Yeah, I think we can agree on that!BWprowl wrote:Well at least we both seem to agree that Barber's dang-near ruined Prowl by this point!

Yeah, I think we can agree on that!BWprowl wrote:Well at least we both seem to agree that Barber's dang-near ruined Prowl by this point!
This, more or less.I don't read (or watch or whatever) stories with a big foam finger and a sign promoting a character I like and agree with, I'm not rooting for anyone and I don't 'care' if one or the other comes out on top in a conflict.
Exactly. I was half-hoping to see Prowl trying to whack Verity (owing to what she knows about Garrus-9 and the trials). Of course, the way the comics have been going, that would probably get loused up pretty badly.The very concepts of loyalty to an institution itself, rather than strict adherence to its ideals, can be explored in a multitude of ways through Prowl as a character. There's tons of great stuff there that you simply aren't going to get with Prowl as a bog-standard human-savin'-hero, which is a much more straight-laced concept that's easier to predict and less entertaining as a result.
Prowl from the "Spotlight" issue did not bother me because he was being used to show Costa's "need for change" theme. Prowl, along with Optimus and Thundercracker, saw that the old business model was failing. They had to try something new. Prowl gave optimism a try.At a purely conceptual level, I would rather have Prowl from LSotW over Prowl from the Spotligh
What Barber was going for there was showing how bad Prowl was by demonstrating that Prowl under Decepticon control was hard to tell apart from regular Prowl.Instead...we got him reset back to the same baseline level of moral ambiguity he's been stuck at since AHM, and now if anderson's tellings of not-RID are to be believed, exaggerated into an over-the-top ambitious jerk who really is indiscernible from the same types of Decepticons, or a million other over-the-top ambitious jerks in fiction. Sad.
And that should have been a wakeup call for the character, but if anything he's doubled down on his behavior. The question I'm starting to ponder is whether or not he has even escaped Decepticon influence. He went right from being controlled by Bombshell to being forced into being part of Devastator and merging his consciousness with the Constructicons. We still might not be seeing the real Prowl after all this time. And the effect may go in both directions. Maybe friendlier Constructicons are a result of being bonded with Prowl. Maybe each has influenced the other's behavior, with the Constructicons having a greater effect on Prowl since it's five versus one.Dominic wrote:What Barber was going for there was showing how bad Prowl was by demonstrating that Prowl under Decepticon control was hard to tell apart from regular Prowl.
Which was stupid, because we already knew Prowl was bad. Barber went over-the-top to demonstrate something that had already been aptly demonstrated at least, like, three times over in the comics, and ended with a reset back to that characteristic status quo with little-to-no payoff. It's like writing an epic, twelve-issue maxi-series all to end with the shocking revelation that the sky is, in fact, still blue.Dominic wrote:What Barber was going for there was showing how bad Prowl was by demonstrating that Prowl under Decepticon control was hard to tell apart from regular Prowl.
Prowl was not exactly a nice guy back then either.There’s a very welcome conversation where Jimmy Pink discusses the fact that he knew Prowl in the old days, only to be told by Arcee that Prowl isn’t who he was in those days.
Wasn't that kind of the point? Barber implied that nobody realized that Prowl had turned because Prowl (outside of the Costa run) was never especially nice.I still think that after being mind-controlled by Bombshell and now forcibly combined with the Constructicons that Prowl hasn’t been himself in a long time.
I was so glad that none of the clones gained individual sentience.Thundercracker and Soundwave destroy the Thrust and Ramjet clones,
And he's descended quite a bit since then. I'm just glad to see that it's apparent to the characters in-story, who logically should notice when someone goes from bad to worse.Dominic wrote:Prowl was not exactly a nice guy back then either.
My point is to wonder just when, apart from the first few issues, has Prowl actually been himself, or without some sort of outside influence? He was under Bombshell's mind control from issue 4 through 14, and then forcibly merged with Devastator in that same issue, a status which has continued to the present issue. So basically Prowl has been himself for four and a half issues out of 38. He's either been under mental control or had his mind linked and blended (and thus susceptible to influence) for much longer. It may very well be the fact that he's already fairly ruthless that allows him to function smoothly with the Constructicons, but that doesn't mean they can't have influenced him to be worse. That's all I'm saying.Wasn't that kind of the point? Barber implied that nobody realized that Prowl had turned because Prowl (outside of the Costa run) was never especially nice.