Review by: [Name/Handle] Rating: 8/10 (High marks for ambition and heart; docked points for pacing and tonal whiplash)
“You are not your first mistake. You are what you choose to become next.” — Optimus Prime, EarthSpark Season 1
Families, lapsed G1 fans, anyone who cried during The Iron Giant . Not recommended for: Viewers who demand non-stop action, or those who believe Decepticons should always be pure evil.
The show’s central family becomes the Malto parents (Dot and Alex), the kids, and the first two Terrans, (a snarky, anxious hawk-like drone) and Thrash (a hyperactive, trash-compactor motorcycle with the heart of a golden retriever). Their mentor? A weary, guilt-ridden Optimus Prime and a brilliantly reinvented Bumblebee , now acting as a big-brother figure. What Works Brilliantly 1. The Terrans: A Fresh Take on Transformer Identity For decades, Transformers were born into factions (Autobot/Decepticon) or were veterans of a million-year war. EarthSpark asks: What if a Transformer had no memory of war? What if they learned about good and evil from a human family? Twitch and Thrash are a revelation. Twitch’s arc about anxiety and fear of the unknown mirrors real childhood struggles. Thrash’s impulsive chaos leads to genuine consequences. Their sibling dynamic is raw, loud, and loving. When Twitch says, “I don’t want to be a weapon,” it hits harder than any explosion in the Michael Bay films.
The show dares to do something controversial: redeem Decepticons. Megatron is present. Not as a tyrant, but as a pacifist exile living in a hidden sanctuary, growing organic plants to atone for his crimes. His interactions with Optimus are tense, philosophical, and heartbreaking. The show doesn’t excuse his past but argues that change is possible. Similarly, Breakdown and even a reprogrammed Shockwave appear, challenging the black-and-white morality of previous series.