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Way of the Geek: Maximum Hulkage
Posted by on Mar 2nd, 2010

The always amusing Deadpool Team-Up continues with team-up’s with little known comic book characters that you wouldn’t expect to see in team-up’s in the first place. In #895, Deadpool searches for a missing statue which just happens to be the very much mobile Living Colossus. And when the chase takes the Merc with a Mouth underwater, no one can hear his beloved one-liners.

The Savage She-Hulks #1 (that’s right, plural) continues the ominous but so far vague-as-heck “Fall of Hulks” by focusing on Lyra, the alternate reality daughter of Hulk and Thundra, who has come to 616 to aid the Frightful Four. This could mean a massive power shift when things aren’t going well for our heroes – but what’s it mean for the other She-Hulks, including (sigh) Red She-Hulk and regular old Jennifer Walters?

If you are looking for the first (and probably the best) She-Hulk, look no further than the cover of Girl Comics #1. This three issue anthology is, as you might have guessed, totally run on girl power, with art and writing by Stephanie Buscema, Devin Grayson and Amanda Connor!

Placed under “The Realm of Kings” banner, “The Son of the Hulk” #2 is sounding a lot more interesting than the “Fall of the Hulks.” Here, we see a strange vision where Galactus is the herald to the Son of the Hulk, who has become a god-like being. But all of this weirdness has threatened the fabric of the fan-favorite Microverse, leading to even more developments in this intriguing storyline.

To see what’s going on in DC right now, click page 2.

Series NavigationComic Rundown: Throwing Down the GauntletComic Rundown: Al Ghul Ala Carte
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4 Responses to “Way of the Geek: Maximum Hulkage”

  1. Devin de Gruyl says:

    What’s this? A week without any new Black Lanterns? Has DC lost their minds?

    …And if they have, is there any way we can prevent them from finding those minds for, oh, let’s say, the next ten years or so?

    ;^)

  2. Conor Duffy says:

    Having just read the Batman/Doc Savage one-shot, I must say I’m really interested to see how First Wave plays out. DC are really taking advantage of their Multiverse these days, which can only make for exciting new stories.

    • Devin de Gruyl says:

      I will give DC credit for that much, certainly. The one thing that bugged me about the original Crisis was simply the fact that the Multiverse didn’t necessarily need to be destroyed, just streamlined considerably from what it had been. It wasn’t necessary to try and shoehorn everything into a single, self-consistent universe, since that’s simply not possible in a storytelling medium like this one, and not with a company with such a rich tapestry of characters as DC — which, lest we forget, also includes characters inherited from defunct publishers (Charlton, Fawcett, etc.) that DC acquired over the years. I think the current DC Multiverse, with its hard-coded 52 alternate Earths (as opposed to the dozens if not hundreds that existed pre-Crisis) is a much more elegant solution to the continuity problem than just pretending fifty years of stories never happened and rebooting the whole company at once.

      In a way, the tables have turned now. Back in the ’80s, it was DC that had the convoluted mess of continuity, while Marvel fans could enjoy the fact that their comics universe of choice was at least internally self-consistent (within reason). Now that DC seems to finally be getting their act together in this regard, as much as possible anyway, it’s Marvel that now has the migraine-inducing morass of alternate Earths and parallel worlds, to the point where even Uatu the Watcher himself has probably just thrown up his hands and run off to sip margaritas in Nassau or something.

      Though, you know… the Crisis was done as a celebration of DC’s fiftieth anniversary… a milestone Marvel will reach next year (the modern Marvel Universe is generally accepted as having first appeared in Fantastic Four #1, cover-dated November 1961). If the House of Ideas ever gets the notion to do a little multi-dimensional weed-whacking, that’d be the opportune time to do it…

  3. Well, first off, we are indeed out of Blackest Night territory because the series is wrapping up – so expect a declining number of undead heroes in the weeks to come (hopefull).

    I don’t think Marvel has quite as many parallel Earths as DC – and if they do, they very rarely cross-paths. Marvel Zombies is about the only one which regularly crosses the Slider portal, spinning out of Ultimate and crossing briefly into 616. That said, Ultimate and 616 have cross paths, leaving most other alternate reality (like say 1602) pretty much self-contained.

    Personally, I think Marvel does a little better job actually building stories around these alternate realities and possible futures instead of just treating them like one-shots, which was mostly the case with Elseworlds.