Just because something feels like a great idea doesn’t mean everyone, or nearly anyone, will agree. This week, Marvel Comics and DC Comics enjoyed a magnificent reveal of their one-shot crossover event headlined by Spider-Man and Superman, the two respective franchise golden boys, for Spider-Man/Superman #1, and the sound you heard as you drove by your local comic book store was glee and the noticeable cha-ching of preorders being placed.After all, Marvel and DC didn’t simply unveil one cover, but upwards of 19 variants that feature the work of a list of renowned talent that’s longer than a CVS receipt, but not all the work was praised and appreciated.”No thanks. I get that he’s going for ‘his style’, but this looks so half-assed,” said one Batman fan. “For a variant cover that you’re likely paying extra for, I’d want something that actually looks cool.” That feedback being followed up by someone who gave Miller his roses for work done in yesteryear, but not so much lately: “Miller cooked generational content that became core parts of Batman’s history, twice, then became the most annoying comic book artist and writer in history.”
Just because something feels like a great idea doesn’t mean everyone, or nearly anyone, will agree. This week, Marvel Comics and DC Comics enjoyed a magnificent reveal of their one-shot crossover event headlined by Spider-Man and Superman, the two respective franchise golden boys, for Spider-Man/Superman #1, and the sound you heard as you drove by your local comic book store was glee and the noticeable cha-ching of preorders being placed.
After all, Marvel and DC didn’t simply unveil one cover, but upwards of 19 variants that feature the work of a list of renowned talent that’s longer than a CVS receipt, but not all the work was praised and appreciated.
“No thanks. I get that he’s going for ‘his style’, but this looks so half-assed,” said one Batman fan. “For a variant cover that you’re likely paying extra for, I’d want something that actually looks cool.” That feedback being followed up by someone who gave Miller his roses for work done in yesteryear, but not so much lately: “Miller cooked generational content that became core parts of Batman’s history, twice, then became the most annoying comic book artist and writer in history.”
#Superman #SpiderMan #Variant #Cover #Ignited #Internet
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