transformers
The Autobots will never see this one coming!

The Autobots will never see this one coming!

Decoys are small, one-piece statuettes of Transformers made from molded rubber, good for erasing pencil marks, chewing, and fooling extremely stupid enemies.


Fiction

Bonus comic

The Decepticons have stolen the Creation Matrix. Ratchet First Aid has developed the decoys to keep the Decepticons occupied. The decoys fly into position, while the Autobots sneak into Decepticon headquarters and retrieve the Matrix.

Upon learning of the ruse, Galvatron angrily declares that the Decepticons would develop their own set of Decoys, presumably to try the exact same trick, later on. That'll show 'em. The Decepticon Deception

Toys

Takara

The Decoys were originally developed as game pieces for Japanese Transformers board games. They were also sold in larger box sets:
(Blaster, Bluestreak, Brawn, Grapple, Hoist, Hound, Huffer, Ironhide, Jazz, Mirage, Optimus Prime, Perceptor, Ratchet, Red Alert, Sideswipe, Skids, Smokescreen, Sunstreaker, Swoop, Tracks, Wheeljack, Windcharger)
(Bumblebee, Cliffjumper, Grimlock, Inferno, Prowl, Slag, Sludge, Snarl, Trailbreaker)
(Astrotrain, Blitzwing, Bombshell, Bonecrusher, Devastator, Frenzy, Hook, Kickback, Laserbeak, Long Haul, Megatron, Mixmaster, Ravage, Reflector, Scavenger, Scrapper, Shockwave, Shrapnel, Skywarp, Soundwave, Starscream, Thundercracker)

Later, characters from the Movie and larger pieces representing the "Scramble City" combiner-teams' super-robot forms were made available as board-game pieces in multiple colors.

Hasbro

In 1987, Hasbro brought over fifty-two of the pieces as "Decoys", and randomly packaged them with the smaller carded toys of the time: the Throttlebots, Aerialbots, Stunticons, Protectobots, Combaticons, Technobots and Terrorcons. The Throttlebots could come with either Autobot or Decepticon pieces, while the combiners only had Decoys of the faction they belonged to.
There is one notable change in the Hasbro version of the Decoys: the numbers on the back of the pieces are a simple "checklist" number.
While the Autobot pieces were only available in red, the Decepticon pieces came in both red and purple. The red versions are part of an early run and are much harder to find as they were only available early on and only with the Throttlebots, and therefore are considerably more expensive on the secondary market.
Though Laserbeak was made available in the Japanese Destron pack, he was supposedly not available as part of the Hasbro offerings, not being listed on the comic's checklist. Karl Hartman and Jon Hartman believe he was, though, and if anyone can offer photo proof of Laserbeak on a Hasbro card, contact them!

Miscellaneous trivia

External links