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Legacy is a toyline in the Transformers franchise, succeeding the Transformers: War for Cybertron Trilogy. It debuted in 2022 and has been running underneath the Generations banner.

The toyline acts as a celebration of the overall history of the franchise and the 40th anniversary by giving certain characters from every Transformers series new, updated figures with War For Cybertron-level engineering, carrying-over the aesthetic and weapon connection system of the previous toyline. Characters from series with a more unique art style such as Transformers: Prime and Transformers: Animated are redesigned to better fit the Generation 1 aesthetic.

In 2023, rather than receiving a Sequel Series like previous Generations toylines, Legacy received a subline imprint called Transformers Legacy: Evolution, which remained largely the same as before, except by rebranding the weapon connection system as "Evo-Fusion". Similarly, 2024 would receive another subline imprint called Transformers Legacy: United, celebrating the 40th Anniversary of the brand. It was later announced that United would be the final imprint in the Legacy line, and would be concluded after its fifth wave, subsequently succeeded by Transformers Generations: Prime.

    Series that have been represented in the toyline 

Transformers: Legacy provides examples of:

  • Adaptational Backstory Change:
    • The bio for the figures released in the Toxitron Collection states that they rose from the Toxic Sludge Swamps of Cybertron, and are now led by Toxitron to unleash mayhem. While none of the G2 figures featured saw official release back in the day, it was implied that they were just the G1 characters in different colors.
    • Implied for several of the "Star Raider" bots, as they are now Star Seeker Space Pirates, and as the majority of them are bots either abandoned by their factions or from Cybertronian Colonies that were mistreated in the Great War, it suggests they are a similar case.
      • In her home series, Filch was a Corvicon prisoner branded as a Decepticon for committing crimes, namely collateral damage as a result of suffering Attention Deficit... Ooh, Shiny!, that managed to escape and had to be recaptured by Team Bee.
      • Lockdown is traditionally depicted as a Mercenary that is nominally allied with the Decepticons, working for the highest bidder and caring more about collecting trophies than any real cause.
  • Adaptational Badass: Due to being a Palette Swap of a pre-existing character, some are given new weapons or features they previously didn't have.
    • Crasher is given weapons that she never had in GoBots, being a repaint of Mirage.
    • Dinobot Scarr, who had been a minor comic character that died shortly after his debut, returns with his own dinosaur mode (an ankylosaurus), and can combine with his teammates to form Volcanicus. Skar and the Dinobots are intended to be retooled into Dinoking, which follows a similar combining formation.
    • Medix has rarely been characterized as a fighter, but his Legacy figure gives him FOUR GUNS, all of which can fuse together into a giant blaster.
    • Chase, being from the Rescue Bots portion of the Aligned continuity, is normally a non-combatant, focusing more on search and rescue than fighting. His Legacy: United toy, however, reimagines his original "capture claw" as an Energon weapon that can split into a pair of wrist blades, and his side-mounted police lights as blasters.
    • Erial, Dion, and Orion Pax each come with guns that none of them wielded in the G1 cartoon, as they were originally civilian bots with no combat experience.
  • Adaptational Curves:
    • Played with regarding Strongarm. Due to being a partial moldmate of Elita-1, she looks like she has a much lankier body compared to her normal Amazonian Beauty looks. On closer inspection however, her proportions are actually rather close to that of her original look, it's just that her head has been made bigger so as to fall in line with the head to body ratio of other Deluxe Class figures, the head to body ratio she originally had more befitting that of a Voyager Class, making her body proportions look smaller/thinner than it actually is.
    • Animated Prowl is a lot stockier than his original appearance, due to being redesigned to fit with the G1 aesthetic.
    • Cyberverse Tarn, due to being a redeco of the IDW Tarn figure, has a much thinner physique compared to his origin series, where he has a much bulkier body. The same could be said for IDW Tarn as well, though that design is much slimmer than the Cyberverse one, so any differences in proportions are negligible there.
  • Adaptational Dye-Job: Prime Bulkhead in the "Wreck-N-Rule" collection is given a military camouflage pattern that he never had in any prior continuity.
  • Adaptational Job Change: According to Word of God, Strongarm is now a police officer rather than a cadet.
  • Adaptational Name Change:
    • Elita-1's pre-war identity, Ariel, is renamed to Erial in the "War Dawn" 2-pack.
    • The Laser Cycle known as Jazz, based on a canceled G2 toy, is renamed to just "Laser Cycle" to avoid confusion with the other G2 Jazz (based on the orange G1 redeco) released in the Toxitron Collection.
    • Dinobot Skar is renamed to Scarr.
    • Lio Convoy is renamed to Leo Prime, a name which had already seen milage in the Transformers fandom.
      • Likewise, his Palette Swap Copy Convoy is renamed to "Nemesis Leo Prime".
    • Tigerchest and Eaglechest were originally called Tigerbreast and Eaglebreastnote .
    • For unknown reasons, the Star Seekers are called the “Star Raiders” in the Walmart-exclusive line featuring the titular faction.
  • Adaptational Species Change:
    • Autobot Bluebolts was originally a non-sapient gun for Robots in Disguise 2000 Ultra Magnus. The HasLab release turns them into a fully-fledged Cybertronian.
    • Windsweeper's guns were originally just regular guns attached to his back. His Legacy figure, however, makes them fully-fledged robots in the form of Targetmasters.
  • Adaptational Superpower Change:
    • Galaxy Shuttle from Transformers Victory can transform into a space shuttle and a locomotive, when he previously was only able to turn into a shuttle. This is due to him being retooled from Siege Astrotrain, who is a triple-changer.
    • Tow-Line, being a retool of Junkion Scraphook, can split apart his body to form weapons and armor for other characters, which he was unable to do in his original series.
    • Windsweeper was originally a Triggercon, a Decepticon with hidden guns that could pop out upon activation. His Legacy figure, however, is a Targetmaster.
  • Adaptational Villainy: The G2 Autobots included in the Toxitron Collection: Mirage, Sideswipe, Jazz, Grimlock, and Laser Cycle (originally named Jazz), are characterized as toxic warriors led by Toxitron to cause mayhem, when they were originally straightforward heroic Autobots.
  • Adapted Out:
    • For characters from the Unicron Trilogy, their gimmicks are able to be activated without the usage of their Mini-Con partners, who have not received an updated figure. To make up for this, various portholes exist that are compatible with the original Mini-Cons to simulate it.
      • A similar situation was present with Override and Metroplex from Transformers: Cybertron who utilized Cyber Keys, being able to activate their gimmicks without them but still included a slot compatible with previous releases. Cyber Keys were finally reintroduced in the United chapter, with Cybertron Starscream, Hot Shot, Vector Prime, and Star Raider Cannonball including one each. However, these Cyber Keys are purely cosmetic and does not activate any gimmicks.
      • In Evolution, the Minicon Jolt would finally receive an updated figure as an exclusive with his Autobot partner, Hot Shot (now in his Powelinx colors).
    • In general, some characters may end up without a weapon, accessory, or feature that they had in their original series. Examples of this include:
      • Pointblank lacks his spoiler/shield.
      • Skywarp doesn't come with his traditional null rays, replacing them with an "Energon Warp Fork".
      • Armada Starscream's left wing cannot form his sword, which is a separate accessory. The Star Saber included also cannot separate into the Air Defense Team, being a single molded piece. He also lacks the Minicon port where Swindle would attach.
      • Played with regarding Tidal Wave and his ability to combine with Armada Megatron. Due to the size disparity, Tidal Wave himself cannot form Burning Megatron. However, he does include smaller versions of his vehicle mode(s) that detach from his body and combine with Megatron instead, replicating the feature.
      • Downplayed with Windsweeper, who lacks his Triggercon guns and instead comes with Targetmasters. The feature can, however, be replicated by putting his Targetmasters in the same spot as his Triggercon guns.
  • Alternate Self: While there are plenty of characters with alternate incarnations running around at the same time like the various Optimus Primes, this is most pronounced with Starscream from the Unicron Trilogy, namely due to two versions of himself from the same universe being present, who couldn't be more different from each other due to the character having Came Back Wrong after Transformers: Energon. First is Armada Starscream, the Noble Demon who died a hero and is the furthest from the traditional depiction of the character "Starscream", in the midst of his character arc due to possessing the Star Saber and original colors, supported by his being shown with Hot Shot in the "Velocitron Speedia 500" Japanese comic as a nod to Starscream's brief period as an Autobot. The second is Cybertron Starscream, best described as a more successful version of the original Starscream and genuinely evil, from before he gained access to the Omega Lock due to still having two swords as his Cyber Key power rather than a sword and gun.
  • Ambiguous Gender: The G2 Universe Laser Cycle. While their original name was derived from a male character, their body is a redeco of the female Road Rocket/Prime Arcee, making it unclear what their gender is supposed to be.
  • Art Shift: Characters from series with a more unique aesthetic are given an updated Generation 1-inspired appearance, to avoid sticking out among other figures and for further reuses of the molds. Downplayed with characters from series like the Unicron Trilogy, as while it does have a unique artstyle, the aesthetic is similar enough to G1 that the difference is virtually unnoticeable
  • Back from the Dead: The "Velocitron Speedia 500" Japanese comic would all but state this to be the case for many of the characters in the line who canonically died in their home series. Part 3 in particular would do this for Prowl and Skyquake, the former by depicting him with an Allspark fragment in his hood in a manner similar to Starscream, the latter shown reattaching his severed arm after he lost it while he was a Terrorcon.
  • Battle Trophy: Galvatron comes with the Matrix of Leadership on a chain, referencing The Transformers: The Movie where he wore the stolen Matrix around his neck. This promotional image even implies he stole it from Laser Optimus Prime, as the latter is missing it from his chest compartment in the photo
  • Bifurcated Weapon: Hot Rod's "Energon Sword", Iguanus' "Energon Claw Shield", and Skywarp's "Energon Warp Fork", all combine into a larger blade for other figures to wield. However, a handle on Skywarp's weapon prevents the weapon from being properly aligned.
  • The Bus Came Back: Many characters from past series are given new figures, or even their first ever figure. In the case of several, they haven't had a figure since their original toylines!
  • Canon Character All Along: Bluebolts, the Autobot weaponizer included with Omega Prime, was revealed to actually be the Maximal Bluebolt from the TakaraTomy “End of G1 Universe” manga. According to Hayato Sakamoto, he had planned this connection back when the manga was being written.
  • Canon Immigrant: Toxitron is labeled as coming from the G2 Universe, even though he originated from the Universe toyline, and only made appearances in G1 and Animated continuities. This is likely to avoid him sticking out from the other Toxitron Collection releases.
  • Canon Foreigner:
    • The Fossilizer Wreckers Spindle and Masterdominus are original to the Legacy toyline, doubling as new characters in the Marvel Comics and G2 continuities respectively.
    • In Evolution, several new Junkion characters are introduced in this toyline, none having any media appearances until the Japanese-exclusive Velocitron comics. They are meant to act as a successor to the Weaponizers of the War For Cybertron Trilogy toyline.
    • In United, a new type of Weaponizer was introduced called the Armorizers, comprised of Transformers made of stone that can likewise form weapons and armor for other figures.
    • Played with regarding Nemesis, as the ship existed in previous continuities, but Legacy introduces a new robot mode that other versions lacked.
    • Malleus Minotaurus, and Targetmasters Ozone and Cleansweep are new additions from the Doom 'n Destruction collection, the former being Solus Prime's blacksmithing assistant, and the latter two being Windsweeper's Triggercon guns as separate robots.
  • Combining Mecha:
    • Legacy introduces an updated version of the Stunticons, all of whom are cartoon-accurate and combine into Menasor.
    • Evolution introduces the Dinobots and Volcanicus, albeit in the smaller Core Class scale.
    • The Junkions can also combine, much like their Fossilizer predecessors, but this time it has the official name of Junkasaurus.
    • Any version of the Needlenose and Skyquake molds can combine in jet mode to form a bigger jet (as in simply plugging Needlenose on top of Skyquake).
    • Armada Optimus Prime combines with his trailer to form Super Optimus Prime.
    • Armada Megatron can combine with Tidal Wave (well, smaller pieces of TW), to form Burning Megatron.
    • Magmatron can separate into his three dinosaur components, which can also combine to form his alternate Magmasaurus form.
    • RID2000 Optimus Prime and Ultra Magnus can combine to form Omega Prime, even replicating the signature handshake that starts the combination.
    • Star Saber can combine with Victory Leo to form Victory Saber. His jet mode can likewise separate into two components, and his Brainmaster forms his face.
  • Composite Character: Certain characters may be referred to as being from specific universes, but still take several design cues from different versions.
    • Shadow Striker comes from the Cyberverse continuity, and has the same head, colors, and vehicle mode, but she's given the body and weapons of her original Universe figure.
    • Skyquake is from the Aligned Continuity, but features certain design cues from his G1 incarnation, most notably in his chest and head.
    • Twin-Twist is his G1 incarnation, but has the colors of the Diaclone figure he was based off of, and is a Headmaster like his Titans Return figure. In fact, the toy itself is a repaint of the Titans Return toy.
    • Wreck-N-Rule Bulkhead is his Prime incarnation, but the military camo pattern he sports is based on Hound from the live-action movies.
    • Data Clerk Orion Pax is based on his appearance from the first IDW comics continuity, but isn't a law enforcement officer, instead being a data clerk like his Aligned incarnation.
    • The Armorizers are original characters, but they took inspiration from the rock creatures of Daira from Transformers: ★Headmasters, the Rock Lords, and the Inhumanoids, with their origin universe, Infernac, being a reference to the domain of Metlar from the latter series.
    • Windblade is based on her Cyberverse incarnation, but takes design influences from her Prime Wars incarnation and original Generations figure.
    • Lockdown has a similar body to his original Animated incarnation, including his hook arm and EMP blaster, but has a head based on his Revenge of the Fallen figure, this because he's been depicted in G1 media using that figure's design.
    • Despite being referred to as his G1 incarnation, Squeezeplay borrows several details from his Japanese counterpart, Cancer, and even comes with Browning as an accessory.
  • Cut Short: The second wave of the Velocitron collection was cancelled partway through its release, with only Crasher, Shadowstrip, and Galaxy Shuttle hitting shelves while Hot Rod was scrapped entirely.
  • Decomposite Character: Unicron Trilogy Starscream has two separate figure releases based on his Armada and Cybertron appearances, which are both listed as separate universes.
    • Shadowstrip is based on the G2 colors of Drag Strip, but it's been said he can be treated like or as a new character.
  • Department of Redundancy Department: Masterdominus' name is a combination of "master" and "dominus", which is the Latin word for master. In other words, his name is "master master".
  • Enemy Mine: The official roster for the Junkasaurus combination includes the Autobot-aligned Junkions Scraphook, Crashbar, and Trashmaster, but also the Decepticon-aligned Junkion Axlegrease.
  • Equippable Ally:
    • Weaponizers:
      • The Junkions and their repaints, all being able to split apart into weapons and armor for other figures, though unlike their predecessors, the Weaponizers, they can transform without having to be taken apart first.
      • Red Cog is a recolor of Cog from the War For Cybertron Trilogy, so he can likewise split into weapons, but still features partsforming.
      • Spindle and Masterdominus, the Fossilizer Wreckers, can turn into weapons for their partners Impactor and Leadfoot
      • The Armorizers, Transformers made of stone, follow suit with being able to become weapons and armor for other figures.
      • Bluebolts can split into several parts, and becomes Omega Prime's weapons. He also doubles as a filler for Ultra Magnus' hollow legs.
    • Targetmasters:
      • Peacemaker can turn into a gun for Pointblank.
      • Zigzag and Sunbeam turn into a double-barrel blaster and rifle respectively for their partner, Needlenose. They can further combine into a larger gun, and even become thruster boosters for Needlenose in jet mode as their "Evo-Fusion" gimmick.
      • Nightstick is included with his partner, Cyclonus, in a Generations Selects release, and can turn into a blaster for Cyclonus to wield.
      • As Windsweeper is a Needlenose redeco and retool, he's given two Targetmaster partners named Ozone and Cleansweeper.
    • Tigerchest and Eaglechest can attach to Deathsaurus as armor, and convert into a bow (Tiger) and a blaster (Eagle) for him to wield.
    • Malleus Minotaurus transforms into a hammer that's wielded by the Mayhem Attack Squad, but officially they're unaware he's alive as they stole him.
  • Excuse Plot:
    • Mainline: Characters from across the franchise are brought to the Legacy world as their universes collide. That's pretty much it.
    • Velocitron Speedia 500: "The race is on! Bots from across the multiverse have gathered on Velocitron to participate in the Speedia 500, a planet-wide race to determine its next leader"
    • Toxitron Collection: "A collection of Transformers robots has risen out of the Toxic Sludge Swamps of Cybertron! Toxitron is unleashing radioactive mayhem with a team of toxic warriors"
  • Expy: Shard was directly inspired by Solitaire from Rock Lords.
  • Fauxrrari: Due to licensing issues, characters with real-life vehicle modes instead have generic vehicle modes evoking their real counterparts.
    • Averted with Goldbug, who has an accurate licensed Volkswagen Beetle mode.
  • Foil: Nemesis is meant to serve as this to the Autobot Ark, who had likewise gained a robot mode in the Kingdom chapter of the War for Cybertron Trilogy.
  • Gender Flip: Road Rocket, an G2 Autobot Laser Cycle who originated as male, was released as part of the Velocitron Speedia 500 subline, which changed Road Rocket's gender to female, partially due to being a retool of the Prime Arcee mold. Ancillary media tends to play with the idea, as while the Velocitron Speedia 500 keeps Road Rocket female, the character in Transformers (2019) is never referred to with pronouns and appeared in their original G2 body initially, leaving it unclear if this iteration was also female, male but with a feminine body, or non-binary. Not helping matters being that a redeco would later be released in the form of "Laser Cycle", based on Jazz's G2 Laser Cycle body and only not identified as Jazz due to the Toxitron Collection already having a G2 Jazz, and no indication as to whether or not Laser Cycle's gender was changed despite also using the Prime Arcee mold.
  • Go-Karting with Bowser: Scourge from Robots in Disguise (2000), Shadowstrip, and Crasher from GoBots are allowed to participate in the Velocitron Speedia 500 race, despite being evil.
  • Hand Wave: Minerva not being a Headmaster is explained away through Word of God that she lost the ability when traveling to the Legacy Universe. Which is fitting when one watches the finale for Transformers: Super-God Masterforce.
  • Last Stand: One of the promotional shots for Wave 2 of Legacy showed Elita-1 (the only non-Core Class Autobot in the wave) taking cover with her guns drawn behind a run-down tow truck, as the many Decepticons and Predacons converge on her position.
  • Legendary Weapon: Malleus Minotaurus' backstory (explained by Mark Maher in a Pulse livestream) is that he was a mystical hammer given life by Solus Prime and became her blacksmithing assistant. He had been stolen by the Mayhem Attack Squad Insecticons and is now trying to flee from their clutches.
  • LEGO Body Parts: Carrying over the Weaponizer system, the Junkions and Armorizers can detach their body parts and swap them with each other.
  • Mix-and-Match Weapon: As Legacy carries over the 5mm-port system from the War For Cybertron Trilogy toyline, many weapons have the ability to combine with each other.
  • Mooks: The Troop Builder multi-pack released in the Buzzworthy Bumblebee subline features four generic foot soldiers* from different factions for the sole purpose of building armies.
  • The Multiverse: Invoked as part of the Excuse Plot, and a major theme of the toyline, with every character being from a different Transformers series, which are labeled as "Universes".
  • Mythology Gag:
    • The Energon-infused weapons included with several Year 1 figures mimic the Energon weapons from the Unicron Trilogy toyline.
    • Velocitron Galaxy Shuttle having a white space shuttle and black locomotive mode is reminiscent of G1 Astrotrain's Japanese toy release, which gave his vehicle modes the same colors.
    • Tarantulas' buzzsaw accessory is based on the one he had in his Transmetal form.
      • The redeco of him included in the United Versus Multipack is based on an early prototype of his original Beast Wars toy.
    • Wreck-N-Rule Twin Twist's color scheme, while based on his Diaclone toy, was chosen specifically as a reference to the 1985 box art he appeared on, which featured him in those colors.
    • Spindle's chestplate was sculpted to resemble the torso of Grimstone, a Dinobot from the Power Core Combiners toyline.
    • Bulkhead's "Wreck-N-Rule" release gives him a new weapon in the form of Prime Breakdown's hammer. Word of God confirms his military deco also is made in tribute to Age of Extinction's Hound.
    • Paradise Parakeet, the bird included with Beachcomber, is a nod to the green bird he had briefly conversed with in the G1 episode "The Golden Lagoon".
    • The Deadeye Duel 2-pack with Kaskade and Javelin is a nod to their very brief sniper duel from the 2019 IDW comics.
    • Powerlinx Hot Shot's guns are directly based on the same ones he used in Armada episode "Dash".
    • Generation Selects Antagony was packaged with two heads: her regular head, and one based on the Transmetal Scavenger. This head is intended to be used for either Antagony or Inferno to make them into Scavenger, with the ant heads on both even having inner sculpting to resemble the chest patterns on Scavenger's original toy.
    • The Animated Autotroopers have an alternate head based on their Kiss Players incarnations.
    • Axlegrease's head is based on her fellow female Junkion, Nancy.
    • Gears has an opening chest compartment, referencing G1 episode "Changing Gears", where the Decepticons altered Gears' personality by removing one of his circuit disks.
      • Gears also features a sculpted “M” on the back of his head as a homage to the cancelled Mysterians toyline, his G1 toy originally would’ve been a part of it as the Mobile Force member Blazar.
    • Origins Wheeljack has his blast shield, which also acts as the track he drove on in the first episode. He can also carry Origins Bumblebee in vehicle mode, and his fan accessories were made to resemble Dominator Discs from G1 episode "The Core"
    • Armorizer Shard is made of Death Crystals from the G1 episode "Chaos".
    • Squeezeplay comes with a blaster accessory that is straight up Browning, his friend and companion from Super-God Masterforce, who turned into a gun.
    • Nucleous is based off of Nucleon from the Marvel comics, a substance that can enhance a Cybertronian’s power at the cost of sacrificing their transforming ability.
  • One-Steve Limit: Invoked in the Toxitron subline. While two different versions of G2 Jazz were released, the orange recolor and the Laser Cycle, the latter was renamed to avoid selling two different characters with the same name simultaneously.
  • Out of Focus: The United subline sees the Decepticons largely take a backseat in terms of representation, focusing largely on the various Autobots, but also on other factions like the Armorizers and the Star Seekers.*
  • Outside-Context Problem: Aside from the already existing Autobots, Decepticons, Maximals, and Predacons, the United portion introduces two more factions into the mix: the "Star Seekers", a group of Space Pirates on neither side of the Cybertronian War comprised of those abandoned by their prior factions or whose worlds were devestated by the Great War; and the "Armorizers", a mysterious group of rock-like Transformers from the "Infernac Universe" partially based on the Rock Lords.
  • Pit Girls: In the Velocitron comics, almost every female Transformer that appears is this, with the exceptions of Crasher and Road Rocket due to them being competitors in the race.
  • Shout-Out:
    • One of Cyberverse Chromia's stock photos has her doing the iconic AKIRA bike slide.
    • Thundertron's lion mode is directly based on Zoids, with Mark Maher outright saying that Thundertron gained his beast mode after crash-landing on Planet Zi (albeit spelled "planet z").
    • Ozone and Cleansweep, Windsweeper's new Targetmasters, are named after two Eco-Warriors from G.I. Joe.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: The original Skar/Scarr had died before he could become a Dinobot. The Legacy figure not only shows him as a proper Dinobot, but it also gives him the ability to combine with his teammates into Volcanicus.
  • Suspiciously Similar Substitute: The Evo-Fusion combination system is very clearly just the Weaponizer system under a new name. Same situation with the "Armorizer" system.
  • Toyless Toyline Character: Largely meant to avert this with several characters, giving them their first ever figure in a toyline, or their first toy that's accurate to their appearance. Such recipients include Tarn and Jhiaxus, the latter of whom did receive previous toys, but Legacy is the first to provide a comic-accurate figure.
  • Toyline-Exclusive Character: See Canon Foreigner above.
  • Uniformity Exception:
    • Legacy G1 Breakdown. Unlike the other Stunticons, he's a retool of Wild Rider rather than an original mold, and he carries a spoiler blade and single blaster rather than dual-wielding guns. This even extends to his toy packaging, as Breakdown was released in Legacy: Evolution, but he retains the Year 1 packaging. This was so he doesn't stick out amongst the other Stunticons (who all released in Year 1) for mint-in-box collectors.
    • Axlegrease, due to being a Decepticon-aligned Junkion rather than Autobot, has pink, purple, and blue coloring, while the other Junkions have the standard red, orange and brown coloring. She's also the only female Junkion released in Evolution, and the only one to be a retool (from Scraphook)
  • What Could Have Been: Invoked with the Toxitron Collection, releasing redecos of figures based on their canceled toys from Generation 2.
  • Your Size May Vary: As usual with Core Class, it consists of tiny characters meant to scale with the larger figures, such as Tasmania Kid and Bouldercrash, and small-scale figures of larger characters, like Optimus Prime, Skywarp, and even an entire combiner with Volcanicus.
    • In an age where scale is given more importance to figures and usually a character is placed under a specific class and budget to alocate resources and give a faitful size in comparison to other figures in the line, Galaxy Shuttle sticks out as a big exception. In the original anime, he loomed over other characters such as the Combiner Liokaiser, and appropriately his toy was designed to interact with Micromasters. His Legacy toy is a new-head retool and repaint of Siege Astrotrain, making him much smaller in comparison to other Victory releases, though this is justified given the character's lack of notoriety to give him his own mold.

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