Originally posted by zopzop
But this is how it ended :Save me Mommy, save me! 😆
Originally posted by psycho gundam
really? look at what thor just went up against. the man was almost the last of his entire race at that moment.that was one of the greatest showings of manhood in comics
Don't mind him.
All these Thor haters just crawl out of the wood work lately. Seriously, trying to turn that into some kind of embarrassing showing. Just wow.
Originally posted by Tony Stark
😐No, I think he's higher than low hence Mid
Well, using the phrase "at worst" seems to suggest that you think that Iron Man, on his worst day, is a mid herald, which in turn suggests that you may think Iron Man on the average or on a good (or great) day, bats above that.
I don't agree with him being Mid-Herald, but thanks for clarifying. 👆
Originally posted by Rage.Of.Olympus
Don't mind him.All these Thor haters just crawl out of the wood work lately. Seriously, trying to turn that into some kind of embarrassing showing. Just wow.
None of Thor's attacks did anything meaningful and even "toppling" Arishem was just something Arshiem himself allowed because it wasn't worth the effort of stopping the attack. This is actually stated on panel.
Thor got wtfpwned in that issue, him and his entire pantheon.
Originally posted by zopzop
It was pretty embarrassing. Anytime a person's mom has to jump into a fight to save her son, it means her kid just got ragestomped. And that's exactly what happened.None of Thor's attacks did anything meaningful and even "toppling" Arishem was just something Arshiem himself allowed because it wasn't worth the effort of stopping the attack. This is actually stated on panel.
Thor got wtfpwned in that issue, him and his entire pantheon.
The whole point was that Thor was fighting impossible odds and was defiant to the end.
Not sure how that's embarrassing...
Originally posted by zopzop
It was pretty embarrassing. Anytime a person's mom has to jump into a fight to save her son, it means her kid just got ragestomped. And that's exactly what happened.None of Thor's attacks did anything meaningful and even "toppling" Arishem was just something Arshiem himself allowed because it wasn't worth the effort of stopping the attack. This is actually stated on panel.
Thor got wtfpwned in that issue, him and his entire pantheon.
Yes, I get it. You're not particular fond of Thor and are on a Celestial trip.
No one cares, take your shit out of this thread.
Originally posted by Horrificus
Yeah, yeah. But, dude. You have to give him credit. He skewered a Celestial and brought it to it's knees. Sans Mjolnir.
Arishem rises from the rubble, a leviathan beyond conflict. The fall was utterly inconsequential to the supreme Celestial, not even worth the effort to prevent, for Arishem acts only when he deems it is necessary.
Arishem draws the sword from himself, having allowed it's entry to merely better analyze it's alien structure and mystic properties
Thor LITERALLY did nothing and had to be saved by his MOTHER. That wasn't a good showing, that was OWNAGE in it's purest form. Compare this to the Silver Surfer's epic struggled vs T&A. Now THAT was an awesome herald feat.
Originally posted by JakeTheBank
That's because writers (and fans) think that in order to tell a good story for the adult demographic, it needs to be dark and serious. I can appreciate those stories, but sometimes I like plain old fun and adventure without some hidden commentary in between the lines of the futility of mankind and its darkest desires and all that bullshit.
I think that Remender is capable of putting out some strictly fun classic style Avengers stories, but he's currently working under the model which he perfected on X-Force, because his fans want to see that style passed into the Avengers.
I'm impressed by the non "gritty and dark" content of his run, I think that the moment with Wasp giving commentary about mutant fashion was downright brilliant, this is exactly the kind of thing that we should be looking foward in Wasp's character, and he brought it in in a very natural way... So much that it makes me admirative.