In my heart I think tfp would fold under a single genuine compliment, and I feel like D-16 was always liberal with complements sooo
I don't like ES season 2 and 3 but I can't stop thinking about this episode đ
Chapters: 2/7 Fandom: Transformers - All Media Types Rating: General Audiences Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply Relationships: Megatron/Optimus Prime Characters: Optimus Prime, Megatron (Transformers), Elita One (Transformers), Starscream (Transformers), Prowl (Transformers), Bumblebee (Transformers), Ratchet (Transformers), Arcee (Transformers), Rodimus | Rodimus Prime Additional Tags: Comedy, Moral Dilemmas Summary:
Megatron finds an unfortunate legal loophole that allows him to accuse Optimus Prime of a crime- and soon Optimus is going to court, with Megatron as the prosecutor, Elita-1 as his defense attorney, and Starscream of all people as the judge. Autobots and Decepticons alike go up to the witness stand to tell Cybertron about who Optimus Prime is. Can Optimus prove his innocence? *Should* he? And for Primus' sake, can everyone please STOP embarrassing themselves?
I would like to sincerely thank this meme for being the funniest thing I have ever seen and making me laugh for a solid minute to the confusion of everyone else in the room
normal, traditional family i fight for
Reactions to getting in trouble with Ratchet (he is not paid enough for this)
Art for my wip TFP fic To Earth and Back Again
Thereâs an infinite universe out there, but theyâve already found the only Star and the only Sky they ever needed
(Inspired by âThe Kissâ by Gustav Klimt, character designs from my transformers fanverse, Sparksong)
I LOVE THEMMMM
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(I wanted more images in this, but tumblr has a limit and it was a lot of pictures anyway)
Anyone who complains about female transformers having ârobot boobsâ needs to shut up. Unless itâs a case of critiquing a design thatâs genuinely caricatured, this complaint only serves to protest against robots looking too feminine, as if all robots by default should have broad, masculine shoulders and flat chests instead. The problem is that people look at a masculine transformer and say, âAh yes, an anthropomorphised robot.â But the moment itâs one of the female transformers, itâs âwhy do robots need boobs?â as if a male-looking body type is anthropomorphizing, but a female-looking body time is suddenly âtoo humanâ or âtoo much.â As if all humanoid robot aliens should look male by default.
That being said, for a long time transformers did have a glaring issue of their female transformers having a generic, Barbie-doll like body type. This especially became problematic as male characters appeared with several different and varying heights and builds, while female characters all looked the same.
This eventually improved with newer media. Iâm going to go through different transformers series, giving my opinions on various female Cybertronians designs.
Transformers Animated and Transformers Prime are the cases where we see the very few female characters that there are being designed with this more Barbie doll look, especially in comparison to the male cast, who each have strikingly different silhouettes. I maintain that thereâs nothing wrong with having this stereotypically feminine figure as long as itâs not caricatured or designed to sxualize the character (in TFAâs case, Black Airachnid was extremely sexualized, but Arcee wasnât at least) itâs just the lack of variety that makes it painful. If all female characters were designed with a stocky, square body type, it would be just as bad; the problem is the lack of diversity in representing how each woman is different.
I think Arcee from Transformers Prime gets some of the most comments about how she has breasts and hips and is most often faced with the question âwhy should robots have boobs?â In response to this question, I propose: why shouldnât they? The shape of their chassis really doesnât matter in the end. I like Arceeâs design and acting like sheâs inherently caricatured for looking like a woman is just a way of alienating femininity.
TFP Arcee is also unfortunately sexualized a lot by the fandom. Primus forbid a woman exist in peace.
The problem with these âBarbie dollâ designs isnât that they are oversexualizedâ while this may have been a problem with Black Airachnia, the true problem, as seen especially with the treatment of TFP Arcee, is the concept that any female body traits are inherently sexual, which both creators and fandom spaces feed into.
Itâs not as prominent, but Iâve also seen a trend of attempting to give female transformers more diverse body types by giving them⊠male body types.
In Transformers Cyberverse, the Seekers all have the same body type, whether they are male, female, or genderfluid, the only differences being that the female models have lips and the male ones have facial-hair like chin stubs (and Acid Storm switches back and forth). However I would hardly call this progress, because the body type is more male-leaning, not truly gender neutral.
Often to make something appear gender neutral, people will just remove anything too obviously feminine. This treats masculine traits as the âdefaultâ and female traits as a deviance from this. A truly gender-neutral design would incorporate both masculine and feminine traits at the same time.
(What if we just made all the Seekers look like women and gave the dudes chins. What if we did that. Huh.)
Shadowstriker from Cyberverse is a better example of this, having a female body type but a chin stub and generally gender neutral face.
I like the look of Alpha Strike as well, she feels actually gender neutral and isnât too exaggerated like most muscular (and especially muscular female) characters are.
For example, Clobberâs design is good, but I do think her lips were strangely exaggerated.
Once the IDW run of the Transformers comics actually introduced female characters, they eventually gained a large cast with a variety of different body types. Take Windblade, Nautica, Pyra Magna, the Mistress of Flame, and Aileron.
These arenât all examples, but IDW certainly had a unique design for each of their female characters, with different heights, width, mixing and matching the proportions of their bodies and displaying diverse body types. Aileron is also a stand-out character design for me, as one of the few heavy-set transformers to be designed in a way that looks more rounded than bulky, implying weight over muscle. We need more weighted transformers in general.
I have many positive feelings about Transformers Earthsparkâs choice of character design for their female characters.
Earthspark has the most consistently diverse character design for its female characters.
And it shows that the key to designing actually good female Cybertronians isnât necessarily to make them not feminine, but to show diverse depictions of femininity. All of the female characters in this show are pretty feminine, but they all look different. Twitch is small and slight, Hashtag is tall and boxy. Each one has different proportions and are easy to tell apart by body type alone. Even better, they each have drastically different facial structures. Twitch has large eyes, Hashtag has a strong chin, Elita-1 has a straight nose and pronounced lips, Arcee has small eyes and a very slight nose, et cetera. Earthspark is definitely a win in this department.
My point with all of this is to say that femininity isnât a one-size fits all. Every woman is different and everyone should get to express their gender in whatever way they see fit. Transformers gradually diversifying the look of their female characters represents this, and I hope they continue improving as the franchise continues.
She/they | Artist & Writer | Multishipper | I like transformers a whole lot
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