Scarlet Witch Brings Marvel’s Ideaverse Back — But What Is It?

Ever since embarking upon a new life dedicated to those who need it the most, Wanda Maximoff, better known as the Scarlet Witch, has come across all manner of friends and foes hailing from the farthest corners of reality. Of course, that doesn’t mean that everyone who steps through her Last Door is deserving of the help they have come in search of, nor that they shouldn’t be returned to whence they came. Or rather, in the case of the Scarlet Witch’s latest client, to the Ideaverse they tried to turn into their own personal superpower.After yet another unexpected visitor comes tumbling through the Last Door, which she employs to give hope to those who have nowhere else to go, the titular hero of Scarlet Witch #7 (by Steve Orlando, Jonathan Hickman, Lorenzo Tammetta, Sara Pichelli, Frank William, and VC’s Cory Petit) finds herself racing against a bevy of fantastical beings hailing from none other than the magical land of Oz. As Nelson Gruber, the man who has stepped into her shop, explains, he wields the power to bring life to the written word with nothing more than the touch of a page. Unfortunately, the more malevolent denizens of Oz set out to ensure that they would never be sent back to their hardcover prison by removing Nelson’s hand. As grotesque as that may seem, it is more than a fair punishment for the ways in which Nelson has abused them previously, especially since these fictional characters were already very much alive.While the Ideaverse has come to encompass the various Marvel Classics and Marvel Illustrated retellings of classic literary tales, not to mention the publisher’s early entries into the worlds of Zorro, John Carter, and similar titles, the first proper indication of its existence was in 1976’s Tomb of Dracula #49 (by Marv Wolfman and Gene Colan). With Blade was busy battling his vampiric doppelgänger, there was no one to inquire as to how a seemingly ordinary woman named Angie Turner was able to summon the Dracula of the Marvel Universe to her side. Not only did this upset Dracula’s prior proceedings, but it also set the stage for numerous other classic characters to come to life in their own way within the Marvel Universe, as Angie’s true power was to bring them to life with little more than a thought.RELATED: An MCU Icon Just Exposed a Major Superhero WeaknessRELATED: Marvel Teases a Loki/Scarlet Witch Romance

Ever since embarking upon a new life dedicated to those who need it the most, Wanda Maximoff, better known as the Scarlet Witch, has come across all manner of friends and foes hailing from the farthest corners of reality. Of course, that doesn’t mean that everyone who steps through her Last Door is deserving of the help they have come in search of, nor that they shouldn’t be returned to whence they came. Or rather, in the case of the Scarlet Witch’s latest client, to the Ideaverse they tried to turn into their own personal superpower.

RELATED: An MCU Icon Just Exposed a Major Superhero Weakness

After yet another unexpected visitor comes tumbling through the Last Door, which she employs to give hope to those who have nowhere else to go, the titular hero of Scarlet Witch #7 (by Steve Orlando, Jonathan Hickman, Lorenzo Tammetta, Sara Pichelli, Frank William, and VC’s Cory Petit) finds herself racing against a bevy of fantastical beings hailing from none other than the magical land of Oz. As Nelson Gruber, the man who has stepped into her shop, explains, he wields the power to bring life to the written word with nothing more than the touch of a page. Unfortunately, the more malevolent denizens of Oz set out to ensure that they would never be sent back to their hardcover prison by removing Nelson’s hand. As grotesque as that may seem, it is more than a fair punishment for the ways in which Nelson has abused them previously, especially since these fictional characters were already very much alive.

RELATED: Marvel Teases a Loki/Scarlet Witch Romance

While the Ideaverse has come to encompass the various Marvel Classics and Marvel Illustrated retellings of classic literary tales, not to mention the publisher’s early entries into the worlds of Zorro, John Carter, and similar titles, the first proper indication of its existence was in 1976’s Tomb of Dracula #49 (by Marv Wolfman and Gene Colan). With Blade was busy battling his vampiric doppelgänger, there was no one to inquire as to how a seemingly ordinary woman named Angie Turner was able to summon the Dracula of the Marvel Universe to her side. Not only did this upset Dracula’s prior proceedings, but it also set the stage for numerous other classic characters to come to life in their own way within the Marvel Universe, as Angie’s true power was to bring them to life with little more than a thought.

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