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Simon Furman: The Simon Furman of early 1985, when I was first asked to write for the UK Transformers comic, would have probably said "pull the other one" if you'd told me I'd still be involved with Transformers more than thirty years later, and that the brand itself was still going strong. The usual "life expectancy" of a toy-related or tie-in comic was about a year. About the time it took for kids to get bored and look for the next big thing, or grow out of the previous one. Transformers just kept on bucking that trend.The US comic ran for eighty issues and some seven years, while the UK comic ran for three hundred thirty-two issues and nearly eight years. Unbelievable, really. At its height, the UK comic was selling two hundred thousand copies every week, and the US comic was canceled on sales of around seventy thousand—which by today's standards would make it a top ten bestselling comic. And even when it did end, I glibly wrote in the final issue, "It never ends." And as it turns out, I was right.
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I think the first generation of Transformers was built on really solid foundation with a fully realized and cosmic backdrop—developed by Jim Shooter, editor in chief of Marvel at the time, and further developed by Denny O'Neil and, most tellingly, Bob Budiansky—a great cast, each with their own fleshed-out character bio, and a cool dual-toy concept to boot. It immediately gave both readers and writers of the comic a lot to invest in, and then expand on.And personally, as a writer, I never treated the robots as robots—just characters with recognizable human emotions and flaws and dreams. I think readers really responded to that. And we never flinched from making the stories gritty and intense, and eventually expanding the scope of the story, bringing in elements like Primus, their creator, and his nemesis Unicron. Overall, G1—from the toys, to Marvel, the cartoon, the comics, the animated movie—has just had so much love invested in it, which is why I think it's lasted.Article continues after the video belowHow early on in the Earth Wars project were you brought in? And given the nature of the game—real-time strategy titles on mobile aren't exactly famed for their story sides—just how much of an impression have you been able to have on how the game's narrative plays out? Do you enjoy the "restrictions" that working in this medium presents, versus comics?
I wasn't there right at the beginning, but early enough to suggest how the story could be laid out to support what the creators at Space Ape and Backflip already had. It was G1, and it was set on Earth, but otherwise, we had to base it in the IDW continuity as it turned out, and support it with its own backstory and story direction, adding in a new human cast at the same time. Then it was a matter of planning the campaigns and putting in the dialogue, both the incidental mid-gameplay stuff and the more story-led before, between and after battles stuff that really drives the narrative. So overall early, but not right at the very beginning.
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Even the creators, me included, have our geeky, fanboy moments, and this was it. Peter and Frank were already on board, so when I was asked to add in some dialogue suggestions for them, how could I resist throwing in a few of my own "Furmanisms," as they became known in the fan community, little sound bites that had become synonymous with my Transformers writing. Pure indulgence, but hey—it also kind of serves to unite a little bit of Transformers comic book love with TV series love. It's a win-win thing.The launch trailer for 'Transformers: Earth Wars'
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It's no secret I love (the Tyrannosaur Dinobot) Grimlock as a character, so I was pleased to see him in there from the get-go. But I also pushed for Bludgeon's inclusion on the Decepticon side and slowly, bit by bit, all my favorite characters are making it into the game. But while I have my favorites—Nightbeat, Hardhead, Galvatron, Bludgeon, Grimlock, all of whom I feel there's a lot of "me" invested in how they've developed over the years—there are really no bad characters. Bob Budiansky did such a wonderful job originally of making them rounded, interesting characters. They're all great fun to write. The new human characters turned out to be really fun too, especially the interplay between Starscream and Luca. It gave us plenty of opportunity for humorous and snarky back and forth exchanges.Transformers was aimed at boys, back when. It sorta says a lot that the main "female" Transformer was colored pink, doesn't it—though Arcee is an absolute bad ass. Do you think that the way the franchise was sold in the 1980s could have done anything differently? You got pretty radical with the comic, once the leash, I suppose, was off, post-Movie. Would you have liked to have seen the cartoon be a little more "inclusive," I suppose; and the stories grow a little darker? As even the G1 cartoon, post-Movie, was still pretty fluffy.
I think even back in the day the comic was a lot harder edged than the cartoon show. I was only ever writing the kind of stories I would've wanted to read myself, so what boundaries there were we pushed pretty hard. Could we/should we have done more, especially in the depiction of female Transformers? Almost certainly, but it was a different age and our audience was ninety-nine percent male. Also, I never really thought much about gender. OK, they were obviously "male" robots, but they were robots! Which are kind of genderless. I applaud what's been done of late, and done well, including in Earth Wars, which features several female Transformers like Windblade, Rust Dust, Stormclash, Skyburst, Slipstream, and more still to come. But if I had the 1980s to do over again, I doubt I'd do much differently.
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Always. I've gone way past the point of expecting anything other than Transformers to keep going strong for, like, forever. The IDW comics, the Michael Bay movies, the way Hasbro is really behind and invested in the brand long-term these days: It all suggests that there's a lot more great stuff to come, and further generations of kids to get into the whole thing. And really that's key—getting the next wave of kids to love Transformers the way previous generations did. That original batch of 80s kids who grew up with it are a big part of why it is what it is now, but that can't go on indefinitely. But Transformers itself… maybe that can.And what of Earth Wars? Naturally a man in your position will be keen to promote it, but do you hope that the style of play appeals to people who might not be into Transformers, but they subsequently begin to get a taste for it? Or do you see this more as a release with the existing audience for these robots firmly in its sights?
I think there's plenty in Earth Wars for both the committed and casual fans, and people who barely know Transformers at all or are just gamers, pure and simple. We always approached it looking to appeal to the widest demographic possible, so while there's plenty for the fans to get excited about, it's not prohibitive if you're picking Earth Wars up as a complete newcomer to the world of G1 Transformers. Everything you need is right there, front and center, no pre-knowledge required.Transformers: Earth Wars is out now. Find more information at the game's official website.Follow Mike Diver on Twitter.