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However, even with all of that, there are still deaths that matter at Marvel and DC. These deaths remain important to the history of their characters, and in some cases the entire universe, influencing characters still. On top of that, there are some deaths that despite being undone still matter, the events that happened because of them echoing down the years. These ten deaths actually mean something, even if some of the dead have been resurrected.
10) Silver Fox

Wolverine’s rivalry with Sabretooth is iconic, and it all began with one terrible moment. At some point in the past, Wolverine lived with Silver Fox, a member of the Blackfoot tribe. They lived in a beautiful little cabin in the Yukon, and lived something of a charmed life. One day, on Wolverine’s birthday, he went fishing and left her alone. While he was gone, Sabretooth came, assaulting Silver Fox, and killing her. Wolverine got home to a grisly scene, and carried the body of his love to town, confronting Sabretooth. The two of them had their first battle, and Sabretooth savagely beat Wolverine, leaving him for dead. This sparked off their hatred of each other. In the ’90s, it was revealed that this whole situation may have been a trick, with Weapon X setting the whole thing up and Silver Fox still alive. However, even with that retcon (which has been retconned more than once over the years), Silver Fox’s death still means something.
9) The pre-Crisis DC Multiverse

Crisis on Infinite Earths is the greatest event comic ever, and it’s honestly not even close. Crisis changed event comics forever, taking the idea of universe-wide crossovers and revolutionizing it by ending the DC Multiverse and recreating the universe, as well as killing multiple characters. The death of the DC Multiverse is the biggest death in the history of comics, and despite the return of the multiverse, it still means something to this day. The death of the pre-Crisis DC Multiverse is a demarcation line between DC’s wild past and its more grounded future. The end of the original Earth-Two alone has completely changed the way the history of DC’s Earth works, bringing the Golden Age heroes to the same universe as latter heroes, and making legacy more important to DC. It’s a death on an infinite scale, and if you’ve enjoyed new DC Comics since 1986, it’s because of this death.
8) Barry Allen

Crisis on Infinite Earths was the death of pre-Crisis DC Multiverse, and that multiverse had started with the introduction of Barry Allen, the Flash. Allen is basically the most Silver Age DC character ever — a sci-fi character with a colorful costume and amazing powers, who’s so good that he’s frankly kind of boring. Barry became so unpopular as the years went on that The Flash was cancelled, and he went to the future to join his wife Iris and father the Tornado Twins. His death in Crisis on Infinite Earths #8 spelled the death knell for the Silver Age; Supergirl’s death in the previous issue was part of a one-two punch that ended an entire era of DC Comics, which is why Crisis on Infinite Earths remains the most important event comic. Allen has come back to life, but his death basically made sure he had a mantle to come back to. Barry literally ran the Flash into the ground; killing him and replacing him with Wally West made the Flash popular again. Plus, he’s looked at as a patron saint of the DC Universe because of this death, which has stayed with him in the years after his resurrection.
7) Superman

“The Death of Superman” was a huge moment in pop culture. It was on the nightly news, and people were lined up around the block when Superman (Vol. 2) #75 came out. Superman’s battle with Doomsday became an instant classic, and was followed up by some brilliant stories — “World Without a Superman”, “Funeral for a Friend”, “Reign of the Supermen”, and “The Return of Superman”. Superman came back, obviously, but that doesn’t mean his death no longer matters. It’s a moment that showed that Superman wasn’t invincible, and changed the way the metahuman community operated. Superman’s death even shook him, as he realized that even his life could be taken from him at any time. It’s a moment that has echoed through the years, and still gets brought up in the modern day.
6) Gwen Stacy

Spider-Man’s life as a hero has been defined by death (that’s a hint, by the way), and the death of Gwen Stacy is one that will always be one of the most important. Losing Gwen Stacy has had major repercussions, both in-universe and on the publishing side of Spider-Man. Spider-Man went after Green Goblin in revenge, and Goblin accidentally killed himself trying to take out Spider-Man. Gwen Stacy’s death led to the relationship between Peter Parker and Mary Jane, and has served as a source of tragedy for Spider-Man even since. In the real world, Gwen Stacy becomes the favorite Spider-girlfriend of writers and editors like Dan Slott, Joe Quesada, Tom Brevoort, and Nick Lowe, all of whom have spent years canonizing Gwen Stacy (check out The Amazing Spider-Man #400, which contains a back-up story that’s much more realistic about Peter and Gwen’s relationship). Gwen’s death has sent shockwaves through the Spider-Man fandom for decades, and even with alternate Gwens like Spider-Gwen and Gwenpool, this death still means something, a lot of it bad.













