Found this massive tome 12 days early, on May 30th, in NYC, before the official release on June 10th. It is the Direct Market exclusive cover featuring Bill Sienkiewicz iconic cover for Transformers no. 1.
Growing up, I had only had the US Titan Books Collections ("Matrix Quest", "All Fall Down" and "End of the Road"), so my introduction to the Marvel years of Transformers was actually the end of that whole run. Side note: I found those three trade paperbacks at a Job Lot of all places as a kid, so "Boombox-eared" Optimus Prime is the most nostalgic Prime for me.
This was a great collection of comics featuring the Transformers, collecting issues 1-46, as well as Headmasters 1-4. Fans will be happy to hear that issue no. 3 is also collected, previously left out of other collections for copyright reasons, since it is an issue that guest-stars Spider-Man.
As much as I'd love these stories to focus more on Optimus Prime and Megatron, this story does the unexpected and shows us that those characters are minor in an entire galaxy full of other sentient beings. I mean, Fortress Maximus probably had more "screen-time" than Megatron. They get their fair share, but overall, they are minor characters compared to other adaptations, where they are up front and center throughout the whole story.
How does this compare to Larry Hama's run on G.I. JOE? Of course, it's subjective, but coming from someone who prefers Transformers, I have to say Joe takes the win on this debate. Hama's writing just flows so smoothly, even when shoving new characters into every single chapter just to sell toys. He makes it feel real, as if they aren't actually showing up just to sell toys, and they're actually meant to be there. Here, every issue focuses on new characters and jumps all over the place. It can get very confusing throughout, since there isn't enough time to get to know anyone and they all have the same personality for the most part. They are very one-dimensional, whereas in Hama's G.I. Joe, each character feels real and different.
Overall, I do not regret picking this one up, though. I missed out on the kickstarter, but I love how the spine and cover look on this compared to the hardcover anyway, so I see it as a win. It's rare for Image Comics compendiums to include pictures of the covers for each comic inside, but fortunately, this and the G.I. JOE Compendiums includes them on a page before each chapter begins.
Recommended!