The playsets often have some transforming feature, as well as things for the Deluxe Rescue Bots and basic figures to interact with. ![]() These Rescue Bots are rendered as main character vehicles with a large open cockpit for the human partner, and the robot mode is molded and painted on the chassis, not unlike Revenge of the Fallen RPMs or Speed Stars. The higher price points are occupied by various sized playsets, which typically include a human character and a non-transforming Rescue Bot. The figures have rolling wheels but no articulation, and have 5mm holes to attach Rescue Gear tools. They each have a simple transformation, sometimes only one step, assisted by auto-transforming parts (like Movie’s Automorph). The Deluxe Rescue Bots, like the Deluxe class of main-line Transformers, form the backbone of the series. The Rescue Gear each have a one-step flip change that allows them to be held or mounted on a Deluxe Rescue Bot. The basic figure sets include a poseable human character in cute proportions, and a Rescue Gear – either a small vehicle with a rescue tool attached or some type of backpack. The initial Rescue Bots figures focused primarily on one scale, but different types of sets allow them to be marketed at a wide variety of price points. Rescue Bots are in the same scale and style as Playskool Heroes, which includes other properties such as Star Wars and Spider Man. With a coherent story focusing on a few main heroes and their human partners, Rescue Bots has hit on a recipe for success. The series debuted with an animated TV show on Hasbro and Discovery’s shared network, The Hub. Transformers: Rescue Bots began in 2011 as Hasbro’s most recent, and possibly most earnest attempt at marketing to the 3-5 year-old demographic through their subsidiary, Playskool. ← Playskool Go-Bots | Continuity: Preschool Transformers | End ![]()
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