What if gwen stacy




















In the current ongoing series, Gwen has begun to divide her time between the regular Marvel Universe on Earth and on her own homeworld. After all, on Earth, everyone knows her secret identity while in the prime universe, no one has any idea who she is.

Because of this, she can go to school in anonymity. The rest of the time, she goes back home to her father, police captain George Stacy. In Ghost-Spider 9, Gwen returns from Earth and saves several people from a fire.

While the next morning, she finds herself in a fight with her dad. The two argue about Gwen putting her life on the line every time she puts her superhero costume on.

George just wants her to be safe, but Gwen argues that it's no different than when he joined the police force. She has an obligation and a responsibility to protect the people of New York, just like he does. Eventually, cooler heads prevail, and their discussion leads Gwen to play the "what if? What if Peter had lived? What if she had no superpowers? Register Don't have an account? Vol 1 , John Romita Jr. What If?

Vol 1 View source. History Talk 1. Do you like this video? Play Sound. I guess what I'm trying to ask you in my typical stumble-mouthed fashion is: Ms. Ultimately he settled on killing Gwen Stacy in her place, because according to Conway " She brought nothing to the mix. It made no sense to me that Peter Parker would end up with a babe like that who had no problems.

Reception to the issue was largely positive, but many readers were incredulous that Marvel would kill Gwen Stacy in such a sudden and surprising manner and that Spider-Man even bore some responsibility by inadvertently causing her neck to snap when he caught her with his webbing , hence the 'snap' sound effect. The death shocked fans familiar with the conventions of the genre: superheroes simply did not fail to save their love interests back then, and it was a given that their lives were never in any real danger.

Marvel even received death threats from angry fans; editors responded, saying "The relationship between Peter and Gwen had been through a lot of inconsequential ups and downs, and unless the two were to be married, there was nowhere else to take it.

But marriage seemed wrong But even after her death, Gwen's spectre lingered over the franchise, and writers couldn't help but tease her return - only to repeatedly dash the hopes of fans with every reappearance.

Gwen's first "resurrection" turned out to be a clone of the original, created by the villain Jackal; the clone deteriorates soon after. Another clone was created by the second Jackal, appearing in Dead No More: The Clone Conspiracy , but the clone deteriorates again and is eventually killed in battle.

Others would come in the form of illusions, dreams and hoaxes - often created by villains for the sole purpose of emotionally compromising Peter Parker a plan seemingly shared by Marvel editorial, a fact not lost on savvy readers.

Writers desperately wanted to bring the character back - even J. Michael Straczynski and Joe Quesada planned to resurrect Gwen at the end of 's contentious One More Day storyline - but Marvel wouldn't budge; Gwen's death seemed immutable. Thus, if editorial edicts prevented writers from telling Gwen's stories in the mainline Marvel universe, they would simply tell them elsewhere.

The first major alternate universe Gwen Stacy appeared in What if Hailing from a universe in which Gwen is bitten by the radioactive spider instead of Peter, the drummer-turned-superhero loses her Peter Parker and vows to use her powers as a force for good.



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