Here we have Sideways in his Cybertronic space ship mode. It's said to be designed after the Batwing given how Hasbro designers were thinking about Batman's cinematic return with Christopher Nolan's Batman Begins, no doubt a much bigger time for a new iteration than either Keaton or Pattinson (apart from Affleck since he was part of a crossover instead of a standalone story). Between the bat shape of the wings, the tail fins resembling the ones you'd find in a Batwing, and the head having a vague shape similar to the front section of the vehicle, this and Cybertron Megatron are examples of how to pay tribute to the Dark Knight without going into Collaborative territory. I also love the black and orange color combo we have for the rest of the vehicle mode, which makes him feel more fitting for a Halloween theme now that it's getting closer (as of this writing, August is almost over and stores are putting up decorations and costumes earlier.while the cockpit could benefit from having clear pieces, the rest of the vehicle mode still looks as great as it did in 2005.
For a vehicle mode size comparison, here we have him next to the Unicron Trilogy version of Starscream. While I believe Cybertron Starscream is bulkier than his Legacy United version, I believe Sideways keeps the same size between the 20 year decrease in plastic/increase in price.
Transformation is nearly identical to the original version of the figure we got in 2005, though the wings and weapon now have to be removed. It's the kind of partsforming that the old toy never really had since it was meant to have the weapons on the left arm and lower legs. The rest being faithful to the original version is at least appreciative, much like with Starscream and Hot Shot. The robot mode is just as accurate to the old toy and show model as the vehicle mode. From the orange midriff to the ball shaped hips, this is almost as close as you can get without copying the old mold or using its engineering 100%. For example, the hips are now universal joints instead of ball and socket, while the shoulders are now pinned in addition to the forearms utilizing 5mm ports. Regardless, he maintains the same sleek and deadly design that contrasted his more G1-esque Armada design.
His head sculpt is as faceless as Soundwave was in Transformers Prime, and I love how the whole visor and the horns on top make him feel like an evil Power Ranger. I kind of wish the orange paint was more metallic to sub for translucent plastic. With his cyber key inserted and the gimmick deployed manually, his articulation consists of a ball jointed neck, swivels for the arms front and back as well as the biceps, wrists, waist, and thighs, hinges for the shoulders moving in and out, elbows, knees, and ankles, with universal joints used for the hips as mentioned before. His arm blades can be held together or individually, depending on what suits you best.
Though the gimmick is manual this time, you still have the option to switch between Autobot and Decepticon logos. A simple lever found on the back of his weapon does this in lieu of a spring loaded feature, thanks economy crisis.
Here we have him along with Starscream in robot mode, with the size difference being fairly close to how they appeared back in Cybertron proper. I'm kind of curious on how a new version of Soundwave will turn out given both represented Planet X. Overall, Age of the Primes Sideways is easily going to be a stand out mold from the line thanks to his faithfulness as well as having some improvements in his articulation in spite of ditching the spring loaded gimmick. With how pricey the old toy is in the aftermarket, you should be able to get this figure, even with the issues that were thankfully resolved with canceled preorders.
Final ranking: ⭐⭐⭐⭐ and a half out of ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Or maybe stick with the original if you still have it and all the parts included. It may be slightly better given the clear plastic and denser materials overall beat the current stuff in some ways.
Final ranking: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ out of ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐