Transformers: The Last Knight (2017)
Posted: Sat February 13, 2016 10:43 am
don't click on the link thenLoathedVermin72 wrote:Emphasis on "Last" please
I really only meant last for Bay. I can stop watching them once he stops directing.spike wrote:don't click on the link thenLoathedVermin72 wrote:Emphasis on "Last" please
what?! you don't want to know how this amazing story ends?LoathedVermin72 wrote:I really only meant last for Bay. I can stop watching them once he stops directing.spike wrote:don't click on the link thenLoathedVermin72 wrote:Emphasis on "Last" please
Story?BurtReynolds wrote:what?! you don't want to know how this amazing story ends?LoathedVermin72 wrote:I really only meant last for Bay. I can stop watching them once he stops directing.spike wrote:don't click on the link thenLoathedVermin72 wrote:Emphasis on "Last" please
But that's a Marvel property, isn't it?bune wrote:I've been seeing rumors of Rom because of the Knight thing.
It was a Marvel comic but not property:Simple Torture wrote:But that's a Marvel property, isn't it?bune wrote:I've been seeing rumors of Rom because of the Knight thing.
"Rom The Space Knight" was a toy co-created by Scott Dankman, Richard C. Levy, and Bryan L. McCoy (US Patent #4,267,551).[2][3] It was sold to Parker Brothers, and was the inspiration for the comic book series.[4] The toy was originally named COBOL after the programming language but was later changed to "Rom" after ROM (read-only memory) by Parker Brothers executives.
Hasbro is the key there.On May 7, 2016, having licensed the character from Parker Brothers' parent company, Hasbro, IDW Publishing debuted a brand new Rom #0 as part of Free Comic Book Day. The free issue serves as a prologue to a new ongoing set to be released July 2016.
::nods::bune wrote:It was a Marvel comic but not property:Simple Torture wrote:But that's a Marvel property, isn't it?bune wrote:I've been seeing rumors of Rom because of the Knight thing."Rom The Space Knight" was a toy co-created by Scott Dankman, Richard C. Levy, and Bryan L. McCoy (US Patent #4,267,551).[2][3] It was sold to Parker Brothers, and was the inspiration for the comic book series.[4] The toy was originally named COBOL after the programming language but was later changed to "Rom" after ROM (read-only memory) by Parker Brothers executives.Hasbro is the key there.On May 7, 2016, having licensed the character from Parker Brothers' parent company, Hasbro, IDW Publishing debuted a brand new Rom #0 as part of Free Comic Book Day. The free issue serves as a prologue to a new ongoing set to be released July 2016.
