Details
Soundwave (2007)
Released as part of TakaraTomy‘s small Music Label toyline, this incarnation of Soundwave drags the character kicking and screaming into the digital age as a working MP3 player. Despite his new electronic abilities, Soundwave still transforms, in a manner virtually identical to his original Generation 1 figure, no less. He still comes with his trademark pair of weapons (although they no longer double as batteries, since he’s got a real one in there now!) plus three sets of hands: two clenched, two for holding his guns, and two posed as if he is pressing his “eject” button.
Soundwave runs on a single AAA battery, lasting for about six hours of continuous play, and operates using a miniSD card; the packaging claims it can only support up to 1GB, but reports indicate it can actually take up to 2GB. The distinctive buttons on Soundwave’s pelvis are now working buttons that control the player: play/pause/power, next, previous, volume up and volume down. Naturally, the player also comes with a set of headphones, but an optional accessory, sold separately, can take their place: a set of transforming headphones in the image of Rumble and Frenzy.
Soundwave was initially released in two color schemes: “Spark Blue”, his normal blue and silver colors; and “Sonic White”, a mostly white color scheme with some blue detailing, echoing the traditional iPod color scheme. When the toy received a second production run later in the year, the “Sonic White” version was replaced with a new Soundblaster-inspired “Blaster Black” deco.
The “Sonic White” version was later repurposed as the mirror-universe Shattered Glass Soundwave.
During one of Hasbro‘s designer panels at BotCon 2008, an audience member questioned the feasibility of releasing this figure in the 2008 Universe toy line, but without the expensive MP3 player electronics. Bizarrely, Hasbro design director Aaron Archer gave a seemingly prepared statement that did not answer the question at all, and instead stated that Hasbro were unlikely to release Music Label Soundwave in their markets due to the obscurity of the MiniSD memory card format. (For what it’s worth, Hasbro’s Greg Lombardo had given an actual answer to the same question at BotCon 2007, when he stated that ML Soundwave’s innards are so devoted to electronics that removing them might adversely impact the leftover toy’s appearance and stability.)
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