Recent discussion in the Age of the Primes thread has inspired me to share the following essay here, which I originally wrote on another board in a thread where the OP was asking for an explanation about the Primes. It is very long and will span multiple posts.
---
The term "Prime" has had a very storied history in the past 40 years of the Transformers brand. Its meaning has changed and evolved many times over, so here's a full overview of what its deal has been since the very beginning.
WARNING: There will be spoilers for a LOT of media from the past 40 years, both vintage and recent.
The 1980s/early 1990s
In the beginning, "Prime" had no meaning. It wasn't a title or anything special. It was simply Optimus Prime's "surname". Early stories from the Marvel comics (some in the US and most in the UK) had Optimus named "Optimus Prime" before he became Autobot leader, even before he became a soldier with any kind of military rank.
The G1 cartoon, meanwhile, came up with its own backstory origin for Optimus in the Season 2 episode "War Dawn", in which it was revealed that Optimus had once been a young dock worker named "Orion Pax", who, after being injured by Megatron, was brought to and repaired by the Autobot sage Alpha Trion, rebuilt into a more powerful new form that Alpha Trion named "Optimus Prime". Like in the early Marvel comics, the "Prime" part of his name had no meaning. But fans quickly got to thinking otherwise when the next big development happened.
In 1986, The Transformers: The Movie was released, and introduced the Matrix of Leadership as a sacred, mystical talisman carried by those given full leadership command of the Autobot faction. A prophecy surrounding the Matrix was also introduced, one that foretold of a certain special Autobot being chosen by the Matrix itself. This prophecy came true when Hot Rod took the Matrix from Galvatron and it turned him into the next Autobot leader, Rodimus Prime. It was here that the term "Prime" first took on some semblance of a deeper meaning.
But first, I need to back up a bit. While this movie introduced the Matrix into the world of the cartoon, the Marvel comics had already introduced its own version of the Matrix beforehand, that being the Creation Matrix. Issue #5 of the Marvel comics, "The New Order", revealed that "once every ten millennia a new Autobot leader is chosen and encoded with the Matrix," with Optimus being the most recent inheritor. But, unlike the physical talisman seen in the cartoon and its movie, the Creation Matrix of the comics was an intangible program. It also functioned differently from the cartoon's Matrix, in that it had the ability to create new Transformer life, whereas the cartoon's Matrix was at first just Unicron's kryptonite, and then shown in the Season 3 episode "Five Face of Darkness, Part 4" to be a repository of knowledge and wisdom acquired from each Matrix bearer.
That same episode also introduced a dynastic lineage of Matrix bearers who had all preceded Optimus. These former bearers were given no names in the episode, referred to only by descriptions in the episode's script. In chronological order, they were simply called "Ancient Robot", "Powerful Robot", "Brooding Robot", "Pre-Transformer", "New Narrator", and "U-Haul Robot".
Backing up again to the Creation Matrix of the comics, it should be pointed out that, for the longest time, it was believed that The Transformers: The Movie had taken direct inspiration from the Marvel comics when it introduced the Matrix of Leadership, since the comics had had the Creation Matrix first. However, when the original first-draft script for the movie was finally unearthed just a few years ago, it was discovered that the movie had actually come up with its Matrix completely independently of the comics' Matrix. The script was dated to August 15, 1984, while "The New Order" was released on February 26, 1985. So the movie and the comics came up with their own completely separate concepts that just so happened to both be called "the Matrix" in the biggest mother of all coincidences.
That said, once the movie came out, it had a big influence on the Marvel UK comics. While writer Simon Furman wasn't a fan of the cartoon, he loved the movie and thought it was amazing. He incorporated many aspects from the movie's story into the UK comics, and later carried them over to the US comics when he eventually took over writing duties from the US comics' writer Bob Budiansky. Particularly, he took the Matrix of Leadership talisman from the movie and the Creation Matrix program from the comics and retconned the two into being one and the same thing. He also introduced a new origin story for the Transformers, inventing the character of Primus as the Transformers' benevolent creator god and the opposite of Unicron, who was reimagined by the comics as a Satan-esque evil god. The energy of the Matrix was declared to be Primus's own essence, explaining how and why it was able to destroy Unicron.
Compared to the cartoon's earlier origin stories of the Cybertronians having been created by the alien Quintessons, and Unicron having been created by the alien monkey scientist Primacron, fans gravitated more toward the comics' Primus origin, preferring its more cosmic scale involving the millennia-spanning destinies and legacies of ancient space gods carried out by the Transformers in the present. During this time, the comics also introduced their own list of other Matrix bearers that had preceded Optimus Prime. Taking a page from the fact that Optimus Prime's successor was named Rodimus "Prime", the comics' list of Matrix bearers gave them the following names: Prima, Prime Nova, and Sentinel Prime.
This pretty much cemented the idea in fans' minds that "Prime" was, now and forevermore, the title held by Autobot leaders who had been chosen to bear the Matrix. Whether they were chosen by the Matrix itself or chosen by their predecessor was not clear-cut, but bearing the Matrix and being Autobot leader seemed to be the main criteria. Whether or not all Matrix bearers had had a different name prior to their bearing it, however, remained unspecified. Some felt that Hot Rod becoming Rodimus Prime was strictly the case for him being that he was the one and only Chosen One, while others took it as a sign that other Matrix bearers could (and should) have pre-Prime names.
This sentiment led to the idea of Orion Pax becoming Optimus Prime in "War Dawn" being the result of him having been given the Matrix by Alpha Trion when he rebuilt Orion in that episode, when the episode itself never implied such before the movie came out. Nonetheless, the flashback of former Matrix bearers seen in "Five Faces of Darkness, Part 4" further supported this notion with Alpha Trion being explicitly shown to have been given the Matrix for safekeeping by the bearer who immediately preceded Optimus. Still, regardless of whether Alpha Trion gave Optimus the Matrix when he first rebuilt him or at some point later on, the debate goes on unresolved to this day.
The 1980s/early 1990s (Japan)
Over in Japan, meanwhile, things were a little different. When the Transformers brand was released to the Japanese market, only the toys and the cartoon were released there. The Marvel comics had no official Japanese translation, and wouldn't receive one until 2018. Consequently, there was only one major continuity in Japan rather than two, that being the cartoon. So the lasting influence of the Marvel comics described in the section above wasn't really a thing in Japan during this time.
When the cartoon was dubbed into Japanese, several of the names and terms were changed. The Autobots were called "Cybertrons", the Decepticons were called "Destrons", Planet Cybertron was called "Seibertron", and so on. Regarding Optimus Prime, he was renamed "Convoy", in honor of the fact that he led a convoy of cars and trucks as the name "Optimus Prime" was apparently too difficult for Japanese kids to say and remember, with how many more syllables it had when spoken in Japanese (eight syllables) compared to how many syllables in has in English (four syllables). The word "Prime" also called to mind imagery of prime ribs, as that's what the Japanese most associated the word "prime" with at that time.
When the third season of the G1 cartoon was dubbed in Japanese, Rodimus Prime was renamed "Rodimus Convoy", in order to make it clear to Japanese kids that he was the new Convoy. At first glance, this makes it seem like "Convoy" is simply the Japanese equivalent of "Prime". However, later series would make it clearer that "Convoy" is more like the equivalent of "Optimus" instead, in that it's a name rather than a title or rank.
In contrast to how Autobot leadership was denoted by the rank of "Prime", in Japan the highest-ranking members of Cybertron leadership were instead denoted by the more military sounding rank of "Supreme Commander" (総司令官 Sōshireikan, more literally meaning "Commander-in-Chief", but inertia from the early days of the online fandom has cemented "Supreme Commander" as the de facto translation). Convoy held this rank, Rodimus Convoy held this rank, and all their successive leaders did, those being Fortress Maximus, Ginrai, Star Saber, and Dai Atlas. All of them held this rank and authority, but none of them carried the Matrix like Convoy and Rodimus Convoy had, because it was the Supreme Commander rank that determined leadership instead of the Convoy name.
After Dai Atlas's tenure, the original Convoy was resurrected in a new more powerful form named Star Convoy, and he remained in command with each new body-upgrade and prefixed-name he received afterward. The first of these was a black-colored Powermaster form called Super Convoy. Then he became an Action Master and went back to just going by "Convoy". Then he received a new "Missile Trailer" body during the Japanese Generation 2 line (which was the Hero Optimus Prime toy in Hasbro's markets), but still went by just "Convoy". But then, he got upgraded into the sword-wielding "Battle Convoy" (which was the Japanese release of the G2 "Laser Optimus Prime" from Hasbro's markets). Other forms for Convoy have since been added retroactively by 21st-Century Japanese G1 fiction, but they mostly continued to call him just "Convoy".
Continued in the next post...
---
The term "Prime" has had a very storied history in the past 40 years of the Transformers brand. Its meaning has changed and evolved many times over, so here's a full overview of what its deal has been since the very beginning.
WARNING: There will be spoilers for a LOT of media from the past 40 years, both vintage and recent.
The 1980s/early 1990s
In the beginning, "Prime" had no meaning. It wasn't a title or anything special. It was simply Optimus Prime's "surname". Early stories from the Marvel comics (some in the US and most in the UK) had Optimus named "Optimus Prime" before he became Autobot leader, even before he became a soldier with any kind of military rank.
The G1 cartoon, meanwhile, came up with its own backstory origin for Optimus in the Season 2 episode "War Dawn", in which it was revealed that Optimus had once been a young dock worker named "Orion Pax", who, after being injured by Megatron, was brought to and repaired by the Autobot sage Alpha Trion, rebuilt into a more powerful new form that Alpha Trion named "Optimus Prime". Like in the early Marvel comics, the "Prime" part of his name had no meaning. But fans quickly got to thinking otherwise when the next big development happened.
In 1986, The Transformers: The Movie was released, and introduced the Matrix of Leadership as a sacred, mystical talisman carried by those given full leadership command of the Autobot faction. A prophecy surrounding the Matrix was also introduced, one that foretold of a certain special Autobot being chosen by the Matrix itself. This prophecy came true when Hot Rod took the Matrix from Galvatron and it turned him into the next Autobot leader, Rodimus Prime. It was here that the term "Prime" first took on some semblance of a deeper meaning.
But first, I need to back up a bit. While this movie introduced the Matrix into the world of the cartoon, the Marvel comics had already introduced its own version of the Matrix beforehand, that being the Creation Matrix. Issue #5 of the Marvel comics, "The New Order", revealed that "once every ten millennia a new Autobot leader is chosen and encoded with the Matrix," with Optimus being the most recent inheritor. But, unlike the physical talisman seen in the cartoon and its movie, the Creation Matrix of the comics was an intangible program. It also functioned differently from the cartoon's Matrix, in that it had the ability to create new Transformer life, whereas the cartoon's Matrix was at first just Unicron's kryptonite, and then shown in the Season 3 episode "Five Face of Darkness, Part 4" to be a repository of knowledge and wisdom acquired from each Matrix bearer.
That same episode also introduced a dynastic lineage of Matrix bearers who had all preceded Optimus. These former bearers were given no names in the episode, referred to only by descriptions in the episode's script. In chronological order, they were simply called "Ancient Robot", "Powerful Robot", "Brooding Robot", "Pre-Transformer", "New Narrator", and "U-Haul Robot".
Backing up again to the Creation Matrix of the comics, it should be pointed out that, for the longest time, it was believed that The Transformers: The Movie had taken direct inspiration from the Marvel comics when it introduced the Matrix of Leadership, since the comics had had the Creation Matrix first. However, when the original first-draft script for the movie was finally unearthed just a few years ago, it was discovered that the movie had actually come up with its Matrix completely independently of the comics' Matrix. The script was dated to August 15, 1984, while "The New Order" was released on February 26, 1985. So the movie and the comics came up with their own completely separate concepts that just so happened to both be called "the Matrix" in the biggest mother of all coincidences.
That said, once the movie came out, it had a big influence on the Marvel UK comics. While writer Simon Furman wasn't a fan of the cartoon, he loved the movie and thought it was amazing. He incorporated many aspects from the movie's story into the UK comics, and later carried them over to the US comics when he eventually took over writing duties from the US comics' writer Bob Budiansky. Particularly, he took the Matrix of Leadership talisman from the movie and the Creation Matrix program from the comics and retconned the two into being one and the same thing. He also introduced a new origin story for the Transformers, inventing the character of Primus as the Transformers' benevolent creator god and the opposite of Unicron, who was reimagined by the comics as a Satan-esque evil god. The energy of the Matrix was declared to be Primus's own essence, explaining how and why it was able to destroy Unicron.
Compared to the cartoon's earlier origin stories of the Cybertronians having been created by the alien Quintessons, and Unicron having been created by the alien monkey scientist Primacron, fans gravitated more toward the comics' Primus origin, preferring its more cosmic scale involving the millennia-spanning destinies and legacies of ancient space gods carried out by the Transformers in the present. During this time, the comics also introduced their own list of other Matrix bearers that had preceded Optimus Prime. Taking a page from the fact that Optimus Prime's successor was named Rodimus "Prime", the comics' list of Matrix bearers gave them the following names: Prima, Prime Nova, and Sentinel Prime.
This pretty much cemented the idea in fans' minds that "Prime" was, now and forevermore, the title held by Autobot leaders who had been chosen to bear the Matrix. Whether they were chosen by the Matrix itself or chosen by their predecessor was not clear-cut, but bearing the Matrix and being Autobot leader seemed to be the main criteria. Whether or not all Matrix bearers had had a different name prior to their bearing it, however, remained unspecified. Some felt that Hot Rod becoming Rodimus Prime was strictly the case for him being that he was the one and only Chosen One, while others took it as a sign that other Matrix bearers could (and should) have pre-Prime names.
This sentiment led to the idea of Orion Pax becoming Optimus Prime in "War Dawn" being the result of him having been given the Matrix by Alpha Trion when he rebuilt Orion in that episode, when the episode itself never implied such before the movie came out. Nonetheless, the flashback of former Matrix bearers seen in "Five Faces of Darkness, Part 4" further supported this notion with Alpha Trion being explicitly shown to have been given the Matrix for safekeeping by the bearer who immediately preceded Optimus. Still, regardless of whether Alpha Trion gave Optimus the Matrix when he first rebuilt him or at some point later on, the debate goes on unresolved to this day.
The 1980s/early 1990s (Japan)
Over in Japan, meanwhile, things were a little different. When the Transformers brand was released to the Japanese market, only the toys and the cartoon were released there. The Marvel comics had no official Japanese translation, and wouldn't receive one until 2018. Consequently, there was only one major continuity in Japan rather than two, that being the cartoon. So the lasting influence of the Marvel comics described in the section above wasn't really a thing in Japan during this time.
When the cartoon was dubbed into Japanese, several of the names and terms were changed. The Autobots were called "Cybertrons", the Decepticons were called "Destrons", Planet Cybertron was called "Seibertron", and so on. Regarding Optimus Prime, he was renamed "Convoy", in honor of the fact that he led a convoy of cars and trucks as the name "Optimus Prime" was apparently too difficult for Japanese kids to say and remember, with how many more syllables it had when spoken in Japanese (eight syllables) compared to how many syllables in has in English (four syllables). The word "Prime" also called to mind imagery of prime ribs, as that's what the Japanese most associated the word "prime" with at that time.
When the third season of the G1 cartoon was dubbed in Japanese, Rodimus Prime was renamed "Rodimus Convoy", in order to make it clear to Japanese kids that he was the new Convoy. At first glance, this makes it seem like "Convoy" is simply the Japanese equivalent of "Prime". However, later series would make it clearer that "Convoy" is more like the equivalent of "Optimus" instead, in that it's a name rather than a title or rank.
In contrast to how Autobot leadership was denoted by the rank of "Prime", in Japan the highest-ranking members of Cybertron leadership were instead denoted by the more military sounding rank of "Supreme Commander" (総司令官 Sōshireikan, more literally meaning "Commander-in-Chief", but inertia from the early days of the online fandom has cemented "Supreme Commander" as the de facto translation). Convoy held this rank, Rodimus Convoy held this rank, and all their successive leaders did, those being Fortress Maximus, Ginrai, Star Saber, and Dai Atlas. All of them held this rank and authority, but none of them carried the Matrix like Convoy and Rodimus Convoy had, because it was the Supreme Commander rank that determined leadership instead of the Convoy name.
After Dai Atlas's tenure, the original Convoy was resurrected in a new more powerful form named Star Convoy, and he remained in command with each new body-upgrade and prefixed-name he received afterward. The first of these was a black-colored Powermaster form called Super Convoy. Then he became an Action Master and went back to just going by "Convoy". Then he received a new "Missile Trailer" body during the Japanese Generation 2 line (which was the Hero Optimus Prime toy in Hasbro's markets), but still went by just "Convoy". But then, he got upgraded into the sword-wielding "Battle Convoy" (which was the Japanese release of the G2 "Laser Optimus Prime" from Hasbro's markets). Other forms for Convoy have since been added retroactively by 21st-Century Japanese G1 fiction, but they mostly continued to call him just "Convoy".
Continued in the next post...