- What If (comics)
"What If", sometimes rendered as "What If...?", is the title of several
comic book series published byMarvel Comics , exploring "the road not traveled" by its various characters. Events in the series are considered separate from mainstream continuity in theMarvel Universe .Uatu the Watcher
The stories in the initial 1977-1984 series utilized the alien Uatu the Watcher as
narrator . The observer of events transpiring onEarth from his base on themoon , Uatu, a member of an immortal race of Watchers, is also able to observe what transpires in alternate realities. Thus, "What If" stories usually began with Uatu briefly recapping a notable event in the mainstream Marvel Universe. He then indicated a particularpoint of divergence in that event, and demonstrated what would have happened if events had taken a different course from then.The second "What If" series — which ran from 1989–2000 — adopted the format of its predecessor, with Uatu serving as series narrator and providing the historical context. However, due to events in the "
Fantastic Four " comic book in which Uatu was punished for destroying another Watcher, he was phased out. The stories themselves began to take center stage, with no need for a framing device; Uatu's last appearance in this role was in vol. 2, issue #76.With future series of "What If", whether or not the Watcher appeared was decided upon by the writer, and many elected to have alternative narrators or none at all. Brian Bendis chose to use a version of himself in the 2005 "What If" issues of Daredevil and Jessica Jones, and in the early 2006 series a hacker whose alias is 'The Watcher' online opens all six issues.
Publication history
Volume 1
The initial 47-issue series ran from February 1977 to October 1984. The first "What If" story, "What if
Spider-Man Had Joined theFantastic Four ?", presented an alternate version of events seen in "The Amazing Spider-Man " vol. 1 #1.Some storylines involved individual characters choosing to take (or not to take) a particular action, when in "reality" they had made precisely the opposite decision. For example, a "
Captain America " storyline published circa 1980 saw the hero being offered the opportunity to run forPresident of the United States as a third-party candidate. In the end, he declined the invitation. Nevertheless, issue #26 of "What If" ("What if Captain America became President?") showed him accepting the nomination, and ultimately winning the 1980 Presidential Election.Due to their nature, stories presented in the "What If" format were allowed to break the rules of the characters' respective series that kept the
status quo intact; major characters could be (and often were) killed off in the alternate realities, and many stories were based on the premise of a particular Marvel superhero, upon gaining/discovering his or her special abilities, choosing a life of crime instead. One issue used what had been the original plot for the conclusion of theDark Phoenix saga in the X-Men, where instead of committing suicideJean Grey submits to a lobotomy that removes her powers. In the "What If" version though Jean Grey is powerless to later prevent the death ofScott Summers the resulting shock causing Dark Phoenix to be restored resulting in a Galactic cataclysm. However, not all "What If" stories were quite so serious in nature. Issue #11, for instance, offered a tongue-in-cheek view of what might have happened if members of the original Marvel Bullpen — specifically,Stan Lee ,Jack Kirby ,Flo Steinberg , andSol Brodsky — had been given the powers and abilities of the Fantastic Four.The series occasionally ran a backup feature, "Untold Tales From the Marvel Universe", depicting the development of some of Marvel's superhuman races such as the
Eternals and theInhumans .Following the cancellation of the series, Marvel published a one-shot "What if? Special" (June 1988) with the story "What if
Iron Man Had Been a Traitor?"The title's letter page was dubbed "What Now?", with the words used by an exasperated Uatu, already up to his eyes in letters, receiving another bag-full of mail from the postman.
Voume 2
"What If" was revived for a 114-issue monthly series running from July 1989 to November 1998. The second series became notable for revisiting and revising ideas seen in earlier issues, often updating them for the times in the process. Additionally, stories could now span multiple issues (whereas before each "What If" had been self-contained), and sometimes multiple takes on the concept could be seen in the same issue, with at least one issue offering three possible endings to its story ("What If
War Machine Had Not Destroyed theLiving Laser ?") and allowing the reader to decide for himself or herself which one "should" have happened.There was also a subtle crossover with the "
Acts of Vengeance " storyline: in the pages of "Quasar ", the hero pursued the Living Laser into the Watcher's lair on the moon, who then fled through Uatu's portal into other universes. The Laser had a brief appearance in that month's "What If" as a streak of light. (This storyline would later be followed up by one in which Uatu directs Quasar to track down the Living Laser through several "What If" universes, eventually ending up in theNew Universe , where Quasar receives theStar Brand .)By issue #87 the by-then-well-known convention of stating the actual point of divergence in the issue's title was dropped. Instead, each issue's cover was made to more closely resemble an issue from the actual series being featured, with only a "What If..." logo denoting its "alternate universe" status.
In one of the last issues of this run (#105), "What If" introduced the character of
Spider-Girl . She proved popular enough to be spun off into her own series, which in turn spawned theMC2 line.Volume 3
"What If" was revived again for six one-shot comics cover-dated February 2005. Although several followed the traditional style of narration by the Watcher, two titles written by
Brian Michael Bendis — "What ifKaren Page Had Lived?" and "What IfJessica Jones Had Joined the Avengers?" — replaced the Watcher as host with a representation of himself. Also, another story showed a conversation between a comic shop customer and worker, where the customer posed the question, "What ifAunt May had died instead ofUncle Ben ?" This idea had been visited previously in the original What If series though under the name of "What if Uncle Ben had Lived?" and follows an altogether different course of events in the 2005 incarnation.A parody by Marvel, "
Wha...Huh?! " was published in August 2005.Volume 4
Another series of six one-shots was released cover-dated February 2006, but these more closely resembled their
DC Comics equivalent, "Elseworlds ". While traditionally, "What If...?" posed a specific question and told a story based on a divergence from regular continuity via a different outcome of a specific event, "Elseworlds" are usually simply new continuities that tell stories which are alternate versions of established characters based around the different time period or location the story is set in (for example, "", in which Superman was raised in theSoviet Union instead of the United States).All but one of these new "What If...?" one-shots followed this approach, focusing on different time periods within the shared universe of "
Earth-717 " which first diverged during the feudal Japan era with the emergence of a "Daredevil" hero known as "The Devil Who Dares". The stories go through other historical eras and heroes, includingCaptain America battling "The White Skull" during the Civil War, Wolverine taking the role of The Punisher and fighting mobsters in 1920s Chicago,Sub-Mariner being raised by his father on the surface duringWorld War II , Thor becoming a herald ofGalactus and a Russian version ofFantastic Four known as The Ultimate Federalist Freedom Fighters being a part of theCold War .All of these stories are portrayed as historical documents from an alternate dimension discovered by a talented young hacker, calling himself
The Watcher .Volume 5
At the end of 2006 Marvel released five new one-off comics, this series focusing on alternate outcomes of major storylines, such as "
Age of Apocalypse ", "Avengers Disassembled ", ', ', and "". They were later gathered in a trade paperback entitled "What If: Event Horizon".Volume 6
"What If?:
Planet Hulk " was the first announced title for 2007 and was released in October. [ [http://marvel.com/news/comicstories.1317.Marvel_Previews_for_October_2007?&utm_source=stories+-+tab+box&utm_medium=link&utm_content=%2Fnews%2Fcomicstories.1317.Marvel_Previews_for_October_2007%3F&utm_campaign=front+page+tracking Marvel Previews for October 2007 - Marvel.com News ] ] It was followed in November by "What If?: Annihilation". December saw two more "What If?" Specials for "Civil War", and "X-Men: Rise and Fall of theShi'ar Empire". January 2008 saw the release of "What If:Spider-Man vs Wolverine". These issues were later collected into a trade paperback titled "What If...? Civil War".""What If: This Was The
Fantastic Four ", featuringSpider-Man ,Wolverine ,Ghost Rider and Hulk, was intended to be released in November but was cut short due to the passing ofMike Wieringo . [ [http://www.newsarama.com/NewJoeFridays/greenfridays.html Newsarama.Com: New Green Friday: A New Joe Fridays' Fill-In ] ] It was eventually released as a tribute to the late author in June 2008 as a 48-page special, with all proceeds going to supportthe Hero Initiative .Volume 7
Starting weekly in December 2008, five more "What If" specials will be released, continuing the theme of alternatives for recent events coupled with classic ones. The ones announced are for "", "
House of M ", "Spider-Man: Back in Black", "Secret Wars " & "Infinity Gauntlet ". In addition a storyline featuring the Runaways as theYoung Avengers will run throughout all five comics. [George, Richard and Schedeen, Jesse. [http://uk.comics.ign.com/articles/885/885113p1.html "What If? Returns in 2008," (June 28, 2000.)] Accessed Sept. 24, 2008.]Alternate Earths
Marvel has given several "What If?" stories official numerical designations as continuities within the
Marvel Comics Multiverse , differentiating them from the mainMarvel Universe ofEarth-616 .Bibliography
*"What If" Vol. 1, #1-47 (Feb. 1977 - Oct. 1984)
*"What If Special" #1 (June 1988)
*"What If" Vol. 2, #1-114 (July 1989 - Nov. 1998)
*"What If" Vol. 3 (six #1 issues, Feb. 2005)
*"What If" Vol. 4 (six #1 issues, Feb. 2006)
*"What If" Vol. 5 (five #1 issues, Nov. 2006)
*"What If" Vol. 6 (five #1 issues, Oct. 2007 - Jan. 2008)
*"What If" What If This was the Fantastic Four? (June 2008)
*"What If" Vol. 7 (five #1 issues, December 2008)Collections
*"X-Men: Alterniverse Visions" - Contains "What If" Vol 2 #40, #59, #62, #66 and #69
*"What If? Classic Volume 1" - Contains "What If" Vol 1 #1-6
*"What If? Classic Volume 2" - Contains "What If" Vol 1 #7-12
*"What If? Classic Volume 3" - Contains "What If" Vol 1 #14-15, 17-20
*"What If? Classic Volume 4" - Contains "What If" Vol 1 #21-26
*"What If? Classic Volume 5" - Contains "What If" Vol 1 #27-32
*"What If?: Why Not?" - Contains "What If" Vol 3
*"What If?: Mirror Mirror" - Contains "What If" Vol 4
*"What If?: Event Horizon" - Contains "What If" Vol 5
*"What If?: Civil War?" - Contains "What If" Vol 6ee also
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Canon (fiction)
*Elseworlds
*List of What If issues
*Marvel Comics Multiverse
*Marvel Comics Universe
*Exiles (Marvel Comics) Notes
External links
* [http://jakanapes.com/Alternity/category.php?catId=28 Alternity]
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