![]() ![]() M8 said he was rebuilt from the destroyed M7 by conditioned minions. M8 left a hypnotic command for Iron Man to recreate him as M9. The #145-146 choice would put this Ultron between M7 and M8, the #177/181 version would be between M8 and M9. Ultron-8 escaped the end of #161-162, but was destroyed in #171-172. He often came up with a new body after an old 1 was destroyed (although there has been at least 1 time when 2 different Ultrons met, nos 11 and 12).īefore this Avengers period the villain last appeared as Ultron-7 in #127 in a crossover with Fantastic Four #150. And indeed which Ultron is involved, given his penchant for rebuilding himself with better bodies and new Mark numbers. This leaves the question of where in Ultron's career the beginning of this story fits. This early Ultron tale could also be squeezed in there. There is also a period between #177 and another lineup change in #181 where Avengers apps in their own title and others have a random mix of the crowd that assembled for the Korvac Saga, including Hawkeye and Thor. (In #151 MD takes HC away for training, and she could already have started this task.) So there's a good argument for placing the 1st part of this story just after that 1. We don't see Hellcat or Moondragon but they could be off somewhere. Wa&YJ are back from hospital, and Ha is visiting. There is an out-of-sequence #145-146 which the Official Index places between #149 and the team reorganisation in #150-151. However I can suggest a couple of possibilities. So it's difficult to pinpoint a time when the active team was Beast, Captain America, Hawkeye, Iron Man, Scarlet Witch, Thor, Vision, Wasp and Yellowjacket. But then Yellowjacket left after #201 until #211. ![]() Falcon left after #194, and MsM after #200. ![]() Wonder Man was around most of the time from #150 to #211. Moondragon was a member in 137-151, plus Hellcat for most of that time. The other main problem is that there were extra characters in the team most of the time. However he too was involved in the Korvac Saga, and had some other appearances as well.Īt the other end of the range Wasp and Yellowjacket were injured for most of 137-149, and even Scarlet Witch and Vision were off on honeymoon for 137-140. He officially left the team in #151, and didn't rejoin until #211. However he did keep popping in for the odd adventure. But in #181 he was dropped from the team until long after #211. Hawkeye returned to help with the Korvac Saga in #170-177 and it looked like he had rejoined. Even when they came to the present they went off to the modern West until #168. In #137 he went back to the Wild West and partnered up with Two-Gun Kid. Take Hawkeye for instance - he appeared in many issues but was hardly ever an actual member of the team. But a closer look reveals that it's not that simple. And indeed the other members of the team sound like the regulars about then. Also Hank and Jan Pym are married, and their union falls apart after those issues. Which old Avengers team appears here? The inclusion of Beast in the ranks suggests that it's from the original series period #137-211. The insides *aren't* film-friendly, with realistic teams from the past and present which are very different from the film incarnation. At least they include Giant-Man on the cover, seeing as the story actually revolves around him. These would be part of the team from the old section of the story, except Vision's costume is the new (film and comics) version (and the Witch's attire is a new-type too). As such the cover plays a bit fast and loose by featuring the original Captain America and Thor and non-Superior Iron Man alongside Scarlet Witch and Vision. The title is obviously meant to play off Age of Ultron (the film rather than the comics series). And White was joined by Dono Sanchez Almara and Rachelle Rosenberg. But Pepe Larraz handled some of the issue, and Mark Morales also did some of the inking. I've listed Jerome Opena as artist and Dean White on colours. Earn bounty money and upgrade your ship with extra cannon, rockets and lasers.Scripter Rick Remender uses this comic to tie up a loose end from his Secret Avengers series. Titan Attacks has the same easy-to-learn and addictive gameplay of the classic arcade shoot 'em up, but is packed full of extras - new features, new strategies, and stylish neo-retro visuals.īattle swarms of alien fighters, bombers and giant boss motherships, over 5 unique worlds and 100 levels of frantic action. As the last surviving tank commander on Earth, single-handedly turn back the evil invading alien army, drive back the Titans across the Solar System, and defeat them on their homeworld. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |