With <em>Avengers: Doomsday</em> quickly approaching in December, several eyes are on the imminent MCU debut of Doctor Doom, surprisingly played by Robert Downey Jr. However, the comics are actively reinventing the classic Marvel villain with some pretty major twists as well. Case in point, the Marvel Universe has just revealed two major changes to Doctor Doom’s status quo that are arguably just as surprising as Robert Downey Jr.’s casting.
Ahead of this year’s massive Armageddon crossover, Marvel’s “Road To Armageddon” storyline has been exploring the fallout from Doctor Doom’s apparent death during the previous One World Under Doom event. This has largely been featured in Chip Zdarsky’s ongoing Captain America series, with Steve Rogers and Nick Fury’s reborn SHIELD in Latveria attempting to find the late Doom’s secret weapons while also helping the nation in the midst of a major political power vacuum.
Now, the recently released Captain America #11 by Chip Zdarsky and Valerio Schiti sees Steve Rogers and Fury discovering exactly who, not what, Doom’s secret weapon actually is.
Months Before Avengers: Doomsday, The Marvel Universe Has A Brand-New Doctor Doom
After taking down the would-be Latverian dictator named Salvation, Captain America and Nick Fury discover what appears to be Doom’s ultimate contingency plan: a teenage clone of Victor von Doom himself, claiming that he’s ready to lead Latveria as its new leader.
However, this isn’t simply a clone with the original Doom’s implanted memories. To that end, it seems as though the original Doom wanted his successor to have a consciousness of his own and be raised as a good man. To that end, this new, younger Doom claims he has no interest in being like the Doom that came before.
Additionally, it seems as though the younger Doom also possesses some kind of mysterious device likely tied to the original Doom’s plans for his legacy following his demise. All in all, the emergence of a brand-new Doctor Doom is pretty wild, especially if this Doom becomes something far more good than his predecessor.
The Old Doctor Doom Is Also Still “Alive” (Trapped in Hell?)
Remarkably, the Doctor Doom twists in Captain America #11 don’t end with a brand-new and teenaged Doctor Doom.
In this same issue, Thunderbolt Ross’ Red Hulk arrives in Latveria with a squad of unsanctioned Hulk-enhanced soldiers, still holding a major grudge after Doom held him prisoner for months during One World Under Doom. This leads to a brutal confrontation between Red Hulk and Rogers’ Captain America, who chooses to defend the younger Doom when Ross tries to kill him.
Despite the arrival of Sam Wilson’s Captain America as some much-needed backup, Rogers looks to either be dying or killed by Ross by the issue’s end, seeing how he wakes up in what appears to be a very dark version of the afterlife or some kind of limbo state.
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