Is Transformers Rise Of The Beasts A Prequel To The 2007 Film?

2025-11-07 08:07:38 154
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2 Answers

Uriah
Uriah
2025-11-08 07:06:14
Nope — not really a prequel to the 2007 'Transformers' film. I usually tell people it’s easier to think of the franchise like two separate runs: the Bayverse that started with 'Transformers' in 2007, and the newer direction that began with 'Bumblebee' and continues into 'Rise of the Beasts.' Since 'Rise of the Beasts' takes place in 1994 and follows on the tone and story threads from 'Bumblebee,' it sits earlier on the timeline but in a different continuity.

That means you shouldn’t expect it to directly lead into the events of the 2007 movie — it’s more of a fresh chapter that borrows classic characters and Beast Wars lore while telling its own story. I liked how it introduced Maximals and Predacons without trying to be a Bayverse bridge; it felt like its own thing, which was refreshing.
Yvette
Yvette
2025-11-08 17:24:51
Timeline debates are my guilty pleasure, so this one’s right up my alley. Short version: 'Transformers: Rise of the Beasts' is not a direct prequel to the 2007 'Transformers' movie in the way people usually mean by that term. It’s set earlier than the 2007 film — in 1994 — and it follows the continuity established by 'Bumblebee' (which was set in the late ’80s). Because of that earlier setting you can say it’s chronologically before the Bay-directed 2007 film, but chronologically-before doesn’t equal narratively-connected.

The bigger point is continuity: the movies split into two distinct threads. The original Bayverse kicked off with 'Transformers' in 2007 and ran through several sequels, with its own tone, character arcs, and worldbuilding choices. Then came 'Bumblebee' in 2018, which functioned as a soft reboot — a tonal reset and a more character-focused origin story that didn’t tie itself tightly to the Bayverse’s events. 'Rise of the Beasts' continues from the 'Bumblebee' path. It leans into Beast Wars-inspired factions like the Maximals and Predacons and builds on the emotional, smaller-scale approach from 'Bumblebee' rather than trying to retroactively fit into the Michael Bay continuity.

So if you’re hoping to watch 'Rise of the Beasts' and suddenly get Easter eggs that directly set up the 2007 film’s opening act, that’s not the point the filmmakers were making. Fans will find connections in shared franchise DNA — classic characters, returning voices, familiar designs — but the new films are carving their own live-action saga. I personally appreciate that: the Beast Wars elements felt fresh, and seeing a different take on Autobots in a more grounded, character-driven story is enjoyable. It’s more of a sibling to the 2007 film in the franchise family tree than a prequel who’s trying to explain the Bayverse origin. For what it’s worth, I’m excited to see where this branch goes next.
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