Special Teams - Transformers Wiki
Special Teams is a collective name given to several combiner teams released after the Constructicons.
Most commonly associated with the term are the four "Scramble City"-style combiner teams that debuted in 1986:
- The Aerialbots
- The Combaticons
- The Protectobots
- The Stunticons
The name is also less commonly associated with the two "Scramble City"-style combiner teams that debuted in 1987:
- The Technobots
- The Terrorcons
It is also very rarely associated with the final "Scramble City"-style combiner team that debuted in 1988:
- The Seacons
Additionally, a member of a combiner team that didn't follow the "Scramble City" concept was also retroactively declared a member of a "Special Team":
- The Predacons
Use of the term
The term "Special Teams" was used by Hasbro in their 1986 Toy Fair retailer catalog, calling the smaller team members/combiner limb figures the "Special Team Mini-Vehicles Assortment" (a name reapplied from the Mini Vehicles), and the larger leader/torso figures the "Special Team Large Vehicles Assortment". Though those assortment names were never used on the toys' packaging nor in the official catalog included with the figures, they were likely also printed on the toys' shipping boxes, though no such boxes have become available to the public as of this writing. Additionally, the names were heavily used in newspaper ads for the toys in 1986. Interestingly, the name "Special Team Mini-Vehicles Assortment" is still used in Hasbro's 1987 Toy Fair catalog, while the "Special Team Large Vehicles" have been renamed into "Special Team Leader Assortment". The term also still appears (though to a lesser degree) in newspaper ads from 1987.[1] Whether the application of the term "Special Teams" to the Technobots and Terrorcons through those 1987 ads qualifies as an "official" use is questionable, since the ads were created in-house by retailers and presumably weren't approved by Hasbro, and might have therefore reflected outdated marketing terminology; after all, one of those ads referred to the individual members of the Technobots as "special teams" ("4 special teams and leader form giant Computron"), and the Terrorcons certainly don't qualify as "vehicles".[2] The 1988 Toy Fair catalog further renames the "Special Team Mini-Vehicles" into the "Special Mini-Team Assortment", while keeping the name "Special Team Leader Assortment".
On the fiction side of things, it was employed predominantly in the Marvel UK Comics, first used in the mini-comic "The Special Teams Have Arrived" included with issue #54 (which also featured an ad that referred to the toys as the "Special Team Collection"), and continuing in the three-parter "Second Generation!" from issues #63–65. Though the term was never used in the US Marvel comic (where the Aerialbots debuted in issue #21, the Stunticons in issue #22, and the Protectobots and Combaticons in issue #24), it was again used on the "Transformations" introductory pages, in the "next week" previews and the recaps for the previous issues when those US issues were reprinted in the UK title (in issues #89-92 and #105-106, respectively). On top of that, an audio drama titled The Special Teams was also available in the UK, whose plot centered around the 1986 combiner teams. However, later ads in the UK comics simply called them the "New Teams".
In 2004, the term "Special Teams" made a reapparance in the book Transformers: The Ultimate Guide, written by Marvel UK veteran Simon Furman and published by DK Publishing, where it was used as the title of the double page that featured the four 1986 combiner teams. On top of that, in 2008, a five-pack named "Special Team Leaders" was released as part of the second Universe toyline, which featured tiny Legends Class figures representing Hot Spot (named "Hot Zone" for trademark reasons), Scattershot (named "Scattorshot"), Razorclaw, Hun-Gurrr, and Silverbolt. While this solidified the previously questionable status of the Technobots and Terrorcons as "Special Teams", it marked the first time the term also encompassed a member of the Predacons.
In 2013, the term popped up in, of all things, a UK Prime comic.
References
- ↑ Collection of newspaper ads that use the name "Special Teams"
- ↑ See the history of the term "Seeker" for a similar case of a possibly outdated Hasbro marketing term that found its way into print ads.