Ugh, another stop on the "let's change the gender/sexuality/race of an already established character and change not much else to avoid having to actually be creative while deflecting any criticism as prejudice" train, choo choo.
my point wasnt in regards to originality in general, just about the gender-bending. though, they do also need to come up with more new character in general that arent derivative of existing ones.DementedSheep said:Not denying it's lazy but how many noteworthy ORIGNIAL male superheros have they come up with in recent years?
I meant limb.Happyninja42 said:How is that any different from the teenage versions of Peter Parker? A young genius who can't drink, smoke, or lose a limp, whatever that means. How many Spiderman stories focused on the woes of him being underage for drinking and smoking? (not counting any PSA specific comics they did that break continuity). I'm willing to bet not many, if at all. Yet they somehow came up with compelling stories for Peter Parker to take part in, despite his crippling state of being a minor. I'm confident they can do it with Riri, just like they did with Miles Morales.
It's not strawmanning to say your reason for why her story will suck: which boiled down to "She's a teenage minor that nobody could relate to, because she's only 15. Citing that she can't drink or smoke or lose a limb...though I have no idea what being a teenager has to do with losing a limb as you put it. Seriously that makes zero sense.Naldan said:I meant limb.Happyninja42 said:How is that any different from the teenage versions of Peter Parker? A young genius who can't drink, smoke, or lose a limp, whatever that means. How many Spiderman stories focused on the woes of him being underage for drinking and smoking? (not counting any PSA specific comics they did that break continuity). I'm willing to bet not many, if at all. Yet they somehow came up with compelling stories for Peter Parker to take part in, despite his crippling state of being a minor. I'm confident they can do it with Riri, just like they did with Miles Morales.
I think you didn't mean to, but that's strawmanning. This Spiderman story of yours not only sounds like a spin-off, but also like complete shit to me. I wouldn't enjoy that, either.
I know you mean limb there, but what in the 9 hells does that have to do with being 15?Naldan said:15 years MIT student gets pampered by a rich macho for being super intelligent. How relatable is that? 15 motherfucking years. She can't even drink alcohol. Smoke. Lose a limp.
OK, gotta be clear. I meant that I doubt there could be violence when she's involved. Could you imagine her in something where people are getting murdered and mutilated rather violently?Happyninja42 said:Snip
What the difference? derivative of another hero and derivative of another hero that just happens to be a different gender. This is somehow worse?Vykrel said:my point wasnt in regards to originality in general, just about the gender-bending. though, they do also need to come up with more new character in general that arent derivative of existing ones.DementedSheep said:Not denying it's lazy but how many noteworthy ORIGNIAL male superheros have they come up with in recent years?
He once held hostage and tried to gaslight a woman into falling in love with him. And there's an issue in Kelly Sue DeConnick's Captain Marvel run where he uses sexist slurs to push Carol Danvers' buttons.JimB said:No, he doesn't. He only behaved the way he did to attack straight, white men in general and me in particular. If he had a history of behaving like a sexist prick, then my narrative would fall apart, so he definitely has never made sexist comments about female heroes before.Agent_Z said:For the record, that villain you're talking about actually does have a history of being sexist.
you are greatly misunderstanding me, Sheep. firstly, by "gender-bending", i dont mean that the characters themselves literally became female, i mean that the superhero persona was taken up by a new female character after originally being made famous by a male character.DementedSheep said:What the difference? derivative of another hero and derivative of another hero that just happens to be a different gender. This is somehow worse?
You sidestepped the point about them not really being gender bends in the first place. Tony has not become a woman and we don't know much about this character yet.
Name one successful original male Marvel superhero that was created in the last 10 years. No-one.Vykrel said:you are greatly misunderstanding me, Sheep. firstly, by "gender-bending", i dont mean that the characters themselves literally became female, i mean that the superhero persona was taken up by a new female character after originally being made famous by a male character.
second, it is worse for these comic entities to recognize that society is clamoring for them to be more inclusive toward women, yet their response is to simply have female characters take over the mantle of well-known male superhero personas. there are plenty of characters that are derivative of their predecessors (Miles Morales, Bucky Barnes, etc.), but at least there were plenty of original male superheroes to begin with that were the stars of their own comics.
Hank Pym took to calling himself Wasp for a while and Wiccan, the Scarlet Witch's son, has near identical "vague ill-defined magic" powers.have you noticed how the reverse doesnt seem to happen? there has never been a Wasp-Man, or Black Widowmaker, or Invisible Man, or Scarlet Wizard, etc. the problem is that these comic writers are looking at the social climate and thinking "we need more female superheroes... screw it, lets just replace Thor and Iron Man with women."
Cassandra Nova, Charles Xavier's evil female twin? Polaris, Magneto's secret lovechild with identical powers? (Not female but in terms of diversity) Literally gay young time-displaced Iceman who then outs present day Iceman?basically, these comics would be a lot more genuinely inclusive if they were more like the X-Men comics. those comics are extremely diverse, and the mutation aspect of that series forced the writers to come up with completely original female heroes and villains instead of just making characters like Professor Charlotte Xavier or Magneta or Icewoman.
Brian Michael Bendis wrote plenty of gruesome, violent murder being witnessed by Ultimate Peter Parker; for example, in a single issue, Norman Osborn transformed into the Green Goblin, beat his son to death with his bare hands, transformed back to a human in grief, and got his brains blown out by Maria Hill. I don't know why that's something we need to cheer for, children being traumatized by watching murder upon murder, but it happened, so...yay?Naldan said:I doubt there could be violence when she's involved. Could you imagine her in something where people are getting murdered and mutilated rather violently?
Yeah, I was doing a bit where I mock the position that he hasn't done that before, because I've been in too many arguments about that one scene with people who don't know what they're talking about when they say Creel and Titania both were acting out of character to suit an essjew agenda.Agent_Z said:He once held hostage and tried to gaslight a woman into falling in love with him. And there's an issue in Kelly Sue DeConnick's Captain Marvel run where he uses sexist slurs to push Carol Danvers' buttons.JimB said:No, he doesn't. He only behaved the way he did to attack straight, white men in general and me in particular. If he had a history of behaving like a sexist prick, then my narrative would fall apart, so he definitely has never made sexist comments about female heroes before.Agent_Z said:For the record, that villain you're talking about actually does have a history of being sexist.
Nah, don't get me wrong. I wouldn't like that in most cases, so I wouldn't include children in these stories in the first place.JimB said:Brian Michael Bendis wrote plenty of gruesome, violent murder being witnessed by Ultimate Peter Parker; for example, in a single issue, Norman Osborn transformed into the Green Goblin, beat his son to death with his bare hands, transformed back to a human in grief, and got his brains blown out by Maria Hill. I don't know why that's something we need to cheer for, children being traumatized by watching murder upon murder, but it happened, so...yay?Naldan said:I doubt there could be violence when she's involved. Could you imagine her in something where people are getting murdered and mutilated rather violently?
He didn't hand over her title. She managed to pick up Excalibur and was given the codename Excalibur while Captain Britain remained Captain Britain. Her only times of being Captain Britain are temporarily in alternate timeline events (Age of Ultron and Secret Wars)burnout02urza said:Yawn. They keep doing this, and it never works.
Anybody remember the time Captain Britain handled over his title to a Muslim woman? No? Good, because she sucked.
Literally starring right now in two comics, Justice League and Green Lanterns. Also all the current Green Lanterns including Hal Jordan and Kyle Rayner (not to mention the thousands of alien ones) are copies of the original Golden Age Green Lantern Alan Scott who was published well before them.Or the time Green Lantern was Simon Baz, the Amazing Bank-Robber Man?
Literally starring right now as a member of the Teen Titans. Also the original Power Girl is herself a copy of Supergirl.Oh, how about the time Power Girl handed over to this black girl? (It's really a thing.)
You mean all the embarrassments you listed who are either starring in comics right now rather than being "shuffled off the stage after a brief time in the spotlight" as you stated or never even took over the title that you claimed at all?Like all the other embarrassments, she'll just get shuffled off the stage after a brief time in the spotlight. It's sort of like how Bendis is desperately trying to keep Miles Morales relevant.
It's not from the comic. The new comic hasn't come out yet. That image is from an old ironman.the December King said:That's not the work from the actual comic, is it? It looks like heavily shaded Poser models with either bad toon shading, or post added lines... either way, that doesn't look great.Karadalis said:Guys.. guys.. and girls..
The new comic will tank... not because of PC.. not because of social justice...
But because the "art" looks terrible:
https://twitter.com/PixelBuff/status/752284656536588288
But still, maybe the story will be engaging on some level that will outshine/outpace/overcome the visuals?
Yeah, Invincible Iron Man #9 to be exact.nomotog said:It's not from the comic. The new comic hasn't come out yet. That image is from an old ironman.the December King said:That's not the work from the actual comic, is it? It looks like heavily shaded Poser models with either bad toon shading, or post added lines... either way, that doesn't look great.Karadalis said:Guys.. guys.. and girls..
The new comic will tank... not because of PC.. not because of social justice...
But because the "art" looks terrible:
https://twitter.com/PixelBuff/status/752284656536588288
But still, maybe the story will be engaging on some level that will outshine/outpace/overcome the visuals?