Board Thread:General Discussion/@comment-26373999-20170331110735/@comment-24152851-20170421135112

Xandermcc wrote: Stryzzar wrote:

Xandermcc wrote:

Stryzzar wrote:

Xandermcc wrote:

Stryzzar wrote:

Xandermcc wrote:

Deadstroke99 wrote: sorry i haven't been on lately.

now heres what i am thinking, season one we see sinestro turn yellow and make the sinestro corps, then they get defeated but are still around during season two just they are being a newcins, when all of a sudden red lanterns start poping up strecthing the lanterns thin.

at this time, hal and some other gl's go to the gaurdians demanding to know hoe many other power batteries their are. the guardians tell them that it was never just yellow and green, but a light spectrum. hal questions why they didn't say anything before, they just say it was never relevent.

just saying maybe in this season we could see Guy gaurdener and john stewart. then season 3 is when we see the blackest night.

anyway, in seasson one we meet saint walker but in season 2 he becomes blue lantern, helping gl with the red and yellow lanerns but hey need more, fith last episode, enter larfleeze.

i haven't worked out an ending so you guys ould think of one! just so you get a say in this. Still feel that Sinestro is a season two foe. However to end yours, i think Season three should deal with Carol becoming recruited by the Star Sappires. Considering the fact that she would be one of the main characters. I'm not really sure about the Carol joining the Star Sapphires. I've seen a lot of times in comics where they give the hero's love interest super powers just for the sake of keeping her relevant. It's okay when the hero's love interest was a hero to begin with like Black Canary, but not fond of ones like Betty Ross as Red She-Hulk or Jane Foster as female Thor. Well that is how it is in Green Lantern lore and she is pretty cool. Same with Red She Hulk, and Jane. Yeah I know that happened in canon, but I don't really like this trend they're doing a lot of. Feels like just giving an excuse to make the love interest more relevant, rather than developing them normally. Red She-Hulk is terrible, IMO. I swear if they turn Iris West into a speedster (the original, not Wally's kid), then I quit. They never did that in the comics for long periods of time for Flash. Personally i like Red She Hulk. Still prefer Jennifer Walters but Red is a cool gal.

Also they don't do it for every girlfriend. In fact it is minimal how many are made into heroes in their own way. Lois Lane, Iris West, Steve Trevor etc. You act like this is the norm, but it is very few. I said it's an increasing trend as of late. I'm fine with them being a hero in their own way, but when their powers are forced over onto their love interests is just pandering. It isn't pandering when we have been pandered to since the dawn of the superhero age. I feel it never felt forced. They took time with each story. Jane took a long time to happen. One time that it was forced was during the Green Lantern animated series though cause Carol was barely in that show and then she gets superpowers as a reward for her cameo-ness. If they want to make the love interest relevant than that's fine, but giving them identical powersets to the hero is just lazy. I remember that episode, didn't like it.