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Captain America has starred in some amazing stories over the decades, with some of the most talented creators in comics working on the character. His books sold well in the ’60s and ’70s, and the ’80s saw some of his best stories. However, the ’90s became a problem for the character. The ’90s were the X-Men’s decade, and the rest of Marvel suffered badly. Fans just weren’t really interested in heroes like Captain America anymore, and the House of Ideas didn’t really know what to do with the character. We’d get Cap-Wolf and a weakened armored Cap, but 1995 would bring the best change to the character in years. However, Marvel had other plan,s and they almost ruined everything.
Heroes Reborn Derailed the Best Cap Run in Decades

Captain America had fallen down the charts, as had Avengers, Iron Man, and Fantastic Four. Marvel had tried everything (basically just copying ideas from the X-Men and Image Comics) to fix the problem, but nothing worked. So, in secret, the company began to negotiate with Rob Liefeld and Jim Lee, superstar artists who had left the House of Ideas to form Image, to take over the books. However, before this became common knowledge, the publisher put a new creative team on Captain America in Mark Waid and Ron Garney.
The two of them came on the book after several years of bad stories, with Cap’s supersoldier serum not working and him becoming an armored hero. Captain America #444 would end this plotline and lead into Waid and Garney’s first story, “Operation: Rebirth” in issue #445. This story was back to basics Cap, literally a rebirth of the character. Sharon Carter was brought back, he was working with the government again, and he had to stop Red Skull. It was simple, it was elegant, it was everything that fans wanted and it was praised to high heaven. Sales started to climb as the comic press praised the book and fans realized how great it suddenly was.








