Here we have Smokescreen in his vehicle mode. Surprisingly, it manages to be the closest to his proper TFP model unlike his fellow cast members. Cliff was second closest to his design, Arcee, Knockout, and the QuakeWing brothers deviated further, and Bulkhead was nothing like his TFP self. While some of the details aren't exactly 1:1, such as his headlight not having covers and the door decals not matching the style the show had them as, it's at least better than I expected in the accuracy. While we have enough color break up so he isn't blindingly white, he should use some silver paint for the rims at least. Also, the front ends where the wheels are tend to have difficulty tabbing in place, though that stems from the somewhat tight space with the arms tucking underneath the front of the car while also form part of the hood.
What will be his robot mode blasters end up on the rear bumper and serve as nitrous pipes, though sliding them in place requires that the pegs (which are still 5mm in width but not in overall circumference) are vertical and not horizontal. Also, while he could use a bit of paint on the back for the taillights, he also struggles to tab in place somewhat in the back.
Here he is next to his TFP counterpart, and you can see how close the two almost are aesthetically. J wouldn't be surprised if the paint app layout of the Go version was what the Hasbro team used for their new Smokescreen, though likely because they can't access the CG models for some reason like they could with the dead RED line. However it seems they traded silver rims and headlight covers for an Autobot insignia and silver headlights.
Transformation is closer to the G1 Jazz transformation than a version of the Datsun trio. Granted, they both have fairly similar designs but with different proportions for the chests and the latter having door wings (Jazz is inconsistent with whether he has them or not), but we now use chunks of the altmode front for the shoulders while the legs use no waist rotation. In fact, the rear wheels now face forwards like with Jazz rather than backwards. The robot mode takes the similarities even further with the proportions better matching the RID 2015 version of Jazz than TFP Smokescreen. I know we have the broad strokes still present for Smokey, but between the bulkier upper body, the chest sort of facing forward and not being broken up, and the part layout matching what we saw in the sequel series, it's almost like Jazz is what they had in mind for this toy before they decided "wait we can make a slightly different white car bot out of this from the Aligned Continuity and sell it first because TFP sells better for nostalgia than RID15). Not a bad thing necessarily but I have to wonder if they will repeat the same thing and turn this into Prowl for a Beast Hunters lore cut despite him already still being white. As for the design, it still has the general identity down, but I feel like the torso is confused as whether it's trying to match the TFP design or stick with the limitations of using real parts. On the plus side, he doesn't have the entire halves worth of hood and roof kibble on his forearms, and I appreciate that his feet aren't wonky as hell without any proper engineering implementation or ankle joints. Still, does anyone feel like his chest sits up a little higher than it should?
Head sculpt is less stylized to better match the overall Generations design philosophy, but while the red paint apps are accurate to the show, they kind of make for a weird beard at the bottom of the face rather than matching the proper placement they had in the show. Perhaps they would look better if they were a darker shade. Articulation consists of a ball jointed neck, shoulder rotation, outward arm movement, bicep rotation, double jointed elbows, waist rotation, universal hips (though the mushroom joints used for the front and back movement are curiously hidden behind a codpiece panel), thigh rotation, hinged knees (with a weird click that also involves the tabs for straightening them, slight hinges for moving the feet up as well as pivots.
Those same nubbins attach to the forearms to serve as his blasters. Kind of a cool way to show the TFP weapons coming out of the forearms schtick, but they look like G1 punch dildos. Also this trick, while a common thing for most Autobot Cars, was commonly done with Sunstreaker and any of the taller characters that are still shorter than Optimus.
Here he is next to the Beast Hunters version for a bot mode comparison. While I prefer my TFP bots to better match the show they come from, I will admit that the Smokescreen mold at least does a few good things worth acknowledging, especially when it comes to kibble management and articulation. Hell, the altmode resembling what we got in 2012/3 is a huge plus over what everyone else got. However, I still think the best Smokescreen is neither one of these molds; maybe we can wait for APC Toys or Gear Factory to get around making one with a huge level of improvements, but for now, I think this mold is decent yet could work better as an entirely different character. RID15 Jazz or even a TFSS style Barricade would be sweet.
Final ranking: ⭐⭐⭐ out of ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐





















































