

The Nemesis Power Warrior used a tank for the center body and was released only in Japan. In addition to these, two versions of the Power Warrior were made for both the Guardians and the Renegades, using molds from the Machine Robo line and recolored. Tonka did design some toys for the line, including the Guardian Command Center and Renegade Thruster playsets, and the motorized Renegade Zod. Several other ranges were drawn from existing Bandai figures (such as the Secret Riders ). The line also included two gestalt-style figures, the car-based Puzzler and monster-based Monsterous. Some of these were drawn from the Machine Robo Scale Robo DX line, some from the MR Big Machine Robo line (these included larger versions of Leader-1, the Guardian leader, and Cy-Kill, the Renegade leader) and some designs not released in Japan. Larger figures, averaging around 12–15 cm (5-6 inches) tall in robot mode, were released as Super Gobots.
#Gobot secret riders year plus
This unnamed assortment, usually referred to as ‘Regular’ Gobots, was used throughout the four years Gobots were produced, and was later supplemented by figures from the Machine Robo Devil Invaders sub-line, plus some aborted Machine Robo figures and some commissioned from Bandai by Tonka. The robot figures transformed into a mixture of generic and specific contemporary machines, plus a handful of Second World War fighter aircraft, and a number of futuristic designs. The bulk of the Gobot line was taken from the Machine Robo ‘600 Series’ line of figures, which were around 5–8 cm / 2-3 inches high on average. Tonka released the first batch of figures to stores in 1983.

In 1991, Hasbro acquired the Gobots range from Tonka Inc. 1987 was the final year in which new Gobots were released. The line sold well initially, but was overtaken by Transformers. Introduced in 1984 by Tonka Inc., the Gobots toys created the robot "sensation" that swept the nation for a short time. The figures were all given individual names, in contrast to the simple designations they received in Japan. In another similarity to Transformers, Tonka decided to make the figures sentient robots, rather than human-piloted mecha as they had been in Japan, and divided them into two factions – the good Guardians and evil Renegades (although early figures were simply described as ‘Friendly’ or ‘Enemy’ on the packaging). The Gobot toyline was based on figures produced by Popy of Japan (later Bandai), named Machine Robo. While Hasbro now owns the fictional side of the property (character names, bios, storyline), the actual toys and their likenesses were only licensed from Bandai in the 80s, were not covered by the Tonka acquisition, and are not available for Hasbro use.
#Gobot secret riders year series
Subsequently, the universe depicted in the animated series Challenge of the GoBots and follow-up film GoBots: Battle of the Rock Lords was established as an alternate universe within the Transformers franchise. Although initially a separate and competing franchise, Tonka's Gobots became the intellectual property of Hasbro after their buyout of Tonka in 1991. GoBots was a line of transforming robot toys produced by Tonka from 1983 to 1987, similar to Transformers.
#Gobot secret riders year free
As with Hey Kids Comics Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License.Ī selection of figures from the Gobot toyline The list of authors can be seen in the page history.
