He knows humanity is not a significant enough threat to actually keep the Decepticons busy, and besides that, it serves no purpose.
It is a not a question of humaity being a threat. But, humanity is a politically saleable "other". Why is it so hard to buy that Megatron had a flawed plan? What is more interesting, a god-moded tactician, or a guy who (despite his virtues) does not win every time. Which character is easier to actually write a story that actually says something with?
In Spotlight: Wheelie, he's mentioned as a candidate for the mission, despite being dead by that point. He doesn't actually show up. A minor glitch. It helps that I don't consider Megatron: Origin canon (because, after all, it started as a DW story.)
I suppose there could be more than one guy named "Bumper". Of course the real reason is sloppy writing.
IDW considers it canon with the rest of this continuity. It doesn't matter that the concept of it started out as a DW story, it was re-formatted to be part of IDW's story.
Gah, why did ya have to use the term "re=formatted"? Just use "edited" or "included". Why use TF techno-jibber when talking about the stories?
Anyway, language aside, I agree with Sparky's point. "Megatron: Origins" is official. The guys in charge of making that decision say it is.
TPB Volume 1 AHM: 1,488, TPB Transformers Devastation: 1,548
Looks like Devastation still did better than AHM to me... And I doubt Volume 2 of AHM will be any different.
It looks like the TPB numbers are consistent with the single-issue sales numbers, trending downward. It might be interesting to check back on AHM volume 1 and "Devastation" in 6 months, to see what their total sales are. And, it might be worth watching the sales for single issues 6 months from now, as well as any "TF:other books" sales trends. (Is TF losing more or less ground than other books?)
Which is odd considering they've shown no proof of this and sales figures from Diamond suggests the exact opposite to be true.
It is all in how one defines "selling well". TF is one of IDW's biggest properties, and likely sells well by in-house standards. Still, Sparky is right on this. Diamond's numbers are more trust-worthy. (As happy as I was to see "Defiance" and "Alliance" on the NYTimes best-seller list, we cannot expect that to be a regular thing.)
Sparky, are your numbers based soley on Diamond, or do they include Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and Borders sales?
Dom