Have you read the Gwenpool comic? You are really missing out on a really great comic. And it is far from a Deadpool copy.
Have you read the Gwenpool comic? You are really missing out on a really great comic. And it is far from a Deadpool copy.
James! Thanks so much for the nice piece. I’m so glad you liked it! I love these weirdo misfits, and we’re really excited about the response so far. Glad to have you on board!
That’s not so far-fetched.
You didn't actually read her series, did you? It was one of the most clever and fun books I've read in a long while. They way they used her powers and the emotional journey she went through was just fantastic
The only Avenger team that’s smaller scale than the GLA would be a hypothetical team consisting solely of Hank Pym’s various superhero aliases.
I still don’t understand why Gwenpool was even a thing that happened to begin with. :P
This is your regular reminder that NextWave is still canon:
so it’s kinda like NEXTWAVE without being so offensive they’ll have to retcon it out of existence.
The fact that there are no big teams operating out of the West Coast makes me yearn for the days the X-Men operated out of San Francisco, which makes so much sense then and even more now.
While West Coast Avengers is a smaller-scaled team series than...well, literally any other Avengers book,
I’m not certain I would exactly classify it as a supervillain, or even a villain, and whether or not it is “powerful” is debatable, but the first thing that comes to mind is Azathoth from H.P. Lovecraft’s Cthulhu Mythos. It’s an ultimate god thing that sleeps at the center of all realities, and everything that has…
Dr. Manhattan, while not technically a villain, isn’t exactly a hero either, and is up there with the most powerful fictional entities. I think he’d get bored fighting Galactus or Thanos and just pop off to another universe.
i mean, except the super villians that can alter reality can just like wipe him out of said reality. Plus a bunch of upper tier villians have resistances to that kind of stuff.
The answer is simple and straightforward: The Purple Man, aka Killgrave. Any supervillain who can tell another supervillain what to do, even ones that can alter space, time, etc...that supervillain wins, hands down. Jesse Custer from the Preacher can do this, but he’s not necessarily a villain per se. But Killgrave…
Is that supposed to be Padme’s actual ship, or a miniature model of it? The one in The Phantom Menace must’ve been 3 or 4 times larger, at least. Maybe the artist just mucked up the scale, but I think you’d struggle to find a spot within it with the headroom to stand upright as it’s presented here, whereas the film…
Although to be fair, some basically nice people aren’t very good at picking out gifts.
Ironic gifts aside, Vader was always going to rebel and attempt to overthrow Palpatine. It’s part of the Rule of Two and still cannon.
The Hulk used to be best friends with the Sentry, calling him “Golden Man.” Sentry’s powers used to keep Hulk calm.