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    Retcon

    Concept » Retcon appears in 452 issues.

    The term "Retroactive Continuity" or "Retcon" for short is used in comic books to define a re-write of a current origin or introduction of new information as if it had always been that way.

    Short summary describing this concept.

    Retcon last edited by LSROTJ on 12/22/21 11:11PM View full history

    Definition

    Retcon or retroactive continuity is a term that is used when writers reveal something new to a previous story already told which usually changes the original back story to something new. The term "Retroactive Continuity" was made known by All-Star Squadron writer Roy Thomas in the 1980s. Damian Cugley shortened the word to "Retcon" when Alan Moore re-wrote the origins of Swamp Thing in 1988.

    At its simplest it can be a piece of information that alters a characters background, shedding some light on their reasoning and at worst a contradiction of a fundamental aspect or plot point of a characters previous established story arcs. The nature of comics to be the amalgam of many artists, writers and even publishers has the obvious flaw of over time their story becoming convoluted and errors and omission are bound to occur and means that ret-con can be as much of a plot device as it can be tool to correct previous errors.

    List of Retcons

    DC Universe related retcons

    • In Crisis on Infinite Earths, after all the alternate Earths were destroyed, many heroes including Superman and Wonder Woman had their entire origins retconned and thus their series rebooted.

    • In Infinite Crisis: Secret Files, there were several retcons that had an on-panel source. When Superboy Prime punched the barrier of reality he caused changes throughout the DC Universe including the resurrection of Jason Todd and the reboot of the Doom Patrol.

    Batman related retcons

    Daredevil related retcons

    • When Frank Miller took over the run for Daredevil, he retconned Daredevil's history so that Stick, an Asian man, helped him develop and master his new abilities.

    Marvel Universe related retcons

    • In Tales of Suspense #64, Black Widow was told that if she stopped working for Russia, her parents would be killed. Years later, it was retconned that her parents had apparently died in a house fire when she was very young.
    • At the end of his first appearance, Wonder Man died, but it was later retconned that he had had his brain patterns recorded just before dying (to help create the Vision), and then later retconned again that Wonder Man hadn't died, but gone into a sort of hibernation state whilst his body evolved from the ionic rays he'd been exposed to (despite that Vision had visited Wonder Man's grave in Avengers #66).

    Spider-Man related retcons

    • During the Clone Saga, Mary Jane had a baby and Aunt May died at the end of the story arc. When J. Michael Straczynski took over Spider-Man in 2001, he retconned it so those two events "never happened."

    • Gwen Stacy's past was retconned when J. Michael Straczynski wrote the Sins Past story arc. This revealed that Gwen Stacy had an affair with Norman Osborn when she was in Europe mourning the death of her father.

    • During One More Day, it was made that Spider-Man's marriage to Mary Jane never happened. And he lost his Other powers.

    X-Men related retcons

    • The Phoenix Saga was originally created by Chris Claremont for the Phoenix to actually be Jean Grey at the peak of her potential. Years after Jean's death, Marvel wanted to bring Jean back. However, bringing her back at first would bring many complications. If Jean were to be brought back, she would still be guilty for killing millions of life forms. Marvel announced that they would not bring back Jean unless someone creates a suitable resurrection story. Kurt Busiek (then a college student) and a few friends started pitching ideas. Eventually he would retcon Phoenix into a cosmic entity, and while Jean was piloting the shuttle, the Phoenix approached her and made an exact duplicate to use. While also merging with a portion of her soul, therefore freeing Jean from the guilt of murder.

    Wildstorm Universe related retcons

    • After the events of Captain Atom: Armageddon, parts of the WSU were retconned in what was termed a "soft reboot", since not everything was erased. The past stories of some teams and characters, most notably Gen 13, Deathblow and WetWorks were completely restarted, erasing all their previous stories (and connections with other teams and characters) from the history of the Wildstorm Universe. Others, like The Authority and Wildcats, were unaffected, and in a few cases, some characters have vague memories of previous connections with characters that they knew before Armageddon but were involved in the retcon. One character, John Lynch, even seems to know that he (and others) are not the original versions of themselves.

    Supreme related retcons

    • The character Supreme, a Rob Liefeld creation, went through several retcons during its publication. Alan Moore and later writers have made the character aware of those retcons, which he calls "revisions", and had the character meet alternate versions of himself from previous revisions who told him to expect periodic new revisions. Supreme is currently aware of at least three such revisions (Supreme #41; Supreme #66; Supreme Blue Rose).
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