So, what's the big deal about the Fantastic Four? Why are they Marvel's flagship title? Why would a guy like Victor Von Doom care about the likes of a rubber band, a matchstick, a pile of rocks and a chick you can't even see? Let me see if I can explain this in a way that makes sense. Keep in mind they were created over 60 years ago and the world was a different place back then. In some ways better, in some ways worse, but definitely different.
In the late 50's Marvel, who called themselves Timely or Atlas back then, published about 8 to 10 titles a month. It was mainly sci-fi/horror books about giant monsters from outer space. Sales wise they were doing okay. Not great, but okay. Their rival DC Comics was having great success revitalizing super-heroes. One book in particular was selling very well, Justice League of America. Publisher Martin Goodman asked editor in chief Stan Lee to create a team of superheroes.
Now what you have to keep in mind here is that comic book publishers at the time thought of their audience as mainly children. During World War Two a lot of service members read comics because they were cheap and easy to read. But after the war ended, the companies looked at their readership as mainly being between the ages of about 6 to 13 or 14 years old. Once you got to be 15 or 16 and discovered the opposite sex, comics went into the garbage can. That's how the publishers saw it and that's how they wrote their stories. As an example, the Justice League had a villain called the Key. He dressed like a Key and tried to take over the world. Nobody ever explained why he dressed like a Key and used weapons that were shaped like a Key. He just did and that was that. As a reader you just kind of went along with it.
And so, after Martin asked Stan to create a superhero book, and after Stan had a heart to heart with his wife Joan, he and the great Jack Kirby created the Fantastic Four. And the world of comics would never be the same again. That is not an overstatement. That is a matter of undeniable fact. The Fantastic Four changed everything.
The DC superheroes were like Gods. They rarely made mistakes. They were capable of miracles. They never argued with each other. They were always sure of themselves and never had doubts. I loved them with all my heart, but admittedly they were hard to relate to on a personal level.
The Marvel characters? They argued. They bickered. They squabbled like children. They were jealous. Sensitive. They made mistakes. They had self doubts. In other words, they weren't Gods. They were human. And people could relate to that.
Boom. Sales went through the roof. Teenagers and young adults on High School and College campuses all over the country and the western world went nuts. Fan clubs were started. I myself was a charter member of the Merry Marvel Marching Society. Newspapers and Radio stations wanted interviews with the Marvel bullpen. Marvel started getting fan mail and lots of it. In short order came the Hulk, Spider-Man, Thor, Iron Man, Ant-Man and Doctor Strange. In June of 1963, Avengers #1 and X-Men #1 premiered. Yes, in the same month and same year.
With the fourth issue of FF, Stan had the words "World's Greatest Comic Magazine" lettered above the logo. That was a ballsy thing to do, but he was right. It WAS the world's greatest comic magazine. Those first 100 issues of Fantastic Four by Stan and Jack was probably the greatest run on any superhero title ever. They introduced the Skrulls, the Kree, Doctor Doom, the Inhumans, the Watcher, Galactus, the Silver Surfer, the Black Panther, Adam Warlock and others I'm sure I'm forgetting. They discovered the Blue Area of the Moon, Attilian, Atlantis, the Negative Zone, the Savage Land, Wakanda and Monster Island.
Yep. World's Greatest Comic Magazine. It certainly was.
Why does Victor Von Doom hate Reed Richards so much? Simply put, Reed is not just Doom's intellectual equal, Reed is smarter. And Doom knows this and it drives him crazy. He can't stand being inferior to anyone. I would say Reed Richards is the most intelligent person in the Marvel Universe. Tony Stark, Bruce Banner, Hank Pym, they all come close but Reed is the smartest. Doom's immense pride and ego are core to his character. He sees Reed as a rival who constantly challenges his superiority, and that just fuels his hatred.
During their college years, Reed questioned the safety of a dimensional portal Doom was developing, which ultimately exploded and scarred his face. Doom blames Reed for this accident, despite Reed's warnings. And they've been at each other's throats ever since.