

Known designers: Takashi Matsuda (TakaraTomy)ĭeceptor is the unlabeled one between Autoceptor and Kaltor.ġ985 saw Kronoform explode in size as it took on Diakron's duties as Takara's "miscellaneous" toyline for the North American market.Black deco: Not released in Transformers but did later inspire the character Meantime in Dreamwave's comics.Blue deco: Not released in Transformers but did later inspire the character Ephemeris in Ask Vector Prime.Gold deco: Not released in Transformers but did later inspire the appearance of another Azimuth.Released unchanged in Generation 2 as Autobot, later repurposed as Vector Prime in Ask Vector Prime and again as Azimuth in the pages of IDW Publishing's comics. Silver deco: The toy's primary colorway.This toy would go on to inspire a flurry of Transformers characters, mostly in the pages of the Facebook incarnation of Ask Vector Prime. creative modes, as famously immortalized in its commercial. Originally released in Takara's Watch-Q as simply "Watch Robo" and rereleased in Micro Change as "MC-06 Watch Robo," Kronoform was marketed not only as a watch-to-robot transformer but as a six-changer ("and more!") with some very. Kronoform's idiosyncratic first year consisted of a single toy: Kronoform, the Robot Time Machine. Three of the watches, Autoceptor, Deceptor, and Kaltor were released directly in The Transformers packaging, (retaining a smaller Kronoform logo printed on the box) while the Robot Time Machine (as Autobot) and Scorpia toys would later see release as Transformers as part of the Transformers: Generation 2 toyline in 1993.ĭecades later, the long-running Ask Vector Prime feature seized on the Kronoform's "Time Machine" schtick to conscript its toys and concepts into most of the Transformers brand's extant time-travel deep lore.
#Autobot toys series
Unique to the line was the "Time Machine" series of transforming watch toys from which the line derives its name, many of which were taken from Takara's Watch-Q toyline in Japan.
#Autobot toys license
If some of your content was shared by accident.Succeeding Diakron in 1984, the Kronoform line was Takara's second pass at engaging directly with the North American market, this time in the form of a somewhat half-hearted attempt to move various remaining Diaclone and Microman toys that Hasbro had declined to license for The Transformers franchise.

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