[HEADING=3]This thread coming to you from Copper Zen, the Escapist's Grand High Pooh-Bah and a member of the The Astral Projection Study Group [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/groups/view/The-Astral-Projection-Study-Group], Brovengers [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/groups/view/The-Brovengers], Cataholics Anonymous [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/groups/view/Catoholics-anonymous], Internet Bunker [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/groups/view/The-Internet-Bunker], Mod Forum [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/groups/view/Moderation-Team] and the Injustice League [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/groups/view/The-Injustice-League].[/HEADING]
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TL/DR: How much do fanboys' expectations limit and damage the quality of stories writers can come up with without losing too many sales?
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I remember reading the fan letters in an old Captain America where a fan seriously insisted that Captain America's defined ability "to have at least 3 contingency plans for any situation" meant that Cap could whip Thor in a 1 on 1 bout.
"Thor wouldn't have a chance!" The fan insisted. "Cap would dodge lightning bolts and tornadoes and take the Thunder god out!"
Superheroes meeting and fighting each other for the first few pages of a book became so cliched over the decades that fans eventually started balking at the inanity of it all. Why DID Wolverine and Captain America have to tussle for 10 pages in 'this' comic when they'd all but formed a Bromance with each other at the end of their last team up 3 months ago? GET ON WITH THE STORY was the battle cry for such fans.
But fanboys be fanboys, as we all know. They MUST have their favorites win. This is the very reason that "X" vs "X" discussion threads are forbidden in Escapist forums. Not only are such debates a matter of opinion, but the very people arguing tend to be the ones least likely to be swayed in their opinions.
The obvious problem for many writers is the limits of their character's "Plot Armor".
Topics of discussion:
(1) How do you think fanboys' following their favorite characters influences comic book companies in building up said characters' capabilities? Wolverine was always popular among regular comic book readers but since the 1999 X-Men movie when he gained the attention of the public at large he became one of the most 'invincible' characters around.
I remember in the "Wolverine and Kitty Pryde" mini series from the 1980's a .45 caliber bullet to the forehead was enough to knock him unconscious.
In the Ultimates series the Hulk ripped him in two at the waist--and he survived. Then he was later decapitated--and he still survived.
(2) Do you think such expectations limit the stories writers can make? One of the reasons Batman is so popular is that he's not super powered, but as in the comic picture above he's been built up to "Above God Himself" proportions in the eyes of many, many fans---the very ones shelling out the money to buy his books to begin with.
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=================================================================================================
TL/DR: How much do fanboys' expectations limit and damage the quality of stories writers can come up with without losing too many sales?
=================================================================================================
I remember reading the fan letters in an old Captain America where a fan seriously insisted that Captain America's defined ability "to have at least 3 contingency plans for any situation" meant that Cap could whip Thor in a 1 on 1 bout.
"Thor wouldn't have a chance!" The fan insisted. "Cap would dodge lightning bolts and tornadoes and take the Thunder god out!"
Superheroes meeting and fighting each other for the first few pages of a book became so cliched over the decades that fans eventually started balking at the inanity of it all. Why DID Wolverine and Captain America have to tussle for 10 pages in 'this' comic when they'd all but formed a Bromance with each other at the end of their last team up 3 months ago? GET ON WITH THE STORY was the battle cry for such fans.
But fanboys be fanboys, as we all know. They MUST have their favorites win. This is the very reason that "X" vs "X" discussion threads are forbidden in Escapist forums. Not only are such debates a matter of opinion, but the very people arguing tend to be the ones least likely to be swayed in their opinions.
The obvious problem for many writers is the limits of their character's "Plot Armor".
Topics of discussion:
(1) How do you think fanboys' following their favorite characters influences comic book companies in building up said characters' capabilities? Wolverine was always popular among regular comic book readers but since the 1999 X-Men movie when he gained the attention of the public at large he became one of the most 'invincible' characters around.
I remember in the "Wolverine and Kitty Pryde" mini series from the 1980's a .45 caliber bullet to the forehead was enough to knock him unconscious.
In the Ultimates series the Hulk ripped him in two at the waist--and he survived. Then he was later decapitated--and he still survived.
(2) Do you think such expectations limit the stories writers can make? One of the reasons Batman is so popular is that he's not super powered, but as in the comic picture above he's been built up to "Above God Himself" proportions in the eyes of many, many fans---the very ones shelling out the money to buy his books to begin with.