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âTheyâll never be the Beatles⌠or will they? Oasis plows through Los Angeles like a ten-megaton guitar pick towed by the hand of John Lennon, proving once again to Michael Krugman that they are, if nothing else, the biggest band in the world.â
Starline: Oh you... you smell that? That's right bitch!
Starline puts a crown on his head
Starline: Victory! Hard fucking earned!
Eggman: Nope.
Starline: FUCK!
-----
Surge: Guess what bitch? I'mma trauma dump on you!
Sonic: I'm not your fucking therapist!
Surge: Then you're gonna be a fucking corpse!
-----
Kitsunami: I'm clearly mentally ill and unstable.
Tails: I'm going to gaslight you into a peaceful resolution.
Kitsunami: No! Surge needs to kill Sonic! Now I'm gonna kill you for interfering!
Tails: But you ran out of water five minutes ago.
Kitsunami: FUCK!
----
Starline: I'm doing this for you, Sempai! Notice me!
Eggman: You smell of desperation and failure, I want nothing to do with you.
Eggman: Also, I planned this fight. Real Jojo shit.
Starline: I'm worthless! A complete and utter failure!
Rocks fall, Starline dies
------
Sonic: You can do whatever you want, unless I don't like it, then I'll beat you up!
Surge: Fuck you, that's stupid.
Sonic: I'm going to give you the chance to let go of your hate and live life anew!
Surge: Nah, I'm gonna hit you with the kind of static jolt you get from walking on carpet in woolly socks.
Sonic: But you'll die!
Surge: Worth.
Surge falls into a bottomless pit
-----
Eggman: I've got a shit ton of Badniks and you're in my evil city.
Eggman: You know exactly how this is gonna fucking go.
Sonic: To be continued!?
More Than Meets the Eye #50 â The Midlife Crisis Cruise Comes to an End
Our issue begins on Earthâ not Swearth, but honest-to-god Earthâ where Optimus Prime and Jetfire are watching a broadcast. Itâs not syndicated television like I Love Lucy or The Transformers (1984), however. No, this broadcast is coming from some of our favorite Lost Lighters, detailing their last will and testament.
Nautica wants to be buried on her home planet, and doesnât give a hot gay fuck what they engrave on her sparkcase. Also sheâs missing a good chunk of her face, but donât worry about that too much.
Chromedomeâs just happy that heâs dying WITH his husband this go around. Iâm sure Brainstormâs also thrilled to not have the âplease please please stop stabbing yourself in the brain to avoid the pain of being a widower Jesus Christ we canât keep doing thisâ conversation for the fifth time in a row.
Rewind takes the opportunity to poke Chromedome in the inferiority complex one last time, making his message out to Dominus Ambus. Our resident lovebirds want to âenter the afterspark simultaneouslyâ, though that seems more like something to address with whoeverâs killing them.
Over on Cybertron, in Metroplexâs titties, it would seem this broadcast is VERY wideband, as Starscream and Scoop (weâll go over whatever the fuckâs going on there in another post) witness Nightbeatâs will and testament, though considering Nightbeatâs technically undead, Iâm not sure how much legal weight it holds. Having done the whole âdyingâ thing before, Iâm sure heâs spent many a long, sleepless night thinking about how it would happen next time. Ikea Johnson wants a âNeoprimalistâ funeral, where they preserve only the head. Interesting that Nightbeat's religious sect is the same as Flywheels, the Scavenger who only existed to be a stand-in for the word "fuck".
Over on Luna 1, Red Alert is convinced that Megatron is using his gun mode to threaten Nightbeat. Fort Max isnât so sure.
Minimus shows off the most recent trick heâs learned, saying the word âfunâ with only stuttering twice. He wants to be buried on the moon, next to all of Rodimusâs failed pregnancies, and wearing the skin of a man whoâs been dead for thousands of years.
Whirl doesnât want a funeral, though youâd think heâd at least want his corpse thrown in the general direction of the Wreckersâ base, where every member gets a slot in the Zone of Remembrance as part of the onboarding. I know he got kicked out, but being shot out of a rail gun at Debris sounds roughly his speed.
Rung only requests that, should he die in his vape pen form, that he be dismantled. Heâs very committed to preventing underage smoking, and for that I commend him.
Rungâs request greatly disturbs the Scavengers, who seem to have forgone fixing the Krok-shaped hole in the wall and buying a couch more than two of them can sit on at a time, in order to afford a replacement TV, after Krok fastball-specialed a golden disc through the last one.
On another part of Cybertron, Windblade and Wheeljack watch Velocity state that she doesnât regret a single thing thatâs happened while sheâs been a part of the Lost Light. To recap, in the few months Velocityâs been aboard: Thunderclash almost died of being too perfect, Velocityâs first boss ran off to go bang a billionaire with a sword collection, Swerve almost died from too much television, her second boss ran off to get roped into the Polycule Wars, Tailgate exploded, Rung was revealed to be practicing without a license by way of a weird gibbon with a ball gag and his serial killer boyfriend, and she became the only practicing medical professional aboard a ship of over 200, after failing to pass her medical exams ten times. Oh, and she wants to be recycled.
Optimus wants to go save them, thinking that thereâs still time. However, the Lost Light isnât responding, and it doesnât actually matter anyhowâ these recording were sent out weeks ago.
Looks like thatâs a series wrap on Nautica, Chromedome, Rewind, Nightbeat, Minimus, Whirl, Rung, and Velocity! Letâs give âem a hand, folks!
Three weeks prior, on the planet of Miliarium, action is happening:
Being on your headset in the middle of a battle seems rather rude, but I suppose sacrifices to politeness have to be made, when one of your co-captains is effectively forbidden from stepping foot on any planet thatâs aware of Cybertronâs existence, given that he, yâknow, is the face of a cause that slaughtered billions over the course of millions of years.
(No, donât ask Optimus how relations with Earth are going.)
Megatron, continuing to command from orbit, tells Whirl to go help Cyclonus and Crossblades with the Rust Giantsâ longship, asking for no casualties. Which is sort of like asking a horse on cocaine to not freak out and kick someone in the head, if that horse also had guns tied to 30% of its body.
Rodimus asks Megatron if heâs enjoying himself, playing a pacifist run of a wartime strategy game with their lives, and Megatron says that heâs ârumbledâ; which Iâm not sure if Iâm search-engining wrong, but I donât know that even the British are saying that to mean theyâre right chuffed or tallywackered about a situation, or whatever. Rodimus is suddenly faced with a Rust Giant that he doesnât even come up to the knee of, but luckily we have a new superhero to save the day, by way of incredible violence.
Looks like weâre still workshopping the battle-cries.
Tailgate punched this guy so hard it caused a jump-cut to the post-battle celebration, where Rodimus shows off his multi-typefacial abilities, Megatron perpetrates his bigotry towards organics, the Cybertronians make galactic news for a not-awful reason for once, and Swerve is also here! For some reason! It looks like itâs gonna be all peaches and cream from here on, so long as we ignore the first three pages of this issue!
Hey, Cyclonus, you have to wait for him to call you, you're not an Autobot. Just because the little white guy you're Sufjan Stevens-level attached to is going, doesn't meanâ Cyclonus, hey. Hey, Cyclonus. Cyclonus. Cyclâ
Later, back on the Lost Light, class is in session. We finally get a look at those course Megatronâs been teaching, only briefly mentioned by Riptide in issue #29. The current course track is on the Knights of Cybertron, Megatron having assigned those in attendance to write essays tackling âpre-Functionist folklore and contested heritageâ.
Todayâs class consists of:
Minimus (old as balls, former high society)
Skids (the best at everything)
Brainstorm (literal genius)
Perceptor (slightly-less-literal genius)
Nautica (jack-of-all-trades brainiac and bibliophile)
Crosscut (former senator, current playwright, therefore probably has at least some sort of degree)
Nightbeat (nosy as fuck, loves to figure shit out)
Hound (former Primal Vanguard)
Thunderclash (perfect student, researcher, friend, confidante, and maybe even lover)
Grapple (not much to say here, other than heâs fucking jacked in IDW)
Xaaron (chief legal advisor for the Autobots)
And Riptide (created during the war and therefore has the least connection to Cybertron's folklore, canonically not a good test-taker)
Poor Riptide's grades donât stand a snowball's chance in hell against his peers', but good on him for sticking with the classes regardless.
This essay was assigned to help students establish context for the Knights within a world where they have not existed for millions of years, having disappeared since they embarked on their quest to Cyberutopia; a world where information creep, the slow degradation of memory as time passes, has made them into mythological figures. Megatron posits that the only thing we really know about the Knights is that they failed to do what they set out to do, as the universe is not a peaceful place, himself arguably being exhibit A of that failure. Still, he intends to use this course to help the Lost Lightâs crew understand the Knights to the best of their current, modernity-biased ability, prior to potentially meeting them. Considering that the Knights will be deciding Megatronâs fate, perhaps this is also for him to grapple with understanding his own end.
Anyway, letâs look at a plot device.
The last time we saw this symbol was during issue #46, both drawn by Grimlock on his walls, paired with the words âprepare confront repelâ, and then on some mysterious fellows who were working with Krokâs nasty little friend Demus and someone called "The Grand Architect". However, the first time we saw it was with Skids in #21, after he went through Tyrestâs space bridge and talked to a giant technicolor ball of light.
Seeing this image kickstarts Skidsâs memory, enough so that he interrupts class over it. Nautica has also seen this symbol, at an exhibit on Troja Major (a planet that Roberts will use as a dumping ground for many plot points in the sequel series to MTMTE) where it was claimed to be some sort of coat of arms. Thunderclash also knows this symbol, having seen it with his beautiful mind and kind heart in his visions, the same visions that were leading him to the Knights and allowing him to create a map to Cyberutopia. Nautica asks Skids to write out the symbol that he âheardâ phonetically into her space phone, in a move that will prove HIGHLY useful later on. Perceptor adds in his two cents, showing off that heâs wearing the âfeminineâ nose-type today, stating that he had talked to one of the Circle of Light members back in Season 1, who had theorized that the Knights of Cybertron was either originally made up of OR broke down into clans, and that the symbol/map Rodimus and Thunderclash were drawing is merely connected to part of the Knights, and that there could be others floating around.
Nightbeat thinks that all this brainstorming (which hasnât involved Brainstorm, oddly enough) is super cool and great, showing off his anime thumb in approval. When Minimus tries to give Megatron props for bringing everyone together to figure this out, he finds that Megatron is having some troubles, hunched over his podium as far as his fucked up old man toy articulation will allow. When Minimus approaches to see whatâs wrong, he gets punched clear across the room for his troubles. Then this happens:
Look, I donât care if 99.9% of the Cybertronian population can reclaim, you shouldnât just limp your wrist at your first officer in the middle of class.
No, what Megatron is actually doing is pointing the fusion cannon he doesnât have anymore, but had attached to his arm for roughly 4 million years, directly at Minimusâs tiny little skull. Quickly coming back to himself, Megatron is both horrified and mortified by what heâs done, offering nothing more but a quick apology before he dismisses the class and bolts, not even helping Minimus off of the floor.
The following day, Velocityâs paying a visit to Megatronâs room, which is STILL as barren as the most dire of single male living spaces. Velocityâs here because Megatron missed his appointment yesterday, after whatever happened in the classroom. Megatron reminds her that the weekly appointment is for him receiving his ration of âfoolâs energonâ which is meant to keep him in a weakened state, which arguably shouldnât make it medicine in the traditional sense. Velocity reminds him that he nearly knocked Minimus Ambusâs (yeah, she uses his full name, guess sheâs not been around long enough to get âjust Minimusâ privileges) block off, and that if Megatron had been at full strength, we might be dealing with a murder situation instead.
Though Minimus IS a load bearer, who regularly slings around a body three times his size, on top of weapons, so maybe not. Also, thereâs an even smaller guy inside the first mustached guy, so honestly itâd probably be fine.
Does Velocity even know about the irreducible Minimus? Is that in his medical history? Does she even know that Ultra Magnus and Minimus Ambus are the same person? Because Megatron didnât even know until they found that corpse on the quantum duplicate Lost Light, and Magnus was his lawyer for the trial as well as being his SIC. Really, what are the legal ramifications of Minimus having assumed the identity of a dead man, now that Tyrest isnât there to keep up the charade and the secret is a bit more open? Does Minimus have legal claim to Magnusâs identity, or at least ownership of the armor? Can Minimus lay claim to any property he purchased as Magnus, or that the previous Magnuses had purchased prior to their deaths? Was Minimus legally declared dead prior to undertaking the role of Enforcer of the Tyrest Accord, if only to make things easier in terms of paperwork? Can Minimus sign off on things, and if so, does he use his own signature, or Magnusâs? If he signed something as Magnus, would any contract bearing it be rendered temporarily void whenever heâs not wearing his work pants? How much of Minimusâs existence makes him cry late into the night with how legally dubious it is? Does Delta Magnus know about Ultra Magnus being a skin suit? I feel like we donât focus on how fucked up this whole situation is nearly enough.
Anyway, Velocity asks after Megatronâs medicine, probably because First Aidâs medical note-taking skills often get usurped by his need to write SpringerxReader fanfiction. She mentions that what theyâve been feeding Megatron over the last year have some side effects, which Megatron seems surprised by. Considering heâs felt sickly and crampy this whole time, the side effects are likely meant to be the intent of the medication.
Velocity then takes a gander at the dents Megatron put into his head when he had his little freakout, stating that âchemo-sedativesâ can change oneâs whole personality in extreme cases, as well as increased stress levels, as Megatron admits that the reason he crushed his head with his hands is that he heard voices screaming. However, Megatron doesnât think stress caused such a thing.
To recap how the last year has gone for Megatron: he was forced to renounce the cause he had led for the last 4 million years, became co-captain of a fucking Carnival cruise ship, had 95% of his crew disappear from reality, found a bunch of corpses, got slapped in the face by Soundwaveâs dad, had to lie to Rewindâs face to make him okay with killing himself so that everyone else might live, got shot as an infant, gaining anywhere from three-to-five fathers as a result, visited the most passive-aggressive garden in the galaxy, got stabbed in the chest and brained with a flat-screen television and then had to apologize for it, and was non-consensually hugged by a swarm of flesh-eating insects parading around in his SICâs skin suit.
Velocity gets a call on her smart watch, Swerve on the other end demanding her presence at the medibay, seeing as sheâs the only doctor on the ship now, and there are multiple people having a crisis.
Smash cut to Swerve, Cyclonus, Tailgate, Chromedome, Rewind, Rung, and Megatron standing on the bridge, their colors looking super fucked up and light bloomed out, because this is a 40-page issue with a shit-ton of detail and characters, so weâve got three colorists, two artists, and an extra inker on for this one. Theyâre meeting with Rodimus, whose fingers have shrunk down to the size of shoestring potato fries, because Swerve, Tailgate, Rewind, Rung, and Megatron heard some sort of awful noise in their brains at the exact same time. Chromedome is here to support his husband, because he loves him so, so much, kissy-noise kissy-noise. Cyclonus is here mainly to clarify that heâs a badass who no one has ever heard cry, because emotional vulnerability and expressing pain are for pussies, unless youâre doing it by way of self-harming directly onto your face meat.
Only Tailgate and Rewind actually admit to what they heard, Tailgate hearing Cyclonus berate him for falling for Getawayâs tricks and Rewind hearing Dominus berate him for not doing enough to find him. Iâd imagine both Rung and Swerve were hearing things relating to their professionalism, given that Rung fucking sucks at his job, and Swerveâs gonna fry the moment Ten gets a union sorted out. Megatron, is well, Megatron, so thereâs a litany of awful things that he could have heard.
Rodimus has Blaster reveal that the ship received a signal at the exact same time that these people had their little brain event. Brainstorm hypothesizes that what happened was some sort of psychological assault, perhaps of Galactic Council origin, as a means of testing a new brain weapon. Magnus, who has been up on an upper level with a clipboard up to this point, notes that they could trace the signal. Mainframe informs him that they have, but the origin doesnât seem to correspond to any known location in the navigation, and theyâd have to physically go there to see whatâs up. Which isnât sketchy in the slightest.
Rodimus wants to load up on his big, beautiful Rodpod with everyone, so they can find who did this and make them stop. When Magnus questions if this is a wise course of action, Rodimus uses American grammar to trip up Magnusâs British-based spellcheck, so he gets to do whatever he wants. This is a trick heâs picked up since Drift left, as the old game of âpitting my people-pleaser hippy dippy boytoy and my no-nonsense stick-up-the-ass sentient rulebook against one another, so whatever I wanted to do from the start can seem like a pleasantly centralized optionâ doesnât work very well when you replace the boytoy with a grumpy old man who tried to murder everything with a heartbeat.
Velocity wants to join the trip alongside Team Rodimus, but Mainframe has his reservations. I donât blame him, considering she is, again, the only medical doctor currently on board this ship. He suggests she take along some personal protection, just in case.
âŚI mean, heâll definitely make sure any bad guys who come her way will die horribly, if nothing else. Also, apparently the Rodpod's artificial gravity goes all the way around.
Nauticaâs spent the last few weeks tricking out the Rodpod with a fancy schmancy new teleport drive, because Rodimus was annoying her to the point where if she didnât give him what he was moaning about she might have had to kill him. Megatron is hesitant to use the drive, but after being informed that there are safety perimeters in place thatâll keep the olâ Rodimus Podimus from teleporting inside a asteroid or whatever, he pulls the level and they end up in the dark.
No, not space dark, donât be funny. Thatâs my job, and they donât pay me for it, which should tell you how dire the situation is. This is a special sort of dark. The sort of dark that leads to panic and lethal levels of quipping. Rodimus cuts the lights on, but it does very little to offset the absolutely suffocating darkness outside. Rewind notes that there arenât any stars, and Tailgate admits that he doesnât know how space works. Thatâs alright Tailgate, neither do any of the people who draw or color this comic. Youâre amongst (created by?) friends here.
The scanners reveal that thereâs something 3000 miles in front of them. And behind them. And to the left, to the right, 12 o'clock, three o'clock, six o'clock, nine o'clock, rock around the clock tonightâ that is to say, theyâre surrounded by something the size of a planet. After disabling the safety protocols on the Rodimus Podimus, the gang find themselves on the surface of Necroworld, where the Necrobot Censere lives and operates his many plinths to the living and dead. Megatron isnât exactly thrilled to be back here. Nightbeat on the other hand, is overdosing on mystery, and he couldnât be happier. Nobodyâs sure what the fuck is going on. Thereâs no time to theorize, however, as half the gang just got blown sky high.
Everyone books it back to the Rodpod to escape the dozen attack craft coming after them, but thereâs more trouble hereâ the teleport drive is dead. Which is weird, because they should have had enough juice to get to and from their little trip. When Rodimus tries to contact the Lost Light, thereâs no response. Theyâre not responding. Megatron tells him that those are two different things, mirroring the same thing Optimus said about trying to contact the Lost Light after he and Jetfire viewed the will tapes. Everyone else is busy trying to figure out who the hell could be firing on them, all of them roughly coming to the same conclusion that Cybertronians as a whole arenât terribly well liked, and the Lost Lighters have made a bit of a name (derogatory) for themselves, since they insulted the Galactic Council, caused the end of the 16-million year Stentarian war, and have ruined at least one bar with physical violence over home movies.
Rodimus tells Megatron to park the Rodpod at the Necrobotâs citadel, just in time for a missile to hit the ass-end of the shuttle, blowing off Magnusâs arm, shredding off roughly half of Nauticaâs face, and giving Cyclonus an excuse to hold Tailgate in his arms. Everyone bolts to get inside, Nautica being carried by Skids so we can further solidify the straightest pairing in the series. Once theyâre all inside, their attackers retreat, and we see where Censereâs gotten to in all this.
Letâs give him a hand, folks!
While Velocity looks over the body, Nightbeat deals with his personal Santa Claus being dead by way of trying to figure out what happened. Megatron, meanwhile, noticed that the craft that attacked them were of Decepticon design, and he tells Ravage to go check it out. Honestly, I doubt he was the only one to notice, given that all but three of the people on this trip were dealing with the Decepticons in some form or fashion all throughout the war, and could therefore identify the make of the crafts, if not the model, so Iâm not sure what the deal is with this secrecy.
Brainstorm is brought over to Nightbeat to help solve this mystery, and he promptly identifies that some of Censereâs equipment is very similar to the stuff Tyrest used for the Aequitas trials, likely used to figure out what sparkflowers to plant where. Rewind, having popped his sparkliest nipple pasties on, because he hates Censere and wants to get glitter all over his house, asks the boys to scootch on over so he can try to call the Lost Light. Nightbeat thinks that Censere tried to sabotage a signal someone else had sent in an attempt to lure Team Rodimus (and friends) to the planet, and that resulted in the brain attack that had happened earlier in the day. Unfortunately, Censere didnât spend any time with Rodimus the last time the Lost Light visited, so he didnât get a taste of the ridiculous way Rodimus likes to live his life, and why the psychic attack wouldnât work.
Rewind gets the phone working, calling Rodimus over to get on the horn. Magnus stands in the background, showing off his grievous amputation. After a bit of fiddling with the settings on their end, the Lost Light makes official contact with Team Rodimus.
Getaway, last we saw him, was very much in prison, but Rodimus isnât going to focus on that niggling little detail right now, as he asks for the Lost Light to swing by to pick up the team so they donât all die. Getaway sort of DOES want to focus on that detail, however, as he very much didnât appreciate being fetish fuel throughout the holiday season, and, despite his name, didnât actually escape that setup. No, Getaway had help.
Man, guess Megatron shouldâve reconsidered failing Riptide on his essay.
Speaking of Megatron, he walks up about now to see what all the hubbubâs about. Rodimus, looking like heâs about to cry, realizes that Mainframe lied to them about not being able to track the signal. Getaway gives him points for getting that right, but really, he wants to drive home the point that the entirety of the crew wanted Megatronâs little pals off the ship. And thatâs what itâs really about, at the end of the day. Getaway hates that high command gave Megatron a party cruise to live out his last days on, last days that might not even happen, with the track record of this goddamned quest. Heâs sick of Rodimus and pals acting like this whole arrangement isnât an affront to every single life thatâs been snuffed out because of Megatronâs actions.
Everyone other than Whirl seems pretty bummed out by these accusations. Swerve pipes up, enraged that heâs been doomed to die alongside everyone elseâ he doesnât even LIKE Megatron. Getaway reveals that at some point or another, he and Atomizer (the interior designer turned bowman, youâll recall) approached every single crew member and asked if they thought Megatron deserved to have a second chance and also, completely unrelated, but what would you do in the event of a coup? Anyone who didnât provide a desirable answer got visited by the nudge gun fairyâ that gun that can fire thought into your brain, or just erase memories if fired dry. The collection of headaches main cast have been experiencing over the last several issues? The side effect of being shot. Skids especially does not like this reveal.
Of course, Getaway isnât just upset with Megatronâs leadershipâ heâs also mad as hell whatâs supposed to be a trip to find their ancestors, who will guide them back onto the straight and narrow, has, in actuality, been Rodimusâs midlife crisis road trip. Getaway wasnât even here for Rodimus and Driftâs ass-slapping contests and insulting galactic officials who want the Cybertronians dead, but he didnât need to be. He took one look at the Rodpod and decided he needed to kill Rodimus right then and there.
Rodimus, at this point, remembers the list Atomizer had offered him back during the trial. Magnus, biting his lip at the idea of a list existing, asks what thatâs all about, and Rodimus explains. Getaway really was hoping that Rodimus would take the bait, so he couldâve blackmailed Rodimus into stepping down and letting literally anyone else take over. Probably Magnus, at that point in the timeline, given that he hadnât gotten buddy-buddy with Megatron yet. Unless Getaway considers acting as someoneâs lawyer under order of the space pope as being too close to an individual.
Getaway decides that this conversation has reached its natural conclusion, as heâs got questing to get done, and it should be moving at a pretty even clip now, since heâs excised all the distractions. Rodimus swears to come after him, but Getaway doubts itâll happen, given whatâs happening next.
While this debacle has been happening, Ravage has been busy searching a crash site, trying to uncover the identity of who the hellâs decided to attack them. Tarn commits a microagression at him, before firing his twin fusion cannons.
The call ends, Getaway cutting off the comm to all contact.
Ravage shows back up at this point, to give everyone the bad news.
Nightbeat, honey, the tragedy is in the opposite direction.
Now, thatâs technically the finale of the main story, but thereâs a little bonus comic attached to the end, acting as a sort of sideways epilogue to hint at what Getaway and his merry band of mutineers will be getting up to, since we arenât seeing them again for a bit.
Our little backup strip begins right before the original launch of the Lost Light, where we see some guys we havenât seen since the 2012 Annual issue. Shock and Ore wander around what will one day become Swerveâs, Shock convinced that this ship is actually the ship they lost 5 million years prior, the Unitrex-1. Ore isnât so sure, but as the readers, we saw the exact moment that Unitrex-1 disappeared in issue #38, after Rodimus forgot to wash his hands while putting the quantum engine together. Shock, wanting to prove that heâs right, fumbles around in the dark, looking for the graffiti he carved into the underside of a table. Ore gets a call on his space Blackberry while heâs doing this, and we finally get the other half of that call Prowl made in issue #1, after he failed to get Chromedome to stay on Cybertron. The Duobots have 20 minutes to get Overlordâs massive, lippy ass on the ship. Knowing that that isnât a ton of time, the two quickly book it out of the bar, leaving the spectral form of Skids to look really bummed out.
Later, at Swerveâs grand (secret) opening, we see some more old faces.
Whoa now, Drift, youâre not supposed to be back until next issue!
Pipes thinks heâs been cursed to not have friends, since Hubcap is still at his dead-end job with the Wreckers, and Riptide was too busy being in a coma to come say goodbye. How rude!
Drift doesnât seem to particularly want Pipes around more than necessary, pushing him to be friends with Rewind, who he describes as having kind eyes. Whether Drift is doing this to keep Pipes safe from overhearing any Overlord-related secrets, keeping his ass-slapping and sexually-tense sword training time with Rodimus safe, or just because he finds Pipes to be mildly annoying isnât clear. Pipes, however, is looking for more than friendshipâ heâs looking to bone down.
Pipesâs ideal partner is wide as they are tall, with tits to match and at least one alt-mode that he can use as a yacht. Drift tells him he can introduce him to Tailgate, though something tells me Pipes isnât really Tailgateâs type, given that he can actually say what he means and doesnât have some fucked-up facial situation.
Itâs really too bad that Pipes died, because I bet he would have loved Nautica, and he would have REALLY loved Nickel.
Later still, we see all of our doctors togetherâ even Ambulon is there! In one piece, even! Ambulon wants to tell First Aid something, and First Aid automatically tries to make it a cosmetic thing, because of COURSE Ambulon would be insecure about his bad skin, and what he really needs is a better cleanser. What Ambulon actually wants to talk about, though, is his alt mode, and the fact that the puns involved with being part of a Combiner make him want to die. First Aid understands, but Swerve, known menace to society, might not be so compassionate, as he throws a grenade into the back of Ambulonâs head, triggering his transformation. Ambulon is mortified, and Swerve does the thing that Ambulon literally just said he hates. First Aid continues to rip flakes of paint off of Ambulon, as the specter of Velocity watches, looking pretty bummed about the fact that she never got to be part of banter like this.
Later on than that, Rewind and a wheelchair-bound Rung are in the currently-empty Swerveâs, as Rewind calls Chromedome to gather up one of the groups for those storytelling circles Rewind organized to try to fix Rungâs brain. He hangs up, then tells Rung that once his brain works again, theyâre going to have a goddamned chat about Dominus Ambus, which is only mildly hampered in its threat by the fact that Rewind standing is barely the same height as Rung sitting down.
Rewind then gets to work writing out the story map for when the âShadowplayâ group gets there, as the specter of Chromedome reaches out longingly for the dead version of his husband. He laments that this Rewind died without closure, but the ghostly specter of Rung reminds him that there are rules to this, and they have to leave now. Not sure why Rungâs here to watch himself be threatened by Pipsqueak McGee. Is he actually doing his job for once, helping guide someone through their grief? I doubt it, since Chromedome isnât a hottie bo-body like Skids, and his problems havenât (directly, at least) caused the sort of trouble that make entire star systems hate you like Megatron.
Later, during the Overlord disaster, Perceptor sprints into Swerveâs, shouting for a medic, as the rest of the battered and beaten watch. Hoist, himself hooked up to the wall by some sort of cable, while wearing his extra-special Rodimus Star, offers to help, though heâs technically an engineer, and whatever heâs gonna do probably wonât have any consideration for the soul or ability to feel pain. Perceptor was using Tripodecaâ sweet, beloved, friend to all, who was the star of the post-Overlord mass funeral Tripodecaâ as a, uh, tripod for his rifle, when Overlord probably noticed that the olâ science sniper looked sort of familiar and did a lilâ grabbing with his big nasty hands. Hoist asks if Perceptor is going to stop Overlord, and considering how things went the last time Overlord was the star of the show, I doubt Perceptor thought he was gonna get lucky twice in terms of survival, especially when Overlord is riGHT BEHIND HIM OH GOD LORDY JESUS MARY AND JOSEPH
How Perceptor survived this isn't clear, but we know he did, as he continued to show up in the story past issue #15 in a decidedly alive, non-paste form. His specter watches this scene unfold, expression unreadable.
Post-Luna 1, Swerve stands in his ruined bar dejectedly, when he realizes that quite a few people have shown up to help him clean up the mess, as long as he promises to reward their hard work with reopening once itâs done. As everyone works to get things back in order, Swerve tells them to keep an eye out for a non-trashed Legislator that he could use as a bouncer, once he fucks around with its head enough to make it do what he wants. Tenâs specter watches as his shitty boss and arguable father is gifted the body that would become him, making a note to get his union going with a bit more urgency.
Later, on the day of the âFuck Off Megatron 2-for-1 Drink Dealâ, Crosscut leads Riptide, Mirage, and Nautica on a tour of the ship. Mirage notes that Swerveâs is a bit of a dive, not suited to his refined tastes in the slightest. In a booth, Getaway and Atomizer have boxed Mainframe in on either side to have a little chat. Swerve and Bluestreak talk television, Bluestreak making a little jab at MTMTEâs second season not being quite as well-received by fans as the first. Over at the bar, Highbrow and Perceptor talk about Quark, while Brainstorm watches while having his briefcase, which he is NOT supposed to have in here.
Crosscut goes on about this bar being where all things happen and where bittersweet is the most often-felt emotion, then calls Trailcutter/blazer an alcoholic as he dances on the ceiling. The specters of just about everyone on the ship watch their fallen friend, enjoying the moment and missing him terribly, as Perceptor brings them back to the here and now of the story, which turns out to be just after the holiday special, judging by the Christmas lights.
Minimus asks if this is safe, and Perceptor says that it is, as nobody can actually interact with the past, because Brainstorm is the only one whoâs ever actually perfected that tech, not that this isnât his fault either. It turns out that when you try to fly against the stream of time as it naturally occurs, you tear a few thousand itty bitty holes on the way to perfecting the process. Perceptorâs found a way to let others view the past, at least for a little while. Minimus is fine with it, as long as everyone continues to behave, and it seems like they are, as everyone mingles in Swerveâs.
The two of them sit down, Megatron handing Minimus what Iâm sure is a mocktail, and Perceptor explains that while the window into the past is closing for now, it may open back up in the future. When Rodimus asks when that might be, he then immediately decides that he doesnât want to know, instead wanting to have a fun little surprise for later. They donât get very many of those, fun surprises.
As everyone toasts to the dead and to future adventures, the specter of Getaway watches on, smug as hell.
Thatâs the end of âNo Guns, No Swords, No Briefcasesâ but that is STILL not the end of the issue! It never ends, this thing! Because the number 50 is very big and impressive, obviously this is a double-sized spectacular, and has to cap off with a note from the man himselfâ James Roberts.
And then after that we get a new notes from fans, but this is already obscenely long and I think I can show you the crux of what theyâre all saying right here: MTMTE (2012) is fucking good. Itâs a good series. Make your goddamn family, friends, coworkers, librarians, and goldfish read it. Share it with people youâve never met. Get a long-term personal project out of it. Get long-term friends out of it. Get a long-term romantic partner out of it. If I can do it, so can you!
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The Artistry of Raven: Impression of a Soulful Dancer & The Unspoken Storytelling of Physical Expressiveness
ANDY: When you started developing the individual characters, the individual faces of the TEEN TITANS, who did you base the characters on? Youâve often said that Changeling was a young Mickey Rooney. But who were the others in real life?
GEORGE: [...] Originally, Raven was Persis Khambatta, the actress who played in the first STAR TREK film, and later became a young lady named Fran MacGregor, who was a dancer, and I used some of her features, particularly her figure, for Raven. [...]
David Anthony Kraft's Comics Interview #50: PĂŠrez! Special Edition (1987)
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In 1987, George PĂŠrez revealed that later in the series, he took inspiration from the appearance of a young dancer named Fran MacGregor to build the physique of Raven. This decision was brilliant as it truly helped visualise the intended grace of Ravenâs characterisation as well as her otherworldly physical beauty.
Then, 12 years later, in 1999, the concept was revitalised in LEGENDS OF THE DC UNIVERSE #18 by the artist Butch Guice, only this time Raven not only had the beautiful, lean stature of a dancer but also posed like one in a soulful, contemporary dance inspired choreography.
These unique, dramatic movements were given specifically to Raven during her monologues where she either lamented her fate as a sacrificial lamb or when she was overwhelmed with strong emotions, like bitterness, frustration, and newfound infatuation - the intensity of which could never be fully conveyed with the frailty of words within a few text bubbles.
âDance is the hidden language of the soul,â was a quote from Martha Graham, a renowned American modern dancer in the 1900s. And the truth of the saying is evident in the way Butch Guice utilised the art of bodily expressiveness here to portray Ravenâs unspoken tragedy (as well as her innocence of a fifteen-year-old girl in the wake of her womanhood).
The movements in themselves are already such beautiful storytelling.
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Bonus: These are some dance photography pieces that remind me of Ravenâs beautiful movements in this issue.