Okay, it's been a few weeks, but good news: without any "real" Transformers on-hand, it's time to finally get back to BotBots!! At last!
As long as we're jumping back in to a line that ended a while ago, we might as well make this a double-whammy: between Series 1 and Series 2, Hasbro released an interquel "1.5" series that was meant to be exclusive to Toys "Я" Us, but that couldn't happen (for obvious reasons), so the sets eventually became Amazon exclusives. There were two tribes in those sets, including the groundskeeping-themed Lawn League.
Just getting exclusive figures with new molds wasn't exciting enough,
I suppose, because there's a gimmick for the Series 1½ BotBots: all the figures have some small area of color-changing paint that is, in theory, supposed to be heat-sensitive, changing hue when it warms up. "In theory." In theory, Capitalism works - in theory. In practice, the color change is so minor, you likely won't even notice it. As this is a watering can, the paint is supposed to represent water coming out of the sprinkler head. And it does that fairly well, but it never quit gets dark enough to not be seen, as was the idea, even if you put it in the freezer overnight. Voice of experience!
BotBots were always easy to convert. In this case, you just hinged the arms out of the sides of the can, folded the legs from underneath, and then open the flap that hides the face.
Since Series 1½ was an exclusive, none of the characters ever appeared on the website or in any merchandise, so there's nothing even resembling biographies for them - they don't even get to appear in the mall, just being dropped into lines down below the scene. So in order to tell anything about them, we have to examine the art on the package.
Both the front and back of the packaging show Nozzlesnot, whether in robot mode or altmode, sprinkling water on their fellow BotBots - sometimes to their relief, sometimes to their chagrin. So presumably that means they're constantly leaking, but happy when they find a way to make that useful?
Putting the spout of the watering can on the robot's forehead is a pretty standard choice, even if it does make the smiley little face hard to see sometimes. Another option might have been to make the robot "little teapot" style - you know, with one arm being the handle and one arm the spout. The body is broadly conical, wider at the bottom than the top, and there are white details painted around the lower edge and on the robot's stomach, helping to break up all that blue.

Nozzlesnot was available both in a Lawn League 8-pack, and a Bakery Bytes 5-pack. The mold would eventually be reused in Series 5.
