Sparky Prime wrote: Once again, DC also continued forward with their continuity in the New 52 relaunch,
No, they threw out 90% of their continuity. Have you really sat down and taken a look at how many stories have changed or gone by the wayside, and thought about how different that makes all the characters? Have you thought about how many characters are entirely gone from the scene? This is not the same continuity we've been reading since 1986. It simply is not. You cannot change, delete and otherwise jettison story after story and character-forming event after character-forming event and claim with a straight face that the continuity is the same.
I'll say it again: DC didn't throw all of that out for no reason. They wanted to
start over. They wanted to go forward without having
to be consistent with what came before, which is all that continuity really is.
but the difference is that they majorly overhauled several of their characters at the same time. I don't know why you keep ignoring this point that they've done both here.
No, they haven't. They've majorly overhauled just about
every character. And they threw out most of their history to do it, leaving us with the nebulous and undefined "five years" in which things that we're just not privy to happened.
How many zero issues have you had a chance to read? Compare the modern origins in the issues from this past month with the originals. In no way, shape or form can the New 52 be said to be following in continuity with the pre-Flashpoint DC universe. Far, far too much has been changed.
Marvel likely will not be changing any of their characters so dramatically as DC did, but you can bet they will probably make some tweaks to their continuity given this opportunity.
Tweaks are one thing. DC did far more than tweak their universe.
An analogy: DC has done essentially what the last Star Trek movie did. The writers of that movie wanted a clean slate without discounting 40 years of Trek on TV and thus alienating the fanbase. So they had the Romulans change history so they could tell their new story without totally writing off everything we saw during TOS, TNG, DS9, Voy and Ent. Those old stories happened, but now they won't. A new reality dominates in which old characters are new, different, and not bound by having to be consistent with past appearances. And while the Star Trek 2009 is technically in continuity with all of those old series, in reality it isn't. It will replace and overwrite old stories with new ones, and old characters with new versions. It's more than a tweak to the Star Trek universe, it's a major upheaval. Continuity has been tossed out deliberately so writers can go in their own new direction, with only old Spock as a nod to the long-time fans. And that's exactly what DC has done. I'd half expected Wally West to turn up in the old Spock role, surprised at the changes to the universe around him, but that hasn't happened. It may yet, or some other character may fill that role eventually. Booster Gold perhaps.