Dominic wrote:Publishers would be more willing to change/replace characters if the fans were not so stuck on how things used to be.
Are you kidding with this? How long was Barry Allen 'dead' for? Was there really any call from the fans after ~2 decades for his return? Not so much. It's not simply a matter of fans getting stuck on how things used to be. Yes they make a big noise when things happen, but given enough time, that dies down. Heck, anymore Marvel seems to piss off fans just to generate controversy about an issue to drive up sales. They even advertise that in their solicits now. You're so quick to pin it on the fans, but often times it's the publishers themselves that get stuck on things.
It is not only a question of a character's age. USAgent is a good example. A recent issue of "Dark Avengers" showed him getting lost limbs back....which effectively makes him the same as he was in the late 80s... And, why exactly? Scarlett Witch is back to pre-Byrne spec, and that is after "Disassembled" and "House of M", which there should have been no coming back from.
So to you, just because a character gets their lost limbs back makes them exactly who they were decades ago? Or somewhat de-powered returns them to what they used to be? No. It is not that simple. Scarlett Witch hasn't been forgiven just because she's not crazy from a power boost anymore. I don't follow USAgent, but similarly, I find it hard to believe he's exactly who he used to be either.
The most notable back-slide since that I can think of is the Manhunter being taken out of Stormwatch.
That's not really a back-slide. J'onn is creating his own Justice League team, made up of several characters who have never been on a team like this before.
Onslaught Six wrote:Shadowman's entire pretense (after issue 5 or so) was that he was going to die. There wasn't any avoiding it. He visited the future, and found out the date he was going to die, and that was in. The upside to this was the fact that Shadowman was destined to die on that date, meaning he couldn't die any sooner than that.
Establishing early on that the character is going to die and when is very different from a character that the publisher just decides to kill off in a given storyline that no one really had any particular plans to ever kill off though. Most comic book characters are written to perpetually live forever or at least at the whim of the publisher.
And if it does suck, I'm not going to pine for the old characters back or anything. I accept it and I move on!
So even if it sucked, you wouldn't complain about it at all? Honestly, I'd believe that when I saw it.