Plus, like, it was her hotel room they went to. You can see her as Cheetah climbing out the same pent house floor later the same issue (unless she had a second hotel room with a pent house floor). So were they just gonna ditch Urzkartaga or did they have a plan to get that giant potted plant in a taxi too?
Granted, post-crisis Barbara was cuckoo-for-cocoa-puffs so who the hell knows what was going through her noggin. XD
She should have just put it on a serving saucer, lol. Than she wouldn't have had to touch it.
Plus Cheetah says she wants the lasso because of it's power...but we all know she really wants it because it's a shiny string.
Last edited by I'm a Fish; 04-18-2021 at 01:04 PM.
I think she said "there is no Barbara"? What did THAT mean? That she WAS the Cheetah now and Barbara was a shadow of who she used to be?
Oh also... in terms of the lasso getting used in interesting ways.... It can't a be a win button. One thing I loved was when Deva got caught in it and was like "Thanks for the lasso!" and used it to read WW's mind.
I’m was down with the whole Aristotle Buchanan avatar-of-sorts (I guess), because it played with the myths of gods transforming themselves into mortal forms and messing with mortal lives - despite it being very on-the-nose that it was Ares. The true fun came when Ares didn’t realize Donna Milton was Circe in mortal drag and that they had Lyta together. Rucka had some fun with their relationship, which was great, as again the myths again and again pair gods and other gods, and demigods, and mortals together. The Circe and Ares romance and Lyta could have led to lots of interesting things for Diana, the Amazons, the gods, Ares’s children, Aphrodite, and the DCU, but I guess we’ll leave that up to other creators.
Gods of Gotham was fun and a great intro to Jimenez’s run - it’s about family in so many ways. The Wonder family, the Bat family, the Titans family, the Young Justice family, the Trinity family, and Ares’s family. Ares’s children escaping Tartarus and possession/mingling with Batvillains was fun through that same focus of family - whether loving or dysfunctional by the personality of each individual involved.
Acknowledging the Duke of Deception, Earl of Greed, and Lord Conquest alongside Deimos, Phobos, Eris, Harmonia, Eros, and Eros’s half-sibling Atlantiades just broadens and deepens the villainous or benign relationships between Diana, the Olympians, their kids, and their earthly agents in potentially interesting and dramatic ways.
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Fireworks Man has earned a spot in my Wonder Woman Series Bible Thingee. I love reassessing and revamping these villains.
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Much like Jimenez’s superb take on Angle Man, I’ve found a few angles to approach Paper Man anew in my Wonder Woman Series Bible Thingee. And no, they don’t involve him being defeated by a stapler.
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I enjoyed the Crimson Centipede that showed up briefly in the Steve Trevor one-shot comic, so I’ve been building on that for the character in my Wonder Woman Series Bible Thingee. Honestly though, where’s Formicida when you need her?
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Glop has been a lot of fun to consider and reinterpret for the modern era of Wonder Woman... and I think I’ve cracked it’s role in the Wonderverse. Which is due to the effect of a whole other event in the DCU. Luckily Glop didn’t come alone as it arrived with some other historical, albeit updated, Wonder adversaries.