It’s not that I hate teen superheroes. I grew up loving Spider-Man, Teen Titans, Iron Man: Armoured Adventures, etc., but now that I’m older, I’m really tired of teen superheroes, mainly because in comics characters never really age, and when they get rebooted in cartoons, movies or TV shows, they usually just start the story around their origin story or after, so whenever Spider-Man gets rebooted, he’s always in high school despite him graduating high school in issue #28 and then graduating college in issue #185. So he wasn’t a teenager for really that long, but at the time he got powers and became a superhero at 15 years old, and that wasn’t very common back then; most teen heroes were just sidekicks. And because Spider-Man is mostly marketed to kids (at least the TV shows and movies), they make him a teenager to appeal to kids.
Despite the fact that a lot of good, the best and mature Spider-Man stories come from when he’s in college or at least graduated from his first 4 years of college, even in cartoons he’s only been in his early 20s for two shows: Spider-Man: The Animated Series and Spider-Man: The New Animated Series – that’s it. And Spider-Man has had at least 12 distinct animated TV series based on Spider-Man, and he’s only been an adult in two of them.
Basically, I’m tired of teen superheroes because I feel like it limits the storylines you can do, and because of comic book logic, the characters never age, so any time they are rebooted, they will be a teenager because that’s their starting point. It’s the same with Ms Marvel; she’s still a teenager despite the fact that she should be 28 years old now because she was 16 in 2013. But also it’s like there’s no middle ground: if you are a “young” superhero, you are a literal child, and if you are an “adult” superhero, you are in your 30s or 40s. People in their 20s do exist.
limer@lemmy.ml 7 hours ago
Boomers in tights or bust!
As a geezer, I too have noticed a startling amount of baby faced caped crusaders.
One can simply assume being a super hero is dangerous. Few live longer than their 20s. What we see now are clones, who think they are the same people.