Warpiglet-7
Lord of the depths
Welcome to married life.Its always good to have someone tell you something you've seen happen multiple times over the years doesn't happen.
Oh you meant gaming.
Welcome to married life.Its always good to have someone tell you something you've seen happen multiple times over the years doesn't happen.
I miss when super-hero comic series could actually tell their own stories in peace without continual interruptions from sprawling multi-title "events" and unwanted editorially-mandated crossovers.I miss when super-hero comic series could have a bunch of stories that didn't involve threats to the entire planet/universe/multi-verse.
Silver Age superhero comics are the best superhero comics.I miss when super-hero comic series could actually tell their own stories in peace without continual interruptions from sprawling multi-title "events" and unwanted editorially-mandated crossovers.
Not that those didn't happen to some degree even way back in the day...
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To be fair, it's entirely possible that Lois' book was outselling the JLA at this point in history, so it may have been a sales booster for them rather than the other way around.
For the curious, the actual plot of this thing beggars belief and ties in to Kirby's Fourth World stories, particularly the Project Cadmus stuff from his Jimmy Olsen run. It may also be the first appearance of the word "Mini-Me" in print, predating Austin Powers by decades.
Silver Age superhero comics are the best superhero comics.
I was more of a X-Men and teen/quirky superhero fan growing up. X-Men, New Mutants, Teen Titans, Legion of Super-Heroes, New Warriors, Doom Patrol, Suicide Squad, all that stuff.I've read a lot of Silver Age Comics (including all of Jimmy Olson and almost all of Marvel), but the vast majority have nothing on the greatest run of Avengers ever. Vol. 1 164-196, Annuals 7-9, and Marvel Two-in-One Annual 2. (Minus the one or two fill in issues in there). Lead by the creative powers of John Byrne, David Michelinie, George Perez, Jim Shooter, and Jim Starlin.
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Although, to be fair, there were some world ending threats tucked in to that run from October 1977 to June 1980. From the Avengers standpoint, it also avoids the issues that tried to get the mangling of Hank Pym going (at the beginning) and did for Carol (at the end), and didn't leave Wanda anywhere unrecoverable.
I was more of a X-Men and teen/quirky superhero fan growing up. X-Men, New Mutants, Teen Titans, Legion of Super-Heroes, New Warriors, Doom Patrol, Suicide Squad, all that stuff.
Chris Claremont’s run on the X-Men can’t be beat. Both wildly imaginative and utterly grounded at the same time. I don’t know that I’ve ever read better. It could also be nostalgia. But, to me, he perfected the superhero soap opera.
I was more of a X-Men and teen/quirky superhero fan growing up. X-Men, New Mutants, Teen Titans, Legion of Super-Heroes, New Warriors, Doom Patrol, Suicide Squad, all that stuff.
Chris Claremont’s run on the X-Men can’t be beat. Both wildly imaginative and utterly grounded at the same time. I don’t know that I’ve ever read better. It could also be nostalgia. But, to me, he perfected the superhero soap opera.
I was more of a X-Men and teen/quirky superhero fan growing up. X-Men, New Mutants, Teen Titans, Legion of Super-Heroes, New Warriors, Doom Patrol, Suicide Squad, all that stuff.
Chris Claremont’s run on the X-Men can’t be beat. Both wildly imaginative and utterly grounded at the same time. I don’t know that I’ve ever read better. It could also be nostalgia. But, to me, he perfected the superhero soap opera.
Rarely have I felt as starved for context as I do right at this moment.and.l..i got nothing
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