Robo Machines
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Robo Machines is a short-lived European transforming robot toy-line released by Bandai from late 1992 to 1993. It was meant as an attempt to revive the European Robo Machine toy-line that ran from 1982 to approximately 1988. It incorporated several toys previously released in the Machine Robo and Robo Machine toy-lines, and five new toys that had only been previously released in Japan as part of the CG Robo toy-line.
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[edit] About Robo Machines
The Robo Machines toy line featured a total of 27 transforming robot figures, and was released by Bandai in France, Germany, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Belgium, Spain, and presumedly, the Netherlands. Giochi Preziosi, Bandai's agent in Italy, handled the release in that country. 22 of the figures were reissues of figures that were previously released as part of the Robo Machine toy-line. 16 were 'regular'-sized figures (simply referred to as "Robo Machines"), and 6 "De Luxe" figures. Furthermore, 5 figures previously unreleased outside of Japan were sold as "Light & Sound" Robo Machines.
[edit] The 'Regular'-sized Robo Machines
- 'Regular'-sized Robo Machines
Sixteen 'regular'-sized Robo machines were released, in series of five. The first series had its line-up changed somewhere along the way to replace Harrier with P-51.
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[edit] The De Luxe Robo Machines
- De Luxe Robo Machines
Six De Luxe Robo Machines were released.
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[edit] The Light & Sound Robo Machines
- Light & Sound Robo Machines
Five Light & Sound Robo Machines were released.
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[edit] Changes from previous releases
Many of the figures released as part of the Robo Machines toy-line had some changes made to them in comparison to previous releases of the molds made in the 1980s.
[edit] Mold changes
- Mold changes
All of the toys that were reissues from the Robo Machine toy-line had their molds modified, meaning that parts from Robo Machines toys are likely not to be interchangeable with those of their 1980s counterparts. Many of the toys featured their original Machine Robo color scheme, even if that color scheme was different on the 1980s Robo Machine release. Some toys had completely new and unique color schemes. The Light & Sound Robo Machines have some color variations. For example, RM-05 Rough Rider is a lighter shade of blue than his Japanese counterpart (the CG-05 4WD CG).
[edit] Sticker changes
- Sticker changes
All of the reissued toys feature new sticker sheets which had any references to existing trademarks from other companies than Bandai removed. Instead, these references have been replaced with text like 'RM', 'ROBO MACHINES', 'ROBOMACHINES', or 'RM AIR FORCE' (on the planes). Not only the text was changed, but in fact the entire sticker sheets were redesigned, and they feature many differences when compared to previous releases. The Light & Sound Robo Machines had some minor sticker changes in comparison to their Japanese CG-Robo counterparts. All the text in their designation numbers was changed from 'CG' to 'RM'.
[edit] Country of manufacturing
- Country of maufacturing
All of the reissued toys were manufactured in China. The Light & Sound Robo Machines were manufactured in Thailand.
[edit] Variations within the toy-line
Some of the Robo Machines released in different countries feature minor variations.
[edit] Packaging
- Packaging
There are at least 3 different types of backing cards available for the carded toys. The carded toys were also released boxed in Germany.
All of the Italian packaging is mono-lingual, in Italian. It also lacks the Bandai logo, instead it features the Giochi Preziosi logo. This means that both Italian backing cards and boxes are different from the packaging used in the other countries in which the Robo Machines toy-line was released.
[edit] Figures
- Figures
Some of the releases featured minor differences due to a change in manufacturing. For example, the De Luxe Space Shuttle was available with either black screws or silver screws.
[edit] Trivia
- P-51 has a Machine Robo-logo molded onto one of its wings, even though it was never released as part of that toy-line. As the original release of P-51, the Gobot 'Ace' lacks this logo, it is likely that this mold was slated for release in the Machine Robo toy-line, but was canned.
- The De Luxe Sports Car II (Porsche 928S) features a color scheme that is very reminiscent of the color scheme that the European version of Zeemon (Fairlady 280Z) sported: Sports Car II is bright red with a black roof, and Zeemon is dark metallic red with a black roof.