![]() ![]() Hope it was worth the last 82 pages.Īnyway, Ultra Magnus decides that he’s going to talk to these guys.Īnd that’s a series wrap on the crew of the Lost Light! Let’s give them a hand, folks! So where did these little buggers come from? Perceptor has a theory, which he shouts with so much vim and vigor he briefly turns the world around him into an anime background. In the standalone issue, the terms are used interchangeably, mainly because none of the folks in the lime-light this issue went to the bar on Hedonia where we met the Ammonites. In the proper tie-in issue publication- not the issue that was sold in comic shops- certain lines of dialogue were changed to help establish that Mini-Cons were a thing, by calling the Ammonites Mini-Cons. There were little guys running around, but they weren’t Mini-Cons. Mini-Cons also hadn’t been established, at least not in name. Only problem with that was that Centuritron wasn’t at all established within the IDW universe. Way to stereotype, dude.įor this issue’s tie-in toy, Hasbro chose the Mini-Con Centuritron. ![]() ![]() Perceptor alludes to the fact that there’s more than one way to be alive as a giant space robot, introducing the term “warm-wired”, which I don’t recall ever being addressed after this issue.Įr, well, no, they’re not actually, Magnus, they’re Ammonites. Off in the background, Brainstorm and Perceptor discuss the structural intent of the Lost Light. Ultra Magnus is dubious about this whole “being completely surrounded by tiny little dudes” thing, but Mainframe’s got a pretty good read on the situation, given that he’s the one actually looking at the screen for the radar. So, when last we left off, the Lost Light had VOMPFed into a massive body of water, or at least something water adjacent, and was surrounded by guys. ![]()
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