Thread:Gilgameshkun/@comment-29720851-20170503182211/@comment-995426-20170505022542

I understand. Yes, I misunderstood before.

Enjoy your comics. I hope you find a way to locate the others. Don't be surprised if the Mirage and 2003 stories are highly similar&mdash;the 2003 series started as an attempt to adapt the Mirage continuity's volume 1 stories to a younger audience, but it has many, many differences and went on to be a very different story overall. I appreciate what Peter Laird was trying to do with the 2003 series, but the Mirage series was never for children, nor really should it have been. Mirage is for adults, though since you're a different generation, you should keep in mind that the adults at the time were mainly Generation X (though the adults during the Mirage continuity's volume 4 were mainly Millennials). I'm one of the youngest members of Generation X (I'm 36&mdash;I turn 37 this month), but two of my older brothers were certainly reading it. And I've been reminded recently that the culture of Generation X had a lot of differences from the culture of later generations.