Iron Man: Avengers villain plans silent apocalypse.
https://www.cbr.com/iron-man-korvac-utopia-endgame/
Iron Man: Avengers villain plans silent apocalypse.
https://www.cbr.com/iron-man-korvac-utopia-endgame/
"We live in a world of cowards. We live in a world full of small minds who are afraid. We are ruled by those who refuse to risk anything of their own. Who guard their over bloated paucities of power with money. With false reasoning. With measured hesitance. With prideful, recalcitrant inaction. With hateful invective. With weapons. F@#K these selfish fools and their prevailing world order." Tony Stark
What If shows how Civil War could have been different.
https://www.cbr.com/what-if-captain-...ost-civil-war/
"We live in a world of cowards. We live in a world full of small minds who are afraid. We are ruled by those who refuse to risk anything of their own. Who guard their over bloated paucities of power with money. With false reasoning. With measured hesitance. With prideful, recalcitrant inaction. With hateful invective. With weapons. F@#K these selfish fools and their prevailing world order." Tony Stark
Yeah, if Civil War had been written with more than just shock value in mind, we could have gotten something like the Ultimate Alliance 2 retelling where both sides ultimately reconciled and, regardless of whether the SHRA remained or not, things would have been better overall.
The spider is always on the hunt.
Fair point. I generally understood, if not agreed with, the points he was making in Civil War, but I didn't like that he was doing it at the expense of the characters involved, some getting hit worse than others, especially in the tie-ins that went all in on the anti-registration perspective.
The spider is always on the hunt.
so what are the odds for Tony's current battle against Korvac?
Marvel can't do a civil war story right becuase they usually go overboard in making one hero overly cynical and the other a zealot. They don't do nuance that well, especially when multiple writiers are involved.
Case in point: Tony as written in his own solo compared to Tony as written in the main event book or other tie in titles. It's like Jekyll and Hyde.
Pretty much, yeah.
Even Marvel Ultimate Alliance 2 adapted Civil War better, particularly with the outcome where even though the pro-registration side ultimately won, both sides united to defeat a greater threat and reconciled enough to work out a compromise that would keep the good parts of the SHRA and reduce if not eliminate the worst parts of it.
The spider is always on the hunt.
Do we know why Tony's chosen his team yet? Because they really don't seem to make a damn bit of sense