Talk:Avengers (comics)

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[edit] Marvel Adventures - Giant-Girl

Where is it said that Giant-Girl is Janet Van Dyne? I haven't seen her named in the book and I've read rumours that she may be Cassie Lang, or a completely new superheroine.

I'd assumed that she was a version of Cassie Lang, but it's possible that it's Janet, and I've seen other people say it's her, so maybe it's been confirmed somewhere? Kelvingreen 21:10, 8 September 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Seperation of the Avengers article

Far be it for me to pick at an old scab, so to speak, but in light of recent reports it may be necessary for us to split off the New Avengers section of this article into its own page, create a new Mighty Avengers page and declare the Avengers to be disbanded as of Avengers Disassembled.

Those of you with good memories (or those currently persuing the archives for the old (and lengthy!) discussion) will recall that I was one of the most adamant mergists. I felt they needed to be merged as New Avengers is a direct continuation of the old team, even keeping some of its most iconic members. However, after Civil War has finished, a new Mighty Avengers book will debut, and most likely the icons of Captain America and Iron Man will head the two seperate teams, possibly with a strained relationship and a rivalry at the very least between them (I know, utter fanwank, but bear with me).

With the advent of a second title, and the old primary Avengers title and its numbering now defunct, who is to say which team is the 'proper' Avengers, so to speak? There has been two Avengers books before, but they have been subtitled with names of a derogatary (if that's the right word) nature such as 'Young' and 'West Coast', and operated without the classic icons and the large numbering of the traditional Avengers title. The distinction was clear.

However, how will we distinguish between 'Mighty' and 'New'? How can we say which is the 'proper' Avengers book if Iron Man and Yellowjacket are on one team and Thor and Captain America are on the other?

I may be thinking too far ahead, or anticipating problems that may not exist when the book is launched. However, my gut feeling at this juncture is to declare the Avengers disbanded, have a heading for teams that are successors to the Avengers summarising the New, Mighty and Young Avengers, create seperate articles for these along with team rosters and seperate up the template. However I would like the community's full backing and wo/manpower before embarking on such a task. I hope this time we can come to a conclusion quicker, more smoothly and with less subborn-mindedness than last time. Let the discussion commence. :) --Jamdav86 14:54, 24 July 2006 (UTC)

As you say, the 'New Avengers' (current series as of 2006) is still the same team as 'The Avengers' in much the same way that most incarnations of the Justice League (e.g. Detroit JLA) are considered as part of the primary article. That said, of course variant and breakoff groups of both the Justice League and the Avengers (e.g. West Coast Avengers or Justice League International) have recieved separate articles so your point is valid...just premature (in my opinion).
In other words, let's cross this bridge no sooner than 6 months from now when we have a better idea of what Marvel will be doing with this team (potentially "these teams"). Or even later, since I'd guess that even if there are two teams for the next couple of years, eventually it would be one again and editors can then debate which one (if either) is the 'split off' team. -Markeer 15:50, 24 July 2006 (UTC)
"However, how will we distinguish between 'Mighty' and 'New'? How can we say which is the 'proper' Avengers book if Iron Man and Yellowjacket are on one team and Thor and Captain America are on the other?"
Er, that was exactly the case with Avengers and Avengers West Coast, you know. Iron Man and Yellowjacket were both west coast avengers Impulse 18:32, 2 October 2006 (UTC)

I thought it may be a bit premature, as I noted, but I wanted to interject before something drastic happened. So who else agrees to leave 'as is' until at least the debut of the series? --Jamdav86 16:25, 24 July 2006 (UTC)

We've had two teams before, East Coast and West Coast, although they were simply two branches of the same team. We've also had a spin-off team, Force Works, but again the main team was intact. What we don't know at the moment is what the organization of the team is like. It may very well be that the Avengers remain the Avengers, with these "Mighty Avengers" being the non-sanctioned ones, or vice versa. It may also be that there are two teams of the same overall organization, as before. Ultimately, it may be useful to have "The Mighty Avengers (comic)" as an article to distinguish the comic (as opposed to the team) like we have "New Avengers (comic)" at the moment. But we just don't know. And so, yes, we should wait. --khaosworks (talkcontribs) 16:27, 24 July 2006 (UTC)


I see this as the same issue as the X-Men. X-Men is a good place to learn about the team, but you also have an Astonishing X-Men and the Uncanny X-Men to learn about each different incarnation of the main group. So why not leave Avengers (comics) and have a page about each different comic book series? At least when the time comes and there actually is a Mighty Avengers book. --Silver lode 16:37, 24 July 2006 (UTC)

What Silver Iode said. X-Treme X-Men broke off from the main X-Men group, but they are still covered in the X-Men article. Any rift within the Avengers may very well be temporary, and leaving New Avengers and Mighty Avengers out of the main article will lead to a gap in the article if the team ever get back together again. By all means, create smaller articles for the various Avengers titles, but keep updating this page too. --Iron Ghost 00:46, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
I can definitely see an analogue with X-Men or even X-Factor (comics). However, it is rather premature to split the article when we don't know anything about the new book or the two teams other than the Mighty Avengers will be taking on the bigger threats. That said, I like the idea of an overarching Avengers (comics) article chronicling the publication history of the teams, with sections dedicated to the different teams and expanded articles on these teams when needed. As a side note, this is how I see the X-Factor article working as well, treating the team name as a franchise and thus those books that use it would have a shared history. --Newt ΨΦ 14:42, 25 July 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Navbox Guidelines

Please follow this link Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Comics/templates/navboxes to join in on the discussion . --Basique 12:09, 7 August 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Mighty Avengers

Still hasn't found it's way here. There's already promo art, details, line up and release days. And these will be real Avengers, not an offshoot such as West Coast Avengers, New Avengers, or Great Lakes Avengers.

Really not that much news, actually. Add it if you want, though. --Jamdav86 12:24, 1 September 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Avengers Disassembled

Does anyone think this page may need to be disassembled soon? There's too much, and one page cannot adequately cover all of the Avengers teams. So far it's covering the Avengers, the New Avengers, the cartoon Avengers (which, let's face it, is an entirely different team), the Marvel Adventures Avengers (another completely different team), and then there's the MC2 Avengers who I don't think are even mentioned here at all, and what about the coming of the Mighty Avengers? It's too much. There are way too many Avengers teams, and to tackle them all properly, they can't be done on just one page which is getting messier and messier. Maybe we need a disambig. page listing all the many different Avengers teams. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 81.151.66.227 (talk • contribs).

I think the article is fine, myself. --Jamdav86 16:14, 20 September 2006 (UTC)
It's managing for what is there, but there are too many Avengers teams to receive proper coverage.

[edit] Merged List of Avengers issues

I merged List of Avengers issues as there wasn't a lot of info not already in this article, but I couldn't figure out exactly where to put these bits, as I didn't read Avengers back then:

  • #291-297: The team is torn apart by the manipulations of Terminatrix and her pawn, Doctor Druid, and the Avengers disband.
  • #300: Captain America, in his short-lived guise as the Captain, reforms the team with only Thor continuing from the previous lineup.
  • Notable issues in the "Proctor and the Gatherers Saga": #343-344, 348-349, 355-357, 359-364, 372-375.
  • Avengers: The Crossing, Avengers: Timeslide and #390-395: "The Crossing": Iron Man betrays the Avengers.

Have at it, folks. --HKMarksTALKCONTRIBS 17:17, 11 October 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Avengers events in issue 1 and 2

The events did not happen as stated, that is why I am editting the article...factual errors. Please stop deleting these changes wholesale. If there is some content problem I am glad to fix it, but simply delting facts to replace them with an innacurate synopsis, made for brevities sake, is a mistake.

ibnfrey midnight central time (GMT -7), 10/17/06


Further, I was in the middle of adding information when this thing apparently kicked in and now it says vandalism next to the change. I find that insulting, please remove that.

Excuse me, but I feel I am entitled to the same vigilance my submittion was treated with. If you can delete it without discussion and do whatever had made it not accept changes, you should be around to discuss the action. I have gone to your page and posted as well as posting here, where I feel you should've posted if you were going to delete corrections. It said explicitly that submittions are welcomed and this sort of thing would not be done when I joined.

ibnfrey 12:22am central time (GMT -7), 10/17/06

Pardon me, but I was in the midst of writing this response when you started complaining about why I wasn't here. Responses take time. Also, I explained precisely why I was reverting in the edit summary.
The events happened exactly as stated. Loki did trick the Hulk into doing his bidding (not that Loki ordered him to do anything, but certainly Loki wanted the Hulk to destroy that tresle and be declared a menace). The call for help was diverted to Thor - that it was intende for the FF is an extraneous detail, and not really the point. The Hulk did quit becaus he found out how they feared him - the Space Phantom, is once again, extra detail, and the Avengers' efforts to contain him, most importantly, led to the resurrection of Captain America; the detours on the way aren't as important.
I've added a few brief words to try and clarify some points, but really, all the stuff you added was too much information for the purposes of this article. It could have been done much more concisely. --khaosworks (talkcontribs) 05:25, 17 October 2006 (UTC)

I appreciate that. I was in the midst of trying to clean it up and more importantly make it more consise when this started happening; it is difficult to see how something impacts a larger article without seeing it in relation to it, at least for me. I did not realize why it was not working, but thought perhaps it was because I had gone back to try to edit and messed it up, that is why I was resubmitting it.

The "doing his bidding" part is misleading and unecessarily non-specific.

The Hulk quit because he was suprised at their (perceived by him) hatred of him, not fear (fear is a POV, to be honest); this reaction is important to understanding the Hulk as more than a cardboard brute who reacts but does not think or feel. Even if the "fear" of his unstable personality thing can be argued as the Avengers underlying motivation in making the comments they made (POV), this is not the cause of the Hulks departure. Hulk clearly states his motivation: "I never suspected how much each of you HATES (bold in source) me, deep down! I could tell by the way you fought me...by the remarks you made." This was in response to comments like "Quiet you brainless gargoyle!" (Iron Man). Hulk was upset, even hurt. This side of Hulk was more evident in later issues of Defenders, but rang clear as a bell here, perhaps for the first time.

Furthermore, the Hulk quest was the arching theme over the entire Avengers early history. They ran into the FF, spiderman, xmen, dr strange and the Defenders (among others) during it at later dates, I'm not speaking of issue #2. Probably the best comic Marvel ever produced is FF #25 in which Hulk fights Thing for basically the entire mag, but which, more germane, leads into a crossover with the Avengers and includes Dr Strange in the action. In an early Spiderman Annual, I forget which one offhand, it again is the theme when Spiderman must capture Hulk for the Avengers to gain membership. This theme was carried for many years across all of Marvel...always the Avengers responsible...always the founding members knowing their partial fault in the matter. To not acknowledge it, at least in passing, is to minimize the series beyond recognition.

All that said, I'm sorry for my response to seeing what I posted being called valdalism by a robot set to call it that. It did offend me and I got short, should have been more patient to see if you were going to respond and I apologize.

I'm not denying any of that, but in the end we're not talking about the Hulk, nor his relationship with the Avengers. We're talking about the impact of that within the larger subset of 40 years of Avengers history, which, to be honest, is really quite minimal. You have to think to yourself what the article is trying to accomplish, an what audience it's being written for. It's not being written for the fan who wants to devour every aspect and nuance of the Avengers. It's for the general reader who doesn't know anything and wants to get a general idea. Yes, the strokes are broad, yes, stuff gets lost in the cracks. Do we talk about Jarvis and his importance to Avengers cohesion as retconned in by "To Serve No More!" in Avengers #280? Do we talk about Cap's ongoing feud against Zemo in the first 10 or so issues of Avengers? Do we mention the entire Wonder Man/Grim Reaper/Vision triangle? No, because we're talking about major beats in the history of the Avengers when we do an overview. It's unfortunate, perhaps, but stuff like that doesn't always belong in a general article. It's not enough to add - we have to ask ourselves what this is for and whether it truly accomplishes the goals set out for it, or will it simply make people's eyes glaze over. --khaosworks (talkcontribs) 06:32, 17 October 2006 (UTC)


I did not mention anything as tangential as the things you mention. Did you read Silver Age Marvel comics? I have read very nearly every issue of every title Marvel came out with (I'm talking dirt and bones stuff like Dazzler, Spider Woman and yes, Eternals) until the mid-eighties because the local comic shop was owned by a friend of my sisters. There is no way to be familiar with the first 20 years of the Avengers and to believe that the Avengers one constant theme over their entire history is somehow not noteworthy. The theme appeared in more issues than many individual Avengers and was the in-world reason for some major crossovers back when they weren't that common.

Further, the actuality of Hulk leaving because of Avenger hatred (as perceived by him) is the only reason anyone might come to the correct conclusion that the Avengers felt responsible because of their own actions, not only the Hulks. Any omittion of that nuance means that any reader will necessarily assume the Avengers were out to capture the Hulk for the sake of capturing a monster and that his Avengers membership was the ancilliary reason for their stated responsibility. That is completely incorrect and thus is not a suitable abridgement.

Moreover, this (wikipedia) is a source document used in many scholarly pursuits, any innaccuracy or embellishment is unacceptable.

Thank you for your consideration.

As you may or may not have noticed, I added "hatred" to the sentence in addition to fear. And not that I have to prove my bona fides, but I've been reading comic books for 33 years now, and my collection goes way back into the Silver Age, not to mention that I've read every single Avengers comic ever published up to Avengers #500 (the recent ones have been sporadic because well, I hate the writing). So... yes, I know my Avengers history, and no, the search for the Hulk was hardly the one constant theme throughout their history - in fact, you'd be hard pressed to find any mention of it outside the issues where the Hulk actually appears. They kind of forgot about the Hulk for years after Cap's Kooky Quartet did their perfunctory attempt to track him down in Avengers #17. To say that it was the one constant theme is a gross exaggeration, compared with, again, 40 years of Avengers history. But this isn't about comparing whose Avengers knowledge is greater. The point, as you say, is accuracy, and no - I don't think the article as it stands concerning these events is inaccurate. --khaosworks (talkcontribs) 07:31, 17 October 2006 (UTC)

Well I am sorry, but I and the history of the Avengers disagree. The Hulk theme does appear in more issues than many Avengers, including ones listed in the article. It also appears in far more issues than most of the villains listed. There is no justification for deleting it as it is more germane than most of the material listed, especially the more recent events, which seem to get more in-depth as the article goes on. It is fine that you do not appreciate the many appearances of this theme or it's repercusions even today, but that is your POV and does not mean that it is not important or that anyone reading on the topic should have it omitted before they see it. I have established it's importance and relevance, which should be a given to any Avengers fan, thus I expect to see it put back.

The fact is, it is the only reoccuring theme that runs that long in Avengers. You argue that it's first repercussion on the Marvel universe (finding Cap) is key and a milestone, but that it's cause and the theme which lived beyond it and is referenced nearly every time the Hulk appears in conjunction with any original Avenger is not even allowed to be mentioned. The responsibility referenced even today is deep because of their part in making the Hulk quit, not simply because of coincidence of him having been on the team.

This theme is a given part of Avengers history and was the driving force behind multiple crossovers, Spiderman not joining the Avengers, Dr Strange meeting the Hulk (Defenders), the Avengers meeting the Fantastic Four, Hulk appearing in Tales to Astonish, which led to his appearing regularly in that mag, etc, etc on to today. It appeared in at numerous titles over the entire run of Marvel. There is no way to argue that it was "minimal" as you state; quite the contrary it is the single most significant theme in Marvel during the early years.

Also, my asking wether you read Silver Age Marvel was a legitimate question, having nothing to do with implying anything about you. I asked because I have never met anyone who had read most of the Silver Age stuff and would try to say that the Avengers looking for the Hulk was "minimal". That is why I mentioned that I had read them, not to say anything about you.

It is minimal as compared to the rest of 40 years of Avengers history, i.e. it's not any more important than plenty of other storylines and themes throughout the years: Wonder Man, Ultron, the Vision's quest for humanity, the Masters of Evil, etc. Let's agree to disagree on this: bottom line, while it may be significant as regards the Hulk and the wider Marvel Universe or his interactions with multiple characters, it's not more notable than anything else in the context of the Avengers as a team. --khaosworks (talkcontribs) 08:29, 17 October 2006 (UTC)


How can you say that this is not as notable as the various short comic runs referenced in the same article? Very few of those had any repercussions beyond the next few issues; the Hulk-Avengers thing has been going on the entire time Marvel has been printing Avengers comics. We are talking about the inherently Avengers-related cause of Hulk quitting the Avengers, Hulk meeting Dr Strange (Defenders) while fighting the Avengers, Hulk appearing in Tales to Astonish (which began in a crossover with Giant-Man and the Wasp), Cap coming back and joining the Avengers, the Avengers meeting the Fantastic Four, Spiderman not joining the Avengers and most of the best fight mags Marvel has put out (Face front true believer! FF #25 and Journey Into Mystery #112 are not for the faint of heart.). It is even referenced on marvelreference.com as one of the reasons the Avengers were willing to have 3 reformed villains replace them in issue #16, saying Iron Man held hopes that the Avengers accepting them and help with further reforming might make up for the teams failure with the Hulk. It is much more noteworthy in the grand scheme than most of the runs listed in the article and it deserves acknowledgement as such.

I'm not saying it's not as notable. I'm saying it's not anymore notable. And it's already mentioned. Get a third opinion if you want, I've pretty much said all I have to say on this matter. All you've talked about is comics other than the team. And after issue #16? They went to look for the Hulk in #17 and then... when's the next mention again? Years and years. And out of 40 years of history and ove 500 issues how often is it mentioned or a factor in anything? Give the specifics, if you want. I'm getting quite tired of this conversation as it appears we are talking at cross purposes. --khaosworks (talkcontribs) 09:02, 17 October 2006 (UTC)

The reason it wasn't in the forefront during the Cap+3 years is because none of those members were involved in the incident as should be obvious. Even at that, it still played a part in their joining in the first place as stated by Marvel, not me. Further, as soon as Giant-Man got back in the comic, he bagan talking about the Hulk and finding him and maybe even getting him to rejoin the team. And, as you say, even that earlier team went to find the Hulk.

I don't believe we are at cross purposes, read what you have written. You haven't referenced what I have written but have decided ahead of time that I am incorrect and have tried to ignore the facts I am presenting..."We are talking about the inherently Avengers-related cause of Hulk quitting the Avengers, Hulk meeting Dr Strange (Defenders) while fighting the Avengers, Hulk appearing in Tales to Astonish (which began in a crossover with Giant-Man and the Wasp), Cap coming back and joining the Avengers, the Avengers meeting the Fantastic Four, Spiderman not joining the Avengers and most of the best fight mags Marvel has put out (Face front true believer! FF #25 and Journey Into Mystery #112 are not for the faint of heart.)." There is no way to argue that I have only spoken of other comics.

Further, every time the Avengers mention their "responsibility" for the Hulk in any Avengers comics or comic with an Avenger in it, they are referencing this very theme. There have been so many such references made that there is no way to argue that one is truly moved to believe it isn't important enough to allow it to be referred to. I have been submitting for quite some time and aI have never had to go to a 3rd party, but it is ridiculous of you to try to say you should have the right to delete good content just because you are not personally aware of it's significance and then refuse to acknowledge what is said in it's defense. This site belongs to accuracy, not to your POV.

I completely dispute that the number of Avenger issues that do mention the Hulk as a responsibility as compared to the number of others that don't are in any way more significant. List them. :At best, I will concede that this was a recurring theme in the early years of the team, nothing more. --khaosworks (talkcontribs) 09:27, 17 October 2006 (UTC)

There is nothing to dispute. The comic only happens one way. The Hulk does leave because of the Avengers actions. They do realize this and feel responsible because they knew they were partly responsible in making him want to leave. All of this is explicitly stated by the said characters. The respsonsibility Thor, Iron Man, Giant-Man and even Wasp have referenced comes from their responsibility in not even giving the Hulk a chance; that is why it is nearly always these characters, along with Cap who takes responsibility for everyone God bless 'im, who speak of the given responsibility.

Even if you only consider the early years and completely omit the source of the Avengers responsibility (which is at the core of our differences here) and consider it a storyline that only included the earliest issues (before #16) it directly appears in and crosses over into, it is still a 6 comic run without including all the cameo issues, which is more than long enough to be considered among the ones in the article. It would also still include Hulk meeting Dr Strange while fighting the Avengers, the Avengers meeting the Fantastic Four, Hulk quitting the Avengers, the Avengers finding Cap and Spiderman not joining the Avengers. Until post-Crisis (DC) continuity upheavals, there simply wasn't any other arc which did so much to the Marvel Universe. Nowadays every hero dies and is reborn in the same issue, but back then the major players didn't get moved by anything but a mountain.

I just noticed I made a couple mistakes, the first story was a 7 issue run, I forgot that JIM #112 (Thors mag, an Avenger, with an Avengers story in it) was a big part of the Avengers #3 story and the Doc Strange meeting was later.

5:07am central (GMT -7) 10/17/06

Black Panther was a regular for ages, was the only guy anyone in the world would've considered Caps replacement (Hawkeye did despite saying no one could replace him first), built a lot of Hawkeyes arrows and all of the Quinjets, among other Avengo-centric things.

I think the fact that Black Widow and Black Knight are mentioned, but Black Panther isn't, speaks pretty clearly that this page is not definitive and needs editing by someone who cares enough about the material to be bothered by such inaccurate portrayals of the significant events contained in the relevent issues.

5:19am central (GMT -7) 10/17/06

Have you removed the restriction on my posting that you wrongly placed there during my editting of my changes? Have you removed whatever references to vandalism which were caused by you deleting my edits while I was working on them? It explicitly stated when I joined that people were not to be restricted from contributing as well as the fact that I should've been allowed to finish my edits and trim them down myself before you delete them out-of-hand. Can I go back and make the changes I added or are you just going to keep adding changes I made as if you contributed them? There is no arguing that these changes were not made by myself.

You have walked the bridge of trying to prove me wrong based on your opinion of the matters at hand instead of accepting anything I said as even possible. The source says "HATE" (bold in source), it does not say fear at all; thus fear is inaccurate, but you still portray my addition as incorrect when the source document very clearly states that I am not. I referenced the issues, but instead of weighing the fact that it is more relevant than most of what is listed in the article, you made the ridiculous demand that I post every issue in which the founding Avengers mention their responsibility for the Hulk. I continually referenced it's unparalleled (in early Marvel) impact on the Marvel universe, but you say you are willing to concede only such-and-such...that is your POV and you do not have any right to delete content you cannot dispute based on it.

I have made a number of changes to the Avengers article and it needs a number more and I'd like to get to work on fixing such ridicularities as Black Widow (who was rarely even seen for the first 250 issues of the mag) being mentioned multiple times while Black Panther, a key character during those same many years is completely omitted. You have not given a single reason for my changes to be excluded and have in fact made most of the content changes I made now yourself. Obviously the content was accurate and appropriate and I feel I should be the one to add it as I was the one who added it.

1:19pm central (GMT -7) 10/17/06

[edit] Lead Section

Tidied up the introduction and removed some verbose and out of place text. The article needs to be more succinct. At present, it is too long.

Asgardian 10:19, 18 October 2006 (UTC)

However, cutting out 95% of the lead section on a article this size didn't help. Due to the length of time the Avengers have been published, compared to other superhero teams I think the article size is reasonable. Grey Shadow 14:02, 18 October 2006 (UTC)

It is actally not very well written and tends to ramble. The goverment section is hard to read and not really relevant to an introduction about a super team. Keep it tight and focus on what is important.

Asgardian 22:34, 18 October 2006 (UTC)

In your opinion, however WP:Lead requires the lead of an article to encapsulate the article; so that it could stand on its own as an overview of the subject. The one sentence lead does not accomplish that. Grey Shadow 13:57, 19 October 2006 (UTC)

[edit] New Version

OK...are some fairly extensive work I've trimmed the article back to an acceptable length. Removed a great deal of the "tell the story" passages and just relayed the gist; added some more striking images and changed the tense to the present. Next up is creating a Reference section at the end, which will remove the need for citing issues in the text. Now looking pretty sharp!

Asgardian 10:13, 19 October 2006 (UTC)

Thanks for the bold edits! With my limited grasp of the history, the new version appears to be a better one. However, I do agree with the Grey Shadow's comment above regarding the lead section. Maybe we can work on a new one? --NewtΨΦ 15:19, 19 October 2006 (UTC)

I've merged the modified introduction into the opening synopsis and culled a few more unnecessary sentences. The article is still a tad too long, but if we remove much more it runs the risk of becoming sterile. The focus should continue to be brief mentions of major events and the changing membership. After that, the curious can use a link or buy the books!

Asgardian 00:26, 20 October 2006 (UTC)

[edit] References

Thanks for doing the references. Added in the one on Captain America's revival as well.

Asgardian 03:19, 20 October 2006 (UTC)

No problem. Grey Shadow 03:58, 20 October 2006 (UTC)

[edit] And Lo There Came A Day Unlike Any Other...

Can anyone tell me when this phrase was first used as the origin of the Avengers in the comics? --Chris Griswold () 07:46, 13 December 2006 (UTC)

[edit] infobox picture

The current picture of the New Avengers needs to go. Per the WikiProject Comics editorial guidelines, infobox pictures should be the most recognizable or well known version of a character or team. When most people think of the Avengers, they don't think of Luke Cage or Wolverine.

Does anyone have any thoughts on a more appropriate picture> I am thinking possibly Avengers #4, with Captain America. --Chris Griswold () 07:48, 13 December 2006 (UTC)

Looking over the first 100 covers, I'd have to say #4's the best depiction of the original team in covers. I'm having difficulty finding anything better. By the way, I'm looking here for anyone else that wants to have a look. --PsyphicsΨΦ 15:24, 13 December 2006 (UTC)