Quote: It's not change if it already happened before.
Well, guess what? It happened before 1986 when Byrne did Man of Steel, also. The responses to that series ran the gamut from "It's horrible, he's CHANGED EVERYTHING" to "It's horrible, he hasn't CHANGED ANYTHING"
I welcome change, I love change... when it's justified, makes sense and it's honest change, not when it's middle aged so-called writers trying to bring back their lost childhood either because middle-aged so-called readers demand them to do it or because the choose to do it.
Guess what again? Byrne was a middle aged writer who used elements of various interpretations of Superman from his childhood and brought them back BECAUSE HE CHOSE TO.
Show me change, real change in comics, and I bet I was for it when it happened, it was justified and it was real, not the return of an outdated status quo.
In the genre of decades old trademarked characters, you're not going to find real, permanent, lasting change that makes an impact. The publishers are far more interested in making money off of licensing than they are off of telling good stories. The status quo has only really been altered once: Crisis. And even that is slowly being undone. If you want, real permanent lasting change, I suggest you stop reading Superman titles, for one. Because it's not going to happen in mainstream Marvel or DC titles.
For readers like you turning the Wasp back into a human after Heroes Reborn is "change" while having made her a butterfly in the first place was wrong, while for me the opposite is true.
Ok, first off, you obviously don't know a damn thing about me to go around claiming what change means to me. Personally, I don't give a shit what happens to the Wasp. She's been a useless character for damn near the entire time she's been around. Turned into insect woman? Don't care. Turned back? Don't care. Turned into Mega Wasp? Again, don't care. These types of so-called changes are quick fix sales gimmicks and not real change or character development. They're quickly forgotten by both the fans and the creators. Hell, even Kurt Busiek didn't touch that one.
And you're still the pot calling the kettle. Deal with your hypocrisy, Mota. Your act has gotten old and stale.