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'''Headmasters''' are a type of symbiotic variation on the [[Transformer]] lifeform in which a smaller sentient being, frequently but not exclusively organic, [[transformation|transforms]] into the head of a larger robot. The process by which this is accomplished varies by continuity. In conversation, the term "Headmaster" can apply to both the primary partner (the head) and the significant other (the body).
'''Headmasters''' are the early prototypes of a process known as [[binary bonding]], in which a Transformer and another being are able to share their thoughts and sensations through an almost psychic link. In the case of a Headmaster, this other being is able to actually transform into the larger Transformer's head, usually replacing the original head - which is removed as part of the initial process. Although usually this bond is to a [[Nebulos|Nebulan]], the species who invented the procedure, some Transformers have been known to bond with [[human|humans]], [[Mini-Con|Mini-Cons]], and even other [[Autobot|Autobots]] or [[Decepticons]].
 
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[[File:Headmasters.jpg|thumb|220x220px|[http://phineasandferb.wikia.com/wiki/Phineas_and_Ferb_Wiki Aren't they a little too young to be control the heads of] [[:en:Main_Page|Transformers?]]]]
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Headmaster bonding in most continuities occurs between two sentient beings, but there have been cases in which the head or the body (such as the [[Transtector]]s in the Japanese anime or the [[Sunstreaker (G1)|Sunstreaker]] clones in the [[IDW continuity]]) is a non-sentient construct controlled entirely by the other partner.
  +
 
When it occurs between two sentient beings, the benefits of the Headmaster procedure are many: The partner gains control of a larger, more powerful body, and the Transformer gains an extra perspective on the battlefield, the psychic [[binary bonding]] involved allowing him to draw on both his own ideas, tactics, and instincts as well as those of his partner as quickly as if they were coming from his own head (since they are).
  +
 
==Fiction==
  +
{{note|Early promotional materials, including [[catalog]]s and toy [[commercial]]s, advertised the Decepticon Nebulan partners as "trainers" for their beastly companions, rather than equal partners. One [[commercial]] took this so far as to have the "trainers" holding whips and ordering Weirdwolf, et. al. to jump through hoops of fire.}}
  +
 
===Marvel Comics===
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The Headmaster technology was primarily the invention of the [[Nebulos|Nebulan]] scientist [[Arcana]] and was designed originally to let Nebulans utilize the bodies of [[Autobot]]s to defend their world, something they did not trust the Autobots enough to let them do on their own. {{storylink|Broken Glass!}}
  +
  +
In this continuity, all Headmaster partnerships seen are human/Nebulan-Transformer. The organic half of the pair is able to transform by use of a special suit of Headmaster armor and a control helmet that interfaces with bio-cybernetic augmentation in the surgically altered humanoid. It is possible for an organic to control/communicate with the larger robot's form with only the control helmet, even if he has not undergone the binary bonding/augmentation process to let him transform into a head, and likewise, an altered/binary-bonded organic remains permanently psychically connected to his partner regardless of whether he retains the helmet or armor.
  +
 
The main weakness in the design comes from conflicts of personality. Since there was never meant to be an equal partnership in the original Headmaster concept, very little attention was paid to how the Transformer and the organic partner would interact during the original bonding. As the prototypes of the binary bonding idea, the Headmasters suffered from a lack of knowledge on how important this interaction would be. Many early Headmasters simply did not get along with their own bodies, and vice-versa. Because of this, partners would often disagree or be at odds with each other, resulting in confusion in the Transformer as the voices in his head had extended arguments over what to do. Depending on the compatibility and personalities of the partners, their minds tend to merge to different extents and their joint psyche manifests in unique ways for each individual.
   
  +
For instance, in the comic, Spike and Fort Max were two separate minds sharing one body, with each dominant in his own form and the other submissive, while Lord Zarak and Scorponok seemed to reach some sort of fusion where he was both beings merged into one, with Scorponok to all intents and purposes becoming entriely subsumed by Zarak's personality (to the extent that, [[On the Edge of Extinction!|during the battle with Unicron]], "Scorponok"'s interior monologue identifies himself as being Zarak merely filling the role of Scorponok, implying that the original Scorponok psyche was essentially gone). A similar situation developed between [[Optimus Prime (G1)|Optimus Prime]] and [[Hi-Q]], except in the reverse.
==Terminology==
 
   
 
{{Note|This was not an unexpected problem for the Transformers. Early [[combiner]] teams had similar issues, with the resulting gestalt being much simpler and less intelligent than the sum of its parts, often because the parts did not get along. However, since the Nebulans failed to ask before starting the Headmaster plan, they were not able to avoid this problem.}}
In conversation, the term "Headmaster" can apply to both the primary partner (the head), and their significant other (the body). To be called a "Headmaster", a Transformer needs to have an autonomous partner who changes into their head as part of their transformation sequence. The benefits of this procedure are many: the partner gains control of a larger, more powerful body, and the Transformer gains an extra perspective on the battlefield, being able to draw on both his own ideas, tactics, and instincts as well as those of his partner as quickly as if they were coming from his own head (since they are).
 
   
 
Headmaster partners are unique amongst their brethren (the [[Targetmaster|Targetmasters]] and [[Powermaster|Powermasters]]) in that they have the power to take full control over the body they are connected to, often against that Transformer's will. However, over time, both the Headmasters and their Transformer partners realized that they worked better when both sides had a say in things (two heads being better than one), and the relationship between them evolved from master/slave into a more equal partnership. In that cooperation lies the real strength of the Headmaster process.
==Technology==
 
   
  +
===''The Transformers'' cartoon===
A mini-con or fellow Transformer, of course, has no problem changing their form into that of someone else's head, but organic partners need a little help in pulling it off. Human and Nebulan Headmasters do this by use of a special suit of Headmaster armour as well as (in comic continuity) surgical bio-cybernetic augmentation. Sometimes the Headmaster armor is not unlike an [[Exo-suit]], transforming around the wearer (G1 Cartoon). Other times it is larger and almost a mecha of its own (DW Comics). Other times is appears to be just an outer layer of Cybertronian armor and the actual mechanics of being a Headmaster and transforming is surgically created inside the partner, transforming them into a cyborg who interfaces with the armor (Marvel Comics). Headmaster armour can be passed on to other people in an emergency, or in the result of a Headmaster's death. The helmet seems to be the most important part of the overall design, creating the mental link, since Spike Witwicky has shown himself able to command the body of [[Fortress Maximus (G1)|Fortress Maximus]] while wearing only that one part, but the entire suit (and in the comic the surgical augmentation) is needed to transform oneself into the head and take full control.
 
  +
[[Image:Headmasters early heads.jpg|right|1px|]]
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[[File:HEADMASTERS.jpeg|left|thumb|220x220px|"HEY! You stole my head"
  +
"No You stole my Head"
   
  +
"YOU BOTH stole MY head design"
It has been shown as well that while connected to a Transformer, a Headmaster partner can use their form as an extended kind of advanced life support - at least one Headmaster ([[Arcee (G1)|Arcee]]) volunteered for the process in order to save the life of a human ally who had been severely wounded in battle.
 
  +
]]
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In this continuity, the Headmaster process was the brainchild of [[Brainstorm]], who had advocated that using an organic partner would be a good strategy in combat with the [[Decepticon]]s. It also seems much less invasive for the organic humanoid involved. No surgical alteration is apparently needed on their part, and the process seems to consist mainly of altering the Transformer's head to 1) have a control center for a partner to sit at inside and 2) transform around the partner into a fancy [[Exosuit|exosuit]]. While some who have undergone it have commented at feeling a closer bond with their respective partners, there is no reason to believe there is any true psychic connection between them as in the binary bonding of other continuities. {{storylink|The Rebirth, Part 1}}
   
  +
===Japanese animated continuity===
Without their head, a Transformer Headmaster is at a severe disadvantage. Most Autobots and Decepticons are shown entering a kind of [[stasis lock]] when their heads disconnect from their robot modes, often seeming sluggish and able to perform only the most basic of functions. In their alternate modes, however, a Headmaster seems no different from any other Transformer: if, perhaps, a little more dangerous. With another intelligent being to help with the task of driving, flying, or shooting, the Headmaster is able to focus more clearly on tactics, strategy, or just the task at hand, freeing up considerable processing power from more mundane requirements. This makes a Headmaster capable of extreme multi-tasking and amazingly rapid decision-making, ''if'' the two partners have similar attitudes and mindsets.
 
  +
Attempting to escape the wars on [[Cybertron (planet)|Cybertron]], a group of diminutive Cybertronians (most of them only a little larger than human beings) fled the planet, only to have their ship crash on the hazardous, inhospitable planet [[Master]]. The need for survival fostered several technological advances (helped in part by technology derived from a [[Fortress Maximus (RID)|time-traveling spaceship]] that crashed on the planet sometime later). Chief among them was the creation of "[[Transtector]]s": large, lifeless robot bodies which the smaller robots could connect to and control. The small Cybertronians had not yet actually mastered the art of [[transformation]], however, and had to undergo rigorous mental and physical training in order to become "Headmasters" (their name, obviously enough, derived from the planet itself).
   
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The Headmasters subsequently migrated from Master and joined the Autobot and Decepticon forces on Cybertron and [[Earth]], leading to a lengthy conflict that ultimately resulted in both factions departing the Earth for a prolonged period of time. With easy access to Earth cut off, leaving its safety in doubt should it be attacked by Decepticons in the future, the Autobots on Master created [[Master-Brace]]s, technology that harnessed the mysterious [[Chōkon Power]] to transform humans and allow them to connect to Transtectors and become Headmasters themselves. A set of six Master-Braces and Transtectors were dispatched to Earth, but half the shipment was stolen by Decepticons, and both factions subsequently used the technology to turn three young human children into Headmasters in defense of Earth.
==Flaws==
 
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[[File:Images (3).jpeg|thumb|309x309px|What's next? He took his head off, now what? [[Targetmaster|It turns into a gun?]]]]
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Cybertronian Headmasters possess numerous energy-manipulating superpowers. They are able to exchange Transtectors freely with their fellow Headmasters to increase their power levels and can link up with each other in the [[Head Formation]] for various destructive results. In contrast, human Headmasters do not possess any of these powers, but have their own natural physical strength and reflexes enhanced many times over by the energies filling their bodies. Their cellular structures undergo some form of ill-defined holistic transformation which allows them somehow to transform their actual, physical bodies into heads. However, unlike organic Headmasters in other continuities, they do not have to undergo any ''permanent'' alteration; they are capable of "turning off" their powers and becoming normal human beings with ease, the only drawback being that they are unable to remove the Master-Braces that give them their powers.
   
  +
===Dreamwave comics===
The main weakness in the design comes from conflicts of personality. Since there was never meant to be an equal partnership in the original Headmaster concept, very little attention was paid to how the Transformer and their partner would interact during the original bonding. As the prototypes of the binary bonding idea, the Headmasters suffered from a lack of knowledge on how important this interaction would be. Many early Headmasters simply did not get along with their own bodies, and vice-versa. Because of this, partners would often disagree or be at odds with each other, resulting in confusion in the Transformer as the voices in his head had extended arguments over what to do. Depending on the compatibility and personalities of the partners their minds tend to merge to different extents and their joint psyche manifests in unique ways for each individual. (For instance, in the comic, Spike and Fort Max were two separate minds sharring one body, with each dominant in their own form and the other submissive, while Lord Zarak and Scorponok seemed to reach some sort of fusion where he was both beings merged into one.)
 
  +
Though only glimpsed in profile art, the Headmaster heads here seem to be larger "mecha" that the human partners pilot. {{storylink|More Than Meets The Eye}}
   
  +
===IDW comics continuity===
(''Note: this was not an unexpected problem for the Transformers. Early [[combiner]] teams had similar issues, with the resulting gestalt being much simpler and less intelligent than the sum of its parts, often because the parts did not get along. However, since the Nebulans failed to ask before starting the Headmaster plan, they were not able to avoid this problem'')
 
  +
{{ongoing}}
 
The Headmaster technology is a product of the shadowy human organization known as the [[Machination]], using technology developed by [[Scorponok (G1)#IDW comics continuity|Scorponok]] on the planet [[Nebulos (G1)#IDW comics continuity|Nebulos]]. Following a tip offered to him by [[Swindle (G1)#IDW comics continuity|Swindle]], [[Ultra Magnus (G1)#IDW comics continuity|Ultra Magnus]] found schematics for enhancing a biological entity with Cybertronian technology, in effect producing a "transformable man". Magnus was able to determine that Nebulan businessman [[Zarak#IDW comics continuity|Mo Zarak]] had been subjected to this process shortly before Scorponok fled the premises. {{storylink|Spotlight: Ultra Magnus}}
   
 
Approximately 18 years later, the Machination captured [[Sunstreaker#IDW comics continuity|Sunstreaker]] and [[Hunter O'Nion]]. They dismantled Sunstreaker and subjected Hunter to an extensive regimen of surgery and implants. Subsequently, they attempted to brainwash him into one of their soldiers. {{storylink|Escalation}} Hunter resisted and was able to contact Sunstreaker, allowing him to become a Headmaster to fight for the Autobots. {{storylink|Devastation}}
== Fiction ==
 
===Generation One===
 
The first and original intent of the Headmaster process was to allow a Nebulan to control the body of a Transformer. This was initially done as a kind of enslavement, overcoming Nebulan distrust by forcing [[Autobot|Autobots]] to give up their heads and placing them completely under the power of their Nebulan partners (hence the term Head'''master'''). Since the Headmaster partner can provide all of the motivation for a Transformer body to move and fight without the Transformer even needing to be conscious (or alive), and can override the will of the Transformer he or she is bonded to, many Autobots and Decepticons find this technology disturbing. There are, however, many benefits to the procedure - enough so that after facing Autobot Headmasters in combat, the Decepticons realised that they needed to take advantage of this technology as well. Although the initial partners were Nebulans, several humans were also involved in this process, including (in some continuities) both [[Daniel_Witwicky|Daniel Witwicky]] and [[Spike_Witwicky|Spike Witwicky]].
 
   
  +
Initially, all Headmasters created by the Machination were non-sentient, guided by their human pilots. As well, all of these models were replicas of Sunstreaker, wired into the Autobot's actual head to help coordinate their movements. However, the success of these initial forays into the technology allowed for the first true binary-bond, enabling [[Abraham Dante]] to combine with his Decepticon master Scorponok to facilitate his rebirth. {{storylink|Devastation}}
Headmaster partners are unique amongst their brethren (the [[Targetmaster|Targetmasters]] and [[Powermaster|Powermasters]]) in that they have the power to take full control over the body they are connected to, often against that Transformer's will. However, over time, both the Headmasters and their Transformer partners realised that they worked better when both sides had a say in things (two heads being better than one), and the relationship between them evolved from master/slave into a more equal partnership. In that cooperation lies the real strenght of the Headmaster process.
 
   
  +
==Limitations==
===Headmasters/Masterforce (Japan Only)===
 
  +
Without their heads, Transformer Headmasters are at a severe disadvantage. Most Autobots and Decepticons are shown entering a kind of [[stasis lock]] when their heads disconnect from their robot modes, often seeming sluggish and able to perform only the most basic of functions. In their alternate modes, however, a
In Japanese continuities Headmasters hail from the planet [[Master]] and generally used [[Transtector]]s, robotic bodies that were devoid of sparks and non-sentient(therefore avoiding the messy argument over whether Headmastering was ethical by not partnering with living Transformers). A Headmaster is born when one of the miniture denizens of Master (Roughly a little bit larger than a human, save for [[Scorponok (G1)|Scorponok]]) proves his worth in combat, and is rewarded with his very own Transtector, in order to be able to fight more efficiently among the Master's larger brethren. These Headmasters have the ability to use another Headmaster's Transecters in order to utilize new powers (This is a nod to the Headmaster's toys who had Tech Specs meters that changed depending on what Headmaster was used).
 
  +
[[File:Images (4).jpeg|left|thumb|220x220px|You got the nerve to call [[Arcee (G1)|me]] ugly?! Look at you!]]
 
Headmaster seems no different from any other Transformer, perhaps a little more dangerous. With another intelligent being to help with the task of driving, flying, or shooting, the Headmaster is able to focus more clearly on tactics, strategy, or just the task at hand, freeing up considerable processing power from more mundane requirements. This makes a Headmaster capable of extreme multi-tasking and amazingly rapid decision-making—''if'' the two partners have similar attitudes and mindsets.
   
  +
==Homages==
===IDW Comics continuity===
 
  +
* The [[Unicron Trilogy]] featured a few examples of smaller robots ([[Mini-Con]]s) becoming the heads of larger ones.
The Headmaster technology is a product of the shadowy organization known as the [[Machination]], possibly using technology developed by Scorponok on the planet Nebulos. Following a tip offered to him by [[Swindle (G1)|Swindle]], [[Ultra Magnus (G1)|Ultra Magnus]] found schematics for enhancing a biological entity with Cybertronian technology, in effect producing a "transformable man." Magnus was able to determine that Nebulan businessman [[Mo Zarak]] had been subjected to this process, shortly before Scorponok fled the premises.
 
  +
** ''[[Armada (franchise)|Armada]]'' [[Sideways]] had two Mini-Con drivers, [[Rook (Armada)|Rook]] and [[Crosswise (Armada)|Crosswise]], for his motorcycle form that could become individual heads, or combine together into a larger robot/driver.
  +
** ''Armada'' [[Overload (Armada)|Overload]]'s Mini-Con partner [[Rollout (Armada)|Rollout]] became the head (and part of the chest) of the larger robot, who could in turn become armor for [[Optimus Prime (Armada)|Optimus Prime]].
  +
** ''[[Energon (franchise)|Energon]] ''[[Omega Supreme (Energon)|Omega Supreme]] also had a Headmaster partner, Omega, which combined with two vehicles to form a large robot.
   
  +
* The ''[[Transformers Animated]]'' series features a supervillain named [[Headmaster (Animated)|Headmaster]] who can use a flying robotic head that aggressively removes another robot's head and replaces it with itself. The head itself can also transform into a small robot mode.
Soon after, the Machination captured [[Sunstreaker (G1)|Sunstreaker]] and [[Hunter O'Nion]]. They dismantled Sunstreaker, and subjected Hunter to an extensive regimen of surgery and implants. Subsequently they attempted to brainwash him into one of their soldiers. Thus far, all Headmasters in the IDW technology have been non-sentient, guided by their human pilots. As well, all of them have been replicas of Sunstreaker.
 
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{{main|Headmaster (Animated)}}
   
[[Category: Generation 1]]
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[[Category:Generation 1]]
[[Category: Headmasters| ]]
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[[Category:Headmasters| ]]
[[Category: Subgroups]]
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[[Category:Subgroups]]
[[Category: Technology]]
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[[Category:Technology]]
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[[Category:Gimmicks]]

Revision as of 22:06, 6 April 2016

The name or term Headmaster refers to more than one character or idea. For a list of other meanings, see Headmaster (disambiguation).


Headmasters are a type of symbiotic variation on the Transformer lifeform in which a smaller sentient being, frequently but not exclusively organic, transforms into the head of a larger robot. The process by which this is accomplished varies by continuity. In conversation, the term "Headmaster" can apply to both the primary partner (the head) and the significant other (the body).

Headmasters

Aren't they a little too young to be control the heads of Transformers?

Headmaster bonding in most continuities occurs between two sentient beings, but there have been cases in which the head or the body (such as the Transtectors in the Japanese anime or the Sunstreaker clones in the IDW continuity) is a non-sentient construct controlled entirely by the other partner.

When it occurs between two sentient beings, the benefits of the Headmaster procedure are many: The partner gains control of a larger, more powerful body, and the Transformer gains an extra perspective on the battlefield, the psychic binary bonding involved allowing him to draw on both his own ideas, tactics, and instincts as well as those of his partner as quickly as if they were coming from his own head (since they are).

Fiction

Note: Early promotional materials, including catalogs and toy commercials, advertised the Decepticon Nebulan partners as "trainers" for their beastly companions, rather than equal partners. One commercial took this so far as to have the "trainers" holding whips and ordering Weirdwolf, et. al. to jump through hoops of fire.

Marvel Comics

The Headmaster technology was primarily the invention of the Nebulan scientist Arcana and was designed originally to let Nebulans utilize the bodies of Autobots to defend their world, something they did not trust the Autobots enough to let them do on their own. Broken Glass!

In this continuity, all Headmaster partnerships seen are human/Nebulan-Transformer. The organic half of the pair is able to transform by use of a special suit of Headmaster armor and a control helmet that interfaces with bio-cybernetic augmentation in the surgically altered humanoid. It is possible for an organic to control/communicate with the larger robot's form with only the control helmet, even if he has not undergone the binary bonding/augmentation process to let him transform into a head, and likewise, an altered/binary-bonded organic remains permanently psychically connected to his partner regardless of whether he retains the helmet or armor.

The main weakness in the design comes from conflicts of personality. Since there was never meant to be an equal partnership in the original Headmaster concept, very little attention was paid to how the Transformer and the organic partner would interact during the original bonding. As the prototypes of the binary bonding idea, the Headmasters suffered from a lack of knowledge on how important this interaction would be. Many early Headmasters simply did not get along with their own bodies, and vice-versa. Because of this, partners would often disagree or be at odds with each other, resulting in confusion in the Transformer as the voices in his head had extended arguments over what to do. Depending on the compatibility and personalities of the partners, their minds tend to merge to different extents and their joint psyche manifests in unique ways for each individual.

For instance, in the comic, Spike and Fort Max were two separate minds sharing one body, with each dominant in his own form and the other submissive, while Lord Zarak and Scorponok seemed to reach some sort of fusion where he was both beings merged into one, with Scorponok to all intents and purposes becoming entriely subsumed by Zarak's personality (to the extent that, during the battle with Unicron, "Scorponok"'s interior monologue identifies himself as being Zarak merely filling the role of Scorponok, implying that the original Scorponok psyche was essentially gone). A similar situation developed between Optimus Prime and Hi-Q, except in the reverse.

Note: This was not an unexpected problem for the Transformers. Early combiner teams had similar issues, with the resulting gestalt being much simpler and less intelligent than the sum of its parts, often because the parts did not get along. However, since the Nebulans failed to ask before starting the Headmaster plan, they were not able to avoid this problem.

Headmaster partners are unique amongst their brethren (the Targetmasters and Powermasters) in that they have the power to take full control over the body they are connected to, often against that Transformer's will. However, over time, both the Headmasters and their Transformer partners realized that they worked better when both sides had a say in things (two heads being better than one), and the relationship between them evolved from master/slave into a more equal partnership. In that cooperation lies the real strength of the Headmaster process.

The Transformers cartoon

Headmasters early heads
HEADMASTERS

"HEY! You stole my head" "No You stole my Head" "YOU BOTH stole MY head design"

In this continuity, the Headmaster process was the brainchild of Brainstorm, who had advocated that using an organic partner would be a good strategy in combat with the Decepticons. It also seems much less invasive for the organic humanoid involved. No surgical alteration is apparently needed on their part, and the process seems to consist mainly of altering the Transformer's head to 1) have a control center for a partner to sit at inside and 2) transform around the partner into a fancy exosuit. While some who have undergone it have commented at feeling a closer bond with their respective partners, there is no reason to believe there is any true psychic connection between them as in the binary bonding of other continuities. The Rebirth, Part 1

Japanese animated continuity

Attempting to escape the wars on Cybertron, a group of diminutive Cybertronians (most of them only a little larger than human beings) fled the planet, only to have their ship crash on the hazardous, inhospitable planet Master. The need for survival fostered several technological advances (helped in part by technology derived from a time-traveling spaceship that crashed on the planet sometime later). Chief among them was the creation of "Transtectors": large, lifeless robot bodies which the smaller robots could connect to and control. The small Cybertronians had not yet actually mastered the art of transformation, however, and had to undergo rigorous mental and physical training in order to become "Headmasters" (their name, obviously enough, derived from the planet itself).

The Headmasters subsequently migrated from Master and joined the Autobot and Decepticon forces on Cybertron and Earth, leading to a lengthy conflict that ultimately resulted in both factions departing the Earth for a prolonged period of time. With easy access to Earth cut off, leaving its safety in doubt should it be attacked by Decepticons in the future, the Autobots on Master created Master-Braces, technology that harnessed the mysterious Chōkon Power to transform humans and allow them to connect to Transtectors and become Headmasters themselves. A set of six Master-Braces and Transtectors were dispatched to Earth, but half the shipment was stolen by Decepticons, and both factions subsequently used the technology to turn three young human children into Headmasters in defense of Earth.

Images (3)

What's next? He took his head off, now what? It turns into a gun?

Cybertronian Headmasters possess numerous energy-manipulating superpowers. They are able to exchange Transtectors freely with their fellow Headmasters to increase their power levels and can link up with each other in the Head Formation for various destructive results. In contrast, human Headmasters do not possess any of these powers, but have their own natural physical strength and reflexes enhanced many times over by the energies filling their bodies. Their cellular structures undergo some form of ill-defined holistic transformation which allows them somehow to transform their actual, physical bodies into heads. However, unlike organic Headmasters in other continuities, they do not have to undergo any permanent alteration; they are capable of "turning off" their powers and becoming normal human beings with ease, the only drawback being that they are unable to remove the Master-Braces that give them their powers.

Dreamwave comics

Though only glimpsed in profile art, the Headmaster heads here seem to be larger "mecha" that the human partners pilot. More Than Meets The Eye

IDW comics continuity

This section covers fiction that is ongoing. It will be added to as the story progresses. If it isn't current, you can help by updating it.

The Headmaster technology is a product of the shadowy human organization known as the Machination, using technology developed by Scorponok on the planet Nebulos. Following a tip offered to him by Swindle, Ultra Magnus found schematics for enhancing a biological entity with Cybertronian technology, in effect producing a "transformable man". Magnus was able to determine that Nebulan businessman Mo Zarak had been subjected to this process shortly before Scorponok fled the premises. Spotlight: Ultra Magnus

Approximately 18 years later, the Machination captured Sunstreaker and Hunter O'Nion. They dismantled Sunstreaker and subjected Hunter to an extensive regimen of surgery and implants. Subsequently, they attempted to brainwash him into one of their soldiers. Escalation Hunter resisted and was able to contact Sunstreaker, allowing him to become a Headmaster to fight for the Autobots. Devastation

Initially, all Headmasters created by the Machination were non-sentient, guided by their human pilots. As well, all of these models were replicas of Sunstreaker, wired into the Autobot's actual head to help coordinate their movements. However, the success of these initial forays into the technology allowed for the first true binary-bond, enabling Abraham Dante to combine with his Decepticon master Scorponok to facilitate his rebirth. Devastation

Limitations

Without their heads, Transformer Headmasters are at a severe disadvantage. Most Autobots and Decepticons are shown entering a kind of stasis lock when their heads disconnect from their robot modes, often seeming sluggish and able to perform only the most basic of functions. In their alternate modes, however, a

Images (4)

You got the nerve to call me ugly?! Look at you!

Headmaster seems no different from any other Transformer, perhaps a little more dangerous. With another intelligent being to help with the task of driving, flying, or shooting, the Headmaster is able to focus more clearly on tactics, strategy, or just the task at hand, freeing up considerable processing power from more mundane requirements. This makes a Headmaster capable of extreme multi-tasking and amazingly rapid decision-making—if the two partners have similar attitudes and mindsets.

Homages

  • The Unicron Trilogy featured a few examples of smaller robots (Mini-Cons) becoming the heads of larger ones.
    • Armada Sideways had two Mini-Con drivers, Rook and Crosswise, for his motorcycle form that could become individual heads, or combine together into a larger robot/driver.
    • Armada Overload's Mini-Con partner Rollout became the head (and part of the chest) of the larger robot, who could in turn become armor for Optimus Prime.
    • Energon Omega Supreme also had a Headmaster partner, Omega, which combined with two vehicles to form a large robot.
  • The Transformers Animated series features a supervillain named Headmaster who can use a flying robotic head that aggressively removes another robot's head and replaces it with itself. The head itself can also transform into a small robot mode.
Main article: Headmaster (Animated)