I want to step in and disagree with this. The 15th anniversary is a perfect time to restart something differently. "Hey, remember that thing you loved 15 years ago? We're restarting it in a new, awesome way!"
Actually, it was the 10 year anniversary. The problem with rebooting, (not that I think this should have stopped a reboot), at the 10+ year mark is that the origional fans who stuck around had 10+ years to develop an unhealthy attachment to the original content. They are not going to like change at all.
(And truth be told, if I had the choice, I'd throw a new BW series over in a second for a new series without a Prime or a Megatron.)
"Last Stand of the Wreckers". Fucking read it. Prime and Megatron are mentioned. But, that is it. Or, is it true that all you Englishmen are allergic to things with flavor? (Ohhhhhhhhhh....snap!)
To the general public, they probably hadn't seen the convention comics, so IDW's comic in 2006 was the first Beast Wars related story in 6 years. IDW isn't just catering to the fans here, they'd like to pull as much as the general audience they can as well.
The problem is that they were just catering to fans. After 6 years, nobody outside of the fandom is going to remember, or care about, BW. The audiences of the 90s were much different from the audiences of the 80s. For us, (the children of the late 70s and early 80s), the business and marketing model used for TF was new. By the mid 90s, (when children of the late 80s would have been watching), it was old hat. It would have been hard for a show to have the same impact on mass audiences in the 90s that a show could have had in the 80s. There were also more distractions, (other media and better technology), which means that even fans would be less obsessive.
Making the comic tie-in with a show that had middling (at best animation for the time) and that has not aged well was a bad idea. Writing wise, BW was too much a product of its moment. Of course, the real problem is the comic. Fuman assumed that readers knew and cared about the old series, (which rules out any new readers), rather than trying to write something that could stand on its own merits. There were fans of the old BW series that had a hard time following parts of Furman's BW run.
Are you me? I was rather peeved with The Gathering/The Ascending back in the day (Ascending issue 2 set me off something fierce, it was that bad).
IYour "tied up a guy with sharp things on his limbs using rope" rant was a bit better. But, yeah, your old posts on the BW comics were generally epic. Seriously, I was glad to have read the comics just to have the same points of reference you were making.
I think the last "flame war" we had was when some AllSpark posters came over for some poll and everyone started arguing about Go-Bots.
Actually, it was a handful of Erectards from TFW. And, that was not really a flame-war so much as us telling them, (in various degrees of severity), to sit the hell down and shut the hell up. That thing with Synjo? *That* was a flame war.
I'm somewhat curious... Dreamwave's comic from what little we know would have been a lot like "The Gathering" except set after the Maximals left with Megatron, and appears that the Maximals may have even come back to Earth after Megatron had broken free. What would you have thought about that?
It would have depended on what Furman was going to do with it. He was definitely in "lazy hack" form at the time. Of course, that might have had to do with Lee not actually paying him for a while.
I actually voted for RiD in that poll. But, the BW option tempted me.
guess it'd have to be initially set in Africa, considering most of the species. Not a bloody zoo, though. -_-
It could have been set globally. Why would a war that jumped across multiple planets be limited to just one region of one planet? Dinosaur forms could have been reconciled by having the Cybertronians misunderstand information they gathered about the planet's native species.
There is no reason that they would have had to have scanned living, or even intact specimens. BWII showed that it was possible to scan the *idea* of a new form rather than an actual form. (None of the Predacons in that series had actual subjects to scan.)
Because I am a TF fan 'in general.' I see redeeming aspects in *every* series. I enjoy them all for what they are and I *don't* sit around wishing forever that we would get a continuation of [x] series that ran three years ago.
I am in a slightly more critical category. I do not like every TF series. There are plenty of TF series that I can find nothing good to say about. But, I do not say that "not x________ = caca del fuego". I just hold out for "series of the same caliber as x_________________".
Dom
-needs a nap after reading this line.
The Beast Wars are over, fanboys--you lose.