Wednesday, May 29, 2013

carD robots!



The ripping and cracking of the 56th seal of the Roboplastic Podcastalypse is the sound of 96 foil packs of Breygent Marketing's Transformers Optimum Collection Trading cards being torn apart! Yes the May 14th release date of this most anticipated (by me at least) of Transformer card sets finally came and went, and with it, lots of my money. So to celebrate this momentous occasion I discuss to myself the long road to conquest littered with Autobot wrecks it's been since these cards were first announced just over two years ago. Then with the help of a very special guest (aka the Prince of Macrocrania), we tear into a box of Transformers cards with the recorder capturing it all live. What fabulous pieces of dead Autobot corpses await us in our foily packs? Will we get a super rare, super special Destavator card? Don't we already have that one? Find out all this and more in this NO PODCARDALYPSE FOR OLD ROBOTS edition of the podcastalypse!

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PINNED DOWN ONE TIME TOO MANY BY ASTROTRAIN AND BLITZWING, I CREATE MY OWN SPECIAL GUEST COMMENTATOR

This episode features commentary on Breygent's Transformers cards by special guest toy destroyer "Super Ban", who at six years old is not only the same age as the Michael Bay Transformer movies, but also the age I was when I destroyed my first box of Empire Strikes Back cards back in 1980. To establish his Transformer fan credibility I can attest to the fact that he rides a movie Bumblebee bicycle, wears a movie Bumblebee backpack, and owns tons of movie Bumblebee toys (plus some G1 Robot Heroes he never plays with). Just so you know where his bias lies, he has been known to use the word "old" to describe any Transformers that are not from the Michael Bay movies. Plus the word he most commonly uses to describe the look of those "old" Transformers is "crappy".
Ironhide tire! This is super gimmicky but really cool. There were two different 'small' Ironhide tire cards and a third large one where the piece of tire is as big as the entire card. The largest were 1 in 3 case incentives meant to get dealers to order more cases.

This is the 72 card base set. Almost half is dedicated to character cards and the rest don't do a good job of representing iconic moments from all three movies. It's as if the base set was an afterthought, or something for autograph hounds to have handy for those times they see stars like Shia LeBouf at comic conventions.

This is a sketch of a robot whose name I don't know by a guy whose signature I can't figure out. I think the artist is Jek Inanuran, but he doesn't appear on the final list of artists supplied by Breygent so who knows. I'm glad I didn't get any super crappy sketch cards, but at the same time I am sad I didn't get any super crappy sketch cards.


Our complete (minus promos) G1 foil set. We're missing some promo cards numbered outside of these 18 but still in this style that include Demolishor, Jolt, and Rampage. I don't know how many total foils are out there, but if the promos are foil then there could possibly be one for every non-movie character that shares a name with a movie character.

Our incomplete movie foil set and the resultant incomplete Bumblebee puzzle picture. I saw a dealer on ebay selling their set with the exact same card missing. I wish dealers would put up individual cards so I could complete this.


BREAKDOWN

I was doing the math to figure out just how many of each type of card there are. From the totals supplied by Breygent, I know there are 250 cases with 3,000 boxes that have 24 packs each and 6 cards to a pack. So that's 24 * 3,000 = 72,000 packs with 6 * 24 * 3,000 = 432,000 cards. From what I've seen, signature, cloth memorabilia, and foil cards replace one base card in each pack, but the tire cards do not. I didn't get a comic panel card but I imagine they replace one base, too. So here are my estimates of what exists in terms of 'hits' based on the ratios printed on the boxes:

Movie foil puzzle cards: 1 in 8 packs = 72,000 / 8 = 9,000 cards or 1,000 sets
G1 foil cards: 1 in 4 packs = 72,000 / 4 = 18,000 cards or 1,000 sets
Autograph: 1 in 29 packs = 72,000 / 29 = approximately 2,483 autographs
Comic Panel: 1 in 72 packs = 72,000 / 72 = 1,000 comic panels
Sketch cards: 1 in 21 packs = 72,000 / 21 = approximately 3,429 sketches
Film memorabilia 1 in 36 packs = 72,000 / 36 = 2,000 memorabilia cards

If you add all these totals it comes out to approximately 36,000 special cards that displace an equivalent number of base cards in the packs. With 72 base cards in the set, the final number of complete sets possible after subtracting the special cards from the total of all cards made is 5,500. So my guess is there are only 5,500 base sets available, which is easily the attendance of Botcon on a good day. And the subsets are even rarer. There's really not a lot of these out there if you think about it. Luckily, dealers are considering this set a failure and are dumping their stock of it on ebay. So patient collectors should eventually be able to complete sets without too much money invested.

Two of my favorites-Bukkake Megatron and ChangeBots Jazz

SHOW NOTES OF THE PODCASTALYPSE

Our hits from 4 boxes

4 comments:

flywheels said...

Any idea where I can find a box?

Evil King Macrocranios said...

They're 50 bucks right now on eBay. Check out item 140985746107.

Paunch Show Greg said...

All I'd want are the G1 cards and Frank Welker/Peter Cullen signed cards if there were any.

Evil King Macrocranios said...

Cullen and Welker didn't sign. LaBouf and Fox didn't even sign! The only really big name was Nimoy.

I'd say grab a complete set of G1 foils as soon as you can. I like them. They're usually under 20 bucks on eBay and if you do the math there are only 1,000 sets out there. If you really want to be hardcore about it, there are a couple of promo cards that fit in the G1 set but those are expensive to track down.

 

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