![]() ![]() both before the war during the early days of the primes too decepticons and autobots colonizing planetsģ. they have colonized several other planets besides themselves and drained energy from near by stars and planets. ![]() they can't be a type 0ġ.not only did they take control of there planets but built several layers upon there planets produced resources from there planet and drained all power from there planet and near by planets in the local star systemsĢ. ![]() I think there's a bit of a disservice to look merely at the series that are in an Energon crisis, rather then looking at the technological level of the Transformers are at.Ĭlick to expand.wrong I have to say. The Solus Prime could forge anything from the universe that she desired by reshaping molecures, so forth. Vector Prime straddles the Multiverse and lives in his own pocket dimension. The Thirteen would seem to have that kind of power. With Multiversal Entities and The Nexus, with Alternity and Shattered Glass, that's a definitive element of a "Type V and Beyond". However, there's another issue that is mentioned on the scale that is prevalent in Transformers. Galactic engineering and influence: Check. Interstellar Travel and Communication: Check. So, when you ignore the power harvesting and look instead at the capabilities as so nicely listed on the provided Wikipedia page, it would seem like most Transformer Franchises are a Type III civilization. He can draw power from another universes black hole. Those abilities require vast amounts of power to pull off and they do it with their own bodies! Megatron himself is practically a Type V Civilization himself Ĭlick to expand. Megatron and Metroplex can utilize antimatter, Devastator and others can fire blasts hotter then the surface of the sun, Shockwave can emit any kind of wavelength from the EM spectrum, including X/Gamma rays, etc. Then you've got the abilities of Transformers themselves. Transwarp, Quantum Jump, and other FTL methods, Space/Ground Bridges, fusion cannons, and manufacturing capabilities that have to be highly consumptive, but we never see what's paying those energy bills. In other words, Transformers have some really advanced technology that seems to run either on Energon or on some other very energy rich source. The next problem is that the resource acquisition and the expenditure abilities don't really line up. Then you've got the various super energy sources, like Rarified Energon that is the building blocks of creation and the requirements to do something like that is just enormous. A few Animated Energon Cubes could power intersteller flight across vast distances with speeds far faster then light (and Space Bridges seem to last a long time without needing to be recharged, despite opening bridges that forces two distant locations of spacetime to touch each other for ease of transport), they also had a two galactic empires, the Autobot Commonwealth and the Decepticon Empire, both dozens of planets all under their control. A single Energon Star was sufficient to open and power a wormhole for several seconds. ![]() With other franchises, such as Energon and Animated, Energon seems to have a form that has even higher energy densities. Given relative energy densities, it's possible a single "real" Energon Cube could power a small community for months. While G1 showed everything being used to be stored in Energon Cubes, the pilot also showed those kind of assembled (oil filled) cubes being compressed from a dozen or more down to create a single "real" Energon Cube. Because throughout all the various incarnations and oddities in animation, we don't have a real bearing on just how potent Energon is or what other power sources Transformers utilize for non-lifeblood power sources. The problem with trying to apply the Kardashev scale to Transformers is that Transformers doesn't use a standard energy scale. ![]()
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