Marvel’s Avengers Comics Promised Far More Than The Video Game Could Deliver

To say that 2020’s Marvel’s Avengers video game was a disappoint to some fans is an understatement. The multiplayer action title promised to give players the chance to play as Earth’s Mightiest Heroes in missions that would take them all across the globe. Fans could only speculate what the game would have in store with a company like Crystal Dynamics developing it. In order to drum up even more hype and excitement for the game, Marvel released five stand-alone comics that tied into the then unreleased game.Released in 2019 as part of Marvel’s Gamerverse imprint, Marvel’s Avengers comprised five separate comics that featured one of the five main playable characters in the video game. Marvel’s Avengers Thor #1 (by Jim Zub, Robert Gill, and Andy Troy), Marvel’s Avenger’s Iron Man #1 (by Jim Zub, Paco Diaz, Rachelle Rosenberg, and Andy Troy), Marvel’s Avengers Hulk #1 (by Jim Zub, Ariel Olivetti, and Andy Troy), Marvel’s Avengers Captain America #1 (by Paul Allor, Georges Jeanty, Marc Deering, and Scott Hanna), and Marvel’s Avengers Black Widow #1 (by Christos Gage, Michele Bandini, and Rachelle Rosenberg) each tell a story set before the events of the 2020 video game. In hindsight, these comics may have caused more harm than good.Iron Man battles against The Beetle only to learn that his technology is being leaked. Discovering that Spymaster was the data breacher, Iron Man stops another Armor Wars-style catastrophe. The Hulk battles against a sentient electricity monster that was spawned from an experiment gone wrong. Thor battles The Hulk after being mentally manipulated by his evil brother, Loki. Captain America thwarts Batroc the Leaper’s attempts at stealing highly classified and dangerous weapons technology. Black Widow undergoes S.H.I.E.L.D. training and battles against Taskmaster as he attempts to pin a jailbreak on her.RELATED: Marvel’s Avengers Was Almost the Perfect Superhero Game

To say that 2020’s Marvel’s Avengers video game was a disappoint to some fans is an understatement. The multiplayer action title promised to give players the chance to play as Earth’s Mightiest Heroes in missions that would take them all across the globe. Fans could only speculate what the game would have in store with a company like Crystal Dynamics developing it. In order to drum up even more hype and excitement for the game, Marvel released five stand-alone comics that tied into the then unreleased game.

RELATED: Marvel’s Avengers Was Almost the Perfect Superhero Game

Released in 2019 as part of Marvel’s Gamerverse imprint, Marvel’s Avengers comprised five separate comics that featured one of the five main playable characters in the video game. Marvel’s Avengers Thor #1 (by Jim Zub, Robert Gill, and Andy Troy), Marvel’s Avenger’s Iron Man #1 (by Jim Zub, Paco Diaz, Rachelle Rosenberg, and Andy Troy), Marvel’s Avengers Hulk #1 (by Jim Zub, Ariel Olivetti, and Andy Troy), Marvel’s Avengers Captain America #1 (by Paul Allor, Georges Jeanty, Marc Deering, and Scott Hanna), and Marvel’s Avengers Black Widow #1 (by Christos Gage, Michele Bandini, and Rachelle Rosenberg) each tell a story set before the events of the 2020 video game. In hindsight, these comics may have caused more harm than good.

Iron Man battles against The Beetle only to learn that his technology is being leaked. Discovering that Spymaster was the data breacher, Iron Man stops another Armor Wars-style catastrophe. The Hulk battles against a sentient electricity monster that was spawned from an experiment gone wrong. Thor battles The Hulk after being mentally manipulated by his evil brother, Loki. Captain America thwarts Batroc the Leaper’s attempts at stealing highly classified and dangerous weapons technology. Black Widow undergoes S.H.I.E.L.D. training and battles against Taskmaster as he attempts to pin a jailbreak on her.

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