Intercompany Crossovers: Intercompany Crossover, Wildc. A. T. S|X-Men, Spike, Batman Versus Predator, Superman Vs. the Amazing Spider-Man, Jla|Avengers,

Intercompany Crossovers: Intercompany Crossover, Wildc. A. T. S|X-Men, Spike, Batman Versus Predator, Superman Vs. the Amazing Spider-Man, Jla|Avengers,
ISBN-10
1230573976
ISBN-13
9781230573977
Pages
36
Language
English
Published
2013-09
Publisher
University-Press.org
Author
Source Wikipedia

Description

Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 35. Chapters: Intercompany crossover, WildC.A.T.s/X-Men, Spike, Batman versus Predator, Superman vs. the Amazing Spider-Man, JLA/Avengers, Superman and Spider-Man, Batman/Judge Dredd: Judgment on Gotham, Deathmate, Marvel Zombies vs. The Army of Darkness, WildC.A.T.s/Aliens, New Avengers/Transformers, Superman/Aliens, Freddy vs. Jason vs. Ash, Star Trek/X-Men, The Uncanny X-Men and The New Teen Titans, Judge Dredd vs. Aliens, Green Lantern versus Aliens, Worlds Collide, Planetary/JLA: Terra Occulta, Superman vs. The Terminator: Death to the Future, DC vs. Marvel, Iron Man and X-O Manowar in Heavy Metal, Ghost/Batgirl: The Resurrection Machine, Batman/Hellboy/Starman, JLA/The 99, Archie Meets the Punisher, Predator vs. Judge Dredd, Superman and Batman versus Aliens and Predator, JLA/Cyberforce, Spawn/Batman, Superman & Bugs Bunny, Superman vs. Predator, Avengers/Ultraforce, Gen /Monkeyman and O'Brien. Excerpt: In comic books, an intercompany crossover (also called cross-company or company crossover) is a comic or series of comics where characters published by one company meet those published by another (for example, DC Comics' Superman meeting Marvel's Spider-Man, or DC's Batman meeting Marvel's Wolverine). These usually occur in special "one-shot" issues or a miniseries. Some crossovers are part of canon-for example, JLA/Avengers, which has been made canon in the DC Universe -but most are outside of the continuity of a character's regular title or series of stories. They can be a joke or gag, a dream sequence, or even a "what if" scenario (such as DC's Elseworlds). Marvel/DC crossovers (are mostly non-canon) include those where the characters live in alternate universes, as well as those where they share the "same" version of earth (Indeed, some fans have posited a separate "Crossover Earth" for these adventures). In the...