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Microman forever
Microman forever





  1. #Microman forever license
  2. #Microman forever series

Pre-TF Soundwave with "Cassette Man" molded on the cassette door. A redeco of this toy was re-released in the 1999 Microman line. The Jetheli transforms from a full-sized audio cassette into a helicopter for the included Microman figure. A redeco of this toy was released in the 1999 Microman line. The Battlebike transforms from a full-sized audio cassette into a motorbike vehicle for the included Microman figure. The version released as the Japanese exclusive Browning sported the blue parts, but with the silver body, though his animation model used in Super-God Masterforce depicted him using the gold body with the blue parts. The Facebook edition of Ask Vector Prime later created retroactive identities for the latter three decoes as Meantime, Ephemeris, and Azimuth respectively.īrowning came either in Silver with red robot parts, or Gold with blue robot parts, in addition to a gold chromed contest piece. The figure wasn't released in the Transformers line until Generation 2 in 1993 as Autobot, though the package art only depicted the chrome version, but Takara had previously released it in North America in the Kronoform line. It came in chrome, black, blue, and gold versions. This figure transformed from a robot to a watch. 03 Volkswagen ("red body", "blue body" or "yellow body"), Pre- Bumblebee.02 Familia 1500 XG ("red body", "blue body" or "yellow body"), Pre- Bumper.01 Porsche Turbo 924 ("red body", "blue body" or "yellow body"), Pre- Cliffjumper.When they came out as part of that line, they were released in only one color scheme each, the same as their subsequent Transformers releases. 04-07 were initially designed as part of the little-known Mysterians toyline but left unproduced, and then the tooling provided to Takara for Micro Change.

#Microman forever license

They were released in red, yellow, and blue and had license plate stickers on the back of the head panel. 01-03 were designed by Takara and transform into super deformed toy cars in the style of Takara's own Choro-Q line (imported to English-speaking markets as Penny Racers). This small car assortment actually had two different origins.

#Microman forever series

This was no doubt part of the reason why Takara were willing to cancel the Microman line in favor of Transformers when Hasbro financed an animated series to promote their versions of the toys. Many of the Micro Change figures came in multiple color schemes, many of which were eventually used for the Transformers line.īy the time the Micro Change theme was introduced in 1983, the Microman story was told exclusively through text and manga pages in the toys' pack-in catalogues, with no tie-in fiction. The Microman figures, unlike all subsequent 3.75" action figures (except their Western counterpart the Micronauts, made by Mego using licensed Microman molds) were on a 1:1 scale rather than representing full-sized humans/ aliens/robots, so the transforming robots and vehicles they created had ordinary household objects (such as, um, handguns) as disguise modes. Micro Change was a subline of Takara's successful New Microman line of the early '80s, which consisted of 3.75" action figures that were super-posable and vehicles and robots for use by them.







Microman forever