LOL, no hes becoming some one else, basicly he was corrupted and has a new personality trying to take over. Who that personality is,you probilly know
Optimus steals Faces, and Nemesis is even worse. So Nemesis probabbly steals groins. Nemesis would win.
I understand that, I just find it a little amusing how the eyes end up looking like the old 3D glasses. Any particular reason you chose the "nemesis" side to be his right side? Personally, I would have gone with the other side, since that's the side that bears the sword in the poster, and since there's a long metaphorical history of the left side being the more "evil" one (the word "sinister" is simply latin for "left", after all).
Nice effects. He is right. Lefty side things are always evilly, just look at Two-Face or most Doctor Jekyll and Mister Hyde posters. Ow....he's also right about the "sinister=left" thing. Believe me, I majored in Google Translate.
Thats just it, its always the left side and thats why i think the right side is more menacing,cause its always the good side the one you can rely on, not anymore Full Force Nemesis, and yes i know the color changed a bit but its do to how the corruption spreads. I know it sucks around the symbol but i had to cover the logo up, plus the (strike symbol) has to do with the story, I choose Tapout, in a also pre-corruption phase.
This is a more menacing pose, and one that's less well-known for optimus, so it was a good choice for a Nemesis Prime adaptation. However, in altering the colors, you've overheightened the contrast (at least how it looks on my monitor), making the brights too bright, and the darks too dark. This washes out a lot of the detail of the image, and makes it look like something of a series of blobs. In Nemesis Prime, for example, you not only lose the red/black flame contrast, but a some of his mechanical details as well, and the shadow at the top covers his eyes, which I think would look highly intimidating if that red glow was more pronounced against his black body. This shadow also obscures parts of the title you've attached to the image, which makes it much harder to get across the information you're trying to present.