You are currently viewing HCRealms.com, The Premier HeroClix Community, as a Guest. If you would like to participate in the community, please Register to join the discussion!
If you are having problems registering to an account, feel free to Contact Us.
Honestly, I feel Frontline did more for CW than the main book.
It was clear from the beginning that Iron Man was pulling strings from behind closed doors. That much was obvious if you follow the Illuminati. But how much he was actually involved didn't come out until this issue and frankly I'm happier now having read it. It puts Tony Starks character into better perspective.
Incidently, I also agree with why the reporters didn't expose Tony's plan and why they gave Cap such a hard time. Iron Man's plan may have been completely immoral, but it would have worked if only Cap hadn't gotten in the way. Seeing as how Tony didn't share the details with him it's harldly his fault either. I still think Cap surrendering was the wussy way to wrap up the story, but at least now I don't hate Iron Man for being totalitarian. He's not evil, just self-righteous.
No worries, sometimes with tempers getting heated about this, I prefer to err on the side of defensiveness.
I thought the synopsis was good... and the storyline... well, if that didn't make Civil War WORST SERIES EVER before, it definitely does now. So much for investigative journalism.
just picked up frontline #11 last night only gotten to where press it talking to cap hope ti finish it at my 1st break
.................................................. ........
"I've never killed a man, but I've read many an obituary with great satisfaction." -- Mark Twain
just picked up frontline #11 last night only gotten to where press it talking to cap hope ti finish it at my 1st break
well read it
going take a few to digest it before i decide on it
.................................................. ........
"I've never killed a man, but I've read many an obituary with great satisfaction." -- Mark Twain
Did Captain America really fail the Marvel US here? I'd argue the Marvel US are the ones who failed Captain America.
Seconded. And, maybe that's the point Marvel was trying to make with Captain America and his place in current society all along ...
No, nevermind. That would've required that Joey Q not just be approving stories based simply on what he thinks would sell the most books and actually evaluating the merits of the writing.
Quote : Originally Posted by hair10, Gentlegamer, doctorfate77, d_knight7, etc.
JacinB is right.
Quote : Originally Posted by Lore Sjöberg
Superman-based interactive entertainment products tend to be very bad, because an accurate Superman game would have one button labeled "Use Powers" and you would press it and win.