Alternatively: The often-fluid nature of human sexuality is something worth exploring, as long as it's done for the sake of telling an interesting story rather than simple titillation or shock value. A gay character being attracted to a person of the opposite sex could be just as compelling a story as a straight person being attracted to a person of the same sex.
Here's one: Diversity in the form of legacy characters is a completely valid tool for attracting attention to diversity in general. Further, legacy characters are extremely common in comics, and the fact that people complain every single time a woman or minority character takes the mantle of a character who'd previously been a white man is rather questionable.
The Sentry was an awesome character and should be back in play during Secret Wars.
Pull List:
Marvel Comics: Venom, X-Men, Black Panther, Captain America, Eternals, Warhammer 40000.
DC Comics: The Last God
Image: Decorum
Janet Van Dyne deserves a bigger push from Marvel. The lady was a founding member of the Avengers? Why not have her lead A-Force?
SHIELD is too connected with heroes or dealing with heroes: Avengers, Misty Knight, X-Men, FF.
Speaking of SHIELD anyone else find it odd that they are kinda doing what the SuperHuman Registration Act was asking for even outside the comics, recruiting teens (Ultimate Spider-Man cartoon).
Norman shouldn't have gone back to being Green Goblin, he could have a good political villain for Avengers and SHIELD.
Scarecrow is a terrible villain for Sam's newly Captain America rogues gallery
I like Carlie Cooper and Alpha
SHIELD should be what the Avengers are now.They should have an veritable army of superhumans in their employ. Take a character like John Walker/USAgent. He would be worth what a hundred SHIELD agents are and you could pay him maybe double of what a SHIELD agent makes.
There is no way that a guy like Xavier should have been allowed to amass a group as powerful as the X-men without some government oversight. No private citizen would be allowed to do this.It should have been Nick Fury and Chuck X from the start.
The Illuminati didnt do anything wrong. They were prepared to do the worst, but they didnt do it.........while Namor
Namor is so much better as a villain is not even funny. Namor being free to do anything he wants, is a entertaining Namor. He doesnt need to be Red Skull evil. Hell, he could be in the right most of the time, but its time to leave the hero stuff behind.
Wolverine shouldnt be an Xman or an Avenger. He should be an agent of SHIELD. He could lead the mutant division or something.
Frank Castle is a serial killer.
Anti hero is just lazy and irresponsible story telling. There should be 3 criterias that characters fall into:Normal,Hero(of different degrees,and Villain(of different degrees).
Schism and No More Mutants was just bad for business. No minority can be divided into just two sides. No minority is worth talking about when their is only 200 of them.
100% Agreed.
Agreed.
Agreed. I still hate Bendis' work, but the original origin of the Avengers was way too convoluted. The Raft prison break is better in every way.
Agreed 100%.
I see your point about the Phoenix, but still my point stands, Scott gets a disproportionate amount of hate directed at him.
Agreed!
I'd like to add a few more:
I don't see the appeal in Howard the Duck.
I don't see the appeal in Luke Cage.
Wolverine should stay dead for a long time, and when he inevitably comes back, he should be back to his 90's power levels (i.e: he heals fast and doesn't age, but he can't grow back a limb, much less his entire body from only one cell).
I don't like the Jean Grey School. It looks like some weird alien stuff stitched to a regular mansion. Also, surprise danger room tests for all students? Who would actually want to spend time in a school like that? The thing is a fucking death trap. You know who got the Xavier Institute perfectly? The movies.
Carnage is a terrible villain
Most of the Marvel Superman clones are terrible (Hyperion, Sentry, Wonder Man)
Blade is the only non-stereotypical black Marvel character who isn't from Africa or the "hood"
Carol Danvers is a terrible character, so is Black Panther
Dan Slott is the worst Marvel writer and it's not even close
Spider-Man comics have been awful for the last 10 years (not counting the Ultimate line)
Marvel events are truly awful, Civil War and Infinity War being the absolute worst
Well, i guess that given the mutants arent tecnically people, the Professor was just abusing a loophole.
Well, that's why the only ones that lives there are the ones who dont any other place to stay or want protection from anti-mutant attacks.
But its necessary, given that these days basically everyone wants to kill them......................................
Super-strong, flight-capable, and generally resistant to things like conventional firearms, along with possible energy beam projectiles. The basic "Superman" power-set.
That aside, I'd say, for an unpopular/uncommon/controversial opinion, that Brian Bendis isn't that bad a writer, but he does best in the arena of gritty, street-oriented crime noir fiction. It's why his Daredevil and Alias were as good as they were; he used characters that were already street-level heroes (or conceived as street-level heroes) as protagonists and central figures for the kind of stories that he was more familiar with, and it largely worked. What didn't work for his skill-set was trying to take on stories and characters that should be larger than life and epic in scope, like the Avengers and more recently the Guardians of the Galaxy and the X-Men, hence the mixed reactions to his runs on all of those series.
I will concede that Peter Parker is currently the least interesting Spider-Person in the Marvel Universe(s), but also say that the blame largely lies with Marvel wanting to turn the clock back on his character and actively reject any progress, advancement, or growth he achieved over his decades of existence. Even more so, Marvel is bent on keeping him trapped in a very narrow and limiting status quo as the constant underdog (which, given his talents and resources, sounds more like underachiever in practice) of the setting, a status quo that has long since become stale and tired for a lot of readers and fans. That is what has made Peter Parker the blandest and least interesting of Marvel's Spider-Heroes, that Marvel itself can't see past its tired and outdated ideas of what he is, what he represents, and what he should be or represent.
The spider is always on the hunt.
Spider-Woman (Jessica Drew) has always been more interesting than Spider-Man (Peter Parker).