Which Transformer Are You?

What's your name?
When were you born?
Do you have a criminal record?
What's your height
How many years of education do you have?
(count from your first year of school)
years
How fast can you run the hundred metres? sec's
How many scars do you have?
Big scars count double!
How many of your friends have
trusted you with a secret?
How many dreams do you have a month?

What is the longest you have
been in any one profession?

Which of the following have you done?

Bungee jumped
A parachute jump
Made a speech to 20+ people
Absailed
Riden a roller coaster
Scuba Dived
Ignored an injury for over 60 mins
Traveled abroad alone

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  Website Credits must be shared with the following people who helped make this site possible;  
 

Botch the Crab
Groundsplitter
tftechspecs.com
And loads of people over at thetf.net
Also funny facts
and devon self catering
of try fantasy football

 
  This website is not created or run by either Hasbro, Kenner, Takara, Marvel Comics, Dreamwave Productions, Devil's Due Publishing, Titan Books, DK Publishing, IDW Publishing, Atari, Melbourne House, DreamWorks SKG, Paramount Pictures, or any other company whose characters or products are mentioned on the website. It is in no way intended to infringe on the copyrights and trademarks of these companies; it has been created for informational and entertainment purposes only.  
 

The Transformers toy line's origin is found in Japan, where in 1982-83 the Japanese toy company Takara had a few toy lines with transforming robots called Diaclone and Microchange (the latter a subset of another toy line called New Microman). In 1983 Hasbro decided to import and market these toy lines in America under the name Transformers, and they made a deal with Marvel Comics to develop a story for the toy line. Marvel's Jim Shooter and Denny O'Neill developed the treatment and a few characters, but the bulk of the characters were named and developed by Bob Budiansky, who would eventually become the first editor and later on the writer on the Transformers comic book. Bob actually developed almost all of the first five or six years' worth of characters. The toy line was launched sometime in early 1984, with the comics starting in May and the cartoon in September. Some European countries got the toy line the same year, but it seems the Nordic Countries had to wait until 1985 to get the first toys. The original series - today often referred to as Generation 1 - was immensely popular, and even had a feature film in the cinemas in 1986, but toward the end of the 1980's the interest vaned and in the USA the toy line was actually cancelled in 1990