Ruin Explorer
Legend
Marvel doesn't obliterate its past like DC does. DC has done it what, three times I can think of off the top of my head, but I think it's more (not a huge DC guy), most recent being the New 52.Not a comic fan as such ( and we have established not one that care about lore overmuch) but have not the comics already invalidated their past or is that DC only?
Marvel takes a "it's okay if you just change continuity" approach, by and large, where it's more like every comic, or every interlinked set of comics is kind of allowed to have its own continuity. Characters who should be 60 return to being 25 even though they were 40 a few months ago, because a new comic book involving them started with a new title.
Sometimes threads of continuity run for decades, sometimes for weeks.
It's just how Marvel does it, and honestly I've never known a Marvel fan to have a big problem with it, and even as a kid when I first noticed it, I was like "Oh, it's like the Greek myths..." i.e. where characters sometimes live at the same time as others and sometimes have been gone for thousands of years, and sometimes are at very different life stages and so on. Where one story has a characters as a child of Zeus, but the next has them as not a demigod at all and so on.
What tends to remain constant in Marvel is personalities and to some extent power sets. But mostly personalities. Characters can experience growth and change but often tend to remain fundamentally like this or like that.
I don't believe the latter will happen.I was not really referring to the comic continuity. The MCU is in the phase where the weight of lore is beginning to become a barrier to new comers.
Aside from that the lore density is approaching the point where someone will break continuity in a controversial way.
The former might, but I don't really see signs of it yet. The MCU has issues, but they're more to do with a lot of the current characters being kinda "meh" than anything else.
To be fair Marvel just doesn't do continuity unless it feels like it, so it'd be quite hard for it to "invalidate" anything. I mean, if Banner Hulk suddenly vanished and Amadeus Cho was Hulk instead whilst it might surprise some people, I don't think anyone would see it as "invalidating comics history". Similarly Miles Morales replacing Peter Parker wouldn't be a huge deal - hell some would cheer for it (I like both myself). Whereas if we had a non-Bruce Wayne Batman, a lot of DC fans would absolutely riot, even though it has happened a number of times in the comics.The MCU is an adaptation that in no way invalidates 70+ years of comics history. That, to me, is the difference.