< Bionicle
Bionicle/Trivia
Normal Trivia Trope:
- Hey, It's That Voice!: In Web of Shadows, Norik is Kagome's grandfather
- Nidhiki is Naraku and Myouga. Also Happosai.
- Also, Matau and Onewa are Vegeta; specifically, Christopher Sabat. They're also Ryuk.
- Krekka, on the other hand, is Nappa.
- Toa Vakama is L.
- Makuta Teridax is the remade George of the Jungle.
- He's also Snips. Yes, really.
- In the Japanese version of Mask of Light, he's voiced by Norio Wakamoto and Takanuva by Mamoru Miyano.
- The Legend Reborn features Worf as Toa Mata Nui as well as the voices of Jim Cummings and James Arnold Taylor as Ackar and Berix respectively.
- It also features Jeff Bennett (Prowl) as Tarix and Strakk.
- Raanu is voiced by Andrew Ryan.
- And Joe Izuzu voices Metus! Foreshadowing, anyone...?
- Scott McNeil is Tahu and Onua.
- Gali and Roodaka are Dot Matrix, Kevin, Queen Chrysalis, and Trixie.
- Nokama is Rarity, Princess Luna, Roberta, and Naomi Misora.
- Jaller is Kento of Hard Rock.
- Peter Cullen voices the Toonami Promo for Mask of Light, as he has done with other promos, and ends with the line "This ain't your daddy's LEGO" starting at 0:26.
- Show Accuracy, Toy Accuracy: The original trilogy movies took great liberties with the toy designs by making their biomechanical characters more organic, more "bio" -- they were given hands, mouths, muscles, and in the female's cases, a dose of Adaptational Attractiveness. However some ended up only just very, very vaguely resembling their sets. Now, for the fourth movie, The Legend Reborn, they decided to go the opposite route: making the characters extremely toy-accurate. Ridiculously toy-accurate -- some even retained the color-scheme ruining red connector rods. Ironically, the people in this movie were really supposed to be organic creatures with some minor mech-implants. Note that there is a lot of leeway. Many design traits could be interpreted in a myriad of ways. An interesting case is that of Roodaka's "braids": rendered as strands of robotic hair in the movie, as tusks that moved together with her jaw in a video game, and as upward-pointing horns in the comics.
- What Could Have Been:
- For starters, the entire franchise would have only lasted for one year, culminating in Mata Nui's awakening. Greg Farshtey, the writer of the comics, saw potential in the story, and convinced LEGO to keep it going. The line continued for another 9 and a half years.
- Every time the Toa won, they were originally supposed to dance. Effin' dance. The canceled Legend of Mata Nui game shows how this would have looked in its final cutscene.
- On that note, the Legend of Mata Nui video game. They intended to make this the ultimate, full-canon telling of 2001's storyline. Then they scrapped it, and so the Adobe Flash-based Mata Nui On-Line Game replaced it as "the" 2001 Bionicle game (and is still to this day for many fans "the" ultimate Bionicle experience). In turn, the MNOG was meant to be just a little, uncanon side-note, which is why The LEGO Company gave such a free hand to its creators at Templar Studios, and it turned out all the better for it.
- They had a movie planned to be released concurrently with the game. Yes, as in way back in 2001, when Bionicle started. When both of these would-be storytelling sources got the axe, it was up to (yet again) little ol' Mata Nui On-Line Game to wrap up the plot. Not even the comics pulled that off, as they were meant to tie into the game/movie.
- The MNOG itself was apparently designed with much more minigames in mind, as many characters throughout the game give the player instructions on how to defeat Kofo-Jaja scorpions, all the way to the final fight. Yet no such creatures ever appear in the game.
- The Sand Tarakava, another beast that was meant to appear in the game and be released as a set. It never got through its prototype stage, however a total of five Sand Tarakava sets were indeed sold.
- The two Toa Hagah sets, Norik and Iruini, were designed to represent the Toa forms of Turaga Dume and the Dark Hunter Nidhiki, respectively. This is why their masks look so much alike. Reportedly, after a few seconds of looking at them, the Story Team decided to make them the Toa forms of two Rahaga characters, and rewrote their backstory from scratch.
- Traitorous Matoran and servant of Teridax, Ahkmou was originally meant to have a new set coming out in '08, as a Shadow Toa. Plans were quickly scrapped, thus his only set remains his Matoran form from '04. He never became a Toa in the story either.
- The sets and story originally planned for '10 and '11 (which is four waves, containing about 40-50 sets altogether). They scrapped all of this in preparation for the line's abrupt Cancellation, and released a wholly new line of merely 6, small-sized sets instead. That means no Element Lords, no shapeshifting assassin robots, no cyborg dinosaurs (although the basic setting has been recycled in Hero Factory), and no sequel to that "trilogy starter" movie that ends on a Cliff Hanger.
- They had vastly different plans for the '06-'11 storyline originally too. '08 would have seen the continuation of the "Jaller and his team try to save Mata Nui's life arc (wrapped up in '07), followed by a multi-year story of the Toa Nuva trying to awaken him. The latter arc got compressed into '08, and instead of the originally planned happy ending, had a shocking Downer/GainaxEnding.
- The writer said he wanted to finish off the Big Bad by having The Hero tear his chest open. This was deemed too violent, and thus the scenario was changed to part of his head getting crushed. Okay.
- BIONICLE: The Album. Advertised on a teaser page in the promotional comics of '02, with names like Cold, Kenna, Rob Zombie and Woven attached, fans were unsure of what to think of this strange new venture. Then the official website finally went up, containing a poll for various bands. Shortly afterwards, the entire thing disappeared. According to Word of God, LEGO and the performers didn't manage to come to a happy agreement over the promotion.
- There was to be a secret seventh tribe that lived on Mata Nui and worshipped the Makuta. Ahkmou, the evil bazaar trader, was supposed to stem from this tribe. In the MNOG, he was meant to hold a group of Matoran hostage, who would mass-produce the infected Comet balls. As with the things mentioned above, this was abandoned from the finished game, but there still is a strange, unused gamefile that shows a Ga-Matoran making Comets.
- The Toa were first envisioned as being these God-like entities that spoke in a constant dramatic voice. They were also to be of different age, Onua being the eldest and Lewa the youngest. Farshtey argued that this would make them too distant and boring, so they were eventually outfitted with wildly different personalities and talked like normal people. They were also made the same age, though Onua still was the wisest and Lewa still acted like a kid.
- The Lohrak was originally scheduled to make an appearance in Legends of Metru Nui, but it did not make it into the final cut. They only appeared in the novelization. The same happened with the Troller Rahi. The Lohrak, though, later made a very brief Cameo in Web of Shadows (since they had their CGI models done), but it's hard to tell that it's them.
- A name the LEGO company considered earlier for the location of Mahri Nui was Ankor Nui. Another was Akua Nui.
- BIONICLE Legends: Invasion was a book that was scheduled to be released in 2007 as the seventh Legends novel. It was, however, canceled due to poor book sales. Invasion was meant to tell the story of the Toa Inika's trip down The Cord. Included in the book was a scene where Vezon slammed Matoro's head into a wall, a confrontation with a tribe of Zyglak, Vezon being taken by the Zyglak, Hahli being injured in a battle, Teridax possessing Matoro while the latter was using his Iden, stealing Hahli's Elda, and later being forced out by the other Toa Inika who threatened to kill Matoro's body. The book would also explain the relationship between the Zyglak and Krana. That information was released in the LEGO Magazine and BIONICLE: Encyclopedia Updated instead.
- Originally, Mutran was going to wear the "Kanohi Artidax, the Mask of Mutation." However, the idea was scrapped after Greg Farshtey saw that the set wore a Shelek. The name is now the name of the island where Miserix was held.
- Also more recently Miserix is known to have the Mask of Mutation.
- "Gatherers" was a name originally considered for the Bone Hunters, and is still reflected on some of the location names.
- Prototype sets are all about this.
- Nuparu Mahri's set was supposed to come with an Aqua Blaster Blade, and it was even written into the books, yet the final model didn't include it. Instead, it only had a shield and a Cordak blaster.
- Similar to this, it was thought that Jaller only possessed one Energized Flame Sword until it was confirmed that he had two in Prisoners of the Pit. The reason for this was that Greg Farshtey was writing the story based off the Jaller toy's prototype.
- As revealed by German and Russian documentaries on LEGO, the Toa sets form the Mistika line had gone through a couple changes as well before finalization, mostly in the color scheme department. Insiders have also mentioned that their prototypes had resembled their original '02 sets better than the final models. There was much complaining.
- The 2005 playsets went through some particularly shocking changes before finalization. The Tower of the Toa set, for instance, was meant to come with a miniature Keetongu figure (at this scale, the same size as a regular canister set). In the finished set, a miniature Kahgarak spider occupies its place -- but it came with a gold-colored Mask of Shadows piece, so it's all good.
- The Manas were first envisioned having giant, bulging eyes, large teeth and grasping pincers. The finalized versions have teeny-tiny beads for eyes, no mouth and their pincers (which hardly look the part) can only poke.
- The Toa Metru were bare-chested at first. For the entire comic run, they were constantly drawn this way. The eventual sets, however, included a piece that covered their inner gear-mechanisms.
- Mata Nui's canister set was originally gold and white, not gold and black. As such, he is described as wearing white in one of the novels.
- The cover image for the '06 book Dark Destiny has a group shot of the six initial Piraka sets in their prototype forms. Most of them have only subtle differences from the released models, however Avak sports an entirely different head-design (he has pincers for cheeks), while Reidak has three eyes (also seen on the first promo-image for the '06 set-line, though the creators claimed those were just random eyes belonging to no actual character). They even appear as such in the Voya Nui On-Line Game. Fenrakk the spider also sports six legs in that game, whereas his actual set only has four.
- Hewkii Inika, the set famous for launching the color gray as a replacement for brown, was, apparently, originally meant to be brown itself, as evidenced by the non-canon on-line animations of '06, which show the character like this.
- Click the beetle, upon transforming into a shield for Mata Nui, would have stayed that way. But The Legend Reborn director Mark Baldo liked the idea of Click being able to switch between forms at will. His shield-mode face was also supposed to have just one huge eye on it, but in the movie, it has his whole face. Meanwhile the toy doesn't have a face at all.
- The directors of the first movie, Mask of Light, talked about envisioning the characters with mechanical, switchblade-like hands, that could go from being claws to tools or other gadgets (mimicking the toys, which more often than not had no true hands to speak of). But as the plot never really called for them to have this ability, they were given normal hands with which to hold their stuff the normal way. Though Gali was shown to possess flip-out wrist propellers.
- Also, before Creative Capers and CGCG were hired. Other studios (Who exactly, as of late, are still unknown) were also being considered to do animation.
- Movie novelizations are also a rich source, as they are always written according to pre-finalization scripts. As such, while the novel for Web of Shadows describes Roodaka riding a giant flippin' mutant wasp out over the sea to where Makuta's imprisoned, the movie has no such scene, and she is simply shown walking around in a room, delivering exposition to herself.
- Some pretty interesting tidbits from a recently released, but evidently older concept video:
- The Mata Nui robot would have had the ability to roll up into a giant ball for space travel.
- A vortex would have lead to the "Power Plant" (Karda Nui).
- The prototype robot was to be only one tenth the size of the Mata Nui robot, as opposed to two thirds the size.
- Mata Nui's knee and three of his fingers would also have been islands.
- And while it's been known since '08, from another concept vid, it's worthy to mention that the Mata Nui robot has also been envisioned as a more organic-looking rock giant.
- Faber Files, a blog by BIONICLE co-creator Christian Faber, based around very early concept art. Other subjects beside BIONICLE are touched upon, such as LEGO Exo-Force. Among other interesting behind-the-scenes plans, the blog details what early ideas they had for ending '01, bringing the "Three Fingers" islands into play.
- Why Fandom Can't Have Nice Things: Farshtey has stated he won't reveal the Shadowed One's name so he won't have to go through the same thing he went through with revealing Makuta's name.
Miscellaneous Trivia Trope:
- Greg Farshtey's favorites:
- Overall Favorite: Kopaka
- Mask of Power: Kanohi Huna
- Characters to write about: Kopaka, Vezon, and Teridax.
- Book: BIONICLE Adventures 10: Time Trap, which reimagined Teridax into the character he is now.
- Dark Hunter: Lariska
- Barraki: Takadox
- Greg Farshtey based Takadox's personality on a character called "East" from one of his earlier novels.
- Matoran: Velika
- 2007 Matoran: Sarda
- Phantoka to write about: Mutran
- Mistika: Krika
- 2009 Character: Malum
- Least: characters that use Treespeak, Vahki
- Farshtey's wife, Jackina, commonly assists Greg with the BIONICLE story podcasts in offering her voice for the female characters, such as Hahli and Tuyet.
- Bob Thompson's (the former head of the original creative team behind BIONICLE) favorite characters were on the dark side Roodaka and on the light side Matau.
- Toa Nuva Lewa was Leigh Gallagher's favorite character to draw.
- The main BIONICLE logo is an image of the Three Virtues.
- The Spherus Magna system is in the shape of the Three Virtues' symbol.
- The Kanohi Kaukau was the only of the Toa Mata's Kanohi to have its design computer generated by set designers--the rest were done by carvings.
- Set-wise, the Kanohi Pakari is the most frequently used Great Kanohi, while the Ruru is the most frequently used Noble Kanohi.
- The term "Toa Mata" was officially coined after 2001-2002 story arc took place to prevent confusion. During this time, they were simply known as the "Toa" because they were the only Toa ever seen in the story at the time.
- Kopaka was the first BIONICLE character portrayed in the comics.
- A running storyline joke regarding Onua is his tendency to save others at the last moment. Examples include removing an infected Kanohi and Krana from Lewa, among others.
- Before the Maori lawsuit against The LEGO Group, the Shore Turtles were called Hoi and Bog Snakes were called Kuna.
- In the Mata Nui Online Game:
- A carved stone at the Po-Matoran trader's stall reads: "My friend went to Po-Koro and all I got was this lousy rock."
- The music played when the Le-Matoran were preparing to attack the Nui-Rama Hive is "Ride of the Valkyries", by Richard Wagner.
- The walls of the Sanctum include packaging information from a LEGO set and a quote from Douglas Adams's The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series: "What do you get if you multiply six by nine?"
- A scene in the Mata Nui Online Game depicts Lewa placing all six of his Kanohi on his personal Suva, and emerging with the golden mask; another scene depicts the Toa Mata's Kanohi simply transforming into the golden masks when they arrive at the Kini-Nui. However, the scene described in the book is the accurate one.
- The Toa's battle with the Manas is described as two Manas that are defeated by the two Toa Kaita. However, in Mata Nui Online Game, this battle is with a horde of Manas that are defeated by smashing control towers.
- BIONICLE Chronicles 1: Tale of the Toa was the first publication to show the Toa's battle with the Shadow Toa; this battle was originally going to be shown in the canceled PC game, BIONICLE: The Legend of Mata Nui. Originally, Greg Farshtey wanted the battle to be won by having the Toa "absorbing" the Shadow Toa into themselves; Cathy Hapka, however, decided to have the Toa working together to defeat them with their Elemental Powers. However, Greg has said that his way is canon, and is referenced in the BIONICLE: Encyclopedia.
- The Mata Nui Cow was originally called the "Mukau" (a pun on "Moo-Cow"), but it has not been called by this name since 2001. The name was taken out of canon because the story team head considered it too silly.
- In an advertisement at the end of Powerless!, there was information on the six Nuva symbols. The page claimed that Tahu's symbol was forged in the Mangai Volcano; Gali's drawn from Gali's Bay; Kopaka's as cold as Mount Ihu; Lewa's born of the living jungle; Pohatu's carved from the hardest stone; and Onua's a treasure from deep within Mata Nui. This is non-canon.
- In the Mata Nui Online Game, Taipu and Hafu had their Kanohi switched. This caused confusion, as Taipu wore a Pakari in CGI images, but a Ruru in the game. He still had his Kanohi switched in the Bohrok Online Animations and the Bohrok-Kal Online Animations. The error was eventually fixed in the Mata Nui Online Game II: The Final Chronicle, with both Matoran wearing their respective Kanohi. There is a reference to this in the game when the player first talks to Taipu and he says he is always mistaken for Hafu.
- The Gukko was introduced in 2003 as a replacement for the earlier birds ridden in Le-Koro. These earlier birds, the Kahu and the Kewa, had to be written out of the storyline because of legal issues with their names. The change was explained away by the revelation that all three of these birds were in fact the same species, and had been called by different names in the past. Recently, it has been changed again to say that the Kahu and Kewa are subspecies of the main Gukko breed.
- The Naming Day concept was created by The LEGO Group when they were requested to change the names of several characters to avoid a lawsuit by the Maori people, who were angry that The LEGO Group was using words of their language. Some of the names changed were not from the Maori language, but rather from different Polynesian languages.
- The Mask of Elemental Energy first appeared in the non-canon BIONICLE: The Game, although it has since been established as canon. The mask will not be used in any other form of media, since it was only intended as a power-up for the video game, although it did appear as an unlockable in BIONICLE Heroes.
- The phrase "play well", LEGO's slogan and meaning of the company's name, is used in Kolhii.
- Graalok's facial structure in Mask of Light was based on the Kanohi Miru Nuva. This was done to accentuate the connection Lewa had with her and other wild Rahi.
- At the end of the credits of Mask of Light, a small message in Matoran symbols can be seen. It translates as "No Rahi were harmed during the making of this film." This is a reference to when Jaller is about to kill Graalok the Ash Bear, but Lewa stops him.
- The USA today made BIONICLE Adventures 1: Mystery of Metru Nui #150 on their best-seller list. According to Greg Farshtey's Blog, it is the best selling BIONICLE book.
- A special sponge version of the Morbuzakh was released alongside a German BIONICLE magazine.
- The huge poster of Turaga Dume that Toa Matau crashes into in Ko-Metru has the Matoran writing for "play well"..
- At one point, Matau mentions planning to have a "romantic ride-drive" with Nokama. This has been confirmed to be non-canon.
- Several Matoran who had a prominent role in Mask of Light have cameos in Legends of Metru Nui, Takua, Jaller, and Hahli appear near the end, and Hewkii can be seen in the Coliseum.
- In BIONICLE: Maze of Shadows:
- The Ash Bear is depicted using the Makuta Nui combiner model. The game exclusively uses sets and combiners and the Ash bear has no official model, so a model which had not, and still has not been seen in the story was used.
- While the Energized Protodermis Entity was described in Maze of Shadows as resembling a Toa Metru, in the game, the substance appeared to have the upper-half of Teridax's 2003 set incarnation, with a pillar of Energized Protodermis from the waist down. However, the Toa Metru form described in the book is considered the canonical form the entity took during the encounter.
- The Great Kanohi Ruru in Hordika form was the first Hordika head to be seen by fans (through the DVD version of Legends of Metru Nui), although it was white and belonged to a prototype Toa Hordika Nuju set.
- On the cover of BIONICLE Adventures 8: Challenge of the Hordika, Vakama's mask is identical in shape to a prototype Matau Hordika mask rather than his own. His eyes are also blue where they should be light-green.
- A line spoken by Matau makes a reference to Julius Caesar's famous sentence "Veni, Vidi, Vici": "We came, we scouted, we all-conquered!"
- The front and back of BIONICLE: Dark Hunters feature Keetongu and the Vahki, respectively. This was due to a printing error by Scholastic. However, the Keetongu error was retconned and explained by Greg Farshtey that it may have been a Dark Hunter "who had some sort of chameleon power" and "appeared as a one-eyed yellow Rahi" in The Many Deaths of Toa Tuyet. The Dark Hunter was later confirmed to be Triglax. The Vahki on the back of the book were explained, also. The Dark Hunters at some point captured some, and changed their command to serving them.
- A particular quote from the Shadowed One ("I think enough hands have been removed this year") was an allusion by Greg Farshtey to the excessive losses of hands during lightsaber combat in Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith, which was also released in 2005.
- The Piraka.com is based in the Piraka Stronghold.
- Each Piraka had a promotional nickname:
- Hakann - "The Bully"
- Vezok - "The Beast"
- Zaktan - "The Snake"
- Avak - "The Trigger"
- Reidak - "The Tracer"
- Thok - "The Drifter"
- BIONICLE: The Quest Game gives the Toa Inika nicknames to go with the Piraka's. These names are non-canon.
- Hahli - "The Catcher"
- Matoro - "The Keeper"
- Hewkii - "The Hitter"
- Nuparu - "The Stopper"
- Kongu - "The Tumbler"
- Jaller - "The Striker"
- The BIONICLE team gave Nuparu a Mask of Flight because it would be humorous and ironic for a Toa of Earth, who rarely sees daylight, to actually fly, while Kongu, who lived in the treetops for most of his life as a Matoran, cannot.
- The reason why Greg Farshtey didn't want Matoro to have Elemental Powers in the story when he released his spirit is because it would give him an unfair advantage, since Matoro could attack beings who couldn't sense him.
- The music playing in the Toa Inika toy commercial is "Move Along" by the All-American Rejects, in accordance with the Free the Band promotion.
- A lawsuit was filed against The LEGO Group when a 2-year-old girl was frightened by a Toa Inika commercial, but LEGO won.
- The Voya Nui Online Game's files featured odd figures. It is still not known if they were a prototype of Hahli, or a Barraki prototype, as the figure appeared to have a Squid Launcher. Another picture showed the underwater city Mahri Nui.
- In some European countries, the Sea Squids are labeled as "Polyps."
- Since his transformation by the Pit Mutagen, Ehlek is sometimes referred to as "The Eel."
- Carapar only possesses one claw in the set, despite having two in the story.
- The markings on Pridak's face and weapons do not represent blood, as was once commonly believed. Greg Farshtey has confirmed them to be natural markings.
- Since his mutation, Pridak is sometimes referred to as "The Shark."
- In 2007, the BIONICLEStory.com was set inside the Toa Terrain Crawler.
- The second Mask of Life code for Command Toa Matoro is former BZ Power administrator and former BIONICLE.com Webmaster, Kelly (AKA Binkmeister's) initials. This was done as a thanks to all the work he had done to the site.
- The Nova Blast was first acknowledged in the non-canon BIONICLE: The Game as a "Nuva Blast," but was later included by Greg Farshtey as a part of the BIONICLE canon.
- BIONICLE: Rahi Beasts was mentioned briefly in BIONICLE: World as one of the books in the Order of Mata Nui's library, written by Rahaga Norik.
- Greg's thoughts on Dark Mirror
- Gavla's immediate mutation upon becoming a Shadow Matoran was a case of artistic license on the part of the author. In actuality, Mutran would have altered her later.
- Antroz's poem about killing the Toa was based off the famous children's rhyme "Ten Little Indians".
- Mutran's name is derived from the English words "mutate" and "transform."
- The reason the comic version and the CGI version of the Keystone looks different is because Leigh Gallagher didn't have access to the CGI animations when he was drawing the comic. The CGI version of the Keystone is the accurate one.
- Vultraz's joke about clicking his red feet together in Brother In Arms is a reference to the classic movie The Wizard of Oz.
- The Axalara T9 won the French "Grand Prix du Jouet" ("Toy Grand Prize") award in 2008.
- Jerbraz's name is based off Jeremy Brazeal, who was an artist for BIONICLE: World and the young readers BIONICLE: Journey of Takanuva, BIONICLE: The Secret of Certavus, and BIONICLE: Desert of Danger.
- Tobduk's name is based off of Toby Dutkiewicz's name, one of the artists for BIONICLE: World.
- Johmak's name is based off that of John McCormack, an artist for BIONICLE: World.
- Tren Krom was inspired by H.P. Lovecraft's character Cthulhu. BIONICLE writer Greg Farshtey stated this to be a "tip of the hat" to the author.
- Vezon's comment about his one-hundred ten unanswered questions in Destiny War is a reference to the large number of storyline questions Greg Farshtey receives via the personal messaging system on BZ Power, some of which inevitably go unanswered.
- Greg Farshtey used Teridax's name as one of his World of Warcraft character's names. He later deleted the character.
- Takanuva's possession of his Power Lance and Midak Skyblaster at the time were simply due to artistic license. The book could not be approved without Takanuva resembling his set counterpart, and thusly the weapons had to be included. He did not actually obtain them in the official canon until after the events of The Journey of Takanuva.
- The prefix for Iron "Fe-" is derived from the chemical symbol "Fe" for the real element iron.
- The prefix for sonics "De-" was derived from the word "decibel," a real-world measurement unit for sound.
- The prefix for gravity "Ba-" was derived from words with the Greek origin of "baros", meaning "weight".
- The prefix for psionics "Ce-" was derived from the words "cerebral" and "cerebellum", words relating to the anatomy of the brain.
- Skirmix was named by former BIONICLE.com webmaster Kelly McKiernan.
- When the My LEGO Network BIONICLE Campaign was first launched, the tribe of the Hero Agori was not identified. A poll was later held on BZ Power to decide the tribal affiliation of the Agori, and Fire received the highest number of votes.
- In The Legend Reborn, the diagram of Mata Nui is labeled in Matoran lettering. The diagram as a whole is titled "Mata Nui Robot", with individual diagrams labeled "front view" and "side view". A line pointing to Karda Nui identifies it as Mata Nui's "heart chamber". In the lower right-hand corner of the diagram the words "Bara Magna test site" are shown.
- Nektann's weapon was designed by Kelly McKiernan, webmaster for BIONICLE.com. He was originally intended to have two, but the final set only included one.
- Bionicle's Working Title was Boneheads of Voodoo Island, Doo Heads, but the title B4 was also considered.
- Greg Farshtey wrote parts the first comic issue out of fun, and then turned them over to his higher-ups. Turned out they didn't have anyone else to write the thing, and as they needed to print the issue as fast as possible, they hired Greg immediately.
- Preliminary names for the Rahaga sets: Norik was "Tahkon", Iruini "Lahka", Bomonga "Nuukor", Kualus "Kuuls" and Pouks simply "Puks".
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