BotCon 2022 report
On the Thursday of August 25 to the Sunday of August 28, the once official Transformers convention BotCon made its long-awaited return, following its end back in 2016. The first BotCon in six years, BotCon 2022 was the first to be run by new convention organizers Agabyss, and the first to be unendorsed by Hasbro since 2004 (before then, only BotCon 2002 had been an officially-licensed event; BotCons 1994-2001 were likewise unlicensed events but did sell officially-licensed merchandise and fiction as exclusives).
As such, the convention exclusives for this new era of BotCon were the first to not be Transformers product at all. For last year, BotCon offered their first exclusive online. An action figure belonging to the Action Force line produced by Valaverse, Wasp Raider was supposed to be released at BotCon 2021, but the COVID-19 pandemic ended up pushing plans for the convention back a whole year. So, Wasp Raider was released online in lieu of a physical convention release. As one can easily tell, his color scheme is homage to Beast Wars Waspinator.
For 2022, BotCon was happening for real and went back to tradition of having a main boxed set, attendee freebie, and additional souvenirs available at the convention store. Rather than go the route of third-party "not-Transformers" like TFCon, or preexisting official Transformers product simply customized like Dairycon, BotCon 2022 instead opted to release exclusive redecos of another, lesser known, first-party line of transforming robot toys.
Produced by 52Toys, BeastBox is a line of transforming robot action figures that features a wide assortment of robotic animals that all change into 2-inch by 2-inch by 2-inch cubes. Because of this, BeastBox toys are very intricate and complex in their designs, some having a real origami feel to them that can make the conversion process quite challenging for some.
Four figures were offered in a boxed set included with the Premium and VIP registration packages, another was offered as the attendee freebie, and two more were each sold as souvenirs exclusive to the onsite BotCon Store. And what was special about these seven is that each was given a color scheme that paid homage to a past Transformers character.
4 Figure Box Set:
* Albitron: A crocodile colored like Albitron, redecoed from BeastBox BB-15 Teardrop
* Dragonfire: A Chinese dragon colored like Shattered Glass Rodimus, redecoed from MegaBox MB-14 Chinese Dragon
* Siberius: A tiger colored like prototype Tigatron/Mutant Tigatron/Shattered Glass Cheetor, redecoed from BeastBox BB-20 Torado
* Motley Roo w/ Josey: A kangaroo and joey colored like Shattered Glass Soundwave and Ravage, redecoed from BeastBox BB-35 Ricochet
Attendee freebie:
* Boxx Monkey: A gorilla colored like, well, it was stated at the show to be colored like Primal Prime, but it's colored red and silver with no blue, and features flame designs that make it look a lot more like Burning Convoy, redecoed from BeastBox BB-03MK Monkey King
Store-exclusive souvenirs:
* Ligerstrike: A lion colored like Shattered Glass Megatron, redecoed from BeastBox BB-19LD Leonardo
* Dark Klawd: A wolf colored like Shattered Glass Optimus Prime, redecoed from BeastBox BB-31 FirmHand
The accompanying convention comic featuring these toys (titled "Charging into the Fray!" as part of a new comic line named BotCon Unlimited) was... okay. It only featured Ligerstrike and Dragonfire. Boxx Monkey was on the cover but, other than that, none of the other BeastBox characters appeared. At all. The only other characters were just humans.
There were also other souvenirs at the store like T-Shirts, pins, a plush toy of Josey, and Volume 2 of BotCon: Beyond the Convention, which covers all that Volume 1 didn't get to cover (like the Transformers Collectors Club exclusives). A special BotCon-exclusive preorder to a new figure in the Archecore line from Toy Alliance was also available at the store, but I did not preorder it.
On Thursday, the first event of the day was the Customization Class (which I didn't sign up for). One at 10am and another at 3pm. In honor of Simon Furman's attendance, the custom class figure (the only convention exclusive that actually had anything to do with Transformers) was Leonicus made from the Walmart-exclusive Vintage Beast Wars Cheetor toy. Who is Leonicus? Well, Leonicus is a character that Simon Furman created for BotCon 1999, the only protagonist of the multi-year storyline Reaching the Omega Point who never received a toy back in the day. He was a member of the Covenant, a group of twelve Transformers who were the first to be created by Primus, a concept that Furman would later recycle for the Thirteen Original Transformers. The idea of using the Cheetor mold came from an unmade Takara concept for a lion retool of the mold (as seen on the webpage linked to above).
Registration package pick-up was throughout the day. Vendor registration and exhibitor hall setup began at 10:30am. VIP and Premium pass registration began at 4pm, and Weekend pass registration began at 6pm. The BotCon store opened at 4:15pm for VIP and Premium pass holders and at 6pm for the Weekend pass holders. The store closed at 10pm and the exhibitor hall setup ended at 11pm. During this time, after picking up my Premium pass and all seven BeastBox figures, I offered to help one of the vendors unload his van and set up his booth, a guy named Joe who's part of the Stasis Lock Podcast. After that, I did him another favor in running a bin full of toys up to Stasis Lock's Parts Party.
Speaking of which, this was my first BotCon where I actually went to the after-hour Parts Parties. I knew about these room-to-room buying sessions in previous years, but was always either too tired or too busy with other things to really go to any of them in the past. This time, I made the effort to explore almost all of them each night, and got some pretty great purchases at several of them (my overall haul from the convention can be found in my previous post).
On the Thursday of August 25 to the Sunday of August 28, the once official Transformers convention BotCon made its long-awaited return, following its end back in 2016. The first BotCon in six years, BotCon 2022 was the first to be run by new convention organizers Agabyss, and the first to be unendorsed by Hasbro since 2004 (before then, only BotCon 2002 had been an officially-licensed event; BotCons 1994-2001 were likewise unlicensed events but did sell officially-licensed merchandise and fiction as exclusives).
As such, the convention exclusives for this new era of BotCon were the first to not be Transformers product at all. For last year, BotCon offered their first exclusive online. An action figure belonging to the Action Force line produced by Valaverse, Wasp Raider was supposed to be released at BotCon 2021, but the COVID-19 pandemic ended up pushing plans for the convention back a whole year. So, Wasp Raider was released online in lieu of a physical convention release. As one can easily tell, his color scheme is homage to Beast Wars Waspinator.
For 2022, BotCon was happening for real and went back to tradition of having a main boxed set, attendee freebie, and additional souvenirs available at the convention store. Rather than go the route of third-party "not-Transformers" like TFCon, or preexisting official Transformers product simply customized like Dairycon, BotCon 2022 instead opted to release exclusive redecos of another, lesser known, first-party line of transforming robot toys.
Produced by 52Toys, BeastBox is a line of transforming robot action figures that features a wide assortment of robotic animals that all change into 2-inch by 2-inch by 2-inch cubes. Because of this, BeastBox toys are very intricate and complex in their designs, some having a real origami feel to them that can make the conversion process quite challenging for some.
Four figures were offered in a boxed set included with the Premium and VIP registration packages, another was offered as the attendee freebie, and two more were each sold as souvenirs exclusive to the onsite BotCon Store. And what was special about these seven is that each was given a color scheme that paid homage to a past Transformers character.
4 Figure Box Set:
* Albitron: A crocodile colored like Albitron, redecoed from BeastBox BB-15 Teardrop
* Dragonfire: A Chinese dragon colored like Shattered Glass Rodimus, redecoed from MegaBox MB-14 Chinese Dragon
* Siberius: A tiger colored like prototype Tigatron/Mutant Tigatron/Shattered Glass Cheetor, redecoed from BeastBox BB-20 Torado
* Motley Roo w/ Josey: A kangaroo and joey colored like Shattered Glass Soundwave and Ravage, redecoed from BeastBox BB-35 Ricochet
Attendee freebie:
* Boxx Monkey: A gorilla colored like, well, it was stated at the show to be colored like Primal Prime, but it's colored red and silver with no blue, and features flame designs that make it look a lot more like Burning Convoy, redecoed from BeastBox BB-03MK Monkey King
Store-exclusive souvenirs:
* Ligerstrike: A lion colored like Shattered Glass Megatron, redecoed from BeastBox BB-19LD Leonardo
* Dark Klawd: A wolf colored like Shattered Glass Optimus Prime, redecoed from BeastBox BB-31 FirmHand
The accompanying convention comic featuring these toys (titled "Charging into the Fray!" as part of a new comic line named BotCon Unlimited) was... okay. It only featured Ligerstrike and Dragonfire. Boxx Monkey was on the cover but, other than that, none of the other BeastBox characters appeared. At all. The only other characters were just humans.
There were also other souvenirs at the store like T-Shirts, pins, a plush toy of Josey, and Volume 2 of BotCon: Beyond the Convention, which covers all that Volume 1 didn't get to cover (like the Transformers Collectors Club exclusives). A special BotCon-exclusive preorder to a new figure in the Archecore line from Toy Alliance was also available at the store, but I did not preorder it.
On Thursday, the first event of the day was the Customization Class (which I didn't sign up for). One at 10am and another at 3pm. In honor of Simon Furman's attendance, the custom class figure (the only convention exclusive that actually had anything to do with Transformers) was Leonicus made from the Walmart-exclusive Vintage Beast Wars Cheetor toy. Who is Leonicus? Well, Leonicus is a character that Simon Furman created for BotCon 1999, the only protagonist of the multi-year storyline Reaching the Omega Point who never received a toy back in the day. He was a member of the Covenant, a group of twelve Transformers who were the first to be created by Primus, a concept that Furman would later recycle for the Thirteen Original Transformers. The idea of using the Cheetor mold came from an unmade Takara concept for a lion retool of the mold (as seen on the webpage linked to above).
Registration package pick-up was throughout the day. Vendor registration and exhibitor hall setup began at 10:30am. VIP and Premium pass registration began at 4pm, and Weekend pass registration began at 6pm. The BotCon store opened at 4:15pm for VIP and Premium pass holders and at 6pm for the Weekend pass holders. The store closed at 10pm and the exhibitor hall setup ended at 11pm. During this time, after picking up my Premium pass and all seven BeastBox figures, I offered to help one of the vendors unload his van and set up his booth, a guy named Joe who's part of the Stasis Lock Podcast. After that, I did him another favor in running a bin full of toys up to Stasis Lock's Parts Party.
Speaking of which, this was my first BotCon where I actually went to the after-hour Parts Parties. I knew about these room-to-room buying sessions in previous years, but was always either too tired or too busy with other things to really go to any of them in the past. This time, I made the effort to explore almost all of them each night, and got some pretty great purchases at several of them (my overall haul from the convention can be found in my previous post).
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