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Throw in the Franklin stuff…… eeesh

Reed was absolutely justified in telling off those faggot muties, that was the only X-Men comic to actually make me rage about injustice and it was their injustice towards humans.
I feel like the anger towards the established heroes, the Avengers/F4/etc wasn't really justified because they'd learned in the past that butting heads leads to Tony or Reed or someone else going maverick and making a halfassed nuclear option.

Although, I'll grant them that it'd be super fucking easy to just write "oh yeah XYZ was influencing them all to be worse people". Because like, Sunspot, Cannonball, Beast, Rogue, Storm, Wolverine. All former avengers with deeper ties to the rest of the Marvel U's standard heroes. Namor? A close associate of Cap. Psylocke's the sis of Captain Britain, Moonstar's ties to Asgard, etc. Many mutants are friends with the greater Marvel Universe and understand that there's a fuckton of things going on which leaves their allies unable to explicitly be there for them all the time.

What I would have enjoyed seeing would have been more of interaction with the greater marvel U that implied something a little off was there. But, modern writers are too retarded and really just wanted Krakoa to be this

Immortal demigods that have their own private paradise were they just have orgies and complain about persecution all day long.

Yeah.

We could at least have had an interesting sorta "Be careful what you wish for" story despite the kinda dumb situation. Hell, I'd say that what I've heard of Hickman's original idea would have been more interesting that what we have now. I'm just glad they're closing the era because I don't wanna keep seeing the mutants keep vacillating because it's so fucking whiplash inducing to see it.

Also, speaking of the X-Men, I kinda enjoyed Cyclops fall from grace from the 2000s-2010s.
 
Jesus Christ, even the new artist on the X-Books just admitted that the Krakoa Era was selling like shit.

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Breevort also confirmed that the New X-Men tease using the Age of Apocalypse logo from a while back was part of a cancelled planned event that the previous editor, Jordan White, was coordinating that was going to continue the Krakoa Status Quo.

Just in case anyone out there tries to tell you that the Krakoa Age ended "when it came to its natural conclusion", and not because of flagging sales and consumer interest that was in the toilet.
 
Jesus Christ, even the new artist on the X-Books just admitted that the Krakoa Era was selling like shit.


Breevort also confirmed that the New X-Men tease using the Age of Apocalypse logo from a while back was part of a cancelled planned event that the previous editor, Jordan White, was coordinating that was going to continue the Krakoa Status Quo.

Just in case anyone out there tries to tell you that the Krakoa Age ended "when it came to its natural conclusion", and not because of flagging sales and consumer interest that was in the toilet.
I feel like the issue with the X-Men is that writers buy too much into the allegory people jumped on in the 90’s-00’s where they are stand-in’s for gay niggers. Their stories revolve around being the most oppressed people ever in spite of every other privilege they have and act like most entitled people in response to anyone who opposes them.

They somehow are oppressed as shit, but also have the Empress of an alien race fucking their wheelchair bound leader who has no ethics. They have no connection to their non-mutant families and tell them to die at a moments notice if they don’t support them in their Jihad.

The Krokoa shit is merely the problem of the X-Men continuously doing this oppression dominance play rather than doing any actual world building or not treating them like gay niggers. You know what would be fun? Something I only see in manga? Hyper powerful characters interacting with the world. Dealing with the consequences of some asshole blowing up the park, going to a restaurant where they are a regular, dealing with people outside of the cast that has powers, having friends with normies.

I had friends recommend this to me and the X-Men always have a what if? plot line going where the X-Men either are fighting an oppressive power as the nearly genocided race or threaten the universe with their supremacy. It’s fucking boring.
 
I feel like the issue with the X-Men is that writers buy too much into the allegory people jumped on in the 90’s-00’s where they are stand-in’s for gay niggers. Their stories revolve around being the most oppressed people ever in spite of every other privilege they have and act like most entitled people in response to anyone who opposes them.
I'd believe it a lot better if the writers didn't pick some major X-Man every era that went into a morality spiral. In the 00s it was Cyclops/Xavier, in the '80s it was what, Jean Grey during the original phoenix saga and Archangel. In the 90s it was. . . I don't remember the 90s. Probably Gambit, Wolverine, and/or Xavier. In the 2010s it was Cyclops turning into more of a villain (which I found interesting). Recently it's just been Krakoa.png.

X-Men really need to learn that maybe they should just be totally transparent. I'd like to see a run where the Xavier School is 100% transparent and plays the social media game and has an Avengers Unity team at the school. That'd be fun.
They somehow are oppressed as shit, but also have the Empress of an alien race fucking their wheelchair bound leader who has no ethics. They have no connection to their non-mutant families and tell them to die at a moments notice if they don’t support them in their Jihad.
The entire Grey family got killed off, The Summers family is a constant big question mark of how many are relevant, etc. I think Cannonball's family shows up with a lotta mutants but the mom's a normal human.

I do agree that we could probably use more tasteful stories of mutants and their normie families. I'd love to see Nightcrawler being contacted by just people who find out they're related to him and just want to meet him without any duplicity. Or, like anyone that isn't a Grey/Summers or Wolverine thing.

Emma's sister was a villain. Don't recall much.
The Krokoa shit is merely the problem of the X-Men continuously doing this oppression dominance play rather than doing any actual world building or not treating them like gay niggers. You know what would be fun? Something I only see in manga? Hyper powerful characters interacting with the world. Dealing with the consequences of some asshole blowing up the park, going to a restaurant where they are a regular, dealing with people outside of the cast that has powers, having friends with normies.
I think Krakoa should put the brakes on letting shitty leftists hacks wank their ideology and actually let us see a story where everyone in power or "seniority" struggles with the 00s Cyclops mental downward spiral of justifying really cynical things. Have Magneto break down as the X-Men slip further and further into justifying lying to their allies for little reason. Have Namor warn Pixie or Nightcrawler that they shouldn't push away those that fought alongside them in the protection of Earth. Etc. Have it all be the Onslaught-Shadow King mind virus or some shit. Or better yet, have it be a piece of the void that was stuck in Emma's mind and finally really got loose. It would have been so cool to try and see which characters would rise above this mental shitpit and it'd have been kind of an allegory for getting out of a victimization mindset when you've finally won.

But uh, that'd imply something, wouldn't it.
I had friends recommend this to me and the X-Men always have a what if? plot line going where the X-Men either are fighting an oppressive power as the nearly genocided race or threaten the universe with their supremacy. It’s fucking boring.

I think the Utopia Years/Hope Summers stuff did the whole "we gotta get united and live on our own nation" thing better than Krakoa did because it was interesting and you could see the fall of Cyclops from being a staunch by the books field leader/superhero to increasing shades of '60s Magneto.


Krakoa had potential. Maybe Hickman's original idea, executed decently well, could have done better than what we got. I'm rooting for Orchis to at least be a fun villain group in the future. I sure hope they don't get ripped apart as fodder.

At least keep Bastion/Nimrod around as the X-Men's Ultron equivalent. I'd fucking hate to see them make another fucking scapegoat for right-winged institutions/extremists. We've got like 9 of them in the X-books history at this point and the only ones I remember are the Purifiers and the Reverend Stryker ones. Sons of Humanity was another one? ISTG we keep getting new ones all the time.
 
Just in case anyone out there tries to tell you that the Krakoa Age ended "when it came to its natural conclusion"
Who the fuck is gonna say that, when everyone knows the natural conclusion was never gonna happen since the writers of the shitty secondary books liked the first act's status quo so much that they didn't let the story move on, causing Hickman to bail?

Everyone knows it went off the rails and the Krakoa part got overextended. I'll insist that Ewing, Gillen, and Spurrier made the best they could of it but the rest? No.

And Duggan most of all, having the reins of the main line, made it so fucking boring.

Krakoa had potential. Maybe Hickman's original idea, executed decently well, could have done better than what we got.
Hickman is fantastic at building things up, and shit at paying them off.
I, too, think if he had put his foot down and forced the others to move the story along as planned, as he said he was capable and not afraid of doing, the result would have been better.
But it'd still probably have failed to live up to the promise.
 
Who the fuck is gonna say that, when everyone knows the natural conclusion was never gonna happen since the writers of the shitty secondary books liked the first act's status quo so much that they didn't let the story move on, causing Hickman to bail?

Everyone knows it went off the rails and the Krakoa part got overextended. I'll insist that Ewing, Gillen, and Spurrier made the best they could of it but the rest? No.

And Duggan most of all, having the reins of the main line, made it so fucking boring.
I used to think Duggan was just a mediocre writer. I now think of him as less than that.

Hickman? I think he's alright. He really needs to be given a proper editor and more support. The leadup to his Secret Wars took years and they really coulda used a "52" style series. His New Avengers+Time RUns Out stuff was the right idea, but wasn't executed that well. The X-ban? Or whatever that was probably hampered stuff further for him.

I recognize Duggan, I just never associated him with anything. Now I guess he's the "shite krakoa guy" to me now.

Hickman feels like a side-graded Morrison at times with the big concepts in mainstream work that don't pay out super well. Well. At least Morrison's stuff was executed better and he's got a better track record.
 
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I used to think Duggan was just a mediocre writer. I now think of him as less than that.
I don't know if it was Posehn* that tard-wrangled him successfully on his Deadpool, but I had a good opinion of him.
Then, little by little, one issue of his X-Men after the other, my opinion eroded into nothing.

* images.jpeg
 
I feel like the issue with the X-Men is that writers buy too much into the allegory people jumped on in the 90’s-00’s where they are stand-in’s for gay niggers. Their stories revolve around being the most oppressed people ever in spite of every other privilege they have and act like most entitled people in response to anyone who opposes them.

They somehow are oppressed as shit, but also have the Empress of an alien race fucking their wheelchair bound leader who has no ethics. They have no connection to their non-mutant families and tell them to die at a moments notice if they don’t support them in their Jihad.

The Krokoa shit is merely the problem of the X-Men continuously doing this oppression dominance play rather than doing any actual world building or not treating them like gay niggers. You know what would be fun? Something I only see in manga? Hyper powerful characters interacting with the world. Dealing with the consequences of some asshole blowing up the park, going to a restaurant where they are a regular, dealing with people outside of the cast that has powers, having friends with normies.

I had friends recommend this to me and the X-Men always have a what if? plot line going where the X-Men either are fighting an oppressive power as the nearly genocided race or threaten the universe with their supremacy. It’s fucking boring.
Chris Claremont, John Byrne, Louise Simonson and Co. already cracked the code on how to do the X-Men right a long time ago---and that's to focus on the character drama between the X-Men instead of their oppressed minority status. Dark Phoenix is heralded as one of the all-time milestones of the series because it's one giant melodramatic soap opera finale to years of relationship-building and camaraderie with each other, as they wriggle helplessly under the thumb of a shadow organization that's managed to out-think all of them, the clock ticking as they watch their friend (and lover, in Scott's case) Jean unravel into a nightmarish entity, helpless to stop her and pull her back.

When you as the reader are invested in this unfurling plot, it's not because of some nebulous sociopolitical allegory that's tacked on as a part of the Mutant World Setting...it's because the writers have done a good job of making you care about these characters for thirty-something issues...the same way a telenovella or soapy drama would over multiple seasons of television. That's where the strength of the X-Men is.

Who the fuck is gonna say that, when everyone knows the natural conclusion was never gonna happen since the writers of the shitty secondary books liked the first act's status quo so much that they didn't let the story move on, causing Hickman to bail?
You'd be surprised how many Krakoa Stans are on Twitter, claiming in furious denial and cope that "NO, YOU'RE WRONG, BIGOT, KRAKOA ISN'T ENDING BECAUSE OF LOW SALES, THIS IS THE NATURAL END OF THE STORY, REEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!!!"

They're desperately trying to pretend this status quo had some kind of long-term sales success, when the plummet in sales happened before Hickman even left the X-Office.

Everyone knows it went off the rails and the Krakoa part got overextended. I'll insist that Ewing, Gillen, and Spurrier made the best they could of it but the rest?
The downside is that they're still Gillen and Spurrier, so their "best" was never going to be good enough. Or even readable.

Hickman feels like a side-graded Morrison at times with the big concepts in mainstream work that don't pay out super well. Well. At least Morrison's stuff was executed better and he's got a better track record.
I keep hearing magical stories of Morrison's narrative genius, but so far everything I've read from his terrible. Granted, it's been mostly his tenure on 2000AD, Heavy Metal, and New X-Men so far....and the more I hear about his Green Lantern run, the more I'm starting to think that this bald hack develops some kind of unique narrative deficiency whenever he comes within a country-ass mile of DC.
 
Chris Claremont, John Byrne, Louise Simonson and Co. already cracked the code on how to do the X-Men right a long time ago---and that's to focus on the character drama between the X-Men instead of their oppressed minority status. Dark Phoenix is heralded as one of the all-time milestones of the series because it's one giant melodramatic soap opera finale to years of relationship-building and camaraderie with each other, as they wriggle helplessly under the thumb of a shadow organization that's managed to out-think all of them, the clock ticking as they watch their friend (and lover, in Scott's case) Jean unravel into a nightmarish entity, helpless to stop her and pull her back.
So, the 70s and 80s had it down and then everyone else kinda kept fucking it up.

Yeah, that checks out. If you really think about it, the most original stuff that didn't spiral out of the Bronze Age X-Men was probably like Age of Apocalypse and maybe the Morrison X-Men and Cyclop's downhill spiral.
When you as the reader are invested in this unfurling plot, it's not because of some nebulous sociopolitical allegory that's tacked on as a part of the Mutant World Setting...it's because the writers have done a good job of making you care about these characters for thirty-something issues...the same way a telenovella or soapy drama would over multiple seasons of television. That's where the strength of the X-Men is.

You'd be surprised how many Krakoa Stans are on Twitter, claiming in furious denial and cope that "NO, YOU'RE WRONG, BIGOT, KRAKOA ISN'T ENDING BECAUSE OF LOW SALES, THIS IS THE NATURAL END OF THE STORY, REEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!!!"

They're desperately trying to pretend this status quo had some kind of long-term sales success, when the plummet in sales happened before Hickman even left the X-Office.
Krakoa was a workable premise, but they really just fucked up by not letting Hickman follow through or giving the reigns to someone capable.

This isn't really a good natural end either, they're fucking coping hard. Having it all be a flashbang in a Hellfire Gala oneshot is really not gonna work unless you've done everything properly. These people are not only midwits, but midwits who aren't even exposed to decent media.
The downside is that they're still Gillen and Spurrier, so their "best" was never going to be good enough. Or even readable.
Yeah where do you go when the bar is pretty low.

Didn't Marvel piss Remender off so bad that he's just done with the mainstream? I liked his X-Force run. This probably woulda been a fine thing for him to take over.
I keep hearing magical stories of Morrison's narrative genius, but so far everything I've read from his terrible. Granted, it's been mostly his tenure on 2000AD, Heavy Metal, and New X-Men so far....and the more I hear about his Green Lantern run, the more I'm starting to think that this bald hack develops some kind of unique narrative deficiency whenever he comes within a country-ass mile of DC.
Morrison's DC work is hit or miss. I liked Animal Man and Doom Patrol in a weird way but I don't re-read them too often. His Batman run was enjoyable enough and introduced Damian and adapted the old international batmen.
 
Remainder fared better with the BuckyNat team-up series. J also liked his Velvet spy thriller. Could see it as a film.
 
Remainder fared better with the BuckyNat team-up series. J also liked his Velvet spy thriller. Could see it as a film.
Did you mean Brubaker? Because if it's the Velvet series I'm thinking of, he did that with Epting. And yeah, with some trimming to the story it could work. "An older Moneypenny is forced to go rogue and clear her name" is a good idea for a story and was a fun read. Could have been an interesting series but Brubaker doesn't like his creator owned titles to last too long. Except for Criminal, which is more like several mini or maxi-series that happen to be set in the same universe.

b7612bc41103296c43507d3545d523c1.jpg
 
Jesus Christ, even the new artist on the X-Books just admitted that the Krakoa Era was selling like shit.


Breevort also confirmed that the New X-Men tease using the Age of Apocalypse logo from a while back was part of a cancelled planned event that the previous editor, Jordan White, was coordinating that was going to continue the Krakoa Status Quo.

Just in case anyone out there tries to tell you that the Krakoa Age ended "when it came to its natural conclusion", and not because of flagging sales and consumer interest that was in the toilet.

"Shut up! It sells when it makes the manbabies mad" Tom Breevort

Jordan White, editor. All you needed to know.

@Mississippi Motorboater

Hickman feels like a side-graded Morrison at times with the big concepts in mainstream work that don't pay out super well.

They don't belong in the same breath....

Regardless of your ability to appreciate Grant Morrison's genuine, imaginative, and revolutionary work over more than twenty years releasing genre defining pieces, Jonathan Hickman has never touched Morrison, nor done the solid, mechanically sound storytelling that Morrison exhibited.

Example, Hickman has not, to my knowledge, mixed up his style in over a decade. Morrison in the 80s, 90s, 00s, and 10s is different, growing and changing as a creative.

Then there's the decompressive failures. Every Hickman comic has gotten worse as he progressively decompresses simple stories, going from a fantastic series of tied together mini-series in his early days to the bloated Fantastic Four (still solid), to the unreadable nightmare that was Avengers.

Morrison, by contrasts, has released timeless classics up until a few years ago (GL is good if over rated).

Well. At least Morrison's stuff was executed better and he's got a better track record.

He's got an excellent track record, which is why when he's terrible he's terrible and he's good he's good. He does not have Simonson, John Byrne, and Claremonts penchant for poor to fair mediocrity over long stretches, which is a trade off that makes allot of their runs age better than Morrison's longer work.

I keep hearing magical stories of Morrison's narrative genius, but so far everything I've read from his terrible.

His new X-men is not terrible. It's cringe inducing to say that. E for extinction reaches out and grips you, regardless of your opinion of it not being Claremont enough, wiping out the status quo while doing it in a twisted way. Then it, leads up to Beast, who has befriended this loser mutant, only in 117 to then have the villain make him use his diploma, a sign of his HUMAN intellect (after letting it be known his struggles with his becoming less human) to clean himself, then have him feral chase said loser mutant boy.

Chilling

Granted, it's been mostly his tenure on 2000AD, Heavy Metal, and New X-Men so far....and the more I hear about his Green Lantern run, the more I'm starting to think that this bald hack develops some kind of unique narrative deficiency whenever he comes within a country-ass mile of DC.

Huh? Sooo, never read JLA, check. Never read any of his Eisner nominated works at DC. Check.

Just gonna throw this out there, Chris Claremont wasn't perfect, it's okay not to like a run. I'm a mid on Morrison. His work at Marvel was 'adequate'. N-Xmen was a C. Average. It has high points...and low points. But to describe the ENTIRE RUN as TERRIBLE is a gross misrepresentation. Terrible is Chuck Austen. Terrible is Bendis...everything.
 
They don't belong in the same breath....

Regardless of your ability to appreciate Grant Morrison's genuine, imaginative, and revolutionary work over more than twenty years releasing genre defining pieces, Jonathan Hickman has never touched Morrison, nor done the solid, mechanically sound storytelling that Morrison exhibited.

Example, Hickman has not, to my knowledge, mixed up his style in over a decade. Morrison in the 80s, 90s, 00s, and 10s is different, growing and changing as a creative.

Then there's the decompressive failures. Every Hickman comic has gotten worse as he progressively decompresses simple stories, going from a fantastic series of tied together mini-series in his early days to the bloated Fantastic Four (still solid), to the unreadable nightmare that was Avengers.

Morrison, by contrasts, has released timeless classics up until a few years ago (GL is good if over rated).
He's got an excellent track record, which is why when he's terrible he's terrible and he's good he's good. He does not have Simonson, John Byrne, and Claremonts penchant for poor to fair mediocrity over long stretches, which is a trade off that makes allot of their runs age better than Morrison's longer work.
I have no idea why you chose to tag me with these. You're responding to quotes from a post by a completely different person. I'm not the one who compared Hickman to Morrison...the other guy did.

I think your blind devotion to Morrison is making you confuse different posters on this thread.

His new X-men is not terrible. It's cringe inducing to say that.
No, cringe is having all of the X-Men characters all talk in the same voice, because the author hasn't done a lick of research on how the characters are supposed to interact. Cringe is stuff like Beast deciding he's gay in one panel, then admitting he's not one panel later, but conceding that "he might as well be gay, since he's already oppressed". Cringe is getting basic shit about the mutant mythology wrong, like either forgetting or not knowing that mutants literally don't get their powers till puberty (which renders the entire character of Cassandra Nova literally impossible, since Morrison claims she developed her powers in the womb). Cringe is turning Jean Grey into a vindictive bully who gets her revenge on Emma Frost by forcing her to relive her past trauma. Cringe would be inventing a 14-year-old's Deviantart character like Fantomex, the guntoting mutant superspy who's "fifty steps ahead of the X-Men" and has dialogue that would make Coldsteel The Hedgehog look like the paragon of subtlety. Cringe would be staging an affair subplot between Emma Frost and Cyclops to push Jean Grey into becoming more malavelont and emotionally vulnerable to her Phoenix State, only to undercut that entire subplot by having her play tonsil hockey with Wolverine behind Cyclops' back before the affair with Emma even takes place, making Jean look like a massive hypocrite. Gosh, it's almost like not a single character in this stupid-ass run acts in-character, or something.

And that's before you get into Morrison's rejected ideas in his story pitch to Mark Powers, where he drops in such excellent chestnuts like the desire of killing Moira McTaggart only for Magneto to re-animate her corpse by manipulating the iron in her blood, or his idea to kill off Rogue and jettison her entire character history and personality to be replaced with an edgy Goth Rogue, because by his logic, "a character with those powers would have zero self-confidence and wouldn't be sassy".

Morrison didn't write an X-Men comic, because he doesn't have any grasp of the characters, and self-admittedly has virtually zero familiarity with the bulk of their character history (something he admits in his manifesto)...he wrote a Grant Morrison comic where the X-Men have their agency, character history and personalities reversed or bent completely to service Morrison's misguided high-concept ideas. They don't drive the story...the story drives them, just like every other piece of trash he writes.

The only thing revolutionary about his run is the fact that he somehow made a comic so awful and incongruitous with the X-Men that Marvel retconned virtually everything he wrote at a speed so unprecedented, it makes One More Day look like a pedestrian small-scale continuity reset. I have never seen a publisher race to get rid of so many bad ideas so quickly.

But they did, and thank God for that.

Just gonna throw this out there, Chris Claremont wasn't perfect, it's okay not to like a run. I'm a mid on Morrison. His work at Marvel was 'adequate'. N-Xmen was a C. Average. It has high points...and low points. But to describe the ENTIRE RUN as TERRIBLE is a gross misrepresentation. Terrible is Chuck Austen. Terrible is Bendis...everything.
You're welcome to point out a single post where I ever claimed Claremont was perfect, or credited him solely for the golden age of X-Men storylines. You'll notice that I included Byrne and Simonson when listing people from that period--because often, Byrne would creatively tussle with Claremont over narrative ideas, to the point where he was contributing to the story with almost as much agency. Claremont, for all of his good ideas, had terrible ones, like Cyclops getting over the loss of his dead wife by hooking up with a miraculous clone who looks exactly like his dead wife. Simonson helping make sense of the walking plot absurdity of Madeline Prior, and even making a psychological dilemma out of it, is what made Inferno such a seminal arc of the X-Men, and helped aid in repairing a disastrous idea. Claremont also has proven exactly what kind of abysmal writing he's capable of when unchecked--as the latter half of X-Treme X-Men and the ENTIRETY of X-Men Forever clearly demonstrate.

But the difference is that he at least understands the characters he's writing. For every terrible idea he has, it will be in pursuit of weaving a satisfying soap opera together, and fulfilling the narrative function of the X-Men as characters. Morrison, meanwhile, treats every character he inherits like props--objects that service concepts and ideas, agency and consistency be damned. He doesn't write the X-Men as humans, because somewhere in that bald, nonbinary brain of his, he forgot how to write humans altogether. That's why his run ages like wet shit in an attic, and I have zero intention of reading it again (not that I have to, given how little continuity from that run is preserved in future, superior story arcs. Who knew "Here Comes Tomorrow" was just code for: "Get Puckered, Editorially-Mandated Retcons Incoming!").

Now, is he the worst run on the X-Men? No, I'd say Peter Milligan, Brian Michael Bendis, and Matt Fraction all had infinitely worse runs...and Jason Aaron has arguably the worst contributions to X-Men in publishing history, the damage from which the X-Books have still yet to fully recover from.

But I'd still take a voluntary mind-wipe to purge my cerebellum of all memories of reading Grant Morrison's run...which again, I don't really have to do, since by the time I reach House of M and the Decimation Era in my annual read-through, the X-Men characters themselves pretty much act like none of that dumb shit ever happened anyway.
 
Bill Sinkiewicz 's brain worms are playing him up again

Motherfucker has always been psychotic about AI but this is a new level of derangement

:story:

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Daily reminder that Bill Sinkiewicz has a reputation of being a white trash drunk who desperately wants to be an "artiste", only got his gig on New Mutants (and going all out experimental-wise on the book as opposed to his more mainstream work on Moon Knight) because Claremont secretly was desperately trying to get New Mutants canceled, once got so drunk that he lost the cover for an issue of New Mutants he was supposed to mail in, and is long rumored to have pulled a Zoe Quinn in that most of the positive coverage for his New Mutants and Moon Knight runs was artificially manufactured due to him fucking Heidi McDonald, who he had an on-again, off-again affair with in the 80s.

And him bitching about AI artwork is hilarious given the rumor that he drank/pissed away all of the money he got off of the Legion TV show. Probably why he's screeching about AI artwork, since he failed at making it as a regular artist, he's never going to see a dime off of Moon Knight since he didn't invent the character (and the TV show is mostly based off of more recent MK books), and comics won't hire him except to do variant covers these days as far as him not even being able to get inker jobs like had to do in the 90s.
 
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I've tried to make AI comics before but it's near impossible to get something consistent. At least on my rig and with the programs I have. However I can see it making a big splash eventually.

Let's say there's a program that has pre-modelled assets. Characters, objects, settings, time and lighting conditions, and even color filters. And all you need to do is select which ones you want to use for your scene, then type into a command bar what you want the characters to do. After a few missteps, you finally get the scene exactly how you want it. You then swivel the camera to be in the position you want, take a screenshot, and now you have a panel of a comic book. Once you have all your panels, all you need to do is assemble your pages, write in some dialogue, and you have your comic.

Now let's be honest, this doesn't seem that far away, does it? In fact, someone is probably already working on it. Or it's already out and I just don't know about it. In which case, let me know so I can finally make a Lightbringer comic.

AI is here and it's here to stay. People can whine and moan all they want, but at the end of the day, if a consumer is willing to pay for it, then it doesn't matter what anyone else wants.
 
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