Alpha Trion: Prime of Primes, Sage of Secrets
The Archivist Who Outlived Eternity: Hands-On with the Sage of Secrets
In the sprawling mythos of Cybertron, few figures loom as large yet remain as enigmatic as Alpha Trion. Within the newly unveiled Transformers: Age of the Primes continuity—Hasbro’s bold reweaving of the franchise’s primordial tapestry—Alpha Trion stands revealed not merely as a wise elder or bureaucratic record-keeper, but as one of the original Thirteen Primes created by Primus himself. Specifically, he is the keeper of the Covenant of Primus, the living chronicle of Cybertronian destiny, and the only Prime explicitly designated with the subtitle “Sage of Secrets” in promotional materials—an intriguing, deeply mystical moniker that hints at narrative depths still unplumbed.
This is no mere cameo. Age of the Primes positions Alpha Trion as the gravitational center of the entire Thirteen saga, a figure whose beard (yes, the beard remains beautifully canon) contains more physical history than most galactic civilizations. Where Solus Prime forged, Megatronus famously betrayed, and Prima led, Alpha Trion patiently wrote. And in a toy franchise where structural continuity is less a straight line than a complex Möbius strip, his role as the ultimate archivist makes him the one true constant in a chaotic multiverse of endless reboots.
| Toy Release | Size Class | Mold Origins & Alt Mode |
|---|---|---|
| Titans Return (2016) | Voyager Class | Heavy retool of Scourge; transforms into a futuristic Spaceship / Cybertronian Lion hybrid. |
| Power of the Primes (2018) | Prime Master | Micro-figure scale; transforms into a small spark core that inserts into Prime Armor. |
| Legacy United (2024) | Voyager Class | Heavy retool of Vector Prime; stylized closer to modern Comic/Animated structural profiles. |
| Studio Series '86 / Premium | Leader/Commander Spec | 100% unique standalone tooling; engineered for pure, uncompromised G1 cartoon accuracy. |
The Thirteen: Context for a Prime
To understand Alpha Trion’s stature, one must first grasp the Thirteen. Introduced in the 2010 Transformers: The Covenant of Primus novel by Justina Robson (later retroactively folded into the Aligned continuity), the Thirteen Primes were the first Cybertronians, each embodying an archetypal aspect of Primus’s will. They were not a team in the modern sense—no shared group chat—but a pantheon of demigods who shaped the planet’s infancy before scattering into legend, exile, or oblivion.
Age of the Primes—a multimedia initiative spanning comics (Skybound), animation (still in development), and toy lines—reestablishes the Thirteen as the foundational mythology. Alpha Trion is not just in this group; he is its memory. While Prima wielded the Star Saber and Solus Prime crafted the Forge of Solus Prime, Alpha Trion’s artifact is the Quill—yes, a quill—which he uses to inscribe the Covenant, a tome that allegedly records not just history but potential history. The book is less a diary and more a choose-your-own-adventure written by God.
Design Evolution: From Bureaucrat to Bearded Oracle
Alpha Trion’s visual journey is a masterclass in iterative reverence. His first appearance in The Transformers Season 2 episode “War Dawn” (1985) cast him as a diminutive, white-bearded archivist in the Golden Age of Cybertron, voiced by John Stephenson with a gravitas that suggested he’d seen the heat death of universes and found it mildly disappointing. His design: a compact, almost gnome-like frame with a flowing beard and a helmet resembling a bishop’s miter. He was the Gandalf of filing cabinets.
Alpha Trion (Age of the Primes) Transformation Level Rating
Transformation Rating: EASY
The Experience: This figure offers a smooth, satisfying conversion process. The parts move freely and require minimal force, making it a truly "fidget-friendly" toy. You can transform it back and forth with ease—most people only need to check the manual once (if at all).
Fast-forward to the Aligned continuity (Transformers: Prime, 2010–2013), and Alpha Trion becomes a member of the Thirteen, his design updated into a towering, regal figure with crystalline armor and a beard that could double as a tapestry. The Age of the Primes toy line (Wave 1, 2025) takes this further: a Leader-class figure with a translucent “Covenant” chest panel that lights up to reveal scrolling Cybertronian glyphs. The packaging bio reads: “Alpha Trion records all timelines. Some he shares. Most he does not.”
Notably, the figure includes an alternate “A-3” head sculpt—a nod to his pre-Prime designation in the Covenant of Primus, where he is the third created after Prima and Megatronus. This is the kind of deep-cut continuity that makes collectors weep energon tears.
The Covenant of Primus: More Than a Book
The Covenant is not just Alpha Trion’s accessory; it is his function. In Age of the Primes lore, the tome is a quantum artifact, a living database that updates in real-time across timelines. When Optimus Prime dies in one universe, the Covenant notes it. When a human child in 1984 names a toy “Bumblebee,” the Covenant logs the cultural impact. Alpha Trion does not merely write history—he curates it.
This raises fascinating canonical questions. In the Transformers: Exodus novel (2010), Alpha Trion is shown altering records to protect Orion Pax (pre-Optimus Prime) from Sentinel Prime’s regime. Is this censorship or preservation? In Age of the Primes #3 (Skybound, 2025), a flashback reveals Alpha Trion erasing an entire alternate timeline where Unicron devoured Cybertron in the first nanosecond of existence. His justification: “Some truths are too heavy for sparks to bear.”
| Included Accessories | Lore Significance & In-Toy Functionality | Plastic Type |
|---|---|---|
| The Quill | The legendary instrument used to write the history of Cybertron into the Covenant. Molded at an accurate scale to fit cleanly inside the figure's articulated index finger hands. | Rigid Plastic |
| Covenant of Primus | The massive book of prophecy. The accessory features a micro-hinge allowing it to be displayed completely closed or wide open on a tactical command desk. | Rigid Plastic |
| Energon Scimitar | Alpha Trion’s traditional combat blade. Engineered with a standard 5mm peg for compatibility across his back panel or hand ports. | Translucent / Soft |
| Cape / Robe Assembly | Fabric or segmented plastic shoulder garb. Tailored to flare outwards to prevent hindering the figure's natural arm and shoulder joint articulation. | Soft Goods / Premium |
Relationships: Mentor, Manipulator, or Both?
Alpha Trion’s dynamic with Optimus Prime is the emotional core of his character. In “War Dawn,” he sends a young Aerialbot back in time to witness Orion Pax’s transformation into Optimus—a closed causal loop that implies Alpha Trion engineered Optimus’s ascension. The Aligned continuity doubles down: Alpha Trion is the one who gifts Orion the Matrix of Leadership, effectively crowning him.
But Age of the Primes complicates this. In the animated prologue (released on Hasbro Pulse, 2025), Alpha Trion is shown debating with Prima about whether to intervene in the Quintesson invasion. Prima argues for non-interference; Alpha Trion counters that “destiny is a suggestion, not a shackle.” He then secretly aids the resistance, planting the seeds for Optimus’s rise millennia later. This is not mentorship—it’s cosmic puppeteering.
His relationship with Solus Prime is equally layered. The Thirteen’s sole female member, Solus was murdered by Megatronus in a fit of jealousy. Alpha Trion’s records of the event are the only surviving account, and in Age of the Primes #5, a data-ghost of Solus accuses him of sanitizing the truth to protect the Thirteen’s legacy. Did he lie to preserve unity, or to hide his own complicity? The comic leaves it ambiguous, which is Alpha Trion’s brand.
Powers and Abilities: The Pen Is Mightier Than the Star Saber
Alpha Trion is not a frontline warrior. His combat feats are rare but decisive. In Transformers: The Covenant of Primus, he briefly wields the Quill as a weapon, slicing through Unicron’s heralds by erasing their temporal anchors—a move that deletes them from existence across all timelines. It’s less a fight and more a bureaucratic assassination.
His primary ability is chronal cognition: the capacity to perceive multiple timelines simultaneously. This is visualized in the Age of the Primes toy line via a “Timeline Shift” gimmick—press a button on the figure’s back, and the chest panel cycles through different historical glyphs (the fall of the Predacons, the rise of the Maximals, even a cryptic symbol resembling the Transformers: Animated logo). It’s a toy feature that doubles as lore.
The “At Least” Conundrum
The promotional tagline “The Thirteen: Alpha Trion At Least” is not a typo. In the Age of the Primes style guide (leaked on TFW2005, later confirmed by Hasbro), Alpha Trion is described as “the Prime of Record, designated A-3, at least until the Covenant reveals otherwise.” This suggests the possibility of additional Primes—or that Alpha Trion’s role transcends the Thirteen entirely.
A clue lies in the packaging for the “Covenant of Primus” accessory pack (sold separately). The instruction manual includes a cipher that, when decoded, reads: “The Thirteenth is the reader.” Meta-narrative implications aside, this positions Alpha Trion as a liminal figure—part of the Thirteen, yet apart from them, a scribe who may outrank the gods he documents.
Cultural Impact: The Beard as Meme
Alpha Trion’s beard has achieved memetic status. In the 1980s, it was a symbol of wisdom. In the 2010s, it became a punchline (“How does Alpha Trion eat soup?”). By 2025, the Age of the Primes marketing campaign leans into it: a promotional image shows Alpha Trion braiding his beard while dictating the fall of Nova Prime, captioned “Multitasking since the Hot Spots.”
The beard is also functional. In Age of the Primes #7, it’s revealed to be a nano-filament archive, each strand encoding a terabyte of data. When Solus Prime’s spark is restored in a backup artifact, Alpha Trion literally reads his beard to locate the frequency. It’s the most gloriously absurd canon detail since the Quintesson sharkticons.
Legacy and the Future of the Thirteen
As Age of the Primes unfolds, Alpha Trion’s role will only grow. The Skybound comic has teased a confrontation with Liege Maximo, the Prime of Deception, who seeks to rewrite the Covenant to erase his own crimes. The animation project (rumored for 2026) reportedly features Alpha Trion as a narrator, his voice guiding viewers through the Thirteen’s rise and fall.
Hasbro’s toy roadmap includes a “Vector Prime + Alpha Trion” 2-pack, hinting at a time-travel subplot. Vector Prime, the master of time, and Alpha Trion, the master of history, are natural foils. Their interactions may finally answer whether the Covenant predicts the future or creates it.
| Ancient Pantheon Companion | Line Origin | Aesthetic Cohesion Rating | Display Compatibility Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vector Prime | Legacy United | ★★★★★ | Flawless cohesion. Their identical stylistic sculpting cues and matching Cybertronian patterns blend perfectly on a shelf. |
| Nova Prime | Legacy Evolution | ★★★★☆ | Excellent structural height ratio. Nova looks imposing, though his crisp white armor can sometimes drown out Alpha's softer maroons. |
| Prima / Onyx Prime | Power of the Primes | ★★☆☆☆ | Poor scaling compatibility. Those older Prime Master micro-scales look completely out of place next to a modern Voyager or Leader build. |
| Quintesson Judge | Earthrise | ★★★★★ | The ultimate thematic pairing. Perfect for setting up high-concept "Rebellion of Cybertron" G1 historical dioramas. |
Conclusion: The Prime Who Refused to Fade
Alpha Trion is the ultimate survivor—not through strength, but through story. In a franchise that reboots every decade, he is the through-line, the one constant in a sea of retcons. Transformers: Age of the Primes does not just elevate him; it justifies him. He is not a relic of 1980s animation or a plot device for Optimus’s origin. He is the reason the origin matters at all.
The final page of Age of the Primes #1 shows Alpha Trion alone in the Hall of Records, the Covenant open before him. A single line of new text glows on the page: “And in the age of primes reborn, the archivist awakens.” The beard, as always, remains impeccably groomed.
Age of the Primes: Release Guide (2026)
The figures below represent market values at the time of this review. View the full and updated [Transformers: Age of the Primes] guide.
| CLASS | NAME | WAVE/YR | RETAIL | CURRENT MARKET | RARITY | KEY NOTES |
| Titan | Star Optimus Prime | 2025 | $149.99 | $160–$195 | Rare | Includes Hot Rod & Micro-trailer. 3-in-1 conversion. |
| Titan | Trypticon (Selects) | 2025 | $199.99 | $210–$250 | Rare | G1-style reissue with AOTP-themed packaging. |
| Cmdr | Silverbolt | W1/25 | $89.99 | $110–$145 | Uncommon | Forms torso of Superion. Often sold out. |
| Cmdr | Onslaught | W1/26 | $99.99 | $100–$130 | Rare | New for 2026. Forms torso of Bruticus. |
| Leader | Megatronus (The Fallen) | W1/25 | $54.99 | $75–$110 | Rare | Includes Requiem Blaster. Extremely popular. |
| Leader | G2 Grimlock | W1/25 | $54.99 | $45–$65 | Common | Includes Wheelie. Turquoise G2 deco. |
| Leader | Onyx Prime | W2/25 | $54.99 | $60–$85 | Uncommon | First beast-form Prime. Highly articulated. |
| Leader | Liege Maximo | W2/26 | $59.99 | $65–$90 | Uncommon | Based on G2 design. Just released June 2026. |
| Leader | Big Convoy | W3/26 | $59.99 | $65–$85 | Common | Beast Wars Neo tribute. Massive “Big Cannon.” |
| Voyager | Prima Prime | W1/25 | $34.99 | $45–$70 | Uncommon | Includes the Star Saber. The “First Prime.” |
| Voyager | Alpha Trion | W3/25 | $34.99 | $45–$60 | Uncommon | Includes the Quill and Covenant of Primus. |
| Voyager | Nexus Prime | W2/26 | $42.99 | $45–$60 | Common | The archetypal Combiner. Clean 2026 engineering. |
| Voyager | Flatline | W3/25 | $34.99 | $35–$50 | Common | Decepticon medic. Retool of Legacy Hoist. |
| Voyager | Brawl | W3/26 | $42.99 | $45–$65 | Rare | Forms Bruticus leg. High demand for team building. |
| Deluxe | Solus Prime | W1/25 | $24.99 | $30–$45 | Common | Includes Forge of Solus Prime. |
| Deluxe | Air Raid | W1/25 | $24.99 | $35–$50 | Uncommon | Forms Superion arm. Essential piece. |
| Deluxe | Slingshot | W1/25 | $24.99 | $30–$45 | Common | Forms Superion arm. |
| Deluxe | Vortex | W2/25 | $24.99 | $40–$65 | Rare | Forms Bruticus arm. Fastest seller of Wave 2. |
| Deluxe | Sureshot | W3/26 | $27.99 | $35–$55 | Uncommon | Finally completes the G1 Targetmaster trio. |
| Deluxe | Animated Ratchet | W2/26 | $27.99 | $30–$45 | Common | Fan-favorite design from the 2008 series. |
| Deluxe | Blast Off | W3/26 | $27.99 | $45–$70 | Rare | Forms Bruticus arm. Often short-packed. |
Price Fluctuation Warning: Secondary market prices can change rapidly due to collector demand, rarity, condition (mint vs. opened), reissues, anniversaries, and overall market trends. New releases often start near retail but may rise with scarcity; older figures can drop if restocked or fall if demand cools.





