Marvel Multiverse Hub

The Comic Board - Collecting, Buy, Sell, Trade & Comic News, Reviews & Discussion

Help Support The Comic Board:

Yeah, the process is pretty much what Mike said. I emailed Jeff with my suggestion for a profile (an X-Men animated series character), Jeff said to give it a try, my submission was approved, and now I have a handful of profiles on the site.
 
Continuing from the mcu thread they're also renumbering realities that had letters in their names and not just numbers
I mean why does that matter
 
As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases. Product prices and availability are accurate as of the date/time indicated and are subject to change.
Also, if Ren & Stimpy exist in the Marvel Multiverse, I'm pretty sure I read a Fairly Odd Parents comic via a Nick Magazine that had like Earth-A, B, C, etc. and Timmy was floating through it.

This rabbit hole is something no one else on planet, not even the writers, gave a **** about...yet here we are.
 
Also, if Ren & Stimpy exist in the Marvel Multiverse, I'm pretty sure I read a Fairly Odd Parents comic via a Nick Magazine that had like Earth-A, B, C, etc. and Timmy was floating through it.

This rabbit hole is something no one else on planet, not even the writers, gave a **** about...yet here we are.
The nickelodeon Multiverse is weird because it's not as well established as Cartoon Network has made there's. But there's enough crossovers to solidly build it. The jimmy Timmy power hours, Nicktoons Unite game series, Super Brawl, etc which brings in almost all the Nicktoons barring a few like Welcome to the Wayne and some other ones I don't care enough about to remember
 
The nickelodeon Multiverse is weird because it's not as well established as Cartoon Network has made there's. But there's enough crossovers to solidly build it. The jimmy Timmy power hours, Nicktoons Unite game series, Super Brawl, etc which brings in almost all the Nicktoons barring a few like Welcome to the Wayne and some other ones I don't care enough about to remember
I'm pretty sure even Avatar is part of this because of Attack of the Toybots. Aangs inclusion in the game makes Calamitous really stupid because his whole plan in that game is kidnapping characters from different universes and making master models of them to create evil mech versions of them. And he has one of Aang the literal Avatar, basically a god, and he didn't even use it to make any robots
 
Also, if Ren & Stimpy exist in the Marvel Multiverse, I'm pretty sure I read a Fairly Odd Parents comic via a Nick Magazine that had like Earth-A, B, C, etc. and Timmy was floating through it.

This rabbit hole is something no one else on planet, not even the writers, gave a **** about...yet here we are.
Those should be outside the Marvel multiverse if that comic wasn't published by Marvel though.
 
I mean with Earth-F-266, Earth-P-1837 and Earth-X-Ian-49 you can literally just remove the letters too
These designations are not even taken too, so it won't ruin anything
And yet they leave Earth-Mesozoic24 intact for some reason despite it also needing to exclude letters by that logic
 
Screenshot_20260405-020840~2.png
The End 2099 issue 4 confirms House of M Scarlet Witch comes from 58163. And this also confirms the House of M reality still exists.

Age of X and Forever Yesterday realities, 8591, which are the other reality warp universes, were also comfirmed to exist in other comics.
 
Definitely not the same reality as 18103 (Earth-18103 was designated only for the Spidery-Man story from Mad #3). There are many Mad stories that contradict each other. Each parody is a separate reality, but those drawn by the same artist can, in theory, be combined into one reality, but only in theory, since there may be contradictions too.
https://spiderfan.org/title/comics/mad_magazine.html
 
Last edited:
Definitely not the same reality as 18103 (Earth-18103 was designated only for the Spidery-Man story from Mad #3). There are many Mad stories that contradict each other. Each parody is a separate reality, but those drawn by the same artist can, in theory, be combined into one reality, but only in theory, since there may be contradictions there too.
https://spiderfan.org/title/comics/mad_magazine.html
List of MAD parodies according to Google AI:



MAD Magazine has famously parodied Marvel Comics and its characters, particularly focusing on their popular films, through satire, movie spoofs, and recurring comic strips, especially during the 21st century. [1, 2, 3, 4]
Here is a list of MAD magazine issues featuring Marvel parodies, based on available records:

Key Marvel Parody Issues
  • MAD #7 (2019): Features "Avenjerks" (a parody of Avengers: Endgame), written by Ian Boothby and illustrated by Gideon Kendall, which also parodied Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse.
  • MAD #513 (2011): Contains "The Amazingly Dangerous Spider-Play: Oh, What a Mangled Web We Weave!", a spoof of the Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark musical.
  • MAD #516 (2012): Features "Spider-Man Tweets While Watching The Avengers & Mad's Less-Than-Amazing Outtakes From the Amazing Spider-Man".
  • MAD #446 (2004): Features a parody of Spider-Man 2.
  • MAD #418 (2002): Includes a Spider-Man movie satire titled "Spider-Sham".
  • MAD #382 (1999): Contains "If Truth in Advertising Laws Applied to Comic Book Previews," which parodied multiple Marvel titles, including The Punisher and The Amazing Spider-Man.
  • MAD #204 (1979): Features "The Incredible Bulk" (a Hulk parody). [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]

Recurring Marvel Parody Features
  • Kerry Callen's Funnies (Various 2010s-2020s issues): Kerry Callen created numerous 1-page parody strips, including parodies of Captain America, Spider-Man, Wolverine, and Ghost Rider.
  • Don Martin Looks at Spider-Man (MAD #212, 1980): A 3-page, non-verbal cartoon parody by Don Martin. [1, 2, 3]

Retread Funnies (Crazy Magazine)
  • Crazy magazine, a sister publication to MAD, regularly featured "Retread Funnies," which re-lettered and re-captioned classic Marvel Comics stories to create satirical dialogue. [1]
Note: MAD generally focused on comic book parodies (like Superduperman) in the 1950s rather than Marvel. More direct Marvel parodies accelerated as the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) became a dominant pop culture force. [1, 2]
 

Latest posts

Back
Top