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The Transformers: Generation 2 (also known as Generation Two or G2) was a Transformers toy line that ran from 1992–1994, in conjunction with a corresponding comic book series and edited reruns of the original cartoon beginning in 1993.
Til All Are One is a soundtrack that contains musical compositions from The Transformers: The Movie. The release is a 2-CD set, the first contains tracks from Stan Bush Call to Action album. The second CD contains the whole music score of The Transformers: The Movie (minus the three score pieces featured in the Motion Picture soundtrack release ...
The Lion cover version of the main Transformers theme was itself covered on the NES by chiptune artist Inverse Phase and renamed to "NESformers". [7] "Subsong 2" from the Commodore 64 game Turrican is actually the song "Escape" from The Transformers: The Movie soundtrack. [8] Unicron’s theme appears in Transformers: Rise of the Beasts.
Transformers: Generation 1; 2 The Transformers: 98 September 17, 1984 – November 11, 1987 Movie The Transformers: The Movie – August 8, 1986 3 Transformers: The Headmasters: 35 July 3, 1987 – March 25, 1988 4 Transformers: Super-God Masterforce: 42 April 12, 1988 – March 7, 1989 5 Transformers: Victory: 44 March 14, 1989 – December 19 ...
Transformers Generation 2 (Issue #1, November 1, 1993 - Issue #12, October 1, 1994) is a comic book series based on the Transformers: Generation 2 toy line, written by Simon Furman. It was published by Marvel Comics. No longer restricted by Hasbro, Furman was allowed to kill off as many characters per issue as the story demanded.
The Transformers continued in Japan as Transformers: The Headmasters with 35 new episodes, however, it ignores the events of "The Rebirth" and is set in a different continuity. A fifth season was aired in the United States, but consisted entirely of re-runs of previous episodes being told as stories by Powermaster Optimus Prime .
[citation needed] Various Transformers ongoing and limited series followed, covering various continuities within the Transformers franchise. [ citation needed ] On January 4, 2005, Dreamwave announced that it had gone out of business and closed down, citing "the shrinking comic book market combined with a weak U.S. dollar" as the reason for ...
With the conclusion of the US Transformers cartoon series in 1987, Japan produced their first exclusive anime series, Transformers: The Headmasters, to replace the fourth and final US season and to carry out the story concepts begun in The Transformers: The Movie and carried on through the third season, using the existing cast and adding the eponymous Headmasters into the mix.