If they cut costs on the production of TFs any further at this point you'll just get an email from Pulse telling you to imagine the $48 dollar deluxe you just ordered.
Power Rangers already got an NFT Megazord, why not Transformers?
IIRC they're shelving a bunch of IPs. Transformers is one of their few success stories so there might be a hit but I think a lot of it will be absorbed by them shelving other things. I do wonder if GI Joe will be one of the things shelved, considering the lack of success they've had with it in recent history...
I think "shelving" might be too strong a word. I DO think that, without Goldner's direction and drive, we're going to see Hasbro pull back on the "IP company" side of things...hopefully with a renewed focus on fundamentals that seem to have been ignored as Goldner pushed the company into being more than a toy company.
That said, the big focus was reportedly to be on fewer, but more significant, brands. And more importantly, more licensing. THAT'S the big one. Already, we've seen Hasbro take part in a shared license with Fortnite. But I think we'll be seeing more action like these in the following years:
-Hasbro hasn't made a classic Tonka truck in over 20 years. They've licensed it out to, currently, Basic Fun (who also does a lot with retro Hasbro properties like old school My Little Pony and Pound Puppies).
-One time Franchise Brand Littlest Pet Shop, after a few years of declining sales, is being handed over to Basic Fun as well.
-Just Play is making moves and was granted the master licenses for Easy Bake, Furreal, and scooped the Sesame Street master license as well.
-Wicked Cool Toys (now part of Jazwares) heralded a successful relaunch of Micro Machines. Jazwares also produces a number of official Nerf accessory items and made a fairly big splash with Star Wars Micro Galaxy Squadrons, starting to step into "Hasbro's space" in the Star Wars product arena.
And I feel Hasbro's back catalog has a TON of licenses that could do well in the right situation: Action Man, Micronauts (which seems dead on Hasbro's end), MASK, Visionaries....
As of this moment, I think Hasbro's working hard to keep the full license on Marvel and Star Wars, less they get chopped up like the DC license ended up (3 different companies produce mass market DC action figures, not counting stuff like Mego). GI Joe's probably walking the line- the movie didn't have much of any real impact, but Classified seems to be doing well as a mass market item. But I can still see the "kids stuff" getting spun off.
In terms of Transformers? Transformers is safe. It's the largest in house action brand they have, the toys still seem to be selling, the media is still being produced and (seemingly) well received. Frankly, Transformers has the potential for MORE expansion as Hasbro tries to milk the franchise for whatever they can.