Unfortunately for the interview he gave doubt very much we will have some answers soon about Cyclops and the egg of the Phoenix.
http://www.comicbookresources.com/ar...ens-loose-ends
Unfortunately for the interview he gave doubt very much we will have some answers soon about Cyclops and the egg of the Phoenix.
http://www.comicbookresources.com/ar...ens-loose-ends
Great that there are versions of Ben at least in Secret War stories. Devastated that Sue isn't in anything.
1218 doesn't exist according to Brevoort, so if all the multiverse is gone according to him why are we still here? In our universe, this fantastic stuff happens not in the real life but comics. We are fine and witnessing the events of the rest of the Omniverse being destroyed.
The Marquis of Death destroyed numerous universes before he arrived to 616, he however is also dead. If another Wyncham exists, he could be as troublesome or if on the right side, something to use for good. But the reality manipulators do make this situation a little funny. Jaspers warping would if left unchecked destroy the multiverse but by changing what should be, he wouldn't create a new one. Wyncham could.
Not the entire Earth, and certainly not the population of the larger universe. All we have evidence for is that those inside the Incursion zones, which seem to be a very small portion of each Earth, might go to Battleworld. That still means that 99% of Earth's population dies, and 99.99999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999 9999999999999999999999999999999999999% of the universe's.
We see Spider-Man on the raft, was that Peter Parker from 616? Or Miles Morales?
I'm assuming Peter, but we do know Miles will survivie due to All-New All-Diff Avengers, right?
On a quest to read all X-Men related comics in chronological order
Titles I'm currently reading:
Uncanny X-Men - X-Men v2 - X-Force - Wolverine - Deadpool - X-Treme X-Men
Yes, that's a very small percentage... whether I got the number of decimal points strictly accurate or not.
If it's just an area about the size of Manhattan for most worlds (although it seems like it might be larger for some), that's about 7 million people out of 7 billion, so about one out of a thousand are saved. But wait, in the Marvel Universe there definitely is life out there. So say even just a thousand inhabited worlds in the galaxy - that's one out of a million. But then there are billions of galaxy - latest estimate 200 billion. Presumably they're inhabited to the same degree. So, that's one out 200 trillion people saved per universe - and remember, that's probably on the low end, since with billions of star systems, a thousand inhabited planets for a galaxy seems quite conservative, especially when the galactic empires can 'terra'form and colonize and build structures like the ringworld in Infinity.
And then you have to wonder about the percentage of destroyed universes even represented on Battleworld, when it's only like a hundred odd different kingdoms and they used to talk about infinite universes (although obviously never actually technically infinite, just large enough to seem so, since if it were infinite then the Incursions could never get to the last ones).
So, no matter how you cut it, and no matter what level you're analyzing, in constructing Battleworld Doom (or whoever else) has only managed to save a really teeny tiny portion of the whole.