I do find it pretty funny that the two most popular comic book shows right now are both based on comics from 20 fuckin' years ago.
Because that's how long the Western comic book industry has been an irradiated, post-apocalyptic wasteland.
I remember reading reports a decade ago that many comic book stores didn't bother stocking comic issues anymore, pivoting instead towards manga, card games like MtG or Yu-Gi-Oh, games etc., since nobody was buying the shit anymore. if they did stock comics, it was a tiny section of the few runs that were selling, and those were relegated to the back of the store where nobody could see you actually purchasing the trash.
You had reports of stores giving some issues away for free and nobody bothering to pick them up, and distributors going to Marvel and DC and outright telling them that it was more profitable to ship toilet paper than comic books.
Leftists basically killed a whole artistic medium that had existed for 100 years in less than 20.
I think the only way to salvage Western comics in general, and capeshit in particular, besides sending everyone currently drawing, writing, editing and publishing them to death camps, is to adopt the manga model.
Have a dedicated team write the story of a character variant with a definitive beginning, middle and end. No crossovers, no shared continuity, no spreading the plot across a multitude of various runs, issues, characters etc.
That way fascist Batman could coexist along with faggot Batman, without either fandom having to interact with each other in any meaningful capacity, and authors would be free to explore a variety of different genre, stories, tropes etc. Now fascist Batman can actually do the logical thing and kill his antagonists when they go too far without forcing the writing team to come up with ways to resurrect them, events can actually have lasting effects on the plot, and there can be consequences.
If you then want to branch out and add spinoffs or sequels to the more popular version of a character, then you could do so easily without creating a domino effect that would impact other characters since they're not forced to share the same continuity.