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DC vs. Marvel (issues #2–3 titled Marvel vs. DC) is a comic book miniseries intercompany crossover published by DC Comics and Marvel Comics from February to May 1996. Each company would publish two issues of the miniseries, thus the title difference between issues #1 and 4 as DC vs. Marvel Comics from DC and issues #2–3 from Marvel as Marvel Comics vs. DC.
Marvel vs. DC was a 1997 comic book mini-series by DC Comics and Marvel. The plot was that two "Brothers" personify the universes that comics fans know as DC and Marvel. After becoming aware of the other's existence, the brothers challenge each other to a series of duels involving each universe's respective superheroes.
These characters first appeared in a series of 12 one-shots which were published in April 1996 between Marvel Comics versus DC #3 and DC versus Marvel Comics #4, the last two issues of the DC vs. Marvel crossover event. A second set of 12 one-shots followed one year later in June 1997, but without the crossover event as a background. [1]
Captain Marvel vs. Superman on the cover of Superman Giant #4 (2018) Art by Andy Kubert. Captain Marvel's adventures have contributed a number of elements to both comic book culture and pop culture in general. The most notable contribution is the regular use of Superman and Captain Marvel as adversaries in Modern Age comic book stories.
Continuing disagreements between Marvel and DC and Pérez's anger over the demise of the JLA/Avengers book [12] resulted in the eventual cancellation of X-Men/Teen Titans #2 as well. [11] Unlike the JLA/Avengers, a good portion of which had already been drawn by Pérez, no artwork was ever drawn for the Uncanny X-Men and The New Teen Titans sequel.
The Batman screenshot. Tubi, the free video on demand streaming service that I had definitely heard of before today, has announced that it’s bringing a bunch of new DC Comics film and TV content ...
JLA/Avengers is officially canon for both companies and the cosmic egg has appeared in DC's Trinity and in Marvel's Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe. [11] The series was reprinted by DC Comics in 2004 as a two-volume collector's edition hardcover (which included for the first time the original 21 Pérez-penciled pages from mid-1983 ...
Gunn says the perceived rivalry between the two superhero-spawning studios, Marvel owned by Disney and DC by Warner Bros., is overblown. "People have this weird belief that Marvel and DC hate each ...