Good point.The counter to that with the hair issue is at least, in that scenario, the user can elect to glue the piece down if they so choose.
Good point.The counter to that with the hair issue is at least, in that scenario, the user can elect to glue the piece down if they so choose.
I dunno what it is. Marvel or DC, classic or modern, or whatever it is in between, I’ve always dug the alternate reality stuff outside the mainline universe. Parallel worlds, divergent timelines, alternate futures, I love it all.
From Earth 2 to 2099 to the Absolutes, I’m in for all of it in figure form. Sometimes this is not a popular opinion. I understand that. But it doesn’t alter the fact that these are some amazing, compelling designs that make great action figures. And keep it interesting.
Yeah, I know. All these concept imprints will eventually crash and burn. I’m more into the overarching idea. A good writer can make one comic into a universe. All Star Squadron by Roy Thomas, LSH by Paul Levitz and many others, Gotham by Gaslight, and more. I love Kingdom Come and definitely want an in universe follow up even if it’s without Waid and Ross. Flashpoint as a universe, not just an event, is a very interesting place. I always thought “Titans Tomorrow” was genius. An amazing, intricate setup from Geoff Johns without any follow up so far. That’s what I’m talking about. And if that gets us some Absolute figures, I’ll be OK with that.I agree but as long as these kinds of stories are done in moderation. All too often these comic publishers will take a good idea and inevitably run it into the ground because they see more dollar signs than fatigue and it drives me nuts. I have read a single issue of any Absolute title because I can already see the signs of over saturation starting to occur