No, he just disappeared without a trace after making a big fuzz.Now this Mysterior fellow, did anyone ever crack the puzzle behind him? He certainly seemed to be enigmatic... mysterious, even.
Great continuity!
No, he just disappeared without a trace after making a big fuzz.Now this Mysterior fellow, did anyone ever crack the puzzle behind him? He certainly seemed to be enigmatic... mysterious, even.
A quick perusal of the Channel Awesome wiki gives the assertion that Mysterior and Mr. Enigma were (surprise!) the same person.No, he just disappeared without a trace after making a big fuzz.
Great continuity!
Read this. It's from 2006, years before Animated (and thus AA2) came along.So, the plot may have thickened somewhat.
A discussion of events on Allspark Discord a couple of days ago brought forward an assertion that it was David "Walky" Willis (as close to a High Mucky Muck as a collaborative wiki has), and not Derik, who took Jim Sorenson's easter egg of Animated's "General Sideways" and insisted from there that (in this particular case) one name meant one character across multiple continuity families, and that this idea faced resistance within the wiki org even at the time it was put into effect.
All I know is I can't recall Walky and Derik agreeing on anything, so if they both came to the same conclusion that's an odd coincidence.
Did people mind as much, I wonder, when Sorenson asserted that Stretch/Tux immigrated to "Challenge of the GoBots" from the TF:Animated universe?If there was resistance to [General Sideways connecting ROTF to all the other iterations] in particular, it was probably less about Sideways in particular than it was about the Allspark Almanac II, which did a lot of stepping outside of the Animated box and poking into other parts of the franchise and a lot of people got really mad about it.
I know there's a contingent of GoBots fans who really don't like the idea that GoBots are the progenitors of, or the descendants of, or the offshoots of, Transformers.Did people mind as much, I wonder, when Sorenson asserted that Stretch/Tux immigrated to "Challenge of the GoBots" from the TF:Animated universe?
Now that I think about it, given the years of back-and-forthing on whether and how to cover GoBots, some likely did.
I know there's a contingent of GoBots fans who really don't like the idea that GoBots are the progenitors of, or the descendants of, or the offshoots of, Transformers.
ofc those ideas are bound to come up because GoBots is owned by Hasbro and it is very much doing the same thing as Transformers, and yeah. Hasbro's going to favour its native brand over the competition they squashed and absorbed. So any GoBots fiction is going to tie them to the Transformers somehow...
... but that doesn't change the fact that a lot of GoBots faithful dislike the idea.
Sadly, you're in the minority on that, as most people I see asking for more and more GoBots homage toys in Transformers just wanna see more Guardians as Autobots and Renegades as Decepticons, rather than as their own separate peoples.As a fan of both franchises, I do very much enjoy when GoBots and Transformers are presented as co-inhabiting a shared universe (or even multiverse), but I definitely wouldn't want to see the GoBots shown as some sort of offshoot/ancestor/descendant of Cybertronians. GoBots, after all, are supposed to be cyborgs instead of true robots. I like it when the writers remember that.
Sadly, you're in the minority on that, as most people I see asking for more and more GoBots homage toys in Transformers just wanna see more Guardians as Autobots and Renegades as Decepticons, rather than as their own separate peoples.
And similarly, there are folks at TFWiki who resented Jim's efforts in various media to wedge in a dumptruck full of "new" characters, plots and concepts from another franchise when there were plenty of stub-class about the Transformers brand that Rad White still had to tell us more about. I wasn't among them, but I understand the sentiment.I know there's a contingent of GoBots fans who really don't like the idea that GoBots are the progenitors of, or the descendants of, or the offshoots of, Transformers.
As someone who watched both series, and despaired that my father could not tell them apart (though looking back, both series had pretty similar premises -- the primary difference being that the Decepticons were a much more successful insurgency against the pre-war status quo), I liked the setup to "Echos and Fragments" -- where Gong and Sideways (oh not him again ) put the Challenge cast through the plot of TF:TAM rather than the movie we were expecting. I kind of wish the authors had stuck with that rather than keep swapping out casts -- because while some things will play out the same (Reign of Zero, anyone?), other will not, because the characters do not think the same as their Cybertronian counterparts, and will have different reactions.ofc those ideas are bound to come up because GoBots is owned by Hasbro and it is very much doing the same thing as Transformers, and yeah. Hasbro's going to favour its native brand over the competition they squashed and absorbed. So any GoBots fiction is going to tie them to the Transformers somehow...
... but that doesn't change the fact that a lot of GoBots faithful dislike the idea.
As a fan of both franchises, I do very much enjoy when GoBots and Transformers are presented as co-inhabiting a shared universe (or even multiverse), but I definitely wouldn't want to see the GoBots shown as some sort of offshoot/ancestor/descendant of Cybertronians. GoBots, after all, are supposed to be cyborgs instead of true robots. I like it when the writers remember that.
Sadly, you're in the minority on that, as most people I see asking for more and more GoBots homage toys in Transformers just wanna see more Guardians as Autobots and Renegades as Decepticons, rather than as their own separate peoples.
I think that was Sorenson? Ask Vector Prime was what made it a "cluster" in the TF multiverse and Sorenson was behind Ask Vector Prime when it started handing out universe designations to everything.Who was the bonehead who tried to make everything a Transformers tie-in? Like even Robotix was a Transformers universe to them. Hated that.
I mean I get it. Honestly the whole thing is very whacky, and there's no easy answer in the nitty gritty nerd debate realm.And similarly, there are folks at TFWiki who resented Jim's efforts in various media to wedge in a dumptruck full of "new" characters, plots and concepts from another franchise when there were plenty of stub-class about the Transformers brand that Rad White still had to tell us more about.
I've got a friend who's very much a GoBots fan and he hated the Scioli run. It didn't help that his version of GoBots took next to nothing from the cartoon. It was essentially a top-down re-imagining of the concept with the GoBots' names and likenesses.Then Scioli came along and things got really weird.
Fans blow stuff out of proportion? Noooothat a number of fans then blew out of proportion
It's tradition.Fans blow stuff out of proportion? Noooo
So, in light of this, consider the following an addendum to my original writings on the first page.So, the plot may have thickened somewhat.
A discussion of events on Allspark Discord a couple of days ago brought forward an assertion that it was David "Walky" Willis (as close to a High Mucky Muck as a collaborative wiki has), and not Derik, who took Jim Sorenson's easter egg of Animated's "General Sideways" and insisted from there that (in this particular case) one name meant one character across multiple continuity families, and that this idea faced resistance within the wiki org even at the time it was put into effect.
All I know is I can't recall Walky and Derik agreeing on anything, so if they both came to the same conclusion that's an odd coincidence.
Unfortunately, aside from Sabrblade, Thy2K and myself, I don't think that there is currently a lot of cross-traffic between TFWiki and the Allspark, so these assertions are not likely to be verified unless someone who was in the inner circle of events was willing to spill what really happened and how.