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Inconsistent structure. Should be either toy-centric or fiction-centric. Right now, it's both, with little rhyme or reason.
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You don't wanna know how much this costs.

Army-building (also troop-building) is a nickname for a toy-collecting habit that involves buying multiple identical toys which represent generic or mass-produced characters (for example, Cobra soldiers or Star Wars stormtroopers), with the intent of displaying them as an imposingly large cohesive unit. Some army-builders have hundreds of figures, arranged in elaborate dioramas or military-style formations.

The practice is somewhat less-common in Transformers fandom than in other fandoms, primarily due to the relative lack of mass-produced, identical, "generic" units, but there are notable exceptions. Perhaps due to the relative dearth of toys representing multiple generic characters, some fans amass armies of non-generic characters (like the Jumpstarters).

Contents

Generation 1

The Transformers cartoon

Generation 1 offers many possibilities for army building, usually by using multiple figures of named characters to represent an army of similarly designed drones.

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A typical example of the victim of somebody's evil plan.
  • The pilot mini-series featured a fleet of nameless Seekers colored differently from the primary three. Two decades later, toys of these "Air Warriors" were finally made in the form of Heroes of Cybertron PVC figures. They were sold in multi-packs featuring three identical Air Warriors alongside the aforementioned three named Seekers.
    • Additionally, generics with identical colors to the original three would sometimes appear within the SAME SCENE as the original three, technically making Starscream, Skywarp, and Thundercracker army builders as well.
    • Hotlink and Bitstream are also a good match for plenty of Air Warriors, though that would be somewhat pricey.
  • The Insecticons can be represented by Bombshell, Shrapnel and Kickback. This is probably the cheaper option than using multiples of the actual drone-unit Insecticon toys Salvo, Zaptrap, and Shothole, and more show-accurate to boot.
  • Multiple Scourge toys can represent the Sweeps. Similarly, multiple Cyclonus toys can represent his armada. In both cases, the main character and his nameless henchmen may be represented by different releases.
  • Multiples of Gnaw can be used to represent the Sharkticons. This works particularly well with this figure, as Gnaw received very little characterization in most official fiction.
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The Headmasters cartoon

In The Headmasters, Sixshot demonstrated the ability to create temporary duplicates of himself.

Super-God Masterforce cartoon

Super-God Masterforce was good to army builders, as it provided several good opportunities.

  • The Seacons had multiples of all the limb-units; Turtler was the only non-cloned individual of the group. Thankfully, the Takara versions of the original toys are identical to the Hasbro versions, reducing the need for costly importing.
  • The Sparkdash Javil, Guzzle, and Sizzle are all drones with multiple copies. Though Javil and Guzzle's toys are colored differently from their Firecon doppelgangers, the Masterforce cartoon gave all three Sparkdash the Hasbro colors, making for cheap army-building for those who'd rather be show-accurate with their hordes.
  • Legions of black Guardminder drones appeared, led by a single golden one. The black drones can be represented by Fasttrack, while the leader can be his redeco Black Roritchi. However, while collecting a single Black Roritchi wouldn't be too hard, as he comes with BlackZarak (just be careful, okay?), collecting an army of Fasttrack toys, which were only sold packaged with Scorponok, would be expensive. Fortunately, the Earthrise toyline would release Fasttrack as an individual deluxe class figure, with a subsequent gold repaint in the Generations Selects line as head honcho Black Roritchi.

2005 IDW continuity

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G.I. Joe vs. the Transformers

G.I. Joe vs. the Transformers II #3 features a pack of Ravage units.

Timelines

Timelines toys are all convention or collectors' club exclusives, which can give attempts to army build with them a rather prohibitive pricetag.
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Kiss Players

The Earth Defense Command's Kiss Players had 48 of the human-created Autorooper models in service. In what can only be a move designed to encourage army-building, the large Autorooper toy came with a decal sheet with specialized markings for all 48 units, not simply the ones given to pack-in pilot character Atari's Autorooper.

Alternators/Binaltech

With the introduction of the GT System in that series' fiction, Smokescreen can inhabit four bodies in unison, so some collectors might take to buying all four Smokescreen variants (or, more precisely, both Smokescreen variants and both Smokescreen GT variants) to represent him in his four bodies at once.

e-HOBBY toy bios

  • E-HOBBY exclusive Overcharge is a Quintesson military product with multiple units available. This back story, along with the multiple different faction insignias he is packaged with, encourages army building, though like the Guardian Robots he would be costly to collect.
  • Megaplex's Collector's Edition bio describes him as "one of a series" of Megatron clones, making him a possible army-builder. Naturally, though, the e-HOBBY Megaplex toy, similar to Overcharge, would not be easy to army-build. On the other hand, it's pretty dang similar to G1 Megatron, meaning one could use him, and the original Machine Wars Megaplex shouldn't be too hard to find.

Legends Spin-Off

Golden Lagoon

  • Golden Lagoon Starscream's lack of any Starscream-specific features makes the figure suitable - but expensive - for army-building Golden Lagoon Skywarp and Thundercracker.

The Story of Super Robot Lifeforms: The Transformers manga

  • You can build up the Megatron Corps by purchasing six of any version of Megatron.

Generations Selects comic

Beast Era

Beast Wars Metals manga

The Scorpion Corps could be built with numerous Scorponok toys, if one considers the minor differences between the two characters to be simply due to an artistic interpretation of the character model. Considering how other characters have been... stylized in these mangas, it might not be much of a stretch.

Beast Wars Neo cartoon

Multiple ships in the Cybertron fleet share a design with Fortress Maximus, which would undoubtedly make him the most expensive army builder of them all.

Beast Wars Neo comic

The Blentrons Elphaorpha, Drancron, and Latolata have many duplicates.

Beast Machines

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The Vehicons of Beast Machines are undoubtedly the most popular army builders from the Beast Era, possibly from all of Transformers, with virtually every Vehicon representing thousands of identical drones. (Megatron was the main exception.)

The Beast Machines cartoon featured legions of Thrust, Tankor, Jetstorm, Obsidian, and Strika drones, each commanded by a general. Note that the character model for Tankor was much closer to the Tank Drone toy.

The Wreckers comic "Departure" further featured drones of Scavenger, Blastcharge, Spy Streak, and Mirage. Additionally, an on-model depiction of the original toy for Tankor was repurposed to represent drones for Quake (who had the same bodyform, but in different colors).

Universe

The 2003 Universe comic "Homecoming" featured multiple Piranacons, toys which would be eventually released by Transformers Collectors' Club as new decos of the original Seacons.

Unicron Trilogy

The Unicron Trilogy offers multiple possibilities for army building.

Armada

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Corner pocket.

In Armada, Unicron's interior is patrolled by swarms of Dead End Drones, commanded by Dead End General units. This was originally an expensive toy to army-build, being a pack-in with the $50 Unicron toy (though eventually some Target stores clearanced them for as little as $13). In the Galaxy Force toy line though, the fourth Micron Booster assortment featured "Bug Drones" at a mere 300 yen a pop (very roughly $3). Unfortunately, the blindpacked boxes meant you either had to buy opened samples, or an entire case of twelve toys to ensure getting a single Dead End Drone... and the General came only one per every two cases.

Energon

Energon offers the largest number of potential army builders of the Unicron Trilogy.

  • In both the Energon cartoon and comic continuities, the Decepticons send thousands of Terrorcon drones to combat the Autobots and steal raw energon ore. In the comic continuity, these drones were based on four living, fully-sparked Decepticons: Battle Ravage, Cruellock, Divebomb, and Insecticon. In the cartoon continuity, the four drone-types also had color-changed variants sold as limited-retail toys. Hasbro would introduce another small Terrorcon to the mix: Doom-Lock, who was later established as a mass-produced drone via Swindle's Spiel.
  • In the cartoon, there were also countless identical Omnicons split among the three body types; Strongarm, Skyblast and Signal Flare. The fourth Omnicon type from the cartoon, Arcee, however, was a unique being, serving as the Omnicons' "queen bee". In the comic series, the Omnicons never became mass-produced Transformers.
  • The bio for Omega Sentinel says he is the commander of the "Guardians of Cybertron", though nothing has ever come forward to indicate just what that group is made up of. Hasbro representatives at OTFCC 2004 indicated that they had intended for groups of Omega Sentinels to appear in the cartoon, but ultimately not even one did, just the original iteration of the mold, Omega Supreme. No canon has specifically made the Omega Sentinel toy, a clear homage to the Guardian Robots of Generation 1, an army-builder. However, Hasbro's original intent and the Generation 1 allusion has led some fans to collect several of him.

Cybertron

Cybertron offers a few good army building opportunities.

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Joe's Apartment 2099
  • Technically a Terrorcon, Scrapmetal is an excellent army builder from the Cybertron franchise. In the Takara line, it was available in three different colorations; red, yellow, and blue. Hasbro would later release both the red and yellow versions in their own line, but blue remained exclusive to the Galaxy Force toyline, ramping up his secondary market value outside of Japan.
  • The inhabitants of Planet X are represented by hundreds of gray clones of Sideways and attack bird-bots. Both are cost-prohibitive army-builders, as the "Noisemaze Mass Production Type Version" was a DVD pack-in exclusive in Japan (and DVDs are not cheap there even without limited-edition toys packed in), and the only way to collect a horde of Laserbeak drones was by buying multiples of the Voyager-class Soundwave toy (which is still less expensive than the Noisemazes).
  • Throughout the cartoon series, "clones" of the Blurr toy are seen both as part of the civilian Autobot ranks hiding on Earth and inhabiting Velocitron. These were never seen in robot mode, and sometimes came in red and yellow varieties as well as the toy's blue (no red or yellow versions of the toy exist, though the Universe Swerve toy is a red-colored pre-Cybertron-retool version of the mold). This doesn't exactly inspire too many to army-build him, but the canon is there to support it.


Live-action film series

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The video games and subsequent comics for the live-action movie universe feature numerous models of mass-produced robots for both the Decepticons and Autobots. Though there are several toys based on these models (designed primarily for the version of the game for the PlayStation 2 and 3, Xbox 360, Wii, and PC), the accuracy of the toys' coloration and head design to the game models varies, but most are geared towards being the Decepticon drones. Interestingly enough, the toys that got redecoed were given original decos, not opposite-side game-decos.

  • Swindle's toy is nearly-accurate to the console game's Decepticon Swindle drones.
  • Dropkick's toy has the Decepticon drones' deco, but the face is only somewhat like the Autobot face, leaning towards a more unique design.
  • Longarm's toy is only barely accurate to the drone design, owing to timing issues. In the game, both Autobot and Decepticon versions are primarily white. The non-lenshead makes it a little more Autobotty, though.
  • Dreadwing is fairly accurate to the Decepticon version of the drone.
  • Both versions of Payload are similarly very close to the Decepticon Class Beta and Constructicon Warrior drones' designs.
  • In the movie comics, Landmine lent his form to a series of L.M.-1 drones.
Dirt Boss and Deadlift have identical bodytypes to the Scrapper drones. However, since they have different names and bios, they don’t technically count as canonical army-building candidates. But if you want to build armies of Dirt Bosses and Deadlifts or unofficially repurpose them as Scrappers, go ahead. We're not stopping you.

Revenge of the Fallen

Potentially, every Constructicon from the movie is an army builder, because multiple characters with the same body model are either destroyed, merged into Devastator, or are fighting the army at the same time.

Dark of the Moon

Age of Extinction

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"You're going to pull my head off and give it to Lockdown, aren't you?"
  • The Knight Ship is guarded by a pack of Steeljaws. Studio Series would later give us the Shadow Raiders, despite them being redecos of their boss Lockdown.
  • An army of Vehicon toys can be used to represent many of the vehicles used by Cemetery Wind. However, that would be rather difficult, seeing as the only toys are either part of a rather expensive Platinum Edition multi-pack or a hard to find tail-ender.
  • Multiple Insecticons were seen in the KSI headquarters.
  • Multiple Stingers can be used to represent the mass-produced units seen in the Mobile Game.
  • The Vehicons can also bolster Galvatron's ranks, but we have already mentioned that would be difficult. Fortunately, Studio Series would give us KSI Bosses redecoed from Nitro Zeus. And while their toys do not necessarily match their on-screen portrayals due to being redecoed from Stinger, the KSI Sentries can make useful army-builders nonetheless.

Bumblebee

  • Studio Series Thrust can be used to represent any of generic Seekers in addition to the official character.

Rise of the Beasts

  • Studio Series Freezer and Novakane can be bought in bulk to stand in for the many Sweeps that appear as part of Unicron's army.
  • Multiple Scorponok can be seen scurrying around in the film's introduction and final battle.

Animated

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Aligned continuity family

Prime

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The Steve Convention
  • The Prime toyline has a plethora of Vehicon toys, based on the generic Decepticon model in the cartoon.
  • The MECH Trooper that came with the Bumblebee vs. Starscream Entertainment Pack is technically an army builder, since you see multiples in the show, but you'd have to buy multiple Bumblebees and Starscreams to get more than one of them.
  • Any of Starscream's Prime figures can be used to represent the Starscream clones from the show.
  • The Arms Micron Gaia Unicron is an army-builder, because Unicron had the ability to multiply himself in the show.
  • Cyberverse Commander Hardshell can be used to build an Insecticon army.

Rescue Bots

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The only Con in the village.
  • Doctor Morocco produced multiple MorBots in Rescue Bots, making any of the resulting MorBot figures potential army-builders. However, the transforming Rescan figure is the most viable, being the only one not packed as part of a set. (Nobody needs to army-build Bumblebee or Graham Burns...)

Robots in Disguise (2015)

Generations

Combiner Wars

  • At Toy Fair 2015, a member of the Transformers design team commented that Viper was designed to be a generic-style Transformer like the Omnicons with the intent that fans army-build him. Whilst he has no fiction of his own, this army-building reputation comes from the fact that he is based upon both the Cobra Viper troopers and the Cobra Rattlers that they often pilot from G.I. Joe. However, Viper ended up being the shortpacked figure in his wave (two of him per case compared to three Grooves and three Warpaths), and was also omitted from the subsequent wave (unlike his two wave-mates), which made finding him rather difficult to begin with, let alone collecting multiple specimens. On top of that, several international markets (such as Australia and the United Kingdom) skipped the only wave he shipped in entirely.

Titans Return

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War for Cybertron: Siege

  • Multiple War for Cybertron: Siege Refraktors can be used to fill out an army, since their model was used for this purpose in the cartoon. Hasbro even encourages it, by allowing three copies of the figure to combine into their camera mode.

War for Cybertron Trilogy

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  • The War for Cybertron Trilogy Centurion Drone can be reasonably army-built. However, doing so comes with a downside: while multiple pistols and energon cubes—and even backpacks usable with Tigertrack and Red Alert—would certainly be useful, most of the remaining accessories in the included Weaponizer Pack are character-specific. Soon to flood eBay.
  • The War for Cybertron Trilogy Deseeus Army Drones can be bought in bulk to display alongside Sharkticons and Allicons, although their exclusivity to Walmart means they aren't as widely available for purchase.

War for Cybertron: Earthrise

  • Like Gnaw, above, the Deluxe Class Earthrise "Quintesson Allicon" army-builds nicely, being sold singly at regular retail in the U.S. The Quintesson Judge is also an army builder.


War for Cybertron: Kingdom

  • The Predacon ship has an army of generics based on Scorponok, so the Deluxe Class Kingdom "Scorponok" works as an army builder.

Studio Series

  • Studio Series Gnaw is perfect for building Sharkticon armies, though at the Deluxe Class scale it is slightly more costly than the Titans Return version.
  • Studio Series Sweep is another ideal army-builder. The Voyager Class Sweeps have a more saturated color scheme than Studio Series Scourge, making it easier to distinguish the troops from their master in this case.
  • Studio Series Gamer Edition Decepticon Soldier is there to help you army-build a bunch of Decepticon troops to reenact playing the Autobot maps of Escalation in War for Cybertron.


Legacy


Cyberverse

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  • In the second season of Cyberverse, Starscream used Vector Sigma to reprogram the AllSpark, creating an army of his "children," the Scraplets. The Cyberverse Scout Class Scraplet toy, while far larger than the on-screen Scraplets, is practically made for army-building.
  • Warrior Class Gnaw, while looking nothing like his statue in the show, has an alternate mode that somewhat looks like the Sharkticons, without all the tribal markings, of course. Smaller tribal marked versions were released in the Sharkticons attack pack.
  • Tarn led an army of identical super-soldiers. Though Tarn never received a Cyberverse toy, one could theoretically use his Legacy toy instead.
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