Please note that this only applies to ads that have superheroes in them. You can't have Bill and Ted just because there's a Bill and Ted's Excellent Video Game Adventure ad in your comic.
True, true. And I dont even know who Bill and Ted are.
Oh, before your time, I suppose (and mine, really, I just know it because the ad for its video game is in a comic I own ). Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure is a movie from 1989 starring two skate hippy sort of guys, who go back in time an have to do a history report so that they can play with their band, the Wild Stalins. There's also a sequel, Bill and Ted's Bogus Journey and a video game, Bill and Ted's Excellent Video game Adventure, released in 1991, based on the Bogus Journey.
True, true. And I dont even know who Bill and Ted are.
Oh, before your time, I suppose (and mine, really, I just know it because the ad for its video game is in a comic I own ). Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure is a movie from 1989 starring two skate hippy sort of guys, who go back in time an have to do a history report so that they can play with their band, the Wild Stalins. There's also a sequel, Bill and Ted's Bogus Journey and a video game, Bill and Ted's Excellent Video game Adventure, released in 1991, based on the Bogus Journey.
I think my local library has that movie. I should watch it.
This poll will decide if Advertisements in old comic books should be considered canon, thus the characters exclusive to the ads allowed in the roleplay.
I vote aye. It would be certainly interesting and a numerous addition to the roleplay.
It is settled, then. Nick Fury is CEO of Hostess, which funds Super Heroes who have no other funding.
Now for the issue of a Hero Prison. I cannot find any online, so we need a fanon prison. Ideas?
Well, I think that there are a few different ways we could go about this. With villains, it's easy, you just chuck 'em in a cell, but it's not that simple with heroes. I think some different ways of having them imprisoned are:
Held captive by villains. If we want, this could give rise to ransoms and/or unmaskings.
Held captive by the government. Sort of like a superhero registration thing.
Arkham, because Batman isn't that different from his villains. He's arguably an obsessed psychopath.
Held captive by their protective butlers.
Still healing.
Identity crisis.
I think we should get this sorted before we decide on a location, because this will could help us narrow it down.
It is settled, then. Nick Fury is CEO of Hostess, which funds Super Heroes who have no other funding.
Now for the issue of a Hero Prison. I cannot find any online, so we need a fanon prison. Ideas?
Well, I think that there are a few different ways we could go about this. With villains, it's easy, you just chuck 'em in a cell, but it's not that simple with heroes. I think some different ways of having them imprisoned are:
Held captive by villains. If we want, this could give rise to ransoms and/or unmaskings.
Held captive by the government. Sort of like a superhero registration thing.
Arkham, because Batman isn't that different from his villains. He's arguably an obsessed psychopath.
Held captive by their protective butlers.
Still healing.
Identity crisis.
I think we should get this sorted before we decide on a location, because this will could help us narrow it down.
I was thinking something like the first one. Have an all powerful evil that imprisons fallen heroes. Valhalla?
It is settled, then. Nick Fury is CEO of Hostess, which funds Super Heroes who have no other funding.
Now for the issue of a Hero Prison. I cannot find any online, so we need a fanon prison. Ideas?
Actually, come to think of it, 42 could work. It was the prison in the Negative Zone in Civil War.
Ooh, high-tech. Let's see... Maybe It could be run by villains? Or... I have it! A dark entity imprisons heroes who have been defeated, deeming them unworthy. When their sentence is over, a light entity frees them. Eh?