When Hasbro themselves couldn't agree on what to name a toy.
In September of 2015, US-based distributor BBCW Distributors put up a listing for wave 3 of the Robots in Disguise Mini-Cons. Among those was a figure listed under the name "Decepticon Back".
The Robots In Disguise news continues to roll in today, again originating from BBCW Distributors. According to an order listing on their page, RID Min-Cons appear to be receiving a third wave featuring Swelter, Decepticon Back, Decepticon Hammer, and Slipstream (a possible second release?)...
news.tfw2005.com
Back then, that name seemed somewhat weird. It
seemingly made more sense in of October of 2015, when US-based online retailer ToyWiz put up its own listing and instead named the figure "Back
fire", which sounded more like a "proper" Transformers name than "Back".
But then, just one day later, US-based online retailer Big Bad Toy Store put up its own listing, but instead of "Backfire", the figure was now listed as "
Kickback".
Still that same day, US-based online retailer Entertainment Earth also put up its own listing, but instead of "Backfire" or "Kickback", the figure was once again just called "Decepticon Back".
In November 2015, the Robots in Disguise mobile game app received a major update that indirectly revealed numerous then upcoming toys, with one of them being a Mini-Con named "Back", thus giving us the first look at the character.
But then, just a few days later, Entertainment Earth got the actual figure in stock. Still lacking official Hasbro stock photos by that point, Entertainment Earth took their own photos, which revealed that the figure that had previously been listed as "Decepticon Back", "Backfire", "Kickback" and then "Decepticon Back" again was
actually named... "Decepticon
Forth".
Again a few days later, ToyWiz and Big Bad Toy Store also got the wave in stock and put up their own photos, with the name on the packaging again being "Decepticon Forth".
You'd think the weirdness ended here, but that was only the beginning!
Only a few days later, Hasbro held a
Google Hangout event during which they provided stock photos and renders for then recent and upcoming toys to participating fansites. Among those were the wave 3 Mini-Cons, with one of them once again being named "Dec[epticon] Back" in the file names.
Okay, you might say. That was probably an early working name that got changed for the final product, with the file names for the stock renders never having gotten updated, right? The same thing happened with Thrilling 30 Skrapnel and Tailgate's partner figure Groundbuster, who were named "Sharpshot" and "Groundpounder" when first revealed at San Diego Comic-Con 2013.
But then, in December of 2015, several Hong Kong-based online retailers - Element Plus Toy, Robot Kingdom and Action Robo - also got the wave 3 Mini-Cons in stock, as did Japanese importer Monster Japan, and to everyone's surprise, the name printed on the mystery figure's packaging was
not, in fact, "Decepticon Forth" like with those US-based online retailers... but actually "Decepticon Back"!
So the figure was named "Decepticon Forth" in the United States, but "Decepticon Back" in Asia?
Around this time, official Hasbro stock photos of the wave 3 Mini-Cons (in European packaging) were revealed, with the name of our mystery figure once again being "Decepticon Back".
Additionally, German online retailer Spieletom got the wave in stock, and the figure's name printed on European packaging was indeed once again "Decepticon Back".
Meanwhile, several US-based eBay sellers put up their listings for the figure, with the name on the packaging being... you guessed it... "Decepticon Forth".
So the figure was named "Decepticon Forth" in the United States, but "Decepticon Back" in Asia and Europe?
Around the same time, Hasbro revealed their official stock photos for wave 2 of the Mini-Con Battle Packs, one of which saw Grimlock paired with a redeco of our mystery figure, which was once again named "Decepticon Back".
Unlike the single-packed Mini-Con, there was never a packaging variant of the Battle Pack that featured the name "Decepticon Forth", but it
still gets weirder!
In April of 2016, the Robots in Disguise cartoon episode "Impounded" premiered, which featured the debut not only of Back, but also of his fellow Mini-Con Forth, who looked quite different than Back (and thus, the "Decepticon Forth" toy).
Following a
long delay, wave 3 of the single-packed Mini-Cons was finally found at US brick and mortar retail in July of 2016, though only at discount chains such as Marshalls. Contrary to the stock those US-based online retailers and eBay sellers had received, this production run also featured the name "Decepticon Back" on the figure's packaging.
Okay, you might say. So "Decepticon Forth" was the name used for an early production run, but the later (and more common) version is named "Decepticon Back", which is to be considered the final, correct name, right?
Ha! If only it were that simple. That same day wave 3 was first found at Marshalls in the United States, there was a sighting of
both the "Decepticon Back"
and "Decepticon Forth" packaging variants side by side at the same store!
Okay, you might say. That's clearly some old stock. All the evidence still points towards Hasbro having settled on the name "Back" for this Mini-Con, with "Forth" in the cartoon using a completely different design that never got a toy, and the toys with "Decepticon Forth" on the packaging were just an error that got fixed with subsequent production runs. Right?
Right?
One day after the first US retail sighting of both "Decepticon Back" and the "Decepticon Forth" variant, a "Mini-Con Mega-Pack" was revealed, featuring a whopping fifteen Mini-Con figures, most of which were either completely unchanged, or minimally redecoed from their previous releases.
One of these fifteen Mini-Cons was our favorite Cyclone figure with an identity crisis, in a minimal redeco of his single-packed release. The name featured on the back of the packaging? "Decepticon Forth".
And unlike the single-packed figure, there has never been a packaging variant of the Mega-Pack featuring a different name documented. Sure, there's a version in multilingual American packaging in addition to the more common version in multilingual European packaging, but that one still calls him "Decepticon Forth".