VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
Satchels with tesseracts inside them...Chiclo wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 3:12 pmThe higher sciences are basically embracing sci-fi as stopgaps to explain why the math disagrees with their janky models. Things like dark matter, supersymmetry, Linnean extinctions, quantum superpositions, even the Big Bang theory is rotted-through with these gods-of-the-gaps.Ryan wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 12:59 pm This whole debate has gotten repetitive, but the way I take it is 'the world outside your window' is another way of saying 'hard sci-fi'.
Hard sci-fi is a more rigorous approach to science fiction where all of the fantastical elements of the story are explained using our current understanding of science and logic.
When applied to a comic book superhero universe, another feature is that the entire world would be realistically affected (drastically) by the appearance of super powered beings and whatever other sci-fi elements are introduced.
Also the stories take place in real-time with the characters changing over time and events have a lasting effect on the world and characters.
VEI used a few of these elements, but not consistently. They were not hard sci-fi. They were definitely superhero fantasy in the same realm of Marvel and DC.
To answer the initial question, a hard sci-fi approach set in the modern day would just use the modern world as the springboard for whatever the sci-fi premise/world-changing event would be.
A lot of comics since the 90's have used elements of hard sci-fi/realism (even Youngblood and Wildc.a.t.s were attempting to) so that it's not a novel approach anymore. I think 'grim and gritty' realism has pretty much become the default. But no one is taking that extra step to realize a truly hard sci-fi, real-time superhero universe. The only people who seemed to have the interest, passion, and opportunity to pull that off were Jim Shooter (out of comics) and Mark Gruenwald (passed in 1996, RIP).


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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
Yeah. One thing that really took me aback was the alien world Divinity and the other two Cosmonauts found themselves in. That was definitely more Marvel-esque than VALIANT-esque.Ryan wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 3:53 pmOh for sure, I'm no science absolutist. Even in science fiction, the distinction between what's considered 'hard' and 'soft' can get very murky and almost meaningless in many instances.Chiclo wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 3:12 pm The higher sciences are basically embracing sci-fi as stopgaps to explain why the math disagrees with their janky models. Things like dark matter, supersymmetry, Linnean extinctions, quantum superpositions, even the Big Bang theory is rotted-through with these gods-of-the-gaps.
But in this case, talking about superhero comic book universes, there can be distinctions made between the 'Marvel' approach where contradictory super sciences, magic systems, alien races, time travel, etc. are all introduced and have no realistic effect on the overall world, and the 'New Univese'/Pre-Unity Valiant approach that is trying to rigorously explain and control these fantastic elements to maintain the illusion of realism.
I'm not saying that's the only way to make good comics. There are plenty of great comics that have a softer fantasy approach. I think VEI falls on the more realistic side of the spectrum, but taken as a whole it's more similar to Marvel than pre-Unity Valiant.


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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
I think it gets hard to maintain the realism with so many different writers and series going at once. Like do the magic concepts in Justin Jordan's Shadowman really fit in the same world as Harbinger? Maybe they do, I don't remember, but eventually when every writer is taking a different approach to 'science vs fantasy' it becomes impossible to reconcile. It's much easier to do in a single series like Squadron Superme, Watchmen, The Boys, etc.ManofTheAtom wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 3:58 pm Yeah. One thing that really took me aback was the alien world Divinity and the other two Cosmonauts found themselves in. That was definitely more Marvel-esque than VALIANT-esque.
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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
Doing magic in a realistic setting is definitely possible. It's called Magic Realism. Look at the work of Del Toro, particularly Pan's Labyrinth, for an example of that.Ryan wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 4:06 pmI think it gets hard to maintain the realism with so many different writers and series going at once. Like do the magic concepts in Justin Jordan's Shadowman really fit in the same world as Harbinger? Maybe they do, I don't remember, but eventually when every writer is taking a different approach to 'science vs fantasy' it becomes impossible to reconcile. It's much easier to do in a single series like Squadron Superme, Watchmen, The Boys, etc.ManofTheAtom wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 3:58 pm Yeah. One thing that really took me aback was the alien world Divinity and the other two Cosmonauts found themselves in. That was definitely more Marvel-esque than VALIANT-esque.


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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
No doubt, I'm just saying it's easier to do in a single work or a series written by the same author. There's tons of sci-fi/fantasy books that do it. Introduce a magic/super-science system with rules and limitations, then strictly adhere to those rules in the story. It gets more difficult to keep that consistent when you have a bunch of different writers and series all coming out at the same time.ManofTheAtom wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 4:10 pmDoing magic in a realistic setting is definitely possible. It's called Magic Realism. Look at the work of Del Toro, particularly Pan's Labyrinth, for an example of that.Ryan wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 4:06 pmI think it gets hard to maintain the realism with so many different writers and series going at once. Like do the magic concepts in Justin Jordan's Shadowman really fit in the same world as Harbinger? Maybe they do, I don't remember, but eventually when every writer is taking a different approach to 'science vs fantasy' it becomes impossible to reconcile. It's much easier to do in a single series like Squadron Superme, Watchmen, The Boys, etc.ManofTheAtom wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 3:58 pm Yeah. One thing that really took me aback was the alien world Divinity and the other two Cosmonauts found themselves in. That was definitely more Marvel-esque than VALIANT-esque.
Like the magic in Shadowman might work really well in its own series, but does it contradict with the way magic and science are portrayed in Harbinger or X-O? That's where it starts to get difficult.
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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
Ah, that's what editors in chief and/or chief creative directors are supposed to address.Ryan wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 4:27 pmNo doubt, I'm just saying it's easier to do in a single work or a series written by the same author. There's tons of sci-fi/fantasy books that do it. Introduce a magic/super-science system with rules and limitations, then strictly adhere to those rules in the story. It gets more difficult to keep that consistent when you have a bunch of different writers and series all coming out at the same time.ManofTheAtom wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 4:10 pmDoing magic in a realistic setting is definitely possible. It's called Magic Realism. Look at the work of Del Toro, particularly Pan's Labyrinth, for an example of that.Ryan wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 4:06 pmI think it gets hard to maintain the realism with so many different writers and series going at once. Like do the magic concepts in Justin Jordan's Shadowman really fit in the same world as Harbinger? Maybe they do, I don't remember, but eventually when every writer is taking a different approach to 'science vs fantasy' it becomes impossible to reconcile. It's much easier to do in a single series like Squadron Superme, Watchmen, The Boys, etc.ManofTheAtom wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 3:58 pm Yeah. One thing that really took me aback was the alien world Divinity and the other two Cosmonauts found themselves in. That was definitely more Marvel-esque than VALIANT-esque.
Like the magic in Shadowman might work really well in its own series, but does it contradict with the way magic and science are portrayed in Harbinger or X-O? That's where it starts to get difficult.
Just like artists are given character sheets to know how to draw the characters, writers should be provided with the same kind of guidelines for how the world works.
TV series do it in the form of bibles.
Last edited by ManofTheAtom on Wed Sep 27, 2023 11:27 am, edited 1 time in total.


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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
I could have sworn that that satchel was magical and it was never explained canonically as a tessaract.ManofTheAtom wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 3:56 pmSatchels with tesseracts inside them...Chiclo wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 3:12 pmThe higher sciences are basically embracing sci-fi as stopgaps to explain why the math disagrees with their janky models. Things like dark matter, supersymmetry, Linnean extinctions, quantum superpositions, even the Big Bang theory is rotted-through with these gods-of-the-gaps.Ryan wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 12:59 pm This whole debate has gotten repetitive, but the way I take it is 'the world outside your window' is another way of saying 'hard sci-fi'.
Hard sci-fi is a more rigorous approach to science fiction where all of the fantastical elements of the story are explained using our current understanding of science and logic.
When applied to a comic book superhero universe, another feature is that the entire world would be realistically affected (drastically) by the appearance of super powered beings and whatever other sci-fi elements are introduced.
Also the stories take place in real-time with the characters changing over time and events have a lasting effect on the world and characters.
VEI used a few of these elements, but not consistently. They were not hard sci-fi. They were definitely superhero fantasy in the same realm of Marvel and DC.
To answer the initial question, a hard sci-fi approach set in the modern day would just use the modern world as the springboard for whatever the sci-fi premise/world-changing event would be.
A lot of comics since the 90's have used elements of hard sci-fi/realism (even Youngblood and Wildc.a.t.s were attempting to) so that it's not a novel approach anymore. I think 'grim and gritty' realism has pretty much become the default. But no one is taking that extra step to realize a truly hard sci-fi, real-time superhero universe. The only people who seemed to have the interest, passion, and opportunity to pull that off were Jim Shooter (out of comics) and Mark Gruenwald (passed in 1996, RIP).
A tessaract is just a shape. Creating one, making it mobile within our three spatial dimensions, that is magic.
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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
In Shadowman #2, Dox directly quoted Clarke's third law to Jack, and categorically declared that "magic is science".Chiclo wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 4:52 pmI could have sworn that that satchel was magical and it was never explained canonically as a tessaract.
A tessaract is just a shape. Creating one, making it mobile within our three spatial dimensions, that is magic.
From that point forward, as it pertains to Dinesh' VALIANT, magic must be considered to be science even if not directly stated as so. Thus, the satchel is a tesseract, not that dissimilar from Doctor Who's TARDIS.
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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
If it was not otherwise stated to be a tessaract, it is presumptive to asume that a tessaract is the only explanation.
It could be a glome. It could be a doorway, a portal to elsewhere in this universe or to hyperspace. There could be some kind of space dilation, not that the satchel is bigger on the inside, but rather things are smaller in there or there is just more of in there than there should be. Or it could just be magic.
Do plattitudes mouthed by a crackpot in early VEI reflect physical laws and limitations in pre-Unity VH1?
Even if all magic is science, that is not definitive that the satchel holds a tessaract or any other higher-dimensional manifold accessible from and capable of storing three-dimensional items. Lots of other possibilities.
It could be a glome. It could be a doorway, a portal to elsewhere in this universe or to hyperspace. There could be some kind of space dilation, not that the satchel is bigger on the inside, but rather things are smaller in there or there is just more of in there than there should be. Or it could just be magic.
Do plattitudes mouthed by a crackpot in early VEI reflect physical laws and limitations in pre-Unity VH1?
Even if all magic is science, that is not definitive that the satchel holds a tessaract or any other higher-dimensional manifold accessible from and capable of storing three-dimensional items. Lots of other possibilities.
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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
I cannot believe that I am arguing about the floojiggity tessaract in a satchel in the year of our Lord 2023. It is like the last 15 years didn’t happen.
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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
Chiclo wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 7:49 pm I cannot believe that I am arguing about the floojiggity tessaract in a satchel in the year of our Lord 2023. It is like the last 15 years didn’t happen.

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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
This needs to be somebody's signature or perhaps a T-shirt?Chiclo wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 7:16 pm Do platitudes mouthed by a crackpot in early VEI reflect physical laws and limitations in pre-Unity VH1?


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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
That's true, in theory. Do you think modern comic companies do any of those things? Do you think VEI did? We're in the era of the auteurs.ManofTheAtom wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 4:43 pm Ah, that's what editors in chief and/or chief creative directors are supposed to address.
Just like artists are given character sheets to know how to draw the characters, writers should be provided with the same kind of guidelines for how the world works.
TV series due it in the form of bibles.
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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
Picking up from where things left off...Chiclo wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 7:49 pm I cannot believe that I am arguing about the floojiggity tessaract in a satchel in the year of our Lord 2023. It is like the last 15 years didn’t happen.


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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
Yes, it could be any of those.Chiclo wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 7:16 pm If it was not otherwise stated to be a tessaract, it is presumptive to asume that a tessaract is the only explanation.
It could be a glome. It could be a doorway, a portal to elsewhere in this universe or to hyperspace. There could be some kind of space dilation, not that the satchel is bigger on the inside, but rather things are smaller in there or there is just more of in there than there should be. Or it could just be magic.
Do plattitudes mouthed by a crackpot in early VEI reflect physical laws and limitations in pre-Unity VH1?
Even if all magic is science, that is not definitive that the satchel holds a tessaract or any other higher-dimensional manifold accessible from and capable of storing three-dimensional items. Lots of other possibilities.


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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
I doubt DC and Marvel do. Grant Morrison got an editor fired off the X-Men comics for doing his job.Ryan wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 8:59 pmThat's true, in theory. Do you think modern comic companies do any of those things? Do you think VEI did? We're in the era of the auteurs.ManofTheAtom wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 4:43 pm Ah, that's what editors in chief and/or chief creative directors are supposed to address.
Just like artists are given character sheets to know how to draw the characters, writers should be provided with the same kind of guidelines for how the world works.
TV series due it in the form of bibles.
I imagine Dinesh might have, though.


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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
Finally.ManofTheAtom wrote: Wed Sep 27, 2023 8:21 amYes, it could be any of those.Chiclo wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 7:16 pm If it was not otherwise stated to be a tessaract, it is presumptive to asume that a tessaract is the only explanation.
It could be a glome. It could be a doorway, a portal to elsewhere in this universe or to hyperspace. There could be some kind of space dilation, not that the satchel is bigger on the inside, but rather things are smaller in there or there is just more of in there than there should be. Or it could just be magic.
Do plattitudes mouthed by a crackpot in early VEI reflect physical laws and limitations in pre-Unity VH1?
Even if all magic is science, that is not definitive that the satchel holds a tessaract or any other higher-dimensional manifold accessible from and capable of storing three-dimensional items. Lots of other possibilities.

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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
Magic is just an advanced form of science, heh.Chiclo wrote: Wed Sep 27, 2023 10:26 amFinally.ManofTheAtom wrote: Wed Sep 27, 2023 8:21 amYes, it could be any of those.Chiclo wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 7:16 pm If it was not otherwise stated to be a tessaract, it is presumptive to asume that a tessaract is the only explanation.
It could be a glome. It could be a doorway, a portal to elsewhere in this universe or to hyperspace. There could be some kind of space dilation, not that the satchel is bigger on the inside, but rather things are smaller in there or there is just more of in there than there should be. Or it could just be magic.
Do plattitudes mouthed by a crackpot in early VEI reflect physical laws and limitations in pre-Unity VH1?
Even if all magic is science, that is not definitive that the satchel holds a tessaract or any other higher-dimensional manifold accessible from and capable of storing three-dimensional items. Lots of other possibilities.![]()


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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
Maybe they did, but did anybody follow them? It seems like maybe David Aja did some character design for early VEI.ManofTheAtom wrote: Wed Sep 27, 2023 8:22 amI doubt DC and Marvel do. Grant Morrison got an editor fired off the X-Men comics for doing his job.Ryan wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 8:59 pmThat's true, in theory. Do you think modern comic companies do any of those things? Do you think VEI did? We're in the era of the auteurs.ManofTheAtom wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 4:43 pm Ah, that's what editors in chief and/or chief creative directors are supposed to address.
Just like artists are given character sheets to know how to draw the characters, writers should be provided with the same kind of guidelines for how the world works.
TV series due it in the form of bibles.
I imagine Dinesh might have, though.

Compared to the series artist version:

For me, I would have liked if everything stuck closer to the more simplified realism of Aja.
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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
Absolutely.Ryan wrote: Thu Sep 28, 2023 10:07 amMaybe they did, but did anybody follow them? It seems like maybe David Aja did some character design for early VEI.ManofTheAtom wrote: Wed Sep 27, 2023 8:22 amI doubt DC and Marvel do. Grant Morrison got an editor fired off the X-Men comics for doing his job.Ryan wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 8:59 pmThat's true, in theory. Do you think modern comic companies do any of those things? Do you think VEI did? We're in the era of the auteurs.ManofTheAtom wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 4:43 pm Ah, that's what editors in chief and/or chief creative directors are supposed to address.
Just like artists are given character sheets to know how to draw the characters, writers should be provided with the same kind of guidelines for how the world works.
TV series due it in the form of bibles.
I imagine Dinesh might have, though.
Compared to the series artist version:
For me, I would have liked if everything stuck closer to the more simplified realism of Aja.


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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
ManofTheAtom wrote: Mon Sep 25, 2023 5:54 pmOne, shzyang is being such a *SQUEE* for no good reason.Chiclo wrote: Mon Sep 25, 2023 5:45 pmIt sounds similar to the period after Birthquake ... the Turok/Shadowman crossover.ManofTheAtom wrote: Mon Sep 25, 2023 4:00 pmCaptained a sinking ship. She was ... left holding the bag ... of ... penguins.
And two: There's a Turok/Shadowman crossover?!? And I knew nothing about it? Can someone please add a link to the cover image!
I've been looking everywhere for the ultra-rare Turok vs Blister issue. Anybody able to help me out?
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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
It's just a one-shot....Oxmyx wrote: Fri Sep 29, 2023 11:51 am There's a Turok/Shadowman crossover?!? And I knew nothing about it? Can someone please add a link to the cover image!
https://valiant.fandom.com/wiki/Turok/Shadowman_Vol_1_1
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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
If we're counting variants, then VEI wins by like a million books.ManofTheAtom wrote:Do you have any idea how many hundreds of comics that was? "Not most of VALIANT"?syzhang28 wrote: Mon Sep 25, 2023 5:20 pm You haven't read most of Valiant.
old Valiant and acclaim is like saying I read every Stan Lee comic so I know Marvel as well as anyone now get your damn Miles Morales and your Knull off my lawn
How many comics did VEI publish during Dinesh' time compared to what Voyager and Acclaim published?
Was it hundreds? You sure?Yes, you've mentioned. So many times. Read the hundreds of Valiant comics you've missed. The Dinesh era is perfection and you'll have more fun on these boards.
I'm sure being on this board and the Facebook page was a lot of fun during the time Dinesh was in charge. I'd have been here and there then, but I was banned from here at the time and not allowed there because I was told that people didn't want to post there if I did...

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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
Technology/science is just magic that is thoroughly explained.ManofTheAtom wrote:Magic is just an advanced form of science, heh.Chiclo wrote: Wed Sep 27, 2023 10:26 amFinally.ManofTheAtom wrote: Wed Sep 27, 2023 8:21 amYes, it could be any of those.Chiclo wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 7:16 pm If it was not otherwise stated to be a tessaract, it is presumptive to asume that a tessaract is the only explanation.
It could be a glome. It could be a doorway, a portal to elsewhere in this universe or to hyperspace. There could be some kind of space dilation, not that the satchel is bigger on the inside, but rather things are smaller in there or there is just more of in there than there should be. Or it could just be magic.
Do plattitudes mouthed by a crackpot in early VEI reflect physical laws and limitations in pre-Unity VH1?
Even if all magic is science, that is not definitive that the satchel holds a tessaract or any other higher-dimensional manifold accessible from and capable of storing three-dimensional items. Lots of other possibilities.![]()
Seriously - electromagnetism and gravity are magic. No one really knows what they are.
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Re: VALIANT And The World Outside Our Window
Heh.lorddunlow wrote: Fri Sep 29, 2023 11:13 pmIf we're counting variants, then VEI wins by like a million books.ManofTheAtom wrote:Do you have any idea how many hundreds of comics that was? "Not most of VALIANT"?syzhang28 wrote: Mon Sep 25, 2023 5:20 pm You haven't read most of Valiant.
old Valiant and acclaim is like saying I read every Stan Lee comic so I know Marvel as well as anyone now get your damn Miles Morales and your Knull off my lawn
How many comics did VEI publish during Dinesh' time compared to what Voyager and Acclaim published?
Was it hundreds? You sure?Yes, you've mentioned. So many times. Read the hundreds of Valiant comics you've missed. The Dinesh era is perfection and you'll have more fun on these boards.
I'm sure being on this board and the Facebook page was a lot of fun during the time Dinesh was in charge. I'd have been here and there then, but I was banned from here at the time and not allowed there because I was told that people didn't want to post there if I did...
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