Clint Barton who is known as Hawkeye, has changed from being the man who refuses to kill to being a second-class Wolverine
Clint Barton who is known as Hawkeye, has changed from being the man who refuses to kill to being a second-class Wolverine
When I was a kid, I thought Rodimus Prime and Galvatron were way cooler than Optimus Prime and Megatron. But when I went back and watched the original Transformers series as an adult, I did a complete reversal. Tracks, a character I couldn't have cared less about at a kid, has also supplanted Bumblebee as my overall favorite character on the show.
With the old G.I. Joe cartoon, like any other kid, I always rooted for the Joes and booed Cobra Commander, Destro, and the other villains. But as an adult, I find the interactions between the villains to be the most enjoyable part of the show, while the Joes tend to bore me.
I'm with a lot of you: I love Batman but good lord is he overused and tired. This BatGod nonsense is just too much.
"Kids don't care **** about superhero comic books. And if they do, they probably start with manga, with One Punch-Man or My Hero Academia. " -ImOctavius.
As a child (reading reprints from the 40's-early 60's), Robin annoyed me. I was there for Batman and this punk kid was in the way. By the time I got to "College Robin" in the late-1960's-1970s, I had completely turned around.
I found Grayson interesting, compelling, and cool. He got to do all the Batman stuff without being nearly so uptight. Detective Comics 441 is still a stand out for me. Sure, Robin started out as the Hostage De'Jour, but by the story's climax, it turned out he didn't any rescuing after all.
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His feature in The Batman Family tended to be hit or miss, but when it was good, it was quite good. I think Robin being in it was one of the things that originally made me decide to give Wolfman and Perez New Teen Titans a try when its first issue hit the stands.