Originally posted by DarkSaint85
They had to be large discrete parts, iirc - so a whole foot, and an arm, etc.In this case he was just cutting strips off his arm. So arguably the same body part over and over again.
What bothers me is that it implies that Wolverine would starve to death, which... doesn't make sense to me.
Originally posted by MrMind
x-men are so wanked on this forum it's sad
It depends entirely on the character.
The Death Metal issue:
Did Prime ki-amp his punch right before he socked the antenna, because that's what it looked like..? 😕
Also Prime's characterization in this was SO much different than usual. He wasn't the petulant, emo child we're accustomed to. He came off as a very intelligent, calculating character who could actually be reasoned with. I actually liked that change.
Originally posted by -Pr-
and that was Grant Morrison iirc.
It was.
But as we discussed it before, it's likely Wolverine was chewing on his own arm just to fool his hunger.
Either that or he was just trying to boost Jean's confidence --- obviously, he was having a much easier time in that unbearable heat than her thanks to his healing factor.
Tried to postpone mercy-killing her, probably.
Originally posted by DarkSaint85For six months 😂 [/B]
Yeah, lol.
I assume he was trapped there, too weak to claw his way out?
Or, perhaps, it was during one of his extreme self-isolation periods?
Perhaps post-World War One, after Lazaer "cursed" him with an immortality of sorts?
But Grant wasn't working with Guggenheim, as far as I know... so it's just my headcanon, trying to make sense out of it and figure out when it could've happened, exactly.
One year in comics = almost a whole decade in real life (and it keeps changing, thanks to the retroactive continuity).
Originally posted by Galan007That's the weird part. First of all, chronologically, Superboy is imprisoned in the Source Wall, then it explodes and he survives and escapes it, then he goes and meets Perpetua. Now, this by itself makes no sense with the Shazam issues [where he was trapped under the red sun]. And then I read this interview by Snyder:
Also Prime's characterization in this was SO much different than usual. He wasn't the petulant, emo child we're accustomed to. He came off as a very intelligent, calculating character who could actually be reasoned with. I actually liked that change.
https://www.cbr.com/scott-snyder-dark-nights-death-metal-4-interview/
And he makes it clear that Prime is this way because he has matured [they even pondered calling him Superman Prime]. Which again, doesn't jibe at all with the characterization aforementioned appearance.
Maybe future issues will clarify this, given the Johns contributes explicitly to all of this.