Prime 1 Studio Transformers Revenge of the Fallen Devastator Statue
Standing over 1 metre tall, Prime 1 Studio's Museum Masterline Devastator brings the giant Constructicon from Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen to life with astonishing CGI-accurate detail, a massive display base, LED-lit eyes, and optional Vortex Grinder parts.

Remember the giant Decepticon that vacuumed the top off the Great Pyramid of Giza? No? Well, Prime 1 Studio is making sure you do with the Museum Masterline Devastator. This latest Museum Masterline piece recreates the towering Constructicon combiner from Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen at well over 1 meter (3.3 feet) tall.

Prime 1 Studio Transformers Revenge of the Fallen Devastator Statue

For years, the closest collectors got to a movie-accurate Devastator came not from Hasbro or Takara Tomy, but from third-party maker Devil Saviour. While its unofficial combiner remains an astonishing engineering feat, it was never truly screen-accurate. After all, asking nine construction vehicles to transform and combine into one giant robot inevitably demands compromises.

Prime 1 Studio isn’t building a toy. It’s recreating a CGI model—and for someone like me who has wrestled with a third-party Devastator through the exhausting process of transforming and combining it, it’s easy to concede that the most faithful way to capture this enormous beast is in its combined form alone.

That philosophy carries through every square inch of the statue. Prime 1 Studio says Devastator was one of Industrial Light & Magic’s largest digital creations for the film, built from more than 52,000 individual parts. Reproducing that level of mechanical chaos in three-dimensional form was no small task. Every tangled panel, hydraulic line, gear, and mechanical curve has been sculpted to withstand close inspection, inviting collectors to keep leaning in for “just one more look.”

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The individual Constructicons have not been forgotten either. Distinctive elements such as the concrete mixer at Devastator’s neck, crane arms, excavator buckets, and construction machinery components are all faithfully integrated into the colossal combined form. The familiar mix of red, yellow, and green completes the screen-accurate appearance, while layered LED-lit eyes add an appropriately menacing stare.

The custom display base deserves plenty of attention, too. Scattered with trailer homes and wrecked vehicles, it recreates the destruction left in Devastator’s wake while giving collectors a better sense of just how absurdly enormous this Decepticon really is.

If the standard version is somehow not intimidating enough, Prime 1 Studio is also preparing optional display parts. Collectors can swap in an alternate head with Devastator’s mouth fully opened to recreate the infamous Vortex Grinder weapon. A display model of Skids and Mudflap is also included, adding a fun nod to the Twins’ frantic encounters with the giant Constructicon.

Pricing has yet to be announced, while pre-orders are scheduled to begin in the third quarter of 2026. But trust me, it is not going to be gentle with your bank account, so better start saving now. Also, perhaps, you may want to start reinforcing the display shelf.

Prime 1 Studio Transformers Revenge of the Fallen Devastator Statue
Prime 1 Studio Transformers Revenge of the Fallen Devastator Statue
Prime 1 Studio Transformers Revenge of the Fallen Devastator Statue
Prime 1 Studio Transformers Revenge of the Fallen Devastator Statue

Images: Prime 1 Studio.