marc
Veteran Member
I'm happy with this so far.
[YOUTUBE]https://youtu.be/Lt-U_t2pUHI[/YOUTUBE]
[YOUTUBE]https://youtu.be/Lt-U_t2pUHI[/YOUTUBE]
Of all the Marvel characters, why doctor Strange? It's just another redemption story. What does this character add that is needed in the cinematic universe?
Of all the Marvel characters, why doctor Strange? It's just another redemption story. What does this character add that is needed in the cinematic universe?
Magic. Their attempts to sell all the Asgardian stuff and the like as "advanced science" or "dark energy" or whatever have fallen kind of flat. Now they can just say "It's frigging magic - deal with it" and not need to bother coming up with some kind of explanation.
Of all the Marvel characters, why doctor Strange? It's just another redemption story. What does this character add that is needed in the cinematic universe?
Magic. Their attempts to sell all the Asgardian stuff and the like as "advanced science" or "dark energy" or whatever have fallen kind of flat. Now they can just say "It's frigging magic - deal with it" and not need to bother coming up with some kind of explanation.
Of all the Marvel characters, why doctor Strange? It's just another redemption story. What does this character add that is needed in the cinematic universe?
Magic. Their attempts to sell all the Asgardian stuff and the like as "advanced science" or "dark energy" or whatever have fallen kind of flat. Now they can just say "It's frigging magic - deal with it" and not need to bother coming up with some kind of explanation.
In the role playing game the groupings were Altered Human (Fantastic Four, Hulk, Spiderman, Juggernaut), Mutant (the Mutants), Alien (anyone who wasn't at least originally human), Robot (Vision, Ultron) and High Tech Wonders (anyone whose powers came from a device or system) (Iron Man, Hawkeye). We tended to put Dr. Strange in the High Tech Wonder group, as he was still fully human, and a lot of the 'technology' in the Marvel Universe was so fantastic it might as well be magic. The difference between a magic wand and a plasmoid-force-projection-ray being mostly the number of batteries it takes and the ritual to charge them...That's pretty much how I see it. He's the other major hero archtype. You have tech heroes (Iron Man, Hulk), Mutants (X-Men), Aliens (Most of Guardians of the Galaxy), and Magic (Dr. Strange).
In the role playing game the groupings were Altered Human (Fantastic Four, Hulk, Spiderman, Juggernaut), Mutant (the Mutants), Alien (anyone who wasn't at least originally human), Robot (Vision, Ultron) and High Tech Wonders (anyone whose powers came from a device or system) (Iron Man, Hawkeye). We tended to put Dr. Strange in the High Tech Wonder group, as he was still fully human, and a lot of the 'technology' in the Marvel Universe was so fantastic it might as well be magic. The difference between a magic wand and a plasmoid-force-projection-ray being mostly the number of batteries it takes and the ritual to charge them...That's pretty much how I see it. He's the other major hero archtype. You have tech heroes (Iron Man, Hulk), Mutants (X-Men), Aliens (Most of Guardians of the Galaxy), and Magic (Dr. Strange).
Ya know, I played Heroes and Marvel growing up, so I'm pretty sure that's where I got that from. I know there are comics online, I wonder if there's any kind of depository with lots of comics to peruse, going back decades. It would be fun re-reading The Beyonder story arc again, for example. Off to Google!
A depository with lots of comics to peruse? Off to my basement.![]()
A depository with lots of comics to peruse? Off to my basement.![]()
I made that mistake once. A flooded basement destroyed most of my collection. I lost everything from the '70s on back, though I only had a couple of very worn issues from the the late '60s. Now my oldest comics are a handful of Superman issues from '82.
My collection currently sits atop a table on the main floor of my house, slowly taking over one corner of the living room. My wife keeps threatening to remove the "eye sore" of carefully stacked drawer boxes, but until shes gives me a better option, they are going nowhere.
I made that mistake once. A flooded basement destroyed most of my collection. I lost everything from the '70s on back, though I only had a couple of very worn issues from the the late '60s. Now my oldest comics are a handful of Superman issues from '82.
My collection currently sits atop a table on the main floor of my house, slowly taking over one corner of the living room. My wife keeps threatening to remove the "eye sore" of carefully stacked drawer boxes, but until shes gives me a better option, they are going nowhere.
Good for you! My wife has told me outright she won't let me get rid of my comics. Her parents were into collecting toys for a long time, and she has that collectors mindset. In my old house the boxes were kept on pallets to keep them off the ground. Up on a hill we didn't have much worry of flooding. Now they are about 4 feet above the floor, and still not in a flood area. Think my oldest are early 80's, maybe a couple late 70's