I think they can sell it because it's what they're best known for. When you think of Avengers, sadly, Justice and Speedball are very low on those you'd like to see... but when you think of New Warriors... they're at the top along with the other original cast members. If you want to get the New Warriors going again, that's who you need.
It is true. I have criticized Marvel for relaunching the New Warriors at least twice (not counting a mini) with premises that didn't fit them and with a large chunk of their old regular cast gone. Yet a few of them like Justice have felt like they moved on a bit. It wouldn't be a bad idea to reunite as many of the founders as possible, at least for the opening issue or arc. Justice still visits with them when he can in civilian attire and naturally organized "Counter Force" and "Avengers Resistance" out of former members. He certainly rebounded with Ultra-Girl, who was retroactively made a New Warrior alongside Slapstick back in 90's continuity.
Yeah, I think that'd be a good start. Get the readers in and form the group more dynamically as a result of the first arc. It'd be wierd to just throw them together and say "we're a team again!" Saving Nova is something that would reuinite them along with the Avengers Resistance and even Gravity. Fighting together against Thanos and winning, saving Nova and Star Lord, and getting those old emotions going, is enough to cement the team again.
Then what if this New Warriors pitch were written as a loose cosmic mini by DnA. Then out of it they can launch the New Warriors ongoing with their new team name and direction, and perhaps a Nova & Star Lord mini
Abnett & Lanning could likely handle a damn fine New Warriors series. I'm certainly enjoying their HEROES FOR HIRE more than I did their IRON MAN/THOR, or even some segments of ANNIHILATORS (not ROCKET AND GROOT; that's awesome). They're moving into NEW MUTANTS and will likely pick up with Havok, Polaris, and/or Marvel Girl from where they left off with them in WAR OF KINGS, so it isn't something that is unheard of. My head says the best idea would be a writer with more "rep" than them, but I'd want it written well and Abnett & Lanning could write it well. Hell, they had Nova reunite with Vance and Angelica in NOVA once already.
Gravity was involved in some cosmic shenanigans in BEYOND! and in Dwayne McDuffie's subsequent run on FANTASTIC FOUR, helping save Epoch (who Quasar used to babysit) from Galactus and then helping the Four and Dr. Strange save Eternity (literally). For a rookie, he's been involved in a damn lot of stuff.
I agree here. THey had a good start with the Nova Corps but I don't think it was catching on. I think what hurt it was a lack of focus on anyone but the Rider brothers and fairly generic characters. The first thing I'd like to see is when Nova returns, he repowers the Corps.
Right. But did the Nova Corps really have a chance to catch on? Once Ego was taken care of, a lot of time was spent with Nova doing solo stuff and being away from them. There wasn't enough time to flesh them out. While I liked that arc with Sphinx that got Namorita back, that was pretty much the last chance for the Corps to really assert themselves.
But I thought they had. Robbie is a long term, defined character. Qubit, Irani, Philo, that dragon-woman...they were all just as deep as, say, Agent Brand, who everyone suddenly loves. There was that unresolved subplot with a seemingly resurrected Super-Nova saving the captured Tarcel from Vulcan's dungeon that went nowhere. But now I am digressing.
I don't think it is fair to say they never caught on; DnA barely tried. Again, the Nova stuff has always been a riff at best of GL; why not go all the way and exploit the perks? Heck, I'm irritated that Jack Flag hasn't done anything in ages!
Cool, then take her with him

Like I said, I wasn't a fan of her's to begin with.
And the New Warriors in a space story isn't anything new. They had several of them in their initial plot. Their first issue had them against Terrax and their last few facing a Dire Wraith (currently in Annihilators). They went to space to face Supernova. I want to say there were more mixed in there but that's all I can think of off the top of my head. Then of course there was the Sphinx, their main nemesis.
True. Plus, I stated Gravity's space cred. Hell, he even met the Watcher. You can't be a real space adventurer unless you have one of Uatu's "I totally can't interfere, but just this once for the hundredth time I can give you a hint or a Maguffin or a free transport to a key location..." speeches.
I'm torn on it, but it would probably make sense. The only other story that could have any hope of buzz besides that would be them reviving Ben Reilly for some reason. But that would return to the late 90's days of trying to make the NW's a spin off of Spider-Man, which at the time was done to try to save them from cancellation - it didn't work, although a 75 issue run is nothing to sneer at.
I don't think this would be hard to get away from at all. Plain and simple, change. It's not like the Fantstic Four trying to get away from being the Fantastic Four. Does anyone believe that FF will last? No. New Warriors, however, aren't as specific in their purpose as a group and aren't as long lasting. And their members have since branched off to their own things for a decade now, enough that if they were to reform they're not exactly the kids they were in the early 90's.
I don't think it'd be hard to move them beyond the teen heroes possibly future Avengers thing at all.
What the New Warriors at least had in 1990 was them being Marvel's only teen hero team who weren't junior X-Men (who, in 1990, were still the New Mutants, but they were about to become X-Force). Nowadays, though, the NW's don't have that anymore; no, most of the characters are not teenagers anymore, but they're still compared and compete against Young Avengers or Young Allies or Runaways or New Mutants and so on. In the 20+ years since, retailers and fans have seen no end of "young" characters abandoned or tossed to the background and I think that prevents them from seriously supporting any launch involving them. To be fair, of course, NW's hasn't had a proper launch with their old cast since the 90's, and that is a long gap.
I think if the NEW WARRIORS were to try to find their own niche or angle, I think if Justice is going to at least be marginally involved, especially if Ultra-Girl is, then a theme they could try is taking on some newer generation villains. By that I mean some of the newer, younger villains who have popped up recently who haven't done much and who are still blank slates. I mean the Bastards of Evil, the "Young Masters"...maybe even Piledriver's son decides to "borrow" Wrecker's crowbar when he's in jail and try to do things better. Gravity himself had two such villains from his own series, Brushfire and Black Death; the latter of whom Rage even fought once, to tie that together. This might remind people of some of what they did in the 90's, taking on street gangs, but I think its a way to up the ante and flesh out some newer villains. Of course, now and again you can have a bigger villain show up or they take part in a crossover, and, ideally, play an important role. That is, if Marvel had the stones to amp any new characters.
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To take a step back from New Warriors chat for a second, may as well get in another of my usual "return/revitalization" ideas that I have posted about before, besides Moon Knight ideas. That is the Shroud. He's popped up in SHADOWLAND: BLOOD ON THE STREETS and he'll be popping up in something else in the near future, but the current track is to play him as a typical street vigilante, which I think is the wrong way to play him. There are too many of those. While it is true that his creator Steve Englehart deliberately based him on Batman and the Shadow, that's no excuse for fulfilling that cliche to the letter.
Shroud's old gimmick was pretending to be a costumed gangster, complete with his own crew (at the time, the Night Shift in L.A.) to infiltrate and undermine crime from within. He settled on this after literally trying to take out Dr. Doom in a head on match, and that didn't work out so well. This wasn't executed very well at the time, but that's no reason to abandon it forever. This angle, essentially, sees the Shroud as an "undercover", and that's a unique angle for a Marvel vigilante.
The dilemma is that Shroud's true purpose was revealed to the Night Shift, so he can't simply lead them again. Unlike a lot of other characters, though, the events of Civil War were a HELPFUL thing because that allowed him to build up some "street cred". Like no end of costumed figures on either end of the law, the Shroud was wanted. He fought Ms. Marvel and Wonder Man, and got arrested. He escaped prison during the final battle, and fled to Canada just like many American super-villains (like the Wrecking Crew and Purple Man). Heck, even in SHADOWLAND, he had a fight with Paladin on some roof tops. That's enough to maybe tie together a backstory that either Shroud was always a gangster and the Night Shift are full of it, or that he was "suckered" by the Avengers into switching teams but now he wants to go underworld again. He certainly wouldn't be the first "bad guy" who flip-flopped. Sandman was one of the Wild Pack and a reserve Avenger for a while. Venom went "vigilante" for a while and in a way hasn't gone back. Juggernaut seems to switch teams every few years (and he used to make a living as a brute for hire).
It isn't as if there is no place for an undercover. The Hood continues to have delusions of grandeur. The Kingpin is trying to settle into his old role. The Sinister Six are still plotting stuff. And hell, Count Nefaria has been keeping a low profile since being freed from prison in 2004-2005; mobsters with Thor-level powers are not to be left idle for long. But for the gimmick to work, very few heroes have to know that Shroud is really on "their" side. That means if he runs into a hero, he'll fight them - and maybe won't pull a punch once or twice, at least if a thug is watching. The AGENTS OF ATLAS tried to game Osborn with this ploy for a bit, and it was an interesting angle. Shroud, however, is a lone man, and doesn't have the raw power of, say, M-11, Namora, and Ken Hale.
Julia Carpenter, who Shroud has been dating, would probably be in the know; in fact, ideally she would literally be his best "contact", especially since the era of "Steve Rogers, Head of SHIELD" is ending. She's the new Madam Web which means she's likely taking it easy from nightly vigilante affairs. We could even re-establish Shroud's old front, which used to be the Cat's Jazz Club that was run by his two allies - burglar Edward "Cat" Lavender and driver/pickpocket Angeline "Mouse" Morrow. I mean, if Moon Knight can keep dragging along Marlene and Frenchie, why not these two with Shroud? They both moved to Manhattan with Shroud in the 90's but haven't done much since. They're fine supporting cast members because they have enough skills to be useful, yet have no powers so they could easily be in jeopardy if they're not careful, or get unlucky. A jazz club might be too outdated (it was a set up established in 1980), but it could always be reinvented as a more modern club. A successful front would also establish Shroud's rep on the streets, as many mobsters have fronts too. While Shroud does have Darkforce powers, he still is mostly reliant on his own prowess, fits, and fighting skills more than sheer super-abilities.
Finally, under this premise, Shroud would likely team up with some other super villains, likely "professionals" who were likely not maniac killers but types more after money than revenge or murder. This could allow one or two neglected villains from somewhere to get some fleshing, too. Taskmaster might be an interesting choice, since he's also had "rumors" about which side he is on, so he and Shroud could support each other in the underworld. To that end, we could throw in Constrictor to the mix, who brings his own unresolved drama with Diamondback (herself a former B.A.D. Girl and Serpent Society member who also dated Capt. America for ages).
At the very least, I think all this would be a better way to use Shroud than just having him be "yet another vigilante on the streets of New York City" as he has been used for the past, oh, 15 or so years.