Jennifer Walters
Attorney at Law
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Kitty Pryde of the X-Men has always been relatively flat chested.
but isnt she supposed to be 15 or so? (not an xmen reader)Kitty Pryde of the X-Men has always been relatively flat chested.
Personally, I love female characters. I see no difference between them and the male ones if written well. That goes for all forms of media, not just comics as I'm a huge fan of Buffy, Alias and others like them. The vibe I get from others why female characters aren't as big of a sell with many men is that frankly, a lot of men just don't believe a woman can be physically imposing and/or be a superhero. For example, my younger brother finds Buffy the vampire slayer ridiculous because a "chick that small would be KILLED by those guys/monsters/demons, etc." while I myself buy it because they've already told me that 1. Buffy can fight and 2. She has some level of super strength. A lot of men simply can't get past the fact that women are smaller and dainty looking etc and unless they look like someone like Chyna many men think these female characters are pushovers as fighters and thus they don't want to read a series about characters they think are winning fights unrealistically.
I don't know, but I'm a big Buffy fan, so I'm probably not the right person to ask. I found it a lot less believable for Xander to be fighting demons than Buffy.Yes, but why is it okay to believe a male superhero having powers? But if a skinny woman gets superstrength it's still not believeable that's she beating up dudes half her size? If there is an in universe reason? Why not just go with the flow and enjoy the character?
JustABill said:Yes, but more often than not in comics, the female heroes significant others are not the damsel in distress. They are just their love interest on the side of their superhero activities.
I don't know, I'm not a writer. Who'd have thought a She-Hulk ongoing would necessarily be a great idea before they first made one? I'm just saying, Storm seems to be one of the most popular female comic characters to the general public, in my experience, so she'd probably stand a decent chance of having a successful series if they could find a direction that's actually interesting.The one problem I'd have with a Storm ongoing and seeing as she's my favorite X-Woman this isn't hating. What exactly would it be about? Would it be sett in Wakanda or the X-Men's base of locations or both? What would be Storm's goal in it?
Storm works as a leader; I dont think she'd work quite as well in a solo. What makes her interesting is her ability to delegate orders and I think having her go solo would take away from her defining characteristic that has made her stand out and interesting. Of course she'd most likely get a supporting cast but really Id rather see her back leading the X-men, which she should be doing. Besides isnt Black Panther, sort of a pseudo-Storm solo? Isnt it presented sort of like the Green Arrow and Black Canary series? I dont read either but I thought Storm had a big leading role along side T'Challa in that bookI don't know, I'm not a writer. Who'd have thought a She-Hulk ongoing would necessarily be a great idea before they first made one? I'm just saying, Storm seems to be one of the most popular female comic characters to the general public, in my experience, so she'd probably stand a decent chance of having a successful series if they could find a direction that's actually interesting.
Wow. Forgot I made this thread. I think it needs to be bumped.
During the reveals of the upcoming MvC3. I've seen two women characters, one of which is in my avatar, get flak for being ''just like their male counterparts?"
Is that the reason this is a problem? Unread bias? Does the brain automatically think that She Hulk, X-23, Spider-Woman, and anyone who is an offshot of a popular male hero is JUST like them? And thus not readable or enjoyable?