In early 2002,
Dreamwave Productions acquired the Transformers comics license and went on to produce a highly successful return of Transformers to the comic world. They started with a limited series focusing on the Generation 1 characters and a monthly series dedicated to
Transformers: Armada. The G1 stories were not bound by the previous Marvel stories nor the animated series. Dreamwave produced a large amount of material, but would go bankrupt and lose the Transformers license in early 2005.
Generation 1 Transformers: Generation 1 (2002) When they acquired the Transformers licence from
Hasbro,
Dreamwave Productions initially produced a six-issue mini-series, written by Chris Sarracini and drawn by company President
Pat Lee, titled
Prime Directive. Despite mixed critical reaction and the late shipping of several issues, the series was a huge sales success. Encouraged by this, Dreamwave produced a second series, this time written by Brad Mick, called
War and Peace. When the second series emulated the sales of the first, Dreamwave decided to upgrade the
Generation One to an ongoing series focusing on the Earthbound Autobots and Decepticons, written by Brad Mick aka James McDonough and Adam Patyk, and drawn by
Don Figueroa (although Lee and
Joe Ng helped draw the preview issue, and issue #4 featured a back-up story drawn by James Raiz). However, Dreamwave's eventual bankruptcy meant that the series would never be concluded past issue #10. This was the first piece of Transformers fiction to use the term
Generation One in the title. After Dreamwave's bankruptcy, the first two miniseries were redistributed in trade paperback form through
IDW Publishing. Of note: there is a magazine that published a 10-page preview in b/w of what was to have been the 11th issue of the series had Dreamwave not gone into bankruptcy, but was of a very low print run.
Transformers: The War Within After the success of their Generation One series, Dreamwave decided to do a series focusing on the war on Cybertron before the Transformers came to Earth, and recruited Marvel Transformers writer Simon Furman and former fan artist Don Figueroa for a six-issue series focusing on the rise of Optimus Prime. Later, a second volume appeared titled
The Dark Ages, again written by Furman and drawn by regular Marvel Transformers artist
Andrew Wildman. The second volume introduced The Fallen, an outcast member of the original thirteen Transformers. A third volume, called
The Age of Wrath, written by Furman and drawn by Joe Ng, was released up through issue #3, but due to Dreamwave's bankruptcy it was never completed. The first two series were re-released in trade paperback form by IDW Publishing in March and May 2007.
Transformers: Micromasters Micromasters was a four-issue mini-series written by Brad Mick aka James McDonough and Adam Patyk and drawn by Rob Ruffolo. Set on Cybertron after the disappearance of the
Ark, the series focused on the history of the titular
Micromasters and the discovery of a mysterious
Golden Disk with links to the origins of the Transformers. Despite some vocal readers' complaints regarding the series and its art, it also received its share of praise and sold well to the direct market.
Transformers: More Than Meets the Eye An eight-issue limited series from 2003 written by Brad Mick aka James McDonough and Adam Patyk (the shapers of Dreamwave's
G1 title and its overall
Transformers continuity) with art by most of the Dreamwave artists, it featured bios of all the Transformers released as toys in the United States (with the exception of several of the Action Masters). The character entries were done in the same style as the 1986 Marvel limited series,
Transformers Universe, with page long bios and art of the characters in both their robot and alternate forms. The character bios included expanded information from the original toys' tech specs, as well as new character development from the Dreamwave
Transformers continuity. Issues one through seven contain the character bios, while issue number eight contains entries for key Transformer locations, ideas and technology. The first pages of issue one and the last pages of issue eight feature a mini-comic about where all the information presented in the limited series is coming from, and who is accessing it, which was a prequel story to the
Beast Wars television series. The series proved to be popular, and a subsequent
More Than Meets The Eye miniseries debuted the next year, this time covering
Transformers: Armada.
Armada/Energon Transformers: Armada (2002–2003) This comic series was based on the new Transformers toyline of that year,
Transformers: Armada. The continuity, while following elements from the cartoon series of the same name, was wholly its own continuity. Differences included the
Mini-Cons' ability to talk in a normal way rather than the beeps and boops from the cartoon series. Also, the resolution to the Armada saga was quite different and involved cross-dimensional travel and several Generation 1 characters. The series ended at issue #18 and was retitled as
Transformers: Energon with the following issue. Originally written by Sarracini, Simon Furman came on board to do a 2-part filler story and ended up as the ongoing writer as a result. Issues 1–5, written by Chris Saccarini and drawn by James Raiz, would give some background to the original war on Cybertron, detailing how
Megatron's campaign started on Cybertron and how the Mini-Cons originally came to Earth, escaping Megatron's grasp. One million years later the arc would introduce the three main human characters (Rad, Alexis and Carlos) and see both sides battle and gain Mini-Cons for the first time. Issues 6–7 would see Furman take over the scripting, with Pat Lee on art, detailing the discovery of several more Mini-Con teams on Earth. Issues 8–11, with
Guido Guidi taking over on art, would see the discovery of a mysterious Mini-Con monolith that would assemble all the Mini-Cons on a base on the moon, leading the Decepticons to attempt a full-scale assault to capture them all. Issues 12–13 would see Megatron construct a superweapon, a powerful laser focusing satellite, in an attempt to destroy the Autobots, as well as capturing enough Mini-Cons to overload
Cyclonus's power. With the series coming to a close and Energon due to take over as the active franchise comic, issues 14–18 were dedicated to the coming of
Unicron, with cameo appearances by several G1 characters. With
Don Figueroa on art, it detailed the coming of the
Heralds of Unicron into the Armada dimension to secure the Mini-Con Matrix and kill all of Unicron's enemies. The arc introduced
Jetfire and the concept of Powerlinking, as well as having a battle between Armada Megatron and G1
Galvatron, Unicron's chief Herald. The final issue, again drawn by Guidi, served as a bridge between the Armada and Energon series, detailing Unicron's defeat and Megatron's disappearance.
Transformers: Energon (2003–2004) The story to
Transformers: Energon picks up ten years after events in Armada. The Energon title was written by Simon Furman and drawn by
Guido Guidi and Joe Ng. The first issue was #19 since Armada was not cancelled but rather retitled. The series was discontinued at issue #30 due to Dreamwave's bankruptcy. Launched in December 2003 Energon would retain the numbering system from Armada, as well as the creative team of Furman and Guidi. Issue 19 would pick up where Armada left off, reintroducing the main cast – as well as Unicron and the new threat of the
Terrorcons. Issues 20–23 (drawn by Guidi and Joe Ng) saw the introduction of Unicron's Four Horsemen and most of the relevant cast (Prime,
Hot Shot, etc.) receiving their
Energon Powerlinking bodies, as well as establishing that Megatron's Spark was trapped within Unicron. It also saw the Terrorcons journey to Earth and saw the return of the principal human cast, as well as the introduction of
Kicker. Issue #24, drawn by James Raiz, focused on the past relationship between Ironhide and
Tidal Wave. Issue #25, again drawn by Ng, introduced the
Omnicons and
Snow Cat. Issues 26–29, drawn by Alex Milne, saw a full-scale Terrorcon attack on Earth, Prime aiding Megatron's rebirth and
Starscream's return in his
Energon form. Issue 30 saw a confrontation between Megatron and Scorponok—but the bankruptcy of Dreamwave prevented this story from being finished.
Transformers Armada: More Than Meets the Eye In 2004 Dreamwave released a three-issue version of the
More Than Meets The Eye series featuring all the
Transformers: Armada characters released as toys in the United States. Written by Brad Mick aka James McDonough and Adam Patyk with art by many Dreamwave artists (including the interlocking covers by
Joe Ng), the layout was similar to the
Transformers: More Than Meets the Eye mini-series released in 2003, and included separate character bios for the Minicons as well as for the other Transformers. The first pages of issue one and the last pages of issue three feature a mini-comic of the human character Alexis studying the history of the Transformers. The comic was set sometime between the events of the
Transformers: Armada and
Transformers: Energon Dreamwave comics. Before Dreamwave's bankruptcy, an
Energon edition of
More Than Meets The Eye was also planned but not released.
Transformers/G.I. Joe Dreamwave Productions and Devil's Due, owner of the G.I. Joe license, each produced their own six-issue mini-series and with separate continuities. Dreamwave's approach, rather than follow the previous efforts of Marvel Comics, had the story set in an alternate continuity, and was written by
John Ney Rieber and drawn by
Jae Lee. Here,
Cobra had discovered and awakened the Decepticons, reformatting their vehicle modes into 1940s era war vehicles and weapons. The two evil forces conquered much of Europe in an alternative version of
World War II. G.I. Joe, here a group of American infantry men, find the Autobots who aid them in stopping both Cobra and the Decepticons. Since Dreamwave's demise, the mini-series has been reprinted in trade paperback form by IDW Publishing.
Transformers/G.I. Joe: Divided Front A second volume,
Divided Front, was produced. It was written by the writing team of James McDonough and Adam Patyk (who also worked to develop the story treatment for the first volume) and drawn by Pat Lee. Despite strong initial sales of over 44 thousand copies and positive reviews stating the series "exceeded expectations," Dreamwave released only one issue before their financial troubles put a halt to their operations. The story followed
Transformers/G.I. Joe, but took place 40 years later in 1985, and was intended to have explained the connection to the first volume's story.
Transformers Summer Special The
Transformers Summer Special was a
one-shot produced in the summer of 2004 that featured stories from
Generation 1,
Energon,
Robots in Disguise, and
Beast Wars. The latter two were put to a vote by fans, and the winner (
Beast Wars) was to be the next
Transformers comic series (see
Beast Wars (Unreleased) and
Beast Wars (IDW Publishing) Background for more information). The
Summer Special was to be an annual mini-series, but due to Dreamwave's bankruptcy only one issue was published. The
Generation 1 segment, written by the main
G1 creative team of Brad Mick aka James McDonough and Adam Patyk and drawn by Pat Lee and Joe Ng, focused on
Megatron and the
Predacons. The Predacons were once warlords on Cybertron who were cast into exile in space. Settling on Planet Beest, (a homage to the
Battle Beasts toy line), the Predacons sank into a feral state, and lived as inhabitants of that world for untold years, until Megatron arrived. Having been jettisoned into space by
Starscream and restored from the brink of death by Wreck-Gar, Megatron now had his sights set on reclaiming the Decepticon leadership, and required the Predacons to bolster his army. Abandoning his personal weaponry, Megatron pursued
Razorclaw through the jungle and soundly defeated him in hand-to-hand combat. Subsequently, he re-engineered the Predacons to give them the ability to combine into Predaking. This would later impact the ongoing
Generation 1 comic when Megatron brought them to Cybertron to help defeat Shockwave and later to Earth. There were three other stories, including a
Transformers: Energon tale written by Simon Furman and drawn by James Raiz. The tale focused on
Slugslinger, Sharkticon and
Snow Cat, who had been defeated in an assault by
Omega Supreme, telling lies to
Megatron in order to excuse their failure. Megatron eventually appoints Slugslinger as his lieutenant, as his lie was the most impressive. The other two, both written by Brad Mick aka James McDonough and Adam Patyk, focused around
Beast Wars and
Transformers: Robots in Disguise. The
RiD tale, drawn by Rob Ruffolo, focused on
Scourge and
Sky-Byte stealing a nuclear reactor, while
Optimus Prime and
Ultra Magnus learn the value of teamwork to stop them. The
Beast Wars tale, drawn by
Don Figueroa, focused on
Rattrap reminiscing on a time when he was attacked by Dinobot 2, only to be saved by a trio of mysterious
Maximals.
The Beast Within The comic shows us a what if there is a Dinobot combiner and the comic can only obtained in Transformers G1 DVDs set split into two comics
Beast Wars (unreleased) In the Summer Special, a competition was run to choose whether the next Dreamwave Transformers series would be
Beast Wars or
Transformers: Robots in Disguise.
Beast Wars won, and the
Generation One team of writers James McDonough and Adam Patyk and artist Don Figueroa were slated as the creative team. However, Dreamwave's bankruptcy would mean that no issues were ever published, although images and issue synopses have appeared on the Internet. After McDonough and Patyk left Dreamwave due to the company's non-payment, writer Simon Furman was added to the series with Figueroa. They would eventually become the creative team on IDW Publishing's
Beast Wars series. ==IDW Publishing==