The end is nigh! Unicron, a planet-sized being that devours other worlds, has set its sights on Cybertron and all of its colonies–including Earth! Optimus Prime, Bumblebee, and their friends must unite every Cybertronian, Earthling, and ally they have to stand against this threat to all existence. But why is Unicron hell-bent on destroying Cybertron–what original sin did Optimus Prime's ancestors commit to earn this wrath? It's an all-out battle against extinction as the world-destroying, universe-shattering threat of Unicron is on its way.
There’s quite a lot going on in this one given that it’s the finale of 13 years of Transformers stories. None of which I’ve read but still managed to enjoy it nonetheless. Occasionally it’s a little difficult to see what’s going on in the busy artwork and, when story threads jump from one to another in a single page - but hey - maybe that’s just me.
Needless to say it’s great fun and I thoroughly enjoyed it.
I wanted to love this but between Optimus and Slide, I found myself rooting for Unicron. Eat em all and put them out of my misery. Unicron is a dumb character and the best version of him was in Transformers Prime, where he was essentially the Earth. That was pretty neat. This was boring and predictable.
This was pretty woeful stuff. Every issue of this collection can be summed up with:
“What are we doing?” > “I’ve got a plan.” > Everything goes to pot. > “How about that plan though?”
I’m glad that this this continuity has come to an end now, and defeating Unicron with the power of love, what a horrendous dying breath that was for the series.
Most of the epic finale to the (first) IDW Transformers continuity. It feels a little disjointed due to interweaving with the final issues of Optimus Prime, which were featured in a separate graphic novel, but it's a much more coherent story on its own than that was. A solid ending with truly galactic consequences, and a frankly more interesting origin for Unicron than we've gotten in the past. Naturally, a lot of characters don't make it. Some die heroically, some die pointlessly, and some die poignantly.
This volume wraps up most of the remaining plot threads in a largely satisfying way, and with it thirteen years of storytelling come to a definitive conclusion. 'Til all are one.
'Unicron' has many problems: a cross-over, a cosmos-scale antagonist, a much too large cast, and it's place as IDW's finale. Attempting to describe the chaos is the supremely talented Alex Milne whose images work in the scenes of close quarters panic but struggle (with some success) in the elemental (largesse) needs of the story. Milne has built a lot on the work of Geoff Senior here, for the best. John Barber's plot is sufficiently epic but sadly the script feels a bit by-numbers, esp. in the first half, damaging the heft of the beats. 'Unicron' is a little too ambitious for it's own good. Too much disconnect although there's satisfaction and confidence in the last few chapters.
Really hard to do a series ending story with such massive cast, but it’s fun to see all the hasbro crossovers ties up without them stealing the show. There’s really only one ending this could have had so there’s not really surprises, but it does have a couple fun points. Not my favorite but I didn’t hate it. Not sure if it will be memorable for me outside of “it’s the end”.
This was a fun read! I didn't know IDW made such interesting Transformers content, and I think I started at the end, so now I just get to work backwards and that's cool by me.
There's a tremendous amount of backstory I've missed, so it may not be the most accessible volume for a lay reader, but I just went with it.
Impenetrably dense for the uninitiated. What I imagine watching a Phase 4 Marvel movie is like for someone who’s never watched one before. The art is good, if a bit too cluttered at points. I mean, there were splash pages where the color choices and amount of visual data made things nigh visually incomprehensible.
John Barber puts bitter nihilism in the mouth of all of his characters, even Optimus Jesus Prime. It's actually beyond stupid and sucks the soul out of everything. Still, he is brilliant. He gave IDW a plot that was funny, shocking, and satisfying. It's a shame that through this, it has nothing to actually say about the human condition. You had hundreds of issues and thousands of characters, and the capacity to orchestrate a grand scheme, and its still hollow!!
Transformers: Unicron gets three stars for art alone. Milne, too, is a crazy person with no ideals, yet his hands are gifted. If Milne and Barber ever actually start believing the inherent goodness of existence, they would be able to create the greatest comic book of all time.
--------My Original Review--------------------- This is an atheist book. The moral of the story is faith is just a tool, don't join a religion. I kinda think that's a shit moral, and out-of-place in Transformers.
Putting that aside...I loved the art and plot and how well this wrapped up the series. Very emotional after reading for all these years 🥲