I always put that down Megatron not wanting too many of his troops to die in one day. (Remember, two of his guys fell into lava and died that morning. As Blackarachnia pointed out, he needed bodies.)Megatron even stopped short of blasting Rattrap and Cheetor in "Aftermath" when he saw Inferno was in trouble and went to save him instead.
As for the duckie and pet-head, I am not sure how much we should consider those, when they were animator indulgence/whimsy.
Rattrap may have been a habitual complainer. But, Anderson is arguing, (and I would agree), that in "Beast Machines" the situation was far worse than anything they had seen on prehistoric Earth. On Earth, Rattrap may have thought he was going to die. But, at least he "knew" his home planet was relatively secure. In "Beast Machiens", he did not even have that much comfort.Heck, one of his catch phrases was even "We're all gonna die".
Not shooting Megatron was cowardly, but consistent with how neutered the Maximals seemed to be in "Beast Machines".
Rattrap, like most of the Maximals, did not handle the events of "Call of the Wild" well at all though.Take "Call of the Jungle" for example, where none of the Maximals were allowed to transform to robot mode, eventually leading to a glitch in their programing. Or "Aftermath" and "Coming of the Fuzors" where the Predacons eventually wear down the Maximals to defeat (until Primal returns at the last second to save them).
Even with an army of drones against them, the Maximals weren't that bad off. Really, season 1 they seemed to struggle more against the plans Rhinox put in motion than they did Megatron's. And in season 2 it wasn't until Obsidian and Strika were introduced that they seemed to have the most trouble.
The Maximals had no infrastructure. They had no secure place to go. And, they were out-numbered. That is pretty terrible actually.
All of the Maximals needed their spines stiffened though. it took Primal most of season 1 to get around to actually fighting Megatron. They even make a point of saying that Primal was unwilling to do what was necessary to win. Remember how squeemish everybody got about the supposed "genocide" inherent to using the Plasma Energy chamber? One might have thought that there were more than 4 independent Vehicons, and that Vehicon culture was highly advanced.Rattrap has just discovered he can manipulate machines, and he knows that there are machines SWARMING the city, any one of which he could've taken over (something he's done REPEATEDLY SINCE THAT EPISODE). And, let's not forget that it took a FULL NIGHT for Megatron to recover, something Rattrap KNEW; he had AMPLE time to whip himself up a Vehicon body suit, go in, and slaughter the bastard.
Rattrap is kind of a boob later as well. Mid way through season one, when he hacks Tankor, Rattrap simply deactivates a large number of tank drones....rather than.....(use your imagination).
The Maximals not stealing weapons is entirely consistent with how they fought in season 1. It is foolish, but consistent.
Well, there is precedent for TFs being incredibly resistant to change. As O6 put it, TFs are stupid. But, it is also unlikely that any of the Beast Era writers were thinking about that.The problem is that you continue to refuse to allow for changes in character and behavior based on changed circumstances. You expect Rattrap to always act exactly the same. I don't see that as either realistic or appealing.
Dom
-just what was Megatron loading at the space port?