Marvel Cinematic Universe - Timeline (Part 3)

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Eh, I can see why they'd put it in canon. But being "set in the same world" doesn't always necessarily mean it's canon.

Example A: Avengers: Damage Control
Just because Uatu showed up in X-Men 97 doesn't mean Earth-92131 is part of the MCU multiverse.

Remember it.
 
Now you're coping lmao.

"Set in the same world doesn't count but this other wording straight from Marvel about the Multiverse Saga does."
Can't pick and choose and say I'm coping.
So let me get this straight. You think saying something set in the MCU MULTIVERSE SAGA is part of the MCU Multiverse is coping. Ah yes, makes sense.

Also, curse you for making me look up what dogmatic means.
 
Earth-92131 has absolutely nothing to do with the MCU. People be calling X-Men '97 as more "MCU" than the literal movies that had multiverse crossovers because of Disney+ randomly adding it to a section. Boy, I guess Ghost Rider (2007) is part of the ABC Marvel Heroes/"Agents and Inhumans" sub-franchise then.
 
Earth-92131 has absolutely nothing to do with the MCU. People be calling X-Men '97 as more "MCU" than the literal movies that had multiverse crossovers because of Disney+ randomly adding it to a section. Boy, I guess Ghost Rider (2007) is part of the ABC Marvel Heroes/"Agents and Inhumans" sub-franchise then.
No. Just No.
 
Earth-92131 has absolutely nothing to do with the MCU. People be calling X-Men '97 as more "MCU" than the literal movies that had multiverse crossovers because of Disney+ randomly adding it to a section. Boy, I guess Ghost Rider (2007) is part of the ABC Marvel Heroes/"Agents and Inhumans" sub-franchise then.
That's not a Marvel Heroes section. That's an Agent and Inhumans section.

Agents. And. Inhumans.
 
So Ghost Rider is an Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. and Inhuman.
The character of Ghost Rider is associated with the Agents of Shield thanks to the TV show. Which is why Nic Cage's Ghost Rider fits into the section. It wouldn't fit if it was a Marvel Heroes section.

Hence why its Agents and Inhumans.

It's really not complicated.
 
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Earth-92131 has absolutely nothing to do with the MCU. People be calling X-Men '97 as more "MCU" than the literal movies that had multiverse crossovers because of Disney+ randomly adding it to a section. Boy, I guess Ghost Rider (2007) is part of the ABC Marvel Heroes/"Agents and Inhumans" sub-franchise then.
buh-buh it has whih and stuff....................
 
https://marvelcinematicuniverse.fan...erica:_Brave_New_World:_A_Hero_Looks_Like_You
This is canon, apparently.
I dunno when "Hero Day" is set, maybe the day they defeated Thanos for good in Endgame? Late 2026 sounds about right, since this is set before the events of the film.

Maybe put it in a "????" between Ant-Man and the Wasp - Quantumania's ending and the start of Secret Invasion.

@Starvel

It fits with the Shang-Chi and Wakanda Forever kids books. They have the same style and are also considered canon.
 
Just learned one episode of Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man has a Thurston meme reference
How does that fit in the timeline
 
Have we ever got an explanation to why Agents of SHEILD, Agent Carter, Cloak & Dagger, Runaways, Inhumans, and Helstrom aren't on the Disney+ timeline?

The old excuse was that they were a "different brand" (Marvel Heroes, Marvel Knights, etc). But that seems unlikely now that the Netflix shows have been added to the timeline.

They've never been stated to be non canon, so what the dilemma?
 
Have we ever got an explanation to why Agents of SHEILD, Agent Carter, Cloak & Dagger, Runaways, Inhumans, and Helstrom aren't on the Disney+ timeline?

The old excuse was that they were a "different brand" (Marvel Heroes, Marvel Knights, etc). But that seems unlikely now that the Netflix shows have been added to the timeline.

They've never been stated to be non canon, so what the dilemma?
I think they're not important to the narrative going forward yet and some of those like Helstrom or AoS might be a coin-toss ultimately if they wanna keep them 100% canon.
 
Have we ever got an explanation to why Agents of SHEILD, Agent Carter, Cloak & Dagger, Runaways, Inhumans, and Helstrom aren't on the Disney+ timeline?

The old excuse was that they were a "different brand" (Marvel Heroes, Marvel Knights, etc). But that seems unlikely now that the Netflix shows have been added to the timeline.

They've never been stated to be non canon, so what the dilemma?
Because whether one likes it or not, I thnk Marvel Studios doesn't want to commit to confirming everything done on those shows as canon. The only reason the Netflix shows were added was because they decided to treat Born Again as more of a continuation of them. Could this change in the future if they wanted to bring something else back ? Of course, but for now it is what it is.
 

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