This is going to end up being a dream/illusion, isn't it? That's why continuity between issues got broken, right? Cause issue 1 looks like it was a whole other book from everything that's happened from 2 and onwards.
This is going to end up being a dream/illusion, isn't it? That's why continuity between issues got broken, right? Cause issue 1 looks like it was a whole other book from everything that's happened from 2 and onwards.
Last edited by Bunch of Coconuts; 11-25-2021 at 01:18 PM.
She will lose her powers and become a vampire
"COURAGE, DON'T YOU DARE LET ME DOWN"
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I never understood the need to dismiss the resurrection protocols as just "cloning" or not the real person. They went out of their way to equate it in story as the same person. It's all fiction at the end, so it shouldn't really make it any different than any explanation they have given for a return in the past. It's just a central plot point of the story now.
The memory thing are just one of the many imperfections of that system, but it doesn't stop the characters from being themselves.
That said, I'm not convince that Wanda was resurrected following procedure. Or if she even is meant to be Wanda. But this story is all over the place, so I don't know if it matters.
the fact that Dead!Wanda found herself lessened by the resurrection of an old back up would indicate that the soul is indeed transferred in the process* (enough to nearly kill Death and cause a new cancerverse)
My personal preference would be (following on from Leah's original plan to start a mutant pantheon with Battlestar as god of battle) for all the unintentional ritual sacrifice/bloodletting in the crucible (to ward away Wandas' curse) accidentally bootstrapping Wanda into godhood as the mutant goddess of chaos (and death, considering their immortality requires a mutant circuit and technology operating in perfect harmony). It at least formalizes the antagonistic relationship between Wanda and mutantdom that is never going away, serves to deter any ambitions of going after her and perhaps serves as an ironic punishment of Eric's bombast in Jerusalem
* which begs the interesting question of what happens if a mutant dies from being harvested for the Eternals' resurrection and is resurrected in turn?