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DC VERSUS MARVEL

 

DC vs. Marvel Comics (issues #2–3 titled Marvel Comics vs. DC) was a comic book limited series crossover published by DC Comics and Marvel Comics cover dated April to May 1996. The series was written by Ron Marz and Peter David, with art by Dan Jurgens and Claudio Castellini.

Two godly brothers who personify the DC and Marvel Universes become aware of the other's existence, and challenge one another to a series of duels involving each universe's respective superheroes. The losing universe would cease to exist. The story had an "out of universe" component in that, although there were eleven primary battles, five outcomes were determined by fan vote.

The six preliminary battles were:

    Robin (DC) vs. Jubilee (Marvel)
    Thor (Marvel) vs. Captain Marvel (DC)
    Aquaman (DC) vs. Namor (Marvel)
    Silver Surfer (Marvel) vs. Green Lantern (DC)
    Flash (DC) vs. Quicksilver (Marvel)
    Elektra (Marvel) vs. Catwoman (DC)


The five battles in which the outcomes were determined by the votes of fans:

    Superman (DC) vs. Hulk (Marvel)
    Spider-Man (Marvel) vs. Superboy (DC)
    Wonder Woman (DC) vs. Storm (Marvel)
    Wolverine (Marvel) vs. Lobo (DC)
    Batman (DC) vs. Captain America (Marvel)

Each side attained three victories in the preliminary battles and five battles were decided by fan vote. However, the storyline does not show one side as being victorious. As part of a last-ditch effort to save their worlds, the Spectre and the Living Tribunal were able to briefly force the "brothers" to resolve the situation by temporarily creating a new universe, called the Amalgam Universe, which is occupied by merged versions of many of the heroes (such as Dark Claw, a merging of the characters Batman and Wolverine). An inter-dimensional character called Access eventually managed to restore the universes to their normal state with the aid of Batman and Captain America. The presence of the two heroes (essentially serving as the brothers in miniature, each being unique among their peers) forced the brothers to recognize how petty their disagreement truly was.

The series was collected into a trade paperback titled DC versus Marvel Comics (collects mini-series and Doctor Strangefate #1; 163 pages; September 1996; ISBN 1-56389-294-4). Later,two different winning bouts were revealed by each company and it has been revealed that the winning bouts were manipulated by publishers and not the fans. One trade paperback has DC characters winning the most votes and another trade paperback has Marvel characters winning the most votes. As a result the fans continue to debate who is better as this whole experiment is now null and void.

The showdown of the century is collected in trade paperback form with each company winning their respective battles.

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