"Good Writing" can generally be surmised as, "Having an idea, and executing it to its conclusion successfully." The same way that a "good song" is one that is pleasing to hear, and makes the listener feel what the writer intended.
andersonh1 wrote:Autobots don't act moral because of the faction they belong to, they join the faction that promotes standards which align with their ideals.
In an ideal world, of course that would happen, but what some of these stories are trying to push--I think--is that not everybody joins a faction because it aligns with their ideals. Some of them do it because of societal pressure or other reasons. For example, in IDW, it's effectively established that there
is no "neutral" faction on Cybertron (at least before the NAILs all show back up, anyway). I mean, there's characters who certainly did have a choice--read Spotlight: Blurr for a
great example--but then I'm sure there are characters who just kind of get roped into a conflict because of how things go.
I mean, imagine you're going about your day, when suddenly a huge group of soldiers shows up in your town and kill all your friends and family. You have nothing left. And then the biggest, burliest one of them with six machine guns on his shoulders and missile launchers on his back and a skull for a head and a big purple face painted on his chest points a cannon to your face and says, "Join us or die." What are you gonna do?
(I hate to invoke Godwinn's Law, but not every Nazi soldier was a bad guy. Many of them were tricked by propoganda and youth indoctrination; a lot of them just went along with the program to save their own skin.)
The other thing is that the Autobots--as the ideal we traditionally see them as--don't quite exist that way, because the faction wasn't started by Optimus Prime. It started as a police force; it became a regime. You had dudes like Senator No-Name (Shockwave) running around doing all kinds of backhanded crap. So you have people who have already been an Autobot since before Prime was around, and then you have people who disagree with Prime's ideal but still see the Decepticons as a destructive and violent force.
Because the villain doesn't see himself as the villain--the villain is the hero of his own story. Megatron believes what he's doing is right. So does Prowl. So does Blurr and Kup, and so does Impactor and Springer. You say a TF will join the faction that best represents their ideals--if your ideal is, "I want to murder all of the Decepticons because they killed my wife/friend/dog," which side are you gonna be on? (Because for all the posturing Optimus Prime might do, he's not going to turn away an extra guy who turns into tank with six wheels, that'd just be stupid.)