternate universe. And, as we've seen in my book, there's a "storm" eating away at the heart of Microspace. The crossover will tie directly into this force of destruction, either as a solution or by making it worse.

                        The Micronauts will, of course, be venturing to Earth during "Revolution," and they'll be sticking around for a bit afterwards, although not necessarily by their own free will. So we're going to get some mini heroes in a gigantic world shenanigans for a bit after the event.

                        I'm picturing the kinds of fight scenes that would make any child of the '80s grin from ear to ear. How much fun has it been writing and drawing those?

                        Barber: I can say this: There's a particular fight scene/set piece I thought of back in the first meeting or so that really got me excited. To me, it's amazing to have the scale of the four-inch-tall Micronauts to the human G.I. Joe to the slightly taller Rom to the even bigger M.A.S.K. vehicles to the towering Transformers -- which get even bigger when you have Combiners (when 5 or 6 Transformers form together into a giant robot mode) and the even huger Titans -- which are cities that change into robots, but they're cities at a Cybertronian scale, so they're miles tall. There's a lot of fun to be had.

                        Cullen and I had some good times bouncing ideas off each other, and when Fico started doing art -- wow. Here was somebody who could, somehow, pull off every crazy idea, and make it look great.

                        Bunn: So much fun! The battles in this book are going to be something else. Fico had no small task before him, balancing so many characters of various shapes and sizes. But he's knocked it out of the park. I see his pages rolling in, and I'm amazed at how much he elevates these crazy stories John and I are writing.

                        Ossio: Being a child from the '80s, and being a big fan of all these characters, it's been a real pleasure to be part of this great team and have the opportunity to bring this story to life.

                        It's been a surreal experience for me to be drawing Optimus, Snake Eyes, etc. It brings me back to when I watched the shows as a child every morning, or when I got the Sky Striker for Christmas. Who would've thought I would end up drawing these characters for such a major story?

                        I'm grateful for the trust David, John and Cullen have given me to bring to life this epic story. I also get to work with Sebastian Cheng, who's doing an outstanding work on the coloring. It's been nothing but a pleasure, and hopefully the readers will have as much fun going through the pages as I have drawing them.

                        IDW Publishing's "Revolution" begins in September.
                        Visit my wiki site:

                        Comic Books in the Media

                        To view my custom works of both JLU and Megos go to:

                        Monitor_EP Deviantart page

                        Action Jackson Road Trip log

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                        • patches
                          New Member
                          • Jan 12, 2015
                          • 19

                          #13
                          I will be shocked if they don't somehow capitalize on the fact that the Micronauts Biotron/Takara Robotman is for all intents and purposes the progenitor of what became the Transformers. He is really where they all began. Where that recurring color scheme and look that we are so familiar with from Optimus Prime began. It would be neat to see that somehow worked into the story and lore.

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