Although she's one of the most important of the Susan Storm is the first female superhero in Marvel Comics, she has had several opportunities to stand out as her own character. Unfortunately, other of the Fantastic Four usually leave her character development as invisible as her name suggests. Nonetheless, a new comic, part of Marvel's tremendous Judgement Day crossover, may provide her best comic book appearance to date.
Sue Storm is undoubtedly advanced the characterization of comic book women during her early appearances in the 1960s. In more modern comics, she often resides in the Baxter Building to play a maternal role, primarily in service of the other characters. Despite this, Invisible Woman has the potential to be incredibly overpowered. Sue's wasted potential is evident in Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa and Steve McNiven's Marvel Knights 4 comics, Marvel's attempt at critically adept standalone stories for the Fantastic Four, when the team goes bankrupt. Reed Richards prevents a depressed man from taking his own life, Ben learns the toils of lower-class construction workers, and Johnny struggles as a returning celebrity actor. Meanwhile, Sue becomes an objectified substitute teacher and defends her kids' friends from aliens. The only instance when Sue is alone features her going for a swim to let off some steam.
A new article from Invisible Woman's force fields are insanely powerful, the adventure promises to be quite thrilling.
Even in stories like Brian Michael Bendis and Bryan Hitch's Age of Ultron, where Sue travels through space and time with Wolverine to save the universe from the cybernetic apocalypse, she is almost always a ing character. Sometimes Sue can provide great moments for others, as she does for the Fantastic Four in Marvel Knights or Wolverine in Age of Ultron. By placing Invisible Woman as the Baxter Building's sole defender though, Fantastic Four #47 can remind fans why Sue is a superhero in her own right who deserves her own stories outside of her relationship to a male hero.
It's significant for readers to realize what Sue is capable of across Marvel's vast and powerful universe. Nonetheless, it's infinitely more important for writers to develop Sue's personal characteristics separate from the Fantastic Four, especially if Invisible Woman enters the MCU. The Invisible Woman deserves to be one of the most critically acclaimed characters in comic books, and hopefully, her version of Die Hard will help her gain more appreciation.
Source: Marvel