![]() When you use it with the app, by the way, all the actions are accompanied by sound effects that play through your phone, making for an even more immersive playing experience. You can also control it via a remote on the companion app if you want even greater operational control over the Autobots leader. The Robosen Elite Optimus Prime can respond to 43 preprogrammed voice commands, including “Convert” (prompts it to morph), “Roll Out” (prompts it to drive off), and “Attack” (prompts it to fight imaginary enemies), so you can command it to do a variety of tasks right out of the box. That means, it gets all the same capabilities as the larger version, from the auto-morphing capability and voice-activated interactions to the programmable movements that allow it to be such a versatile toy robot. As such, it’s also built out of over 5,000 individual components, including 60 microchips and 27 high-precision servo motors. Not only does it look the same as last year’s version, it recreates the complex engineering beneath that shell, too. ![]() Seriously, it mirrors the appearance of the original Optimus Prime from every angle, both in its robot and automotive forms. Despite being smaller, it remains as detailed as the original, recreating every exterior element of the G1 version of the Autobots leader, making it look exactly like it did from the original toy series in the 1980s. The Robosen Elite Optimus Prime is three inches shorter than the Flagship model, standing at 16 inches tall, with the rest of its physical dimensions reduced to match those proportions. Whichever the case, it’s still every bit the engineering marvel that the Flagship version is, albeit at a slightly reduced size. Or maybe they just managed to miniaturize the components further, so that they’re now able to build them in more compact form. Maybe this makes it a little less daunting to find space for in the display shelf. Why make it smaller? We’re not entirely sure. This year, they’re offering a smaller version of it in the form of the Robosen Elite Optimus Prime. A year later, they got the actual license to use the same impressive tech for the 19-inch Flagship Optimus Prime. In 2020, Robosen debuted a robot that looks like an off-brand Transformers knockoff you can buy off a toy shelf from the 90s, except they gave it the ability to perform its shapeshifting actions all on its own.
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