Marvel Comics is setting up 2022 as another year of mash-ups
Doctor Octopus' Superior Four is Marvel's lat🍎est spin on mashing up its iconic characters

Starting in early 2022, the Marvel Universe will be under the 'Devil's Reign,' a crossover event in which Kingpin takes over M꧂anhattan, and sets about trying to eliminate all the city's vigilante's by enlisting his own army of villains.
One of those villains, Doctor Octoꦿpus, will form his own team known as the Su๊perior Four, composed of his own Variants from around the Multiverse - each of whom is mashed-up with another Marvel hero.
This means that three members of the Superior Four are amalgamations of Doctor Octopus along with Ghost Rider, Hulk, and Wolverine, respectively - echoin🐭g the line-up of the 'New Fantastic Four' of Ghost Rider, Wolverine, Hulk, and Spider-Man, with the original Doc Ock takinౠg Spider-Man's place in the line-up.
But that's just the latest in a long (long, long) line of Marvel mash-ups and shifts to status quos of popular heroes, with even more similar concepts - like 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Elektra becoming the main Daredevil, and 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:several heroes getting altered by the 🌱Darkhold - already waiಞting in the wings for upco🍌ming stories.
Marvel's philosophy of altering its characters in seemingly fundamental ways, down to their very identities, only to use that change as fuel to eventuall⛄y bring back the original status quo, often with a 🎶fresh coat of paint, is alive and well.
Over the years, ♒Marvel's heroes have been replaced with amalgams, mash-ups, and alt-identities for an indeterminate amount of time - some of whom have even grown into characters of their own when the originals🅰 returned
Case in point: 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Miles Morales, Peter Parker's replacement in the now-defunct Ultimate Universe (itself an entire illusion of change publishing imprint) is celebrating his 10th anniversary, and in a few months will face off with 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Ben Reilly, the 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:616 Marvel Universe's Peter ༺Parker replacement, who made his own return in October.
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Whew!
And that's not even mentioning the death-resurrection cycle that's cu♍rrently fueling the X-Men titles or the Doctor Strange murder myst✤ery that will result in a new Sorcerer ܫSupreme that could wind up being ... wait for it ... Doctor Strange.
Yup, this is all of it part-and-parcel for the Hou🐻se of Ideas for a long time and increasingly so in the last few month🐠s and weeks.
Which makes it as good a t🌞ime as an💃y to look back on its history.
The Illusion of Change
Once upon a time, the father of Marvel Comics Stan Lee coin🦹ed the phrase "the illusion of change" in regards to superheroes – the idea being that an ongo﷽ing superhero story should give readers the idea that the hero's life is changing and evolving, even though the core concept remains the same, and on some level, the status quo always resets to its home position (more or less).
The concept isn't new in any way. DC in particular often published wacky 'imaginary' stories (particularly starring Superman in crazy variations of his costume and powers) during the Silver Age.
But one of the first applications of the concept in a tonally-earnest, multiple-issue sense was the classic Uncanny X-Men's 1980 '' story, which showed a glimpse of a dark possible future for mutant-kind.
Since then the concept of briefly diverting away from the mainstream version of familiar heroes for a glimpse of another world with alternate, sometimes staggeringly different versions of the characters we all k💦now has only grown in pop🅘ularity.
DC picked up the baton in a big way in the early '90s with the advent of its Elseworlds imprint, a whole line of comics based around earnest alt-reality versions of Batman, Superman, and others, resulting in stories like , , and (itself reaching its 25th anniversary in 2021). The name ‘Elseworlds’ has come 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:back in the DC Universe🌠 as part of its cosmology following the multiversal event , which itself was largelyღ powered by alt/'dark'-takes on DC's most popular charact𝓡er Batman.
But the X-Men, once again, is the franchise that truly innovated the concept with 1995's '' event, an extended story that took over the entire X-Men linꦡe, in which readers were transported to an alternate timeline where Charles Xavier died before forming the X-Men and Apocalypse co🐲nquered the world.
A smash hit, 'Age of Apocalypse' took readers away from the mainstream X-Men they knew and loved to a much darker, more violent world – and the result was that fans not only got the satisfaction of the return of the classic versions of the X-Men, but they also got to pine for the return of the 'AoA' version🍨🅷s they liked best.
(A few of them jumped to the mainstream Marvel Universe when the core X-Men returned, and others have crossed over later – a trend that will continue when alt-reality ideas hit it big – see the '00s version of this concept in Wolverine's Old Man Logan, which has spawned an entire spin-off universe Wastlanders that, you 🍃guessed it, will return in Decemb🏅er).
The mid-'90s hit a wave of such replacements, from Spider-Man's '' which replaced Peteꦍr Parker as the wall-crawler for a time (which Marvel is currently reviving with Peter Parker's protege Miles Morales) to the saga in wh🌜ich the Man of Steel was split into two beings that did not resemble the classic Superman in design or powers, again turning Superman's return to form into a fanfare event when the 'Red/Blue' arc was resolved.
Superman, of course, also pioneered the tactic of killing a hero off and replacing them, only to have them come bac🐽k sometime later – a tactic first used to great effect by the X-Men (there they are again) in the '.'
The crest of that arc of the "illusion of change" culminated in the original 1996 'Heroes Reborn,' in which the Avengers and Fantastic Four were shunted ﷽into an alternate reality with totally different backstor🦹ies and relationships.
[We did a deep dive on the 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:classic Heroes Reborn right here.]
1💟995-96 also marked the , which spawned its own "illusion of change" variant – the ⛄Amalgam mash-up characters. Originally envisioned as a whole line of which combined Marvel and DC heroes into new creations (Batman and Wolverine became Darkclaw, Superman and Captain America became Super Soldier – we're barely scratching the surface), in the years since Marvel and DC stopped collaborating, Marvel Comics has taken the concept and run with it, more on that in a moment.
Then there's of course House of M, a 🍷2006 event which turned the Marvel Universe into💟 a mutant utopia through the magic of the Scarlet Witch, and which was referenced in Disney Plus' WandaVision streaming show.
Most recently, Marvel made this move in a big ꦜway with 2015-16's , which revived the title of the very first Marvel event comic in a story that destroyed, rebuilt, and redefined the Marvel Universe while also streamlining and rewriting parts of the publisher's history – a way of 'rebooting' their universe without actually pulling the trigger.
And since Secret Wars, Marvel has made an e🌱ven bigger pattern of the "ꦦillusion of change."
Mash 'Em Up
For the last few years, Marvel Comics has made an art form of taking their clas🌜sic characters, and plain old mashing them up with other characters people love (or don't), sometimes innovating brand new fan-favorites along the way.
In recent memory, Marvel has mashed up everyone from Deadpool and Venom (putting the Merc with a Mouth in a symbiote suit for multiple stories) to Deadpool and Howard the Duck (Deadpool the Duck was real and that's all we really need to get into), to Howard the Duck and Juggernaut (in an alt-reality Guardians of the Galaxy story), and of course Deadpool and Gwen Stacy (for a variant cover design which took on a life of its own as 𓆏, a character who actually is not a mash-up of Deadpool and Gwen Stacy).
And speaking of Gwen Stacy, she may b෴e the uncrowned queen of the Marvel mash-up, with the alt-reality , who debuted in the Multiverse event 'Spider-Verse' as the hero of a world where Peter Parker died and Gwen survived, becoming one of Marvel's biggest multimedia breakout stars in years, now under the codename Ghost-Spider.
'Spider-Verse' of course formed the basis for the animated film Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, which adapted the story of Miles Morales, the aforementioned Ultimate Universe Spider-Man who took on the mantle after the Peter Parker of his world died, eventually coming to✨ the mainstream Marvel Universe (He's got that 'Clone Saga' we mentioned going on, just more proof of the cyclical nature of these co💞ncepts.)
'Spider-Verse,' the comic bo൲ok event, featured a whole army of alternate-reality Spider-Men – but, ironically, not the core Peter Parker, who was at the time himself replaced as Spider-Man in the mainstream Marvel Univ🍌erse by the Superior Spider-Man, a mash-up of Spidey and his arch-enemy Doctor Octopus who inserted his consciousness into Peter's body.
Spider-Man isn't the only character whose franchise has once again become dominated by the narrative of alt-versions and mash-ups of his classic self (though Marvel's recent 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Spider-Man: Spider's Shadow kept the wallcrawl💛er busy in an alt-reality where he never gave up the Venom symbiote).
The X-Men, ever the guinea pigs for the "illusion of change," have been mashed-up and move🐟d around as much as any Marvel properties since the end of Secret Wars.
There's Weapon H, a genetically engineered mash-up of Hulk and Wolverine with all the powers of both (and, uh, very little of the staying power of either), and then there was that couple of years where the classic Wolverine was dead and 'illusion of change' superstar Old Man Logan took hisඣ place on the X-Men alongside Laura Kinney/X-23, who took up the actual mantle of Wolverine.
And of course, the X-Men revisited the 'Age of Apocalypse' concept through '' in which NateGrey/X-Man, a holdover from the 'Age of Apocalypse' reality, made his own world that supplanted the X-Men line for a few months before ꩵthe House of X/Powers of X revamp – which has itself incorporated a concept where mutants who died while the team was fighting in the multivers🌼al Otherworld have been resurrected with new personalities.
And lest you think the recent Heroes Reborn is the first time Marvel's made a meal of the mash-up idea for a recent event, remember the , a whole universe of mashed-up Marvel heroes where characters like Steve Rogers and Steven Strange combined to become Soldier Supreme, Peter Parker and Marc Spector became AracKnight, Black Panther and🏅 Ghost Rider became Ghost Panther and many more.
The Infinity Warps debuted in 2018's Infinity Wars event in which the Infinity Stones fell into the hands of random, sometimes disastrous people. Created through the reality-altering power of ꦓt༺he Stones, the Infinity Warps were instrumental in eventually destroying the stones at the end of the story, despite it meaning the end of their own world which was housed in the Soul Stone.
Don't worry, Marvel left a back door open for them to return, so you might get to see Weap🧔on Hex (X-23/Scarlet Witch) again som🎉eday.
Though some may like to forget the still controversial story, there's also , in which Steve Rogers was replaced with a duplicate whose history was totally rewritten so he ha♌d always been a villainous agent of Hydra, operating as a double agent in a temporarily successful plan to conquer the Earth. And that’s saying nothing of all the times Steve has been replaced by Bucky Barnes, Sam Wilson, and others, only to have Steve Rogers returned to the role at a key dramatic moment.
And we just mentioned Heroes Reborn, a new recent iteration of that event with a mash-up twist, combining classic Marvel characters into new ❀concepts in a world based on the premise that the Avengers never formed – very similar to the classic X-Men story 'Age of Apocalypse' ☂that we mentioned.
All of this to illustrate not just how prevalent the idea of remixing and combining characters has become in Marvel Comics, but how much that premise has gone beyond the comic book page to become one of the defining traits of Marvel's m💃ultimedia presence, including the increasingly Multiverse-focuꦺsed MCU, which may even feature multiple live-action versions of Spider-Man in upcoming films.
Phase 4 of the MCU is increasingly revolving around the Multiverse. The aforementioned WandaVision has already started the fireworks by pulling in story elements of 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:reality-altering events🦂 like House of M and dovꩵetailed right 🍸to the alt-timeline exploring Loki which leads into 2022's reality-bending Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness.
The in-continuity animated Disney Plus series What If...? introduced Multiversal Avengers, which seems like a coordinated effort 🌠with the new December-debuting Marvel Comic series Avengers Forever, a titleꦉ dedicated to alternate spins on familiar characters.
In other words, don't expect Marvel to stop drawing from the illusion of change weꦍll any time soon.🦩
In fact, It looks like they're ju🐼st getting started...
Speaking of Marvel Comics and change, Newsarama looks at these ten Marvel events that changed everything.
I've been Newsarama's resident Marvel ꧋Comics expert and general comic book historian since 2011. I've also been the on-site reporter at most major comic conventions such as Comic-Con International: San Diego, New York Comic Con, and C2E2. Outside of comic journalism, I am the artist of many weird pictures, and the guitarist of many heavy riffs. (Th▨ey/Them)