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  1. In comicbooks Continuity has no general rule, there's some things that make you understand it a little better but there's no general guideline, you made 2 interesting questions: A)I like supes, so i need to read from the very first issue? On the Short: Absolutely not.

  2. If you want to get in to comics than all you need to know are the CURRENT canons/continuities. For Marvel that would be the 616 continuity and for DC you need to know the New 52 continuity. Both are relatively new so it's not hard to get into.

  3. Jun 12, 2012 · There is some basic continuity but the what is more or less the same in each story; it is the how that captures our attention. I see Wolverine or the Punisher being good candidates for this type of story. The basic principles of the characters don’t change but each story shows us a new interesting take on how they do what they do.

  4. Nov 25, 2021 · What you describe in terms of comic production is what the last 20 or more years of Marvel has been — warping the comic book business to match the movies, after the movies copied the comics, after the comics tried to make themselves sale-worthy to be optioned to film.

  5. If you or someone you know has struggled with comics continuity, here’s a brief self-help guide to to why all that history does and does not matter, plus how to tell a retcon from a reboot, and...

  6. Jul 15, 2024 · Continuity doesn’t come naturally to long-running franchises like DC and Marvel Comics, Star Wars, or Star Trek — and those stories must abandon it to survive.

  7. Mar 25, 2013 · Continuity, at least to a basic degree, is important. A character’s origin, history, victories, defeats and relationships are part of what they are. Although anything can happen in a comics universe it must be recognized that people like a good dose of reality, even in the fiction they read.

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