A chronological journey through the best and most interesting Marvel comics from 2000 to 2015 (roughly). Trevor has spent his life reading Marvel comic books, and Kylee has been busy doing other things. Will Trevor and Kylee come to a shared understanding of Marvel's greatness and flaws as they navi…
You need to learn how to love yourself, or at least how to not actively try to murder yourself.
Moving from the Avengers back to the X-Men means more emphasis on pharmaceutical ethics, and exactly the same amount of emphasis on AI sentience.
The children are our future, but if they try and change it too much it'll break the space-time continuum.
Some heroes are brought together by fate, while others are brought together by editorial mandates to revitalize a comic book franchise with more dynamic and fan-favorite characters. Hey, why not both.
Who could have guessed that – no matter when this episode came out – the story of US forces destabilizing a foreign government would still be pretty relevant.
It wouldn't be a Spider-Man comic without heavy bridge-death imagery, or Aunt May narrowly evading the Grim Reaper yet again.
Just because the war ends doesn't mean the soldiers stop fighting.
In which the greatest superhero team the world has ever seen is decimated and disbanded; all because they refused to acknowledge the reality-warping elephant in the room.
What's a king to a god. What's a god to another god with a hammer. What's a god with a hammer to a big old prophecy.
'Marvels' gets a lot of praise for its unique perspective on the golden age of heroes, but I just think it's great that we finally have a comic about the difficulty of creating a good coffee table book.
I know I mistakenly say in this episode that Bohemian Rhapsody won Best Picture, and I just want to take this moment to apologize to all the Green Book fans out there.
I'm Kingpin, you're Kingpin, everybody's Kingpin.
Vigilante Justice is all fun and games until vigilantes begin thinking they can really enact justice.
Ah yes, the 90s, when comics were worse. Anyway, Daredevil's life is hard.
Maybe the real villains are teenager emotions.
Be careful who you form a lifelong nemesis-ship with in college.
Grant Morrison brings his series to a clean, simple, totally comprehensible conclusion that no one will ever try to retcon.
The Xavier Institute needs to be investing a lot more in counseling services. Also, the government made a cool French guy.
Genocide, love triangles, space birds, and twin murder.
Let's get to know a really cool guy who just wants to do the right thing, and also the Spider-Man he's always trying to kill.