The plot's really great and entertaining and that i enjoyed reading the manga. Yeah, i'm scared of ghost and stuffs like that but i like to watch/read horror genres because i find it to be interesting and somewhat entertaining in a way. She tries her best to ignore those horrifying creatures that she would often see in the streets, in her house and in there school, though she had a hard time ignoring them because of there disturbing and scary looks. And they would eventually be scared and would seek help from others to get rid of those creatures, but Mieruko-chan is different. And the hyena con, named Untite, is another Cyborg Beast, like Max-B, Hellscream, Dirgegun and Thrustor.The plot is just like any other horror movies where the protagonist would often see ghosts, monsters etc. And apperently some part of Unicrons spirit was attached to the energy, which now created a hybried between Leo Prime and Unicron and both parts seem to have some form of amnesia, while inheriting abilities from both. Leo Prime was resurrected on earth due to the planet still having some traces of Angolmois-Energie. So guess next issue, Galvatron will show up and will want to turn Lio-Unicron into his new body, but needs a lot of transforming parts to do it… The funniest part was when he just goes \"Yeah that sounds like something I would do\" And I guess because he is part Unicron, he can gain energy by eating rock? So I guess like Last Bot Standing this is the end of the world/universe, and Blue Bird of Happiness is trying to resurrect Lioconvoy but using Earth because it was once Unicron (WUT?) and they get attacked by a hyena bot dude whom Unicron made to eat corpses… And Lioconvoy comes back as a mix of Unicron and Lioconvoy which I guess means he talks like one of those delinquent anime protagonists and is super rude to his saviour, but still wants to help. Now with translation…., it makes even less sense. In truth, Mars being rebuilt was mentioned in the Japanese dialogue from the very beginning, and the Western fandom at large simply failed to notice."īasically, it would seem that is correct. It was, however, mentioned in the English dub produced by Omni Productions, but for the longest time, that was believed to have been an invention of the dub, rather than a (surprisingly) accurate translation of the Japanese dialogue. The Western fandom's perception that Mars's appearances post-The Headmasters were in error stemmed from the fact that, in all official and unofficial English-subtitled releases of The Headmasters, Fortress's line about rebuilding Mars was completely overlooked and left out of the subtitle translations.
Evidently, they succeeded, given Mars's aforementioned later appearances. When saying goodbye to the Witwickys, the Autobot leader Fortress stated that, among many other tasks ahead of them, the Autobots planned to rebuild Mars as part of their efforts to bring peace to the universe. In the final episode of The Headmasters, the Autobots succeeded in finally driving the Decepticons off the Earth for good, and prepared to leave the planet themselves. For decades, fans in the West took these later appearances of Mars following its destruction to be, well, a glaring continuity error. Yet, it made later appearances in both the Victory and Beast Wars II cartoons as a fully-intact, definitely-not-destroyed planet. The planet Mars was blown up by the Decepticons in the fifteenth episode of the Transformers: The Headmasters cartoon. Therefore, all of its later Japanese G1 appearances are continuity errors. This is what the Wiki has written in the "Misconceptions and Urban Legends" page about the matter: What I can say is that he did mention Mars in some way. I don't speak Japanese so I can't exactly tell you what Fortress actually said. I believe the subtitles might have missed that. I'm not sure what subtitled version of Headmasters you watched, but if you listen to Fortress's farewell speech to Daniel, he does say "Kasei", which is Mars's name in Japanese.