![]() It feels like they did some great engineering on the first two and when they said they wanted more designs, no one knew how to repeat it with a different design. If you leave his hands at his sides, he seems to stay in robot mode, but you can barely see his face. In robot mode, unlike the other robot Mini-Cons he doesn’t lock into robot mode. I think I prefer the original color scheme, but it’s not bad looking.ĭrift looks okay in these colors, but it’s still not a great mold.īacktrack is not terribly well designed. Read my original review of Drift and Jetstorm.īlizzard Strike Drift & Mini-Con Blizzard Strike Jetstormīlizzard Strike Jetstorm looks pretty cool. ![]() You must remove his weapons to launch him. This will not work for Overload’s Mini-Con Backtrack. One cool thing about the attachable parts is that you can leave them on while they are in the launchers, or at least your could for Drift and Fracture. I think the point of this was to make it look like more toy than you are actually getting. This is kind of pointless, as they are useless once you remove the parts. The Mini-Cons all come with Autobot or Decepticon shaped trees with their accessories on them. Drift’s Mini-Cons are all disc shaped while Overload’s Mini-Cons are ball shaped. They have a built in safety mechanism that makes it very hard to launch the Mini-Con if the robot is not standing or vehicle isn’t sitting on a flat surface. Overload cannot launch his Mini-Cons in robot mode. They are extremely well engineered so that the launchers also work in vehicle mode. The launcher swings down and launches the Mini-Cons along a flat surface. The first wave have a built in launcher that is attached to the right arm in robot mode to launch Mini-Cons. Deployers are about the same size as Warrior Class toys, perhaps slightly larger. Transformers: Robots in Disguise (2015) Deployers (Blizzard Strike Drift with Blizzard Strike Jetstorm and Overload with Backtrack)Ī few notes on these before I get to the reviews.
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