Transformers - Ec Apr 2026

Unlike the often-forgettable human characters of G1 or Armada , the Maltos are written with nuance. Dot is a former military pilot haunted by her experiences with Decepticons. Alex is a goofy, supportive “tech dad.” Robby is angry and displaced (moving to a small town), and Mo is the glue with her relentless optimism. Their conflicts aren’t just “help the robots” — they’re about trust, fear of loss, and the meaning of home.

If you are an adult fan who hated the Bay films’ cynicism, watch EarthSpark . If you want to introduce a 7- to 12-year-old to Transformers without the trauma of watching Optimus Prime die, watch EarthSpark . If you just want beautifully animated, heartfelt stories about robots learning to be people… you already know the answer.

The show dares to do something controversial: redeem Decepticons. Megatron is present. Not as a tyrant, but as a pacifist exile living in a hidden sanctuary, growing organic plants to atone for his crimes. His interactions with Optimus are tense, philosophical, and heartbreaking. The show doesn’t excuse his past but argues that change is possible. Similarly, Breakdown and even a reprogrammed Shockwave appear, challenging the black-and-white morality of previous series. Transformers - EC

Families, lapsed G1 fans, anyone who cried during The Iron Giant . Not recommended for: Viewers who demand non-stop action, or those who believe Decepticons should always be pure evil.

When Transformers: EarthSpark was first announced, the fandom was cautiously optimistic. After years of gritty war epics (the War for Cybertron trilogy) and lighthearted toy commercial entries ( Rescue Bots ), the promise of a show produced by Nickelodeon and animated by studio ICON (known for Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles ) suggested something different. What we got is arguably the most human take on giant alien robots since Transformers: Prime — but with a modern, family-centric twist. Set after the Autobots and Decepticons have ended their war on Earth, EarthSpark introduces a new status quo. The Decepticons are defeated, but not all are evil. The Autobots are trying to integrate, but humans remain wary. In the rural town of Witwicky, Pennsylvania (yes, that Witwicky), two human siblings, Robby and Mo Malto, stumble upon a crashed Cybertronian ship. Their touch activates a unique, never-before-seen type of Transformer: the Terrans — protoforms that bond with human emotions and forge their own sparks. Unlike the often-forgettable human characters of G1 or

“You are not your first mistake. You are what you choose to become next.” — Optimus Prime, EarthSpark Season 1

The stylized 2D/3D hybrid animation is gorgeous. Transformations are fluid and creative (Twitch’s bird-mode unfolding into a lanky robot is mesmerizing). Action scenes prioritize weight and geometry over particle effects. When Megatron uses his fusion cannon, it feels destructive. The color palette is also a win — Earth tones for the Terrans, military grays for the humans, and classic bright reds/blues for the Autobots. The Frustrations 1. Pacing Issues & Villain Underutilization The first five episodes are nearly perfect. But around the midpoint, the show stumbles. The central human villain, Mandroid (Dr. Meridian), starts as a terrifyingly believable antagonist — a human supremacist who uses Cybertronian tech to augment himself. His ideology (“Why trust aliens?”) is relevant. But his transformation into a floating, chaotic, almost Power Rangers -level villain dilutes his threat. The “Chaos Terrans” arc (evil clones of the Terrans) feels like filler dragged out two episodes too long. Their conflicts aren’t just “help the robots” —

EarthSpark can’t decide how much to reference the past. One scene will feature a deep-cut homage to Beast Wars (a cameo by a protoform of Dinobot), and the next will have Optimus delivering a speech lifted almost verbatim from the 1986 movie. While fun for older fans, it sometimes overwhelms the new characters. The show shines when it focuses on the Terrans, not when it leans on “Remember this?”

The show’s central family becomes the Malto parents (Dot and Alex), the kids, and the first two Terrans, (a snarky, anxious hawk-like drone) and Thrash (a hyperactive, trash-compactor motorcycle with the heart of a golden retriever). Their mentor? A weary, guilt-ridden Optimus Prime and a brilliantly reinvented Bumblebee , now acting as a big-brother figure. What Works Brilliantly 1. The Terrans: A Fresh Take on Transformer Identity For decades, Transformers were born into factions (Autobot/Decepticon) or were veterans of a million-year war. EarthSpark asks: What if a Transformer had no memory of war? What if they learned about good and evil from a human family? Twitch and Thrash are a revelation. Twitch’s arc about anxiety and fear of the unknown mirrors real childhood struggles. Thrash’s impulsive chaos leads to genuine consequences. Their sibling dynamic is raw, loud, and loving. When Twitch says, “I don’t want to be a weapon,” it hits harder than any explosion in the Michael Bay films.

That line alone is worth the price of admission. earns its spark.

Review by: [Name/Handle] Rating: 8/10 (High marks for ambition and heart; docked points for pacing and tonal whiplash)