Reading "G1" always confuses me a bit, since I know it simply as "The Transformers cartoon." Ah, so
G2 was much later, in 1992-94. I was too old for toys and cartoons by then, so that explains why I have no familiarity with that (or anything since).
This man speaks the truth. Snarl was the only full-size Transformers toy that I had (those things were insanely expensive for toys in the mid-80s) and it was disappointing to me that he factored so little in the cartoons. I still loved that toy, though, and it's been driving me crazy that I haven't seen it in over 20 years. Every few years, I go rooting through the childhood toy attic area at my parents' home, hoping to finally find it, but I never do. It's the house that I grew up in and I would've never thrown out or given Snarl away, so I can't imagine where else it could be, but it saddens me that I can't find it.
BTW, I was just looking up Snarl on Wikipedia (yeah, he has his own page) and, at the bottom, one of the versions was this "Snarl" from Transformers: Classics...
Never mind that it's not the Snarl that we know... what the heck kind of character design is that in the first place? That's messed up.
The bottom one looks like a redeco/recast of a Beast Wars figure from the 90s. Yeah, they weren't exactly known for their creativity in terms of making worthwhile robot
and alt modes by that point. A lot of G1 robots were kind of bonkers design-wise too, but they felt more like limitations of the toy-making technology of the time coupled with the fact that they were never meant to be fully humanoid, sentient robot characters in that mode (G1 Ironhide and Ratchet are among the worst offenders. They were clearly meant to turn from vans into rolling battle stations for human pilots, so their "robot" mode was a seat with a half-assed face decal sitting up behind the car windshield and looking nothing like the animation models that had the windshields as the chest), but by the 90s they were making damn fine regular transformers toys so there was no excuse for the laziness of the Beast Wars set in some cases.
You're also lucky you had a Snarl. Only Dinobot I had was the purple G2 release of Grimlock. I wanted Snarl so badly that one day I saw on in a clearance pile of G2 transformers at a K-Mart when I was shopping with my mom, but when I opened the package in the car, the spring to pop one of the robot mode hands out of the dinosaur leg was broken and we had to take it back. I never did find another one.
and if you want the best example of Snarl getting the shaft:
He's in the Transformers Movie for all of about 5 seconds.
Behold, the only times you see him in the movie:
That's it. he doesn't do anything, he doesn't say anything, and any other time you see the rest of the Dinobots, it's everyone but him.
The script apparently even repeatedly refers to "the 4 Dinobots" and Snarl usually gets left out presumably because he wasn't one of the original 3, and Swoop was considered more interesting because he was a Pteranadon.
He might even get the shaft now because they've re-shuffled the Dinobot names in newer toys/fiction because "Slag" (the triceratops) is a vulgar word in the UK. So sometimes the triceratops is now called Snarl, and they just ignore having a Stegosaurus.
and in a fun bit of trivia, apparently a bunch of original Snarl toys had to be recalled because they were painted using lead-based paint. Fun times
as an aside, there's a collector series of "Masterpiece" toys out now that are super-detailed.
want.
EDIT: I know how incredibly nerdy all that talk is, but even just outside of my Transformers fanboyism, the history of the brand, its creation, and the various parties involved fascinates me.