It was… 2007. I was 10 years old and sitting in front of my TV with a Duke X-Box controller in my hand. Booting up for the first time was X-Men Dimensions, a fighting game featuring the well-known group of Mutants that are a popular culture phenomenon.
I had no idea who they were, of course: I hadn’t had much interaction with Superheroes at that point: They hadn’t truly hit their stride yet in the mainstream. But as I played that polygon-rendered Tekken-With-Mutants video game, I fell head over heels in love: I wanted more.
While I came to love DC’s comics, I felt like Marvel’s comics (and Characters) were closer to reality than the others. When I found out almost all of them were the offspring of one man, Stan Lee, I was amazed and inspired: what if I could create characters like that? Up to that point I hadn’t really made my own characters, but that sparked a creative surge in my mind: I wanted to create.
As time went on I continued watching Marvel’s projects and their comics, and when rumors of a Iron Man movie coming to the big screen began to circulate, I though “hey, that could be cool.”
It was. And so was Iron Man 2. And Captain America, Thor, AND Avengers. I loved it, and I loved seeing Stan Lee cameo across the movies.
Of course, I was still tinkering with my own Superheroes, including a lightning-powered hit man that could go toe to toe with Thor and come out ahead. When he was made, my knowledge of what all Thor was capable of was somewhat limited: I thought he was just a strong dude with lightning and a hammer.
Stan Lee inspired me to create superheroes, and that would lead to several game iterations, Fan Fiction for one, and this for another. I have my favorites of Stan’s comics: Spider-Man vs. Fancy Dan, came out in the 60s and featured a riverboat swindler with a cane and a really, painfully purple suit and his cronies stands out in my memory. My favorite character Stan would come up with is Captain America. A weak man who wanted to serve his country getting incredible powers and serving as the bumbling Private Rogers and Captain America.
If we’re honest, we owe the Superhero as we know it today to Stan Lee. People with power, but just people: they’re not perfect, but they’re doing the best they can. Without Stan Lee, the superhero would have faded into obscurity after the close of World War Two. Stan Lee getting tired of writing Cowboy, Detective and Romance comics would lead to the creation of Spider Man, the Fantastic Four, the X-Men, the rebirth of Captain America, Iron Man, Thor, and The Avengers (featuring Ant Man and The Wasp.) But without the catalyst of Stan Lee’s comics, others would not have come forward with their own superheroes as well.
I owe Stan Lee for Legends of Albadyn, for Project Champions and for Fan Fiction The Game. I owe Stan Lee for bringing my creativity forward to the point that I would create Characters of my own.
I’ll miss you, Stan The Man. Excelsior!