I am pretty far behind on comics.
Forever Evil: Got it. Ain't read it. This story features
the Crime Syndicate of America. Actually, this is at least the third iteration of those walking talking cliches. It is arguably the 5th or even 6th.
. I have no idea what posessed me to buy it. Either way, it cannot be worse than "Age of Ultron", right?
On a related note, the fancy covers for this month's DC books are not the only covers. As it turns out, there are regular cover variants available. I was able to down-grade my fancy cover variant of "Earth 2" #15.1 for a regular cover. I have to wonder how many people would have been worried about getting the fancy covers had DC made clear that regular variants would be available to begine with. (When the fancy covers were first announced back in July, DC said that they might do regular variants of some top-tier books.) The regular covers were not a last minute thing. DC planned this for the sake of hype. I am calling dirty pool. But, I can now rest easy and take my regular covers, so it is not all bad.
Iron Man: Scuttlebutt has it that Stark is returning to Earth, and this week's issue sets up for it Gillen is sticking around on the book, so I am sticking with it.
Superior Spider-Man #17
So Miguel O'Hara is from the defunct Marvel 2099 lines, right? Spider Man 2099 or something like that. There's not enough of him in this issue for me to really get a feel for the character or his world, though the future-slang gets old really fast. The situation with the timestream reminds me of Zero Hour, so is this Marvel's version of that crisis crossover? I notice the Hulk is traveling in time as well.
Spider-Ock continues to amuse with his memory of being the last picked for the team, and his "villain" speech patterns. His high opinion of his boss, who is being framed and his company subjected to a hostile takeover, is notable coming from Octavius. The guy normally looks down his nose at everyone. And his dismissal of spider-sense as a useless super power is hilarious. "Be more specific!"
For the sake of transition, I probably should have talked about this after "Forever Evil". Anyway.....
"Age of Ultron" ended with a "retcon punch" sort of moment. But, while DC's "Infinite Crisis" used it as an all-purpose way to paper over old mistakes going in to a reboot, Marvel is using it as an all-purpose way to ignore past story-elements without wholly contradicting themselves. (Buy the "Guardians of the Galaxy" one-shots to see the practical effects of this sort of writing, particularly in the character profiles at the end of the comics.)
A recent attempt at rebranding the old "2099" books had a line of dialogue to the effect of "we really are not sure what year this is relative to the old calendar. 2099 is just a guess." I would not be suprised if Marvel dropped the "2099" branding and went with some kind of time-vague "heroes of tomorrow" banner in the next decade or so.
Future slang was a huge part of 2099. Slott is likely making a stylistic choice.
This was a huge week for my pull file (after a few relatively light weeks). A "Cobra Files" compilation came out. There was a Starlin written "Infinity _________" compilation that I had to leave behind for money reasons. (It is in my file.) And, there were a few other books of interest, including both obligatory and casual reads. At the very least, I know there will be stuff waiting for me next week.