I figured as such, but for some reason the geek in me just keeps screaming that this is one big causality loop, like Kirk’s glasses in Star Trek IV.
I never thought it was realistic, but it was fun, in a head-bending ninja-mojo sort of way.
Larry Hama really loves his ninja comics; in addition to Nth Man, he also did Wolfpack (inner-city kids learn ninjitsu to stay off the streets and defend their neighborhood), as well as all the ninjamania in G.I. Joe.
I’ve been waiting for Barry to come back for almost 20 years now. I wish they would bring him back. I think it’s idle fan speculation because of every other reversal to the Silver Age that’s going on now.
There’s at least three Gwen-Clones running around (one of whom is married to a Miles Warren clone (yuk) ) so I don’t think she counts.
I don’t blame Conway for bringing in the first Gwen clone–he was getting death threats in the mail from disgruntled fans*. I’ve heard (I’ve never seen Conway confirm or deny this specific incident) that allegedly someone took a picture of his kids in the schoolyard or something and mailed it to Conway with a note that said something to the effect of “It’d be a shame if someone pushed them off a bridge, wouldn’t it?” and Conway (more or less) said “F*ck it. It’s a funny-book. It ain’t worth this crap.” (I agree) and he intro’d the first Gwen Clone. Nothing forgives the Clone saga though.
Fenris
*Marvel fans were fucking nuts at this time. When Howard the Duck first appeared in Adventures in Fear, he was quickly killed (pushed off a bridge over a void). Marvel got huge hate-mail, including someone who sent them dead ducks in the mail(!!!) with notes saying stuff like “yOU MurDEreD mE!” Early '70s Marvel fans were deranged.
Wow, that’s embarrassing, but in my defense, it was 6:00 in the morning. I meant to say “Well, that sure was decent of you! I definitely would have said something else.” Don’t mind me, though. :smack:
My “Only Bucky and Uncle Ben stay dead” comment was meant to be tongue in cheek; I’m aware that other characters stay dead. The Legion and the Titans tend to let their dead stay dead.
If I were in charge of comic book characters, I would make it a rule that dead characters should stay dead unless bringing them back was part of the storyline that killed them. Thus, Ben coming back in the recent Fantasic Four storyline is ok, as it was planned from the very beginning, and he wasn’t really dead. Resurrecting Jean Grey isn’t.
Likewise, I sincerely hope that they don’t bring Barry back. Like with Jean, to do so would lessen the sacrifice he made to save the universe.
Might be Magneto. When he was a member of the Hellfire Club, he tried to consolidate his influence by seizing two titles, Black King and White King, simultaneously, functioning as a “Grey King.”
Or, maybe it was Dr. Spectrum when his jewel broke and all the color was leached out of him.
It is possible they weren’t speaking literally (the point about comic book universe science aside). It is just as likely that the element they are discussing as dwarfing entire galaxies, could be from some super Dyson’s sphere in which the entire surface area and thus population of the “planet”, dwarfs the population/surface area of all the planets of “galaxies.”
Or, comic book physics being what it is, if there’s a Microverse, there’s probably a Macroverse. But, the current line is that the Stranger was lying about Eternus and was intended to be the fourth head of the Living Tribunal. He always reminded me of the guy who played Darren Stevens’ boss on Bewitched (and who, come to think of it, also played J. Jonah Jameson on that short-lived Spider-Man TV show in the 70s).
Epimetheus I have a comic in which Superman discovers that Warworld is larger than a dwarf star. IIRC Warworld is not a Dyson sphere. It’s just really big.