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Universal stream

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"Hey, let's call this new stream 'Phartz'."
"Heh heh. Cool."

Universal stream is the term used by the Transcendent Technomorphs to describe a specific point in time within the timeline of a single universe/dimension/reality inside the Multiverse, with said point usually, but not always, denoting the universe's point of origin. The TransTech have cataloged over 15,962,782 universal streams (over 1,176,325 of which have "come to termination"), grouping related universes into what are known as universal clusters and devising a classification system used to give each individual stream an alphanumeric designation.

Ultimately, it is important to remember that these are just labels, of no particular import... not worth devoting your mental energies to.Vector Prime, Ask Vector Prime, 2015/08/26

Contents

Universal clusters

There are six "main" universal clusters:

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IMPORTANT.

Other minor clusters include:

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NOT QUITE THAT IMPORTANT.
  • Fornax—the Kre-O continuity family, home to modular brick-built Transformers.
  • Iocus—a cluster essentially made up of overlapping aspects of other clusters, it is home to forgettable side-merchandise like Hero Mashers, Bot Shots, Construct-Bots, Battle Masters, and Attacktix, populated by 'bots functionally indistinct from their counterparts elsewhere in the multiverse, giving the outward appearance of worlds in which characters from different universes exist side by side.
  • Nexus—the technologically advanced cluster where the TransTech world of Axiom Nexus resides.
  • Quadwal—the "real world", in which Transformers exist primarily as toys.
  • Yayayarst—the Go-Bots continuity family, home to the Go-Bots of Botropolis.


Clusters in the farthest reaches of the multiverse only tenuously connected to the Transformers include:

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WELL, WE LIKE IT.


Deciphering the terminology

For further information, see: List of universal streams

Each universal stream's name consists of three parts, beginning with the continuity family of origin, a number that indicates the "real world" date of creation, and a Greek letter that denotes the form of media. Supplied by writers Greg Sepelak, Trent Troop, and Jim Sorenson, the list of Greek letters and the media to which they refer are:

  • Alpha—animated series
  • Beta—tech spec/toy/pack-in comic only ("box")
  • Gamma—comic book series
  • Delta—motion picture/live action
  • Epsilon—club/convention fiction
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    Basically, you could classify this as a universe, Primax 490.07-G Gamma cos it's a comic that Grimlock drew in a comic from 7th April 1990.

    Someone will do it too.
  • Zeta—text stories, storybooks, and other prose works (printed)
  • Eta—radio/audiocentric universes, books on tape
  • Theta—live performance/spoken word
  • Iota—Internet-only information (not involved with club/convention)
  • Kappa—games (video and otherwise)
  • Lambda—covers, still images, and advertisements (there's so many Lambdas these days that Vector Prime stopped keeping track Ask Vector Prime, 2015/06/07)

So, for example, Primax 984.17 Alpha refers to the continuity of the original Transformers cartoon, with "Primax" referring to the Generation 1 continuity family, "984.17" indicating the first episode's airdate of September 17, 1984, and "Alpha" denoting an animated series. Using this information, we could, in theory, determine the names of yet-unnamed universes on our own—for example, the "Decepticon Dark Commander Grand Scourge" pack-in comic would be "Primax 915.0 Gamma".

Furthermore, a minus symbol at the beginning of a universal stream's number indicates that this particular reality is a negative polarity universe, where the morals and personalities of most living beings (especially Cybertronians) are radically inverted. Thus far, at least eight negative polarity universes have been revealed, but Vector Prime has hinted at the existence of many more, with the caveat that they are not as common as positive polarity universes. Ask Vector Prime, 2015/05/14 Epilogue Two

In the case of sources that identical streams of multiple universes could be connected to (such as story collections and anthologies, multiple versions of a video game, or comic book cover variants) a one or two-letter suffix is added to the number to indicate the actual source material. For example, from the Transformers Legends anthology, Aurex 1104.30-DB Zeta is the "Lonesome Diesel" short story by David Bischoff, while Aurex 1104.30-JH Zeta is the "Fire in the Dark" short story by John Helfers.

Don't Cross the Streams

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"Haw, that guy up there said farts!"

Spatial-temporal powers like the TransTech, the Alternity and Flaternity, and the Transformers of Cloud World could hop reality willy-nilly, and Unicron has been known to move to new universes after he devours or is driven from one. Primus and Unicron can pluck you out of your reality and put you in another, and "Rhythms of Darkness!", "Worlds Collide", and the Universe War all involve one or both sending agents to another reality.

For most of the multiverse, however, crossing from one universe to the other is bloody hard. Many never make contact with another universe and those that do, may only do so temporarily and in circumstances hard to replicate. There does exist dedicated technology to link one world and a specific other, as the Quintessons used with Menonia.

In late 2015 Quadwal time, interdimensional travel and communication, even to the hyper technologically advanced TransTech, was rendered nigh impossible as a result of a cosmic event. Any universes or potential new universal clusters created after that time are beyond the knowledge of the TransTech and as such do not have a place in their database.


Major streams

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The most important and iconic stream of them all.

Nearly two hundred streams have been named, over half of which exist within Primax realities. Among all of the known universes, however, there are nine known "pillar" realities, a set of universes that can be thought of as "foundational", with unusually high amounts of branching points and quantum echos. Ask Vector Prime, 2015/11/01 The origin streams for these nine universes are:

See also

Notes

  • Cor, all that's really complicated, isn't it! This is down to it originally being a joke on how fragmented the multiverse was back in 2008 (it only got worse!) and to make the TransTech seem more detached and alien. Greg "M Sipher" Sepalak, co-creator of the format, specified that the TransTech gave the universes "techy, unintuitive-sounding terms... since they're really just points of data to them (rather like the naming of exoplanets or individual asteroids and etc) rather than ongoing stories about characters."[1]
  • With the termination of the partnership between Fun Publications and Hasbro at the end of 2016, no new TransTech fiction has been published; as a result, new continuity families introduced after 2016—such as Cyberverse or BotBots—do not possess in-fiction universal stream designations and likely never will.

Foreign names

  • Japanese: Jikūgun (時空群, "spacetime cluster")

References

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