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Beast Wars II: Super Life-Form Transformers

Beast Wars II: Super Life-Form Transformers (ビーストウォーズII 超生命体トランスフォーマー, Bīsuto Wōzu Sekando Chō Seimeitai Toransufōmā) is a 1998 Japanese Transformers anime series, spawning a movie and a toyline. It was broadcast on TV Tokyo from April 1998 to January 1999, and was the first Transformers anime to be produced by Nihon Ad Systems and animated by the studio Ashi Productions. The series was preceded by Beast Wars: Transformers, and was followed by Super Life-Form Transformers: Beast Wars Neo. The series has a much lighter tone and is aimed more toward children, whereas the more accessible Beast Wars was intended for a wider age-range. The anime uses conventional animation rather than the CGI of its predecessor. With the exception of the faction leaders, all of the characters within the toy-line are either remolds, reissues, or recolors of earlier Beast Wars or Generation 2/Machine Wars toys.[2]

In addition to the 43 episodes, there is also a 50-minute movie, Beast Wars II: Lio Convoy's Close Call!, which takes place sometime between episodes 32 and 38, and a manga adaptation by Shōji Imaki that was serialized in Comic BomBom from July 1998 to February 1999, also localized in Korea by Daewon Media. The anime was also released in Korea, and it was broadcast on SBS.

Plot

Beast Wars II tells the story of a battle waging between Lio Convoy's team of Cybertrons (Maximals) and Galvatron's army of Destrons (Predacons) on the planet Gaia. As Lio Convoy and Galvatron fight over the mysterious energy source known as Angolmois Energy, many strange occurrences and mysterious properties of Angolmois Energy begin to arise.

Characters

Main

Recurring characters

Guest characters

Spin-off exclusive characters

Theme songs

  1. "GET MY FUTURE"
  2. "SUPER VOYAGER"
  1. "Places Where Dreams Go" (夢のいる場所, Yume no Iru basho)
    • April 1, 1998 - January 27, 1999
    • Lyricist: Eiko Kiyo / Composer: Hiroto Ishikawa / Arranger: Seiichi Kyoda / Singers: Jun Yoneya
    • Episodes: 1-43
  1. "SPACE DREAMER - Distant Beast Wars" (SPACE DREAMER 〜遥かなるビーストウォーズ〜, SPACE DREAMER - Haruka Naru Bīsuto Uōzu)
    • Lyricist: Kensaku Saito / Composer: Hideki Fujisawa / Arranger: Hideki Fujisawa / Singers: COA
  2. "MY SHOOTING STAR"
    • Lyricist: COA / Composer: COA / Arranger: COA / Singers: COA

Episodes

Chapters

Toy line

The series was primarily repaints of non-show Beast Wars figures and repaints of Generation 2 figures, including two unreleased Autoroller figures and the black Dreadwing/Smokecreen repaint, planned for the cancelled 1996 assortment of figures. In both cases the items were recolored and slightly remolded; repainted versions of five of the Seacons also served as new Predacon characters.

The series did feature new molds for Lio Convoy and Galvatron, as well as the Tako Tank. Generation 1 Trypticon, and Beast Wars Dinobot, Cybershark, Wolfang, and Waspinator were remolded as "upgraded" versions of Megastorm, Starscream, BB, Dirge and Thrust.

The remolded Cybershark saw release as Overbite in the U.S. as Universe exclusive.

References

  1. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-11-22. Retrieved 2009-10-12.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^ "The History of Transformers on TV". IGN. Archived from the original on 2011-07-13. Retrieved 2010-08-14.
  3. ^ "ビーストウォーズ2(セカンド)(1)". Archived from the original on 2014-04-20. Retrieved 2014-04-20.
  4. ^ "超生命体トランスフォーマービーストウォーズ2(1)". Retrieved 2015-03-31.
  5. ^ "超生命体トランスフォーマービーストウォーズ2(2)". Retrieved 2015-03-31.
  6. ^ "超生命体トランスフォーマービーストウォーズ2(3)". Retrieved 2015-03-31.
  7. ^ "超生命体トランスフォーマービーストウォーズ2(4)". Retrieved 2015-03-31.
  8. ^ "ビーストウォーズ2(セカンド)(2)". Archived from the original on 2014-04-20. Retrieved 2014-04-20.

External links