JewishHobbit
Avenger
- Joined
- Aug 4, 2003
- Messages
- 26,683
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 56
Man, I'd like free bags! I've visited tons of shops over my years and never once have I found one that gave bags or boards with new comics!
And I was curious about that one but with my budget needing to downgrade I won't be getting it.
The New X-Men were only depressing during Kyle and Yost's first 12 issues or so. I don't think anyone else died after that until Wolfcub in Young X-Men a year or more later.
And honestly, that generation went 37 issues before anyone died (including New Mutants, which it relaunched from, a one shot, and a Hellion mini). Had mass death for 12 issues, then went another 24 issues (including the X-23 mini that tied in and Young X-Men) before the next death occured. It then went another 7 until cancelation... so 1 death in 2 1/2 years after Kyle and Yost's initial splurge. All in all I think there were 5, maybe 6 deaths (and a dozen or two nameless students in the bus deal) in 71 issues. Slott probably matched that in Initiative and is halfway there already in, what 7 or 8 issues of Amazing Spider-Man? And yet you praise those dudes. Double standard anybody?
And honestly, the New X-Men class was fantastic even before the splurging and they were all brand new. I loved them! The Splurging sucked but it was all done in a way that really played the story into something great. And that one random death in Young X-Men was dealt with and turned Rockslide into a very 3-demensional character and my favorite of that generation.
So no, death and destruction isn't needed at all to make great new character that last and New X-Men, I feel, proved that. They were new and built a following for 3 years before the first death... and that was for somewhere around 20 or so characters... not just 6 or so new ones that Academy has. With relaunches and connecting minis they went around 70 issues and are still prominant every month in various ongoings and minis from X-Force to X-Men Legacy to Uncanny X-Men.
So I don't know what you're ranting about New X-Men for.
I just showed how you apparently didn't read New X-Men's run to know what you're talking about there... AND I just said in that same post that the reason I'm debating on dropping Amazing Spider-Man is due to the constant deaths... did you miss that point? It doesn't matter if it's new or not.
In the scenerio with Avengers Academy... it's very bleh thus far. I find nothing there to care about these characters with save maybe one or two. Now, if it were in my budget I wouldn't mind waiting for them to grow but it's been 3/4 of a year and I still feel like their story has barely progressed. By this time in Young Avengers we'd established all the characters, built connections between them, established Patriot's origin and drug problems, played out the entire Iron Lad storyline and got Vision out of it, and were in the early process of discovering the secrets behind Hulkling and Wiccan.
In Academy we've learned that they're new, troubled, went on a few small adventures that didn't amount to much, and haven't impacted all that much in or out of the title. Young Avengers have grown stagnant over the years but comparing Academy to them where they were at this point is apples and oranges in my opinion.
Let me rephrase that... nothing happened of importance. With a small exception of whatever comes of the Finese plot (which I don't see being much at this point) nothing happened to put us in a different place than where we were at the beginning of last issue. Their story didn't move forward all that much.
I think you're going on rants due to being offended at people downing Academy or something because this has little to do with what I was talking about. But putting it planely... to pay attention to the comics that don't do it (and most of us do pay attention to them) they have to be good to capture our attention. For me, Academy isn't anywhere near good enough to keep me. I keep buying it because I like student books in general and I see the potential in it, but I've been very disappointed in it so far and if I have to cut things it's a top runner due to that.
And I obviously pay attention and stick with light hearted comics being that in that review up there I also stated Batgirl as my favorite DC title each month... a VERY lighthearted book. And I could ask you this... why aren't you reading Batgirl? or better yet... Echo? It's light hearted while serious, little doom and gloom, a fantastic read with two people who've been bragging about it for two years now (Phaed and I) and is independant and a low seller. It could use the sales but you aren't giving it a shot. At least I gave Academy at least 9 issues. So is your deal that people aren't supporting the smaller good titles or that people aren't supporting the smaller good titles that YOU want them to support?
Eh, I liked his Wasp deal best... but then I never liked Janet and seldom read anything with her. Right now, when I think Wasp, I think of Hank Pym.
Quicksilver appeared in this issue. I do agree about Justice and Speedball, though. However, Speedball, written by Gage, will be featured in a FEAR ITSELF mini series, so I imagine Gage was saving focus on Baldwin until there. Justice is a problem because it is a subplot that Veil has a crush on him, yet we are told about it more than shown; it was only shown in issues one and five (of nine).
And I was curious about that one but with my budget needing to downgrade I won't be getting it.
The New X-Men are grim and depressing. The Young Avengers are no more fleshed out than the Academy kids despite having been in print for SIX YEARS. At the very least, some Avengers genuinely care about the well being of the Academy kids and are actively trying to teach, defend, and help them. The Young Avengers, meanwhile, are manipulated and/or hunted or left to die by the Avengers at virtually every juncture.
The New X-Men were only depressing during Kyle and Yost's first 12 issues or so. I don't think anyone else died after that until Wolfcub in Young X-Men a year or more later.
And honestly, that generation went 37 issues before anyone died (including New Mutants, which it relaunched from, a one shot, and a Hellion mini). Had mass death for 12 issues, then went another 24 issues (including the X-23 mini that tied in and Young X-Men) before the next death occured. It then went another 7 until cancelation... so 1 death in 2 1/2 years after Kyle and Yost's initial splurge. All in all I think there were 5, maybe 6 deaths (and a dozen or two nameless students in the bus deal) in 71 issues. Slott probably matched that in Initiative and is halfway there already in, what 7 or 8 issues of Amazing Spider-Man? And yet you praise those dudes. Double standard anybody?
And honestly, the New X-Men class was fantastic even before the splurging and they were all brand new. I loved them! The Splurging sucked but it was all done in a way that really played the story into something great. And that one random death in Young X-Men was dealt with and turned Rockslide into a very 3-demensional character and my favorite of that generation.
So no, death and destruction isn't needed at all to make great new character that last and New X-Men, I feel, proved that. They were new and built a following for 3 years before the first death... and that was for somewhere around 20 or so characters... not just 6 or so new ones that Academy has. With relaunches and connecting minis they went around 70 issues and are still prominant every month in various ongoings and minis from X-Force to X-Men Legacy to Uncanny X-Men.
So I don't know what you're ranting about New X-Men for.
It seems to me that the only way some of you can care about a book with new characters is if every issue, one of them is slated to die, and in every four, one of them does (NEW X-MEN, basically). The graveyard of the X-Mansion is probably full of more bodies than Arlington National at this rate. Well, SPIDER-GIRL just killed off the main character's father in issue two; all of you should be all over that.
I just showed how you apparently didn't read New X-Men's run to know what you're talking about there... AND I just said in that same post that the reason I'm debating on dropping Amazing Spider-Man is due to the constant deaths... did you miss that point? It doesn't matter if it's new or not.
In the scenerio with Avengers Academy... it's very bleh thus far. I find nothing there to care about these characters with save maybe one or two. Now, if it were in my budget I wouldn't mind waiting for them to grow but it's been 3/4 of a year and I still feel like their story has barely progressed. By this time in Young Avengers we'd established all the characters, built connections between them, established Patriot's origin and drug problems, played out the entire Iron Lad storyline and got Vision out of it, and were in the early process of discovering the secrets behind Hulkling and Wiccan.
In Academy we've learned that they're new, troubled, went on a few small adventures that didn't amount to much, and haven't impacted all that much in or out of the title. Young Avengers have grown stagnant over the years but comparing Academy to them where they were at this point is apples and oranges in my opinion.
I wouldn't say nothing happened. The Avengers talked it over and Tigra admitted she was over reacting and even being hypocritical towards the kids, not letting them learn something she did. As for Taskmaster, Gage was in a rock and a hard place. Determine 100% that Finesse is his child and completely and forever shut down that subplot, of which there would literally be nothing more to do with it (beyond ripping off Teen Titan's schtick with Deathstroke's annoying daughter Rose). Or leave that door at least a little open for some discussion and doubt and whatnot. I thought the fact that Taskmaster was willing to take a chance on Finesse despite things not being 100% between them was a test of character. The scene between them at the end was actually bittersweet at best. Finesse hadn't had a focus episode since issue 2 and she is a character who needs to at least attempt to be sympathetic now and then. Often she comes off like a ***** when the focus isn't on her.
Let me rephrase that... nothing happened of importance. With a small exception of whatever comes of the Finese plot (which I don't see being much at this point) nothing happened to put us in a different place than where we were at the beginning of last issue. Their story didn't move forward all that much.
It just seems to me that the same people who whine and cry about their favorite characters being killed, mutilated, or reset with mystical deals with devils and roll their eyes when Marvel promises destruction and thunder every month can't pay attention at any comic that doesn't do that. You can't have it both ways. And if all comics do is destroy without building, eventually all you have is scorched earth.
I think you're going on rants due to being offended at people downing Academy or something because this has little to do with what I was talking about. But putting it planely... to pay attention to the comics that don't do it (and most of us do pay attention to them) they have to be good to capture our attention. For me, Academy isn't anywhere near good enough to keep me. I keep buying it because I like student books in general and I see the potential in it, but I've been very disappointed in it so far and if I have to cut things it's a top runner due to that.
And I obviously pay attention and stick with light hearted comics being that in that review up there I also stated Batgirl as my favorite DC title each month... a VERY lighthearted book. And I could ask you this... why aren't you reading Batgirl? or better yet... Echo? It's light hearted while serious, little doom and gloom, a fantastic read with two people who've been bragging about it for two years now (Phaed and I) and is independant and a low seller. It could use the sales but you aren't giving it a shot. At least I gave Academy at least 9 issues. So is your deal that people aren't supporting the smaller good titles or that people aren't supporting the smaller good titles that YOU want them to support?
As for Giant Man, I hate his creepy antenna but don't mind the rest. I'm with Absorbing Man on this one; Pym as the Wasp did usually feel like he was fighting crime in a dress; Janet just owned that name for over 45 years. It's like if Princess Diana died and Nemesis decided to fight in her colors and name as Wonder Man. I'd snicker every time I saw him. I wouldn't have minded a return to Doctor Pym, though. Everyone calls him that, anyway. Like Reed Richards; no one but out of touch law enforcement ever call him "Mr. Fantastic" anymore.
Eh, I liked his Wasp deal best... but then I never liked Janet and seldom read anything with her. Right now, when I think Wasp, I think of Hank Pym.
Last edited: