Secret Wars’ Finale Says Goodbye to the Marvel Comics of Old

Secret Wars’ Finale Says Goodbye to the Marvel Comics of Old

Secret Wars' Finale Says Goodbye to the Marvel Comics of Old

The final issue of Marvel’s everything-changing event series bids farewell to the fictional father figure of its superhero reality. Reed Richards doesn’t exit the stage quite the way we’ve been led to believe, either.

Secret Wars' Finale Says Goodbye to the Marvel Comics of Old

The end of Secret Wars comes a few months deep into an aftermath that’s well underway. Marvel Comics’s All-New, All-Different initiative is a complete re-imagining of their universe’s characters and status quos. The changes so far have given readers a Spider-Man who runs a global tech conglomerate, a female Wolverine and a Hulk who isn’t Bruce Banner. All of this takes place eight months after the end of Secret Wars. The Fantastic Four is no more, and the Human Torch and the Thing fight evil on different super-teams. The whereabouts of Reed Richards (the original, not his evil alt-reality counterpart) have been an ongoing mystery for a while, with allusions to his apparent death.

Secret Wars' Finale Says Goodbye to the Marvel Comics of Old

Secret Wars #9—out this week from Jonathan Hickman and Esad Ribic—shows what happened to Mr. Fantastic just before the Marvel Universe gets reborn.

Secret Wars has been happening on a cosmic scale. It is set on a patchwork planet created by Dr. Doom after snatching omnipotence from mysterious beings who were orchestrating the end of all existence. What’s made the series the best mainstream crossover event in recent memory, though, is that it’s actually a focused character study. It’s largely been concerned with Victor Von Doom and the way that the archvillain has embodied godhood, but there’s been an increasing focus on his lifelong enemy, too. After surviving the erasure of the multiverse, Reed Richards has found himself in a reality where his life has been stolen. He’s been focused on working with the Black Panther, Namor and other survivors to come up with a way to defeat Doom-turned-God. The scenes where he reckons with what’s been lost, like the ones below from Secret Wars #6, have been wrenching.

Secret Wars' Finale Says Goodbye to the Marvel Comics of Old

The difference between superficial and meaningful change can be hard to chart in superhero comics. Death, estrangement and other reversals are just storytelling tools used in panels and word balloons. But Marvel Comics’ latest mutations have been consequential in game-changing ways. The company whence Iron Man, Captain America and the X-Men sprung isn’t just a comics publisher anymore. Even before its acquisition by Disney five years ago, Marvel was acting on ambitions to make their characters the source of an ambitious multimedia business. Those ambitions have been largely met, manifesting in a reality where multiple Marvel-branded movies and TV shows come out every year.

This issue’s best subtext is in how Hickman comments on the real-world shifts that are seemingly influencing how Marvel is grooming its stable of characters. Despit rampant speculation, it’s never been explicitly confirmed that 20th Century Fox’s command of the Fantastic Four film rights is the reason that Marvel isn’t publishing a monthly series featuring their beloved super-family. But the way that the publisher has reconfigured its fictional landscape is clearly prioritizing characters whose film and TV rights are under Marvel’s control. For example, the X-Men franchise is another one whose multimedia rights are controlled by a non-Marvel/Disney entity so the new Marvel Universe is a place where mutants are becoming extinct while the Inhuman population booms. Those are the same Inhumans who are a major part of Disney-owned ABC TV show Agents of SHIELD. If they are what they seem to be, editorial decisions like these—driven by outside factors—are a big change from how Marvel used to craft its storylines.

That change is deeply felt in Secret Wars #9, which reads like an explosion of all the series’ various attributes. There are giant battles of epic scale, shot through with heated monologues revealing how characters see themselves and others. The issue ends with a glimpse of the new reality Marvel’s heroes inhabit and teases the reason that Miles Morales got his mother back. Early on, as the Black Panther and Doom face off in a prelude to the series’ final showdown, Doom sneers at the attacks on his rule, characterizing them as “machination.”

It’s a sly beat that reminds readers that all superhero universes are the aggregate results of decades of tweaks, feints and left turns. Machinations, both metafictional intratextual, aren’t anything new in cape comics. What’s changing now is the fact that the successes of various adaptations appear to be filtering back into the wellspring that the TV shows and movies came from. It’s an undeniably plausible reason that, say, Daredevil has a secret identity again.

There’s also a sense of closure here, as Hickman returns to characters and scenes from his tenures on various Marvel series. The Black Panther counsels young charges in his kingdom like he did in New Avengers #1, but it’s the beginning of a new universe—and not the impending death of many—that serves as a backdrop. Epitomized by a stellar stint on the Fantastic Four family of titles, Hickman’s time at Marvel linked many of the publisher’s franchises into a sprawling mega-story, concerned in part with the hard choices superheroes have to make to preserve entire societies. Fittingly, Secret Wars ends with Reed Richards peacefully resigning himself to the idea of a new Marvel Universe built off of the emotional resonances of the old one. He can’t be part of it now, but serves in a role that’s a tacit acknowledgement that he’ll always be the foundation stone upon which Marvel’s superhero successes were built

Did You Forget What Marvel’s Secret Wars Was About? Let Us Remind You!

Did You Forget What Marvel’s Secret Wars Was About? Let Us Remind You!

Did You Forget What Marvel's Secret Wars Was About? Let Us Remind You!

Marvel finally did it. Eight months after it began, Secret Wars came to a close today, after nine issues of reality-bending madness. No idea what the fuss is? Want to get in on the event that brought us an All-New Marvel universe, juuuust as it’s ending? What the hell happened to the Fantastic Four? Here’s our guide.

Just a warning, going in—we’re not going to be spoiling the final issue of Secret Wars #9, which was released today. But obviously, plot points from the first 8 issues of Secret Wars, by Jonathan Hickman, Esad Ribic, Ive Svorcina, and Clayton Cowles, will be detailed below. You’re been warned!

Did You Forget What Marvel's Secret Wars Was About? Let Us Remind You!

So. Secret Wars. Didn’t that happen in like, the ‘80s?

It did! The 2015 series shares its name with the classic Marvel “event” series that took place in 1984. The new Secret Wars only really shares a name and the concept of the “Battleworld”, which all 9 issues of Secret Wars and its various spinoff series took place on.

Battleworld?

We’ll get to that, first, you have to deal with the Universe exploding.

Whaaaaaaaaaa?

Okay, let’s actually dial it back a little bit further, because Secret Wars is essentially the culmination of a plot that’s been swinging around in writer Jonathan Hickman’s New Avengers comic series. Basically, the New Avengers—Captain America, Tony Stark, Reed Richards, Namor, Doctor Strange, and Black Bolt—faced a terrible battle. Parts of Marvel’s various alternate universes were smashing into each other, creating “Incursions” that essentially destroyed either one of the universes or both in the process. The Avengers had to be willing to do anything to stop that happening to their own reality.

Did You Forget What Marvel's Secret Wars Was About? Let Us Remind You!

Sounds dark.

It was very dark—Hickman’s New Avengers saw some of Marvel’s greatest heroes sacrifice a lot to ensure the safety of their universe. They erased Steven Rogers’ memory when they decided they needed to go beyond Cap’s moral code. They kept a woman from an alternate universe captive. Hell, at one point they actually destroyed another universe to save the main Marvel reality. In the end, even these heroes sinking to their lowest didn’t save them. The Ultimate Marvel universe, known as Earth-1610, smashed into the main Marvel Universe, Earth-616, destroying both.

Wait a second. What the hell is Ultimate Marvel? Doesn’t that mean the best Marvel? Why isn’t that one the main universe if it’s the Ultimate one!?

The Ultimate universe first appeared in 2000, an alternate take on Marvel’s most iconic heroes that updated their origins and stories for the modern day. Peter Parker’s no longer a freelance photographer but the Daily Bugle’s website admin—things like that. The Ultimate universe was one of Marvel’s most popular alternate takes on its heroes, and home to some fantastic characters. Like Miles Morales, who took over from Peter Parker as Spider-Man.

Did You Forget What Marvel's Secret Wars Was About? Let Us Remind You!

So it was a big deal when it ended, seemingly for good, by taking out the prime Marvel universe in a big fiery explosion. Many heroes from the 616 and 1610 Earths survived though, after figuring out there was no point fighting each other and instead getting on some spaceships, hoping to ride out the cataclysm.

So where does Secret Wars take place, if the Marvel universe is dead?

Remember when I mentioned Battleworld earlier? The Battleworld is a mish-mash of different alternate worlds, smushed together into one. The escape crafts of the surviving heroes crash land there, only to find out each region—populated by alternate versions of many heroes, with recreations of old Marvel events, like Age of Ultron or X-Men Apocalypse, alongside new things like the wild-western 1872—was ruled by the iron fist of Doctor Doom, the God-King of the new universe.

Wait. How the hell did Doctor Doom survive? And become god?

While the New Avengers were going around being morally problematic in their quest to save the world, arguably Doom tried to be the most noble—in his own, Doom-y way. Victor realized that the Beyonders, godlike beings who played a part in the creation of the Marvel cosmos, were the ones behind the destruction of the alternate realities. Doom, with the help of Doctor Strange and Molecule Man, managed to thrash the Beyonders, hoping that by taking their power he could save reality. He couldn’t, but he used it to reforge the remaining shards of different universes into one single remaining world.

Did You Forget What Marvel's Secret Wars Was About? Let Us Remind You!

Seems kind of benevolent, for a Supervillain.

Well, having absolute power let Doom basically create a fantasy world for himself to play about it. The “Baron” of each region of Battleworld had to report to Doom, the ultimate ruler of the world—something Doom has wanted forever—and a man who could reshape reality at the click of his fingers.

He commanded an army of alternate Thors to police the world (they were called the Thor Corps. Cute name aside, they were not to be trifled with). He erased the memory of Reed Richards from the mind of Sue Storm and Richard’s children, Valeria and Franklin, and made them his own family, to spite his longtime nemesis. Hell, he even made Galactus his personal lapdog, for christ’s sake.

Okay, less benevolent. No one tried to stop him?

No—the Thor Corps ensured that there was no travel between different regions of the Battleworld, and after all, Doom had godlike powers. He could do whatever he wanted, and Battleworld was mostly fine to exist with him ruling it all. He did so happily for eight years, until the escape ships containing the survivors of the Ultimate and Prime Marvel universes arrived. Being the superheroes we know and love, they didn’t take too kindly to Victor Von Doom being god.

Did You Forget What Marvel's Secret Wars Was About? Let Us Remind You!

But how do you fight god?

Good question. They tried to battle Doom, but with his almighty power they couldn’t beat him. Before he could deal the killing blow that would’ve snuffed out Marvel’s most iconic superheroes, Stephen Strange—who had spent those eight years as Doom’s lackey, believing his closest allies were lost—used his magic to scatter the heroes across the Battleworld, something Doom snapped his neck for.

Oh, and he blamed Strange’s death on the heroes, charging Valeria Richards, who still thought Doom was her father, with hunting them down.

Okay. But when this Secret Wars thing started, Marvel cancelled a bunch of my comics and replaced them with all these Battleworld comics. What’s the deal with that?

With the universe destroyed, those comics couldn’t really continue. Secret Wars was designed to be a total reboot of the Marvel comic universe, something they hadn’t really done on this scale. Its current crop of comics ended, and were replaced by tons and tons of new miniseries that were set in the different regions of Battleworld, exploring these strange places and offering twists on old stories like Civil War or Armor Wars or even things that weren’t wars!

Do I have to read all of them to understand Secret Wars then? I don’t have the time, money, or sanity to do that.

No one does. If you just want to catch up on the main thrust of Secret Wars, just read the main Secret Wars series, which ran for 9 issues and ended today.

Great! So, heroes scattered, Doctor Doom triumphant. What happened next? Were our heroes… doomed?

See what you did there. Well, the heroes were scattered, but not broken. They even managed to find regions that were disgruntled with Doom’s long rule, and slowly built an army of resistance that could march upon Doom’s castle in the appropriately-titled region of Doomguard.

Did You Forget What Marvel's Secret Wars Was About? Let Us Remind You!

And Black Panther got hold of the all-powerful Infinity Gauntlet, because how else are you going to fight a dude with the powers of a god?

So Doom’s armies fight the heroes’ armies. What about Doom himself?

Well, you’ll have to find out by reading the final issue—the heroes and villains of Marvel’s old universe have made their move, and Doctor Doom stands to lose everything he’s made. Suffice to say, it’ll have some big questions about the fate of certain Marvel heroes, especially the Fantastic Four. But this catches you right up, so you can dig in straight away.

Marvel director Joe Russo hints at looming Avengers cull

Marvel director Joe Russo hints at looming Avengers cull

Film-maker set to helm Captain America: Civil War and Infinity War movies says studio may jettison key superhero characters from its ‘cinematic universe’

A bruised Iron Man prepares for battle in forthcoming superhero smackdown Captain America: Civil War.
Last stand … A bruised Iron Man prepares for battle in forthcoming superhero smackdown Captain America: Civil War. Photograph: YouTube

Russo told an audience at the Wizard World New Orleans convention that film-makers planned to deal with an increasing proliferation of costumed heroes in Marvel’s “cinematic universe” by removing some of its key players. The film-maker, who will oversee Captain America: Civil War, due to be released in the UK in April, and the two-part Avengers epic Infinity War alongside brother Anthony, also said lesser-known figures might move to the fore.

“I want to see some storytelling from some of the secondary characters,” Russo told fans at the Wizard World New Orleans convention. “We’re focusing on that right now with Infinity War while we’re breaking into those movies, [to see] which characters we can pull to the forefront who potentially haven’t had their own ‘A’ story arc to this point. I think you’ll see that the supporting Avengers are going to become primary Avengers.

“Everything is finite, right? Nothing can last for ever,’ he added. “It’s cyclical. Some new Avengers in [future movies] are going to become prominent and then maybe some Avengers might not be around any more.”

There have been rumblings of change for some time at Marvel, with Robert Downey Jr, who played Iron Man, now 50 and having failed to sign up for future solo outings as the power-suited hero. The looming debut of Benedict Cumberbatch’s Doctor Strange, a key member of The Avengers in some of the original comic books, has also inspired speculation that the sorcerer supreme could eventually join the superhero team on the big screen.

There is also a precedent for the disappearance of Captain America, currently played by Chris Evans, from the Marvel universe. In a 2007 comic book chapter, the original patriotic hero, Steve Rogers, was revealed to have died after being shot at close range by sometime paramour Sharon Carter, who had been hypnotised into committing the murder. Rogers remained “dead” for two years before a 2009 series, Captain America: Reborn, revealed he had simply been phasing in and out of space and time.

Infinity War parts one and two will be released in 2018 and 2019 respectively. Doctor Strange, with Scott Derrickson directing, marks Cumberbatch’s debut lead role in a big-budget Hollywood production and will be released in November.

Marvel director Joe Russo hints at looming Avengers cull

LEGO Marvel’s Avengers Getting Free DLC Exclusively for PS4, PS3

LEGO Marvel’s Avengers Getting Free DLC Exclusively for PS4, PS3

At last, I’m free to speak about one of the most exciting things that we’ve been squirreling away on at TT Games for LEGO Marvel’s Avengers, outside of everything that already makes the game such a fun and authentic Marvel title (Yes, Squirrel Girl reference intended… sorry!).

LEGO Marvel’s Avengers is getting some free DLC content exclusively for all PS4 and PS3 players. What’s even more awesome is that this content is based on the brilliant Marvel’s Ant-Man movie and also one of my most anticipated films of 2016, Marvel’s Captain America: Civil War. And yes, believe it or not I’ve managed to keep a lid on this. I’m not quite sure how… but I have.

LEGO Marvel’s Avengers already features content from six epic Marvel films (and a plethora of content from the rest of the Marvel Universe, including a ton of characters from Marvel Comics), however, now PlayStation gamers will be able to add content from two more movies to their experience.

So, I hear you all asking: what is this content exactly, and what makes it so exciting? Well, first up we have the Captain America: Civil War Character Pack, which will be available at launch on January 26th and includes nine characters — yes, nine characters — featured in the upcoming movie: Captain America, Iron Man (Mark 46 armor), Black Panther, Winter Soldier, Falcon, War Machine, Scarlet Witch and my personal favorites, Crossbones and Agent 13. It’s a great pack that will hopefully get everyone as excited as I am about the film. Obviously before you ask, yes, you will be able to take all of these characters into the main game, into the various levels or into the eight different open world locations.

LEGO Marvel AvengersLEGO Marvel Avengers

The second is the Ant-Man Character & Level Pack, of course based on the Ant-Man movie, which will be available later this spring. This pack features an awesome level based on a section of the film. It also has eleven great characters, including Ant-Man (Scott Lang), Ant-Man (Hank Pym), Ant-Thony (Flying Ant), Cassie Lang, Darren Cross, Scott Lang, Hank Pym, Hope Van Dyne, Luis, The Wasp (Janet Van Dyne), and Yellowjacket.

We are really bringing Ant-Man and Yellowjacket to life with all the abilities that you’d expect them to have. The team and I here at TT Games are positive you will really enjoy this DLC offering. But, not only are we bringing you the characters and the level content, the part of this pack I’m most excited about… Ant-Thony the Ant! You’ll be able to fly around on Ant-Thony within the DLC level and then into the main game as well.

When I watched the movie with the team, we really enjoyed it, so much so that I went back to watch it again the next day, and then saw the amazing playsets that LEGO created for the film so to now be able to pair those together and bring them to life in LEGO Marvel’s Avengers is yet another reason why this game has been an absolute delight to work on.

In addition to the movie and comic content in the game, we’re really looking forward to hearing what you all think of the many new features in LEGO Marvel’s Avengers, specifically the Avengers Team-Ups. When you think of the Avengers, you think of teamwork, pulling together against adversity as a team. So, now you can team-up characters to perform incredible combo moves to take down the bad guys.

LEGO Marvel Avengers

Teaming up core Avengers results in unique moves based on the pairing so we hope you enjoy trying out all of the various combinations to see which is your favorite. For us, it’s yet another reason why LEGO Marvel’s Avengers has been such a pleasure to develop. All of us on the team here are Marvel fans so make sure you look out for the various references and nods we’ve put into the game to make it the most authentic and fun experience.

We think that this is our best game yet — more humor, more characters, more features, more open world gameplay, more abilities, and of course, more movie content exclusively for PlayStation fans.

On behalf of myself and the team, we hope you have many hours of enjoyment when you play LEGO Marvel’s Avengers, and if you love it as much as we think you will, keep an eye out for the season pass content that we’ll be bringing your way featuring classic comic content as well as content from Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.

Minecraft players given free rein to build up, tear down Ottawa

Minecraft players given free rein to build up, tear down Ottawa

In the real life version of Ottawa, Parliament Hill looms over the downtown, the Rideau Canal bisects the city, and the Senators take to the Canadian Tire Centre ice way out in Kanata.

In Minecraft Ottawa, none of that’s set in stone.

The recently-unveiled GeoOttaWow lets Minecraft players explore and refashion Ottawa’s streets, houses, train tracks, as well as major buildings like Parliament Hill and City Hall.

“I think we’re one of the first in Canada to do this, so that’s a good thing,” said Coun. Rick Chiarelli, chair of the city’s information technology sub-committee, on CBC Ottawa’s All In a Day Friday afternoon.

For those unfamiliar with how the game works, Minecraft lets players dig (mine) and build (craft) nearly anything they want using Lego-like blocks and bricks.

The game — which has no levels to complete or mandatory objectives to accomplish — has proven immensely popular. In 2014, its Swedish designers Mojang were bought by technology giant Microsoft for $2.5 billion.

GeoOttaWow came about after a staff member took the city’s open data and uploaded it over the holidays, said Charles Duffett, the city’s chief information officer.

Duffett told All In A Day host Alan Neal that the freedom of being able to shape the nation’s capital to your liking gets people — especially young people — invested in the future of their city.

Game teaches ‘principles of civil planning’

“Now you have kids who are experimenting with basic principles of municipal planning. So if they think, for instance, that an outdoor stadium should be somewhere, they can build one — and then they can look at what impact it would have on that area, and what the concerns would be,” said Duffett.

ottawa-chiarelli-220

Ottawa is one of the first cities in Canada to be made available on Minecraft, said Coun. Rick Chiarelli, chair of the information technology sub-committee. (CBC)

“They may discover they’re learning some principles of civil planning.”

Other places in the real world have made themselves available on Minecraft, perhaps most notably the entire country of Denmark, which can be torn down and built back up according to players’ whims and desires.

According to Chiarelli, in one important way, the Minecraft version of Ottawa is even better than the real thing.

“It also shows all the streets plowed.”

Minecraft players given free rein to build up, tear down Ottawa