Spotlight: Jazz
Not perfect, but a strong "survive against the stronger opponents" type of story. Jazz rescues Tracks from certain death at the hands of the Predacons, and in the process shows his capabilities as an agent and soldier. The Predacons are sold as "Megatron's elite squad", but I was never quite convinced, given the way Jazz tears through them. The intention is to show just how good he is, but it does make the Predacons look less than elite rather than simply making Jazz look good. Perhaps if there had only been two or three of them, Jazz's success would have seemed more believable. The last minute save by Ironhide is a bit cliched as well, as he saves Jazz just in the nick of time.
I know I've missed quite a bit in the last year, but is this the first time we've really seen Tracks in a major role? Commander Wax-n-buff relates the story as a flashback, which negates any suspense about who lives or dies. But given that we're reading about Jazz and Tracks, I doubt anyone expects them to do anything other than survive, so it's not that big a deal.
The art is very good. I'm always glad to see E.J. Su's art again, and I was delighted to see Josh Van Reyk get co-author credit, since I worked with him on the Mosaic project at one point. Should he be considered an "ascended fan" like Don Figeroa now?

Spotlight: Cliffjumper
This is not the type of story I ever expected to see about Cliffjumper, the little guy with a big attitude. Apparently he's some sort of expert fighter and assassin in IDW's continuity. That's fine, but it does make for a jarring story at first as I read Cliffjumper behave in ways I don't expect. He gets a break from the war in a fairly idyllic place, thanks to his spaceship crashing, and exposure to some rather innocent people either helps him to grow a bit more of a conscience. Or else he's simply afraid to tell them what he's done while fighting the war, for fear of disappointing them. And of course the Decepticons find him, forcing him to fight them to save his new friends. I'm not sure I buy him killing five or six opponents by himself, but that's apparently what happens.
Some nice touches include Cliffjumper's discussion about the differences between himself and the organic humanoids he encounters. He can't feel the heat or cold, and at one point Kita burns her hand slightly while touching his arm, as we might when touching a hot car. Cliffjumper didn't even notice he was hot from being in the sun.
The art's good, if a bit too "anime" for my taste (at least when it comes to the two aliens) and the story focuses on a character who has rarely gotten the spotlight. I don't know that I like it better than the Jazz spotlight, but it's probably the more sound of the two when it comes to the narrative.