Robot universe

From The Transformers UK Appendix
Revision as of 17:14, 1 February 2024 by TheLastGherkin (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigationJump to search

The "robot universe" is the name given[1] to the reality dominated by the war between the Autobots and the Decepticons. It is also home to the superhero Spider-Man, the international peacekeeping team Action Force, and just about any robot or somebody in an iron suit.

Timeline

 Unless otherwise stated, stories are taken as occurring in their year of publication.

Nearly two thousand years ago

The Saga of Erik the Red


11th Century

1066

The Battle of Hastings – The True Story.


18th Century

1775

The Truth About Alcatraz!

1793

The cathedral of St. Gabriella of the Highlands was founded, complete with what would become a famed golden bell. Baron Brimstone and his Sinister Satan Squad!

1798

German immigrant Ludwig Anderson built a stately manor in Westchester County. Byte of the Binary Bug!


20th Century: 1930s

1934

The Truth About Alcatraz!

1939

On 23rd May, the U.S. Navy submarine Squalus suffered a malfunction during a regular test and sank to the sea floor off the coast of Porstmouth, New Hampshire. After 27 hours underwater, the crew was eventually rescued by the diving bell of Commander McCann. Trapped Beneath the Waves!


20th Century: 1940s

1943

The former Squalus, after being renamed Sailfish, operated in the Pacific Ocean during the Second World War. In December 1943, it destroyed a Japanese cargo ship, which by coincidence was carrying crew members from Sculpin who had previously aided in Squalus' rescue. Trapped Beneath the Waves!


20th Century: 1980s

The robot X-51, later known as Machine Man, was created as part of the X project Introducing Machine Man three or more years before his tussle with Khan, Xanadu! putting his birth in 1980 or 1981.

1984

Marvel Comics timeline on TFWiki.net, an external wiki

The February 7, 1984 edition of the Daily Bugle reported a "stop press" story on the sudden eruption of Mount St. Hilary  in Oregon –an eruption which, unbeknown to the general public, had reawakened the Ark  and restarted the conflict between the dormant Autobots and Decepticons.[2] Once word of the giant rampaging robots in Oregon spread, Bugle editor-in-chief Robbie Robertson dispatched photographer Peter Parker to the scene, leading to his alter ego Spider-Man becoming involved in the Transformers' conflict. Prisoner of War! 

1984 was a busy year for Machine Man. His civilian identity, Aaron Stack, gained a job at Delmar Insurance in New York City. Throughout the year he stopped the Binary Bug's crime spree, Byte of the Binary Bug! created the Ethicals, Where Walk the Gods! defeated the mad crime lord Khan, Xanadu! and cleared himself of a crime he didn't commit. The Man Who Could Walk Through Walls The latter was due to the influence of Senator Miles Brickman, a recurring thorn in Machine Man's side who sought to demonise him in order to gain victory in the U.S. presidential election.[3] Byte of the Binary Bug! The Man Who Could Walk Through Walls

After trying to help a metamorphosed scientist, Kill Me or Cure Me Machine Man encountered Baron Brimstone in May. Brimstone perpetrated a crime spree over subsequent weeks before finally being apprehended. Baron Brimstone and his Sinister Satan Squad! Immediately after their final bout, Machine Man discovered his arm had been stolen, leading him into the web of Madam Menace. Arms and the Robot! Barely a week later, he faced her once again, concurrent with an Alpha Flight investigation that saw Senator Brickman's presidential ambitions thwarted before he became his party's nominee.[3] The encounter with Menace's henchmen left Machine Man's face heavily damaged. Alone Against Alpha Flight! Mechanic Gears Garvin fixed him up a suitable replacement around the time of Halloween, when Machine Man came into conflict with Jack O'Lantern. Jolted by Jack O'Lantern!

Matt and Humph were kidnapped by alien robots Matt and the Cat issue 7 Issue 8 on a Friday evening Issue 5 presumably in 1984. Though the duration of their space adventure is unknown, they were eventually returned to the same night they left by Octus Alpha's time disc. Issue 72 Issue 73

1985

In 1985, The Chromobots issue 21 the life of young comics reader Dudley was turned upside down by the arrival of the Chromobots, Issue 12 Issue 13 a team of interstellar policemen tracking down an escaped criminal by the name of Predator. Issue 16 Two weeks after Dudley's first meeting with Mikros and Transmute, the trio encountered Predator in the process of kidnapping nuclear arms designer Tessa Stone, with the plan of using her knowledge to destroy the Chromobots' home planet, Chromos Five. Issue 17 Issue 18 After a late night tip-off from the Chromatic Star Federation, Issue 21 the third member of the squad, Shield, took Dudley, Transmute, and Mikros out to the countryside, a location where Predator's distinct teleportation pattern had been detected. Issue 22 There, they fell through a time shift to the year 2535, where Earth was an apocalyptic wasteland. Issue 23 This timeline was prevented by Dudley's theft of Predator's time modulator and subsequent return to 1985, where Shield destroyed it. Issue 26

On Saturday September 12, 1985, the Bugle's headline news story was "GIANT ROBOTS ON RAMPAGE! Invasion from Space". By this point, the press was speculating that the Transformers were an alien invasion, or controlled by a foreign power. The Icarus Theory  (By early 1986, Triple-I's  Walter Barnett  would run the cover story that the Transformers were all controlled by Robot-Master, a supervillain played by Marvel Comics' Donny Finkleberg.  I, Robot-Master! )

1986

Man of the Year

1987

Wanted: Galvatron — Dead or Alive!  Hunters  Fire on High!  Vicious Circle! 


20th Century: 1990s

21st Century

2007

Wanted: Galvatron — Dead or Alive!  Headhunt 

2008

The Legacy of Unicron! 

2015

Man of the Year

2020

If This Be Sanctuary?! Rime of the Ancient Wrecker!


24th Century

What Fools These Immortals Be!


26th Century

2535

After kidnapping Tessa Stone in 1985, the rogue Chromobot Predator teleported to the future using his time modulator. The Chromobots issue 19 Predator used her knowledge to create a weapon that hybridised Chromatic technology and nuclear weaponry. By the year 2535, he had successfully destroyed Chromos Five and eliminated all life on Earth, starting again with his loyal Mutants. Issue 25 Issue 24 He used Tessa as bait Issue 23 to lure the Chromobots (and their human ally Dudley) to the nuclear wasteland. Issue 22

The Chromobots were confronted by the Mutants, who were expecting them based on Predator's predictions. Issue 24 Predator himself arrived to brag about what he'd achieved with the time modulator. Issue 25 Dudley snatched the device from Predator, and he and the Chromobots returned to 1985. Shield destroyed the modulator, causing Predator's timeline to fold in on itself, erasing the Chromatic criminal and his achievements from existence and allowing future history to run its unaltered course. Issue 26

Westphalling

The official stance is that The Transformers is not canon to the mainstream universe of Marvel Comics.  However, the series' events take place in some kind of Marvel universe, due to the appearances of Spider-Man, Nick Fury,  Dazzler,  U.S. 1,  the Savage Land,  and others. As a result, Marvel considers the universe of Transformers U.S. to be Earth-91274 , and the universe of the UK version to be Earth-120185. 

This, however, isn't fun, and the stance of The Transformers UK Appendix is to take in-story events and crossover character cameos at face value, building up a shared universe in the style of the Tommy Westphall hypothesis (and flying in the face of Dwayne McDuffie's original intent when coming up with it).

From outside sources

  • Received wisdom tells us that both Rocket Raccoon and Planet Terry are Earth-616 characters, which means for our purposes, their stories are in the "robot universe".
  • A version of Hercules also exists in Earth-616, though the Hercules in Hercules is classified as a version from Earth-829  as part of the general categorisation of all depictions of the future as alternate realities.
  • Because of Planet Terry's level of technology and knowledge of Earth culture, Occam's razor suggests that he is a far future human. An adult Terry appeared in Earth-616 in the present day in Drax issue 7,  retconning Terry's adventures as occurring roughly when they were published. This appearance leaned in to the familiar design of Terry's suit by revealing him to be a pink Kree. 

The letters pages and metafiction

The general policy of The Transformers, from about issue 29 onwards, was that the comic itself was a close adaptation of the "real" Autobot/Decepticon conflict that happened in real life. This was a blanket policy to explain away the comic's inconsistency with the original cartoon, as well as provide a rationale for how these apparently "fictional" robots could respond to fan mail on the letters page. This results in incongruities such as...

So just because a story on The Transformers UK Appendix depicts The Transformers (or similar) as fiction, doesn't mean it can't also be in canon with the events of The Transformers.

References

  1. By the Doctor in The Incomplete Death's Head issue 12. 
  2. Soundwaves, issue 29 
  3. 3.0 3.1 If we tie Miles Brickman to real-world politics, the nearest U.S. presidential election was in November 1984, placing all Machine Man stories before then. This doesn't quite gel with him still hoping to become the party's nominee in "Alone Against Alpha Flight!", which takes place shortly before the Halloween adventure "Jolted by Jack O'Lantern!", but maybe the robot universe's nomination race ended a little later than the real world's August 1984 timescale. See Miles Brickman#Notes for more information.
  4. "Showdown!" on Joepedia