(continued)
Over in Japan, the Legends of the Microns line (still getting used to that, having called it Micron Legend since those days) approached packaging in a way similar to Car Robots -- windowed packaging for earlier releases (except toys were now in boxes with solid hang tabs instead of being, uh, skin packs) and windowless boxes for later ones. The windowless boxes would continue Car Robots' pairing of artwork for robot mode with toy pictures for altmode. The packaging art would usually be the same Dreamwave art assets used in the US, but with some differences, such as for Hot Shot (thankfully), Jetfire, and Megatron.
Box backs featured a cool transformation sequence across the box and highlights of the toy gimmicks in insets, and for bigger boxes, co-sells (headshots gathered per faction, rather than toy pictures) at the bottom. A separate inset pair of pictures (for each mode) highlighted the Micron partner alongside the (other) gimmicks. Of some trivial interest is that the toys faced right or left based on faction, not price point. One nice detail is that the interior tray highlighted the Micron partner with a little Micron panel.
My favorite part of the Japanese packaging has to be the Micron packaging. The card wasn't particularly good (Optimus Prime and Megatron flanking the logo on a green, light-streaked backdrop, leading the chase for the Microns) but the bubble being the Micron faction symbol made up for that. This is still one of my favorite anythings about packaging, and when I first saw it in person at a specialty store I thought it was the coolest damn thing.
These worked together to create an "unlocking a Micron panel" vibe, rooted in a silver said panel being behind the Microns themselves, typically arranged all pointing up in a three-lines-converging/diverging manner where feasible. These also included artwork (on the front base of the bubble) that featured the three team members in robot mode. The Exdimension redecos would reuse all of this, except with a black/foil silver nameplate on the front-of-bubble card.
Japanese releases were back to trying different packaging formats; while versus packs were still out, Takara sought to leverage the "Mini-Con partners" element of the line by packaging Deluxes (and their own Partners) with Mini-Con Teams. These packages, which used artwork for both the teams tended to highlight the included teams, or at least make sure they were visible in the window. A later, perhaps the (maybe literally) ultimate multipack for the line, the gorgeous Magna Convoy DX box set, would be an immense windowless box.
Sonokong continued importing then-current Transformers lines, with a tight Armada lineup named Eunha Yeongung: Cybertron and having packaging that mostly featured the same style as their previous releases. The packaging was similar to Takara's with some text and logo differences (compare this Shock with Takara's Shockwave). A nice touch is how their windowless packaging for Ultra Magnus/Overload has a ghostly picture of Super Mode Optimus on the front, setting up that connection.
Next: I have loved you for 20 years, please accept this gift of Alpha Q
Over in Japan, the Legends of the Microns line (still getting used to that, having called it Micron Legend since those days) approached packaging in a way similar to Car Robots -- windowed packaging for earlier releases (except toys were now in boxes with solid hang tabs instead of being, uh, skin packs) and windowless boxes for later ones. The windowless boxes would continue Car Robots' pairing of artwork for robot mode with toy pictures for altmode. The packaging art would usually be the same Dreamwave art assets used in the US, but with some differences, such as for Hot Shot (thankfully), Jetfire, and Megatron.
Box backs featured a cool transformation sequence across the box and highlights of the toy gimmicks in insets, and for bigger boxes, co-sells (headshots gathered per faction, rather than toy pictures) at the bottom. A separate inset pair of pictures (for each mode) highlighted the Micron partner alongside the (other) gimmicks. Of some trivial interest is that the toys faced right or left based on faction, not price point. One nice detail is that the interior tray highlighted the Micron partner with a little Micron panel.
My favorite part of the Japanese packaging has to be the Micron packaging. The card wasn't particularly good (Optimus Prime and Megatron flanking the logo on a green, light-streaked backdrop, leading the chase for the Microns) but the bubble being the Micron faction symbol made up for that. This is still one of my favorite anythings about packaging, and when I first saw it in person at a specialty store I thought it was the coolest damn thing.
These worked together to create an "unlocking a Micron panel" vibe, rooted in a silver said panel being behind the Microns themselves, typically arranged all pointing up in a three-lines-converging/diverging manner where feasible. These also included artwork (on the front base of the bubble) that featured the three team members in robot mode. The Exdimension redecos would reuse all of this, except with a black/foil silver nameplate on the front-of-bubble card.
Japanese releases were back to trying different packaging formats; while versus packs were still out, Takara sought to leverage the "Mini-Con partners" element of the line by packaging Deluxes (and their own Partners) with Mini-Con Teams. These packages, which used artwork for both the teams tended to highlight the included teams, or at least make sure they were visible in the window. A later, perhaps the (maybe literally) ultimate multipack for the line, the gorgeous Magna Convoy DX box set, would be an immense windowless box.
Sonokong continued importing then-current Transformers lines, with a tight Armada lineup named Eunha Yeongung: Cybertron and having packaging that mostly featured the same style as their previous releases. The packaging was similar to Takara's with some text and logo differences (compare this Shock with Takara's Shockwave). A nice touch is how their windowless packaging for Ultra Magnus/Overload has a ghostly picture of Super Mode Optimus on the front, setting up that connection.
Next: I have loved you for 20 years, please accept this gift of Alpha Q
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