TheCorpulent1
SHAZAM!
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I agree with everything else you said, but I call bulls*** on this. I was a new comic reader at a time when continuity was pretty heavy--back in the '80s and early '90s--and I never felt obligated to look into old comics; I wanted to because the stories were interesting enough that I wanted to figure out how they got to that point and learn about what I'd missed. My first issue of virtually every comic was some random issue in the middle of a story arc until I started really buying them regularly in high school. That's not to say that jumping-on points aren't beneficial; I just think completely discarding decades of what made those selfsame characters you're trying to generate interest in great in the first place is a mistake.The second problem is that comics are hard to get into due to decades worth of convoluted continuity. They aren't new reader friendly at all. Asides from Batman, Aquaman, and Green Lantern, the rest of DC is essentially getting a clean slate in regards to continuity. New readers don't have to feel obligated to check out comics that are decades old and written in an out of date style that only hardcore geeks like. All these new #1's makes new readers feel easier to check them out as opposed to Action Comics #905.
Hell, the claim that streamlining and simplifying characters creates better sales is already a proven fallacy. Barry Allen's origin is more straightforward than Wally's, since Wally's hinges on Barry's to begin with, yet the sales on The Flash haven't been particularly noteworthy since Barry took back over the mantle. Meanwhile, Batman's comics, which are a seething morass of continuity under Morrison, are doing quite well. At best, stunts like this line-wide reboot are short-term sales boosters.
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