Anyway, the Suicide Squad has begun to resurrect the Justice League.
Yes, folks, we have been hornswoggled. Spoiler alert for the latest season of Suicide Squad, it turns out that all of these deaths were actually just comic book deaths (via Polygon). In the last major update to Suicide Squad, the July 25 release of "Mrs. Freeze" and accompanying story content, the gang kidnapped an alternate reality version of the Flash to replace the one wasted in the main game. Hopefully the universe he came from doesn't need him.
For now, Flash is safely imprisoned in a protective pod, ready to (presumably) become a beautiful born-again superhero butterfly in future seasons, but it seems he's not the only one with reservations about the Suicide Squad. There are more empty tubes dotted around this place.
What will they be used for? Perhaps they are meant to house another resurrected character? Perhaps these are the characters who were said to be returning to the game in last year's leaked information.
It is very funny, at least to me, that the "Kill The Justice League" game is being axed in favor of the "Revive The Justice League" game, but it is not surprising. I don't read a lot of comics, and I know enough to know that comic book deaths don't count. In a long enough timeline, everyone eventually comes back like a six-pack savior.
If you ask me, those spare tubes will be filled with the game's upcoming season updates; Supermassive has promised to complete four seasons of its "currently announced roadmap," and Mrs. Freeze's constitutes season two.
After that, well, who knows?" The game is reportedly a financial disaster for Warner Bros. despite the "flashes of splendor" that our own Morgan Park found in his "Suicide Squad" review. As much as we would like Rocksteady to turn things around, the game will not be out of this world after the fourth season ends. Then again, the death of a superhero never lasts long.
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