. . "JUNKION"@en . . "Sing-Song"@en . . . . "Sing-Song"@en . . "Sing-Song is a Junkion, and like her people, is a walking, very powerful and all but indestructible Junkbot, i.e., a robot built of leftover mech parts, scrap metal, and junk. When she is hit by laser blasts and falls apart, she reassembles himself and keeps right on coming. Her speech and attitudes are also a junkyard-like collection of languages and broadcast fragments overheard from all over the universe - scraps of TV commercials, soap opera dialogue, old song lyrics and valentine inscriptions merged with quotations from history given out of context. As Sing-Song might say, \"Holy Mackerel, Mrs. Olson, your mountain-grown easy-listening sidekick, kimosabe, wishes you have a nice industrial-strength day. Film at eleven, or not.\" Sing-Song can transform into motorcycle mode and back to robot mode continuously in battle, so that her \"ruins\" become her transformed mode and back again any time she takes a direct hit. In robot mode, she carries an armor axe and a decelerator laser that inhibits an enemy robot's flow of cerebral impulses. In motorcycle mode she can attain a speed of 160 mph for a distance of 100 miles."@en . . . . . "Sing-Song is a Junkion, and like her people, is a walking, very powerful and all but indestructible Junkbot, i.e., a robot built of leftover mech parts, scrap metal, and junk. When she is hit by laser blasts and falls apart, she reassembles himself and keeps right on coming. Her speech and attitudes are also a junkyard-like collection of languages and broadcast fragments overheard from all over the universe - scraps of TV commercials, soap opera dialogue, old song lyrics and valentine inscriptions merged with quotations from history given out of context. As Sing-Song might say, \"Holy Mackerel, Mrs. Olson, your mountain-grown easy-listening sidekick, kimosabe, wishes you have a nice industrial-strength day. Film at eleven, or not.\" Sing-Song can transform into motorcycle mode and back to ro"@en . . .