Maybe it was intended for stabbing, not slashing.
Swordfights in space never look like fencing but they totally could.
Swordfights in space never look like fencing but they totally could.
I guess that would explain why it was able to be smashed to pieces by the Dark Star Saber.Maybe it was intended for stabbing, not slashing.
Does Magmatron count?How did Beast Wars fail to give us a Menasaur?
Seems like they got hit with the "GEEWUN" stick by the third season.I think it was Robots in Disguise (2015) that really should have had a Menasaur.
Since it did have a Menasor, after almost all the Decepticons in the preceding seasons had either animal modes or animal themes on their robot mode.
Market forces. Combiner Wars sold so well that the last season of RiD '15, which lined up with it, was under pressure from retailers to skew closer to it.Seems like they got hit with the "GEEWUN" stick by the third season.
At the time they first came out, most of them were locked behind a Members Only wall accessible only to club members, and not everyone in this fandom was willing to be a club member. They only really became free to read by the general public in the final years of the club when it became clear that Fun Publications would be losing the Transformers license, but by then the only people reading the prose stories were the diehard loyalists who had already been reading them, and/or those who read them primarily for wiki coverage.it might just be me being on the wrong side of the internet but does no one read the funpub text stories anymore?? i feel like most of the fandom (the parts where i'm at anyway) either haven't read them or don't know they exist. weren't they kinda popular when they first came out..
i don't mean the shattered glass stuff, i feel like more people know about that. i mean wings universe and transtech etc etc.
Ah- that makes sense, thanks for the enlightenment.At the time they first came out, most of them were locked behind a Members Only wall accessible only to club members, and not everyone in this fandom was willing to be a club member. They only really became free to read by the general public in the final years of the club when it became clear that Fun Publications would be losing the Transformers license, but by then the only people reading the prose stories were the diehard loyalists who had already been reading them, and/or those who read them primarily for wiki coverage.
Not to mention the fact that Transformers is so visually driven a brand that many don't like reading text-only prose with little to no illustrations, believing Transformers simply doesn't work as novelized fiction and can only really function and thrive in visual mediums like comic books, TV shows, and movies.
And then there were the critics who just derided the convention/club fiction in general (not just the prose stories but the comics, script readings, Facebook fiction, and all of it) as "fanfiction" (used in a derogatory manner despite there also existing well written fanfics out there on the 'Net) just because it all had a niche release venue aimed strictly at geeks instead of any mainstream releases at mass retail aimed at more general audiences.
Until today I was unaware that they had ever been available to non-members.They only really became free to read by the general public in the final years of the club when it became clear that Fun Publications would be losing the Transformers license
Well, one of them had always been free for anyone to read. It's just that it was one that even the Club had wanted to sweep under the rug and pretend like it didn't exist (but it still did since it was published and promoted and everything): "The Razor's Edge", the story written by Ben Yee to advertise the 2007 pre-beast Airazor toy.Until today I was unaware that they had ever been available to non-members.![]()