Yeah, that's what I wrote.The Romulan Republic wrote:Too powerful?
Yep. All you have to do is lure Hive into a remote and uninhabited area, get President Ellis to sign off on using a nuke on American soil (assuming he's in the U.S. at the time) and then hope that's enough to do the job. "Big fucking deal," indeed.I don't know. He's strong, sure, but not that strong. He can only mind control inhumans. His ranged attacks seem limited in scope. He can survive a rocket launcher? Big fucking deal. Throw an ICBM at him.
It's a good thing that this is a series where the Avengers directly intervene on a regular basis then. Oh wait. Do you even bother to think things through before you type these posts out? In theory Agents of SHIELD is set in the MCU but given how often the major movie characters cross paths with anyone on TV (which is, with the exception of Fury, never) it might as well not be. It is, as someone once wrote elsewhere, the tail end of the MCU. By Avengers standards Hive might be someone Thor or the Hulk could wipe their arses with but they aren't a factor in this context (they're too busy dealing with other business, anyway).I actually think there are several individual Avengers who could probably take him one on one, at least if not caught off guard.
He's strong for this show, not strong by the overall standards of the MCU.
The fact that he did might just be cause for concern. It's one of his feats. It doesn't matter how he did it. He's demonstrated the ability to manipulate Maveth's environment. The only reason we haven't seen him do that on Earth is because it's not a priority for him and he doesn't consider Team Coulson to be anything more than an annoyance (otherwise he would have launched a full-scale relentless assault on the Playground by now). He's entirely focused on creating Primitive Inhumans that he can control. I love how you just trivialise Hive's threat level as though he's a lowly bank robber or a Saturday morning cartoon baddie.And do we know anything of the circumstances of how he destroyed a world?
Given how often you bend over backwards to make excuses for Ward in general you've done a sterling job of giving me the exact opposite impression. Just accept the fact that you're an apologist for fictional villains. I'll appreciate your honesty. Or don't and whine about it some more.Regardless, I don't think that I was actually trying to make an argument in favour of keeping Dalton on the show, so much as just saying I thought it was likely.
Why wouldn't Dukat be a poor example? They took a relatively interesting character and completely ruined him by allying him with one of the worst aspects of the show (the evil branch of the fucking wormhole aliens that took a gigantic dump on DS9 every time they appeared). From military leader to Space Satanic cultist. That's an improvement! Also, it's "whether". Are you illiterate? Has your typing subroutine encountered an error? Why is this a habit with you? I just don't understand.So I don't give a damn weather Dukat is a "poor" example or not.
It's nice to see you completely undermining your own point while still being ridiculously accommodating about such a notion. Would it kill you to agree with me on this issue once in a while? Ward is dead and he had it coming. More than a few times over. What's it going to take for you to actually hate a villain? I'm quite frankly curious.Bringing Ward back...
They'd have to do something new with him for it to be really good. Since they pretty much rejected the redemption idea over and over again (and portrayed Ward as a fairly one-dimensional revenge-obsessed sadist in the process as I recall), but did not develop Ward into a real Big Bad caliber-antagonist and had him keep making the same sorts of mistakes, he'd gotten kind of tired and shallow and doesn't have a lot of obvious directions to go in. I'll give them credit for finally doing something new with him, sort of, with the "Ward as a Hive cultist" thing, but then he died, and if they kill Hive... that angle's probably played out too.
It's not a tragedy, TRR. Ward had his time in the sun and he made his mark. The show can survive his absence.Its a pity, because from mid season one to late season two I think Ward was possibly one of the MCU's most interesting and compelling characters.
Why on Earth would that even happen? Three seasons and it still hasn't sunk in? It's thankfully far, far too late now. The only people who are willing to entertain that possibility are batshit crazy.That said, I wouldn't necessarily object to Ward coming back, provided that its well-written, of course, and in particular that they never, ever ruin Daisy's strength of character by having her get together with him.
Does that look like the face of a woman who's grief-stricken and pining for Bad Boy McShitbird? Fuck no. So why even bring it up?
As you said earlier it would have to be exceptionally well done and even then it would ultimately be pointless given that, in your hypothetical, Ward dies. Plus it would have the uncomfortable feel of attempting to gloss over his crimes. It seems like the polar opposite of "wonderful" to me. Ward doesn't have a future. Everyone that wasn't an ally of convenience hated and feared him when he was still alive. His mentally unstable girlfriend died by his hand. He's done. The only place for him now is the comics where he's just been introduced.There is, in particular, one angle that they hinted at that I wouldn't mind seeing followed up on:
Back in season two, Coulson offered Ward the option of going through the Tahiti program and having his memory wiped. I think that would have been very interesting. Give Ward a clean slate of sorts, and see what kind of man he is without all the baggage of his past, all his misguided loyalties and obsessions and indoctrination and grudges. Maybe he'd be a better man. Maybe he'd still be a complete scum bag/nut job. But I think that a good writer could potentially make an interesting character study of it.
It wouldn't even have to last. You could do it for an episode, or an arc, then have him revert to the old Ward or die. But I think there was potential there for a wonderful story that was never used.
Yeah, how dare they do use comic book characters in the comic book TV adaptation! You sound like an absolute snob thumbing his nose at the source material for even having the temerity to exist. Have you even read any of the comics (Secret Warriors would be a good start)? The issue isn't whether or not the characters are pre-existing ones but how they're used. That's all that matters.I would like to see more Marvel villains brought in, though. And, hell, original villains. Not everything has to come from the comics. One of the things I like about this show is that a lot of the main cast are apparently original characters, and ever time they have one turn out to be a comics character, it irritates me. Its like, God forbid that they do anything purely original. I'll give them a pass on it though, because Daisy is awesome and Hive is at least a fairly menacing villain.
It's rather ironic that you're complaining about the lack of original characters given that a significant portion of Team Coulson, including their leader, were only introduced via the MCU. Until recently, Raina and Ward didn't have comic counterparts either.
Why do you keep projecting this pompous air of authority in every post? You're not in charge of anything. You are completely powerless when it comes to determining Agents of SHIELD's direction. As am I. We're just opinionated viewers.