Talk:Marvel Multiverse

Retcon
User:Epsilon the Eternal left the following as a cleanup tag. I think this is more of a talk page issue than cleanup:


 * If I'm not mistaken, "Earth-5556" being the DWU is a retcon; wasn't it the original intent of the crossovers that the characters shared a universe? I don't know enough myself to know if the page as it currently stands is accurate in that regard.

Anyways, for some more info on that, see the conversation I had with User:Scrooge MacDuck at Talk:N-Space. But to explain, when Marvel first used Doctor Who, they treated it like any other licensed property and crossed it over casually. Although the concept of the Marvel multiverse existed then, it wasn't so well-defined outside of the few comics concerned with it. As such, the writers of these comics didn't explicitly mention travel between universes aside from the rare occasion it was a plot element, such as Death's Head traveling from (the "robot universe"). In the 2000s, when Marvel's practice of universe-numbering and definitions of parallel realities, possible futures and the like was much more popular, they basically used "Earth-5556" to effectively say "Well, the Doctor isn't really part of Earth-616, he's got his own universe." As such, this is a retcon, but it doesn't explicitly contradict or rewrite anything like many retcons do, it just differs from the carefree (possible) authorial intent at the time.

The fact of the matter is, what I just explained isn't something we actually know or can source, it just can be inferred from the way the Marvel Multiverse has grown and changed. If we even were to mention it on this page, which I'm not sure we should, I'm also not sure how we would go about it. I think simply explaining that much of the numerical reality info came long after Marvel actually published DWM should suffice. Chubby Potato ☎  08:04, 14 August 2021 (UTC)


 * That was really informative! However, I do still believe a distinction should be made between how the Multiverse was handled when they were publishing Doctor Who comic stories and how they do now. It is also worth mentioning that some Doctor Who stories, such as Contributors is a crossover with Marvel and in continuity with the 1980s stories - Nightcrawler is mentioned to be one of Jay Eales' allies. So it is not entirely true, at least from a Doctor Who perspective, that these universes are separate. Plus, showing that they once shared a universe is good to demonstrate one of the largest crossovers Doctor Who has ever had, as opposed to treating it like it has always been a separate universe. 📯 📂 10:14, 14 August 2021 (UTC)