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{{trope}}
{{work}}
[[File:Marvel_1602.jpg|frame]]
[[File:Marvel_1602.jpg|frame]]
{{quote|''"We live in a time of miracles and wonders and I cannot say that it pleases me."''|'''Queen Elizabeth'''}}
{{quote|''"We live in a time of miracles and wonders and I cannot say that it pleases me."''|'''Queen Elizabeth'''}}
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''Marvel 1602'' was an [[Elseworld]] miniseries written by [[Neil Gaiman]], transporting the [[Marvel Universe]] into the Elizabethan Era. It took heroes such as [[Nick Fury]], [[X-Men|The X-Men]], [[Daredevil]], [[Doctor Strange]] and [[Spider-Man]] and found a way to make them work in the period and tell an original tale centering upon them.
''Marvel 1602'' was an [[Elseworld]] miniseries written by [[Neil Gaiman]], transporting the [[Marvel Universe]] into the Elizabethan Era. It took heroes such as [[Nick Fury]], [[X-Men|The X-Men]], [[Daredevil]], [[Doctor Strange]] and [[Spider-Man]] and found a way to make them work in the period and tell an original tale centering upon them.


The original mini-series has had several follow-ups by other writers, focusing on particular (sets of) characters. ''1602: A New World'' by Greg Pak, which introduces [[Iron Man|Lord Iron]], ''[[Fantastic Four|Fantastick Four]] 1602'' by [[Peter David]], and ''[[Spider Man]] 1602'' by Jeff Parker.
The original mini-series has had several follow-ups by other writers, focusing on particular (sets of) characters. ''1602: A New World'' by Greg Pak, which introduces [[Iron Man|Lord Iron]], ''[[Fantastic Four|Fantastick Four]] 1602'' by [[Peter David]], and ''[[Spider-Man]] 1602'' by Jeff Parker.


{{tropelist}}
----
=== This work provides examples of: ===
* [[Alien Space Bats]]: The universe was normal until superheroes started appearing in it four hundred years too early. Yes, the dinosaurs are "normal". Dinos and prehistoric beasts really DID roam the lands a little before the colonists arrived in official Earth-616 canon. In fact, the Savage Land still has dinosaurs.
* [[Alien Space Bats]]: The universe was normal until superheroes started appearing in it four hundred years too early. Yes, the dinosaurs are "normal". Dinos and prehistoric beasts really DID roam the lands a little before the colonists arrived in official Earth-616 canon. In fact, the Savage Land still has dinosaurs.
* [[Ambiguously Gay]]: James keeps calling Brother Petros "pretty", as well as saying the Inquisitor must've been pretty as a young man. {{spoiler|This is [[Foreshadowing]] the fact that the latter is the father of the former.}} It also has some basis in reality, being a popular theory on James of Scotland held by many historians.
* [[Ambiguously Gay]]: James keeps calling Brother Petros "pretty", as well as saying the Inquisitor must've been pretty as a young man. {{spoiler|This is [[Foreshadowing]] the fact that the latter is the father of the former.}} It also has some basis in reality, being a popular theory on James of Scotland held by many historians.
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* [[Elseworld]]
* [[Elseworld]]
* [[Exty Years From Now]]: Set 400 years before it was published.
* [[Exty Years From Now]]: Set 400 years before it was published.
* [[Everythings Better With Dinosaurs]]: America has been replaced by the Savage Land in this continuity, so it's now crawling with dinosaurs. According to the page at the end of the comic, it's because [[Neil Gaiman]] [[Author Appeal|likes dinosaurs]].
* [[Everything's Better with Dinosaurs]]: America has been replaced by the Savage Land in this continuity, so it's now crawling with dinosaurs. According to the page at the end of the comic, it's because [[Neil Gaiman]] [[Author Appeal|likes dinosaurs]].
* [[Historical Domain Character]]: Queen Elizabeth, King James, Virginia Dare.
* [[Historical Domain Character]]: Queen Elizabeth, King James, Virginia Dare.
* [[Historical Villain Upgrade]]: James again.
* [[Historical Villain Upgrade]]: James again.
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* [[Knight Templar]]: The Grand Inquisitor, charged with ferreting out Witchbreed. {{spoiler|Actually one himself, as he's this world's Magneto.}}
* [[Knight Templar]]: The Grand Inquisitor, charged with ferreting out Witchbreed. {{spoiler|Actually one himself, as he's this world's Magneto.}}
* [[Let's You and Him Fight]]
* [[Let's You and Him Fight]]
* [[Leaning On the Fourth Wall]]/[[Medium Awareness]]: At one point, Reed says that he believes that the fundamental particles of [[Marvel Comics|the Universe]] are stories, and that they are in a universe that favors them. He posits that stories can never truly end. Ben Grimm asks if it would be possible to restore his humanity, and Reed responds that the "laws of story" would [[Status Quo Is God|prevent any cure from lasting long]]. This has happened several times in mainstream Marvel.
* [[Leaning on the Fourth Wall]]/[[Medium Awareness]]: At one point, Reed says that he believes that the fundamental particles of [[Marvel Comics|the Universe]] are stories, and that they are in a universe that favors them. He posits that stories can never truly end. Ben Grimm asks if it would be possible to restore his humanity, and Reed responds that the "laws of story" would [[Status Quo Is God|prevent any cure from lasting long]]. This has happened several times in mainstream Marvel.
{{quote| '''Reed:"'' For in the end, alas, you are much more interesting and satisfying as you are.}}
{{quote|'''Reed:"'' For in the end, alas, you are much more interesting and satisfying as you are.}}
* [[Meta Origin]]
* [[Meta Origin]]
* [[Mythology Gag]]: To things in the [[Marvel Universe]].
* [[Mythology Gag]]: To things in the [[Marvel Universe]].
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* [[President Evil]]: {{spoiler|According to Captain America, The Purple Man becomes this.}}
* [[President Evil]]: {{spoiler|According to Captain America, The Purple Man becomes this.}}
* [[Pretentious Latin Motto]]
* [[Pretentious Latin Motto]]
* [[Rubber Band History]] / [[The Time Travellers Dilemma]]: {{spoiler|Averted. Uatu preserves this timeline in a pocket universe, allowing it to continue despite Captain America's removal bringing back the original timeline.}}
* [[Rubber Band History]] / [[The Time Traveller's Dilemma]]: {{spoiler|Averted. Uatu preserves this timeline in a pocket universe, allowing it to continue despite Captain America's removal bringing back the original timeline.}}
* [[Runaway Fiancee]]
* [[Runaway Fiancee]]
* [[Running Gag]]: Matthew Murdoch being offered money to ''stop'' singing, [[Spider Man|Peter Parquah]] messing around with spiders.
* [[Running Gag]]: Matthew Murdoch being offered money to ''stop'' singing, [[Spider-Man|Peter Parquah]] messing around with spiders.
* [[The Spymaster]]: Sir Nicholas Fury.
* [[The Spymaster]]: Sir Nicholas Fury.
* [[Sarcastic Confession]]: When James asks Petros how he got to him from Spain so quickly, Petros responds that he "ran very quickly." James thinks this is hilarious.
* [[Sarcastic Confession]]: When James asks Petros how he got to him from Spain so quickly, Petros responds that he "ran very quickly." James thinks this is hilarious.
* [[Straight Gay]] {{spoiler|Angel.}}
* [[Invisible to Gaydar]] {{spoiler|Angel.}}
* [[Sweet Polly Oliver]]: Jean Grey.
* [[Sweet Polly Oliver]]: Jean Grey.
* [[Sweet On Polly Oliver]]: {{spoiler|Angel again, though subverted in that, as the above suggests, he's perfectly okay with his attraction to 'male' Jean}}.
* [[Sweet on Polly Oliver]]: {{spoiler|Angel again, though subverted in that, as the above suggests, he's perfectly okay with his attraction to 'male' Jean}}.
* [[Theory of Narrative Causality]]
* [[Theory of Narrative Causality]]
* [[This Is My Name On Foreign]]: As a big chunk of the characters are English, this doesn't get played with as much as you'd think. There are some notable examples, though, like Carlos Javier (Charles Xavier), Enrique (Erik Lensherr/Magneto), Roberto Trefusis (Bobby Drake), and Scottius Summerisle (Scott Summers).
* [[This Is My Name on Foreign]]: As a big chunk of the characters are English, this doesn't get played with as much as you'd think. There are some notable examples, though, like Carlos Javier (Charles Xavier), Enrique (Erik Lensherr/Magneto), Roberto Trefusis (Bobby Drake), and Scottius Summerisle (Scott Summers).
** Roberto Trefusis as Bobby Drake deserves special mention: Roberto claims to be a nephew of naval commander Sir Francis Drake; the real Sir Francis had family by marriage named Trefusis. Someone's [[Shown Their Work|Showing Their Work]].
** Roberto Trefusis as Bobby Drake deserves special mention: Roberto claims to be a nephew of naval commander Sir Francis Drake; the real Sir Francis had family by marriage named Trefusis. Someone's [[Shown Their Work|Showing Their Work]].
** Peter Parquagh is [[This Is My Name On Foreign|This Is My Name On]] [[Ye Olde Butcherede Englishe]]. It gets retconned as a pseudonym in ''Spider-Man 1602''.
** Peter Parquagh is [[This Is My Name on Foreign|This Is My Name On]] [[Ye Olde Butcherede Englishe]]. It gets retconned as a pseudonym in ''Spider-Man 1602''.
** Rohjaz ({{spoiler|Steve Rogers}}), as well, though {{spoiler|he actually ''is'' Steve Rogers.}}
** Rohjaz ({{spoiler|Steve Rogers}}), as well, though {{spoiler|he actually ''is'' Steve Rogers.}}
* [[Title By Number]]
* [[Title by Number]]
* [[Trapped in The Past]]: {{spoiler|Captain America.}}
* [[Trapped in the Past]]: {{spoiler|Captain America.}}
* [[Voluntary Shapeshifter]]: {{spoiler|Virginia Dare's power.}}
* [[Voluntary Shapeshifter]]: {{spoiler|Virginia Dare's power.}}
* [[White Haired Pretty Girl]]: Virginia Dare, definitely, and Clea Strange possibly.
* [[White-Haired Pretty Girl]]: Virginia Dare, definitely, and Clea Strange possibly.
* [[Ye Olde Butcherede Englishe]]: Played with; since this is the Elizabethan era, Thor's normal [[Flowery Elizabethan English]] speech patterns have been pushed further back and taken on elements of Old English.
* [[Ye Olde Butcherede Englishe]]: Played with; since this is the Elizabethan era, Thor's normal [[Flowery Elizabethan English]] speech patterns have been pushed further back and taken on elements of Old English.


=== The sequels provide examples of: ===
=== The sequels provide examples of: ===
* [[A God I Am]]: Octavius, when he [[Stages of Monster Grief|embraces his transformation]] instead of trying to undo it.
* [[A God I Am]]: Octavius, when he [[Stages of Monster Grief|embraces his transformation]] instead of trying to undo it.
* [[Dropped a Bridge On Him|Dropped A Bridge On Her]]: Natasha, a major character from the original miniseries, questions Doom about his plans... and he pushes her off his flying ship to her death.
* [[Dropped a Bridge on Him|Dropped A Bridge On Her]]: Natasha, a major character from the original miniseries, questions Doom about his plans... and he pushes her off his flying ship to her death.
* [[I Have Your Wife]]: Baron Octavius keeps Henri Le Pym working for him by continually reminding him that if he doesn't comply with demands, his lady, Janette, will be fed to Conners, who is almost fully dinosaur in this world.
* [[I Have Your Wife]]: Baron Octavius keeps Henri Le Pym working for him by continually reminding him that if he doesn't comply with demands, his lady, Janette, will be fed to Conners, who is almost fully dinosaur in this world.
* [[Karmic Death]]: {{spoiler|Osborne is horribly wounded by cannonfire when the Kingpin's pirates attack. While he survives the initial attack, he contracts a horrific case of gangrene, and the narration states that he will die in a matter of days.}}
* [[Karmic Death]]: {{spoiler|Osborne is horribly wounded by cannonfire when the Kingpin's pirates attack. While he survives the initial attack, he contracts a horrific case of gangrene, and the narration states that he will die in a matter of days.}}
* [[Mad Scientist]]: Octavius (squid), Conners (dinosaur), and eventually Osbourne (also dinosaur?) are all lab-table mutates, the prior two by their own doing. Octavius' mutation was accidental, though, which was the original reason he'd used a hostage to press-gang Pym into creating a cure. Then, as part of a [[Kick the Dog]] moment, he reveals to Pym that he'd been experimenting on Janette while she was in his keep, mutating her into an insect hybrid.
* [[Mad Scientist]]: Octavius (squid), Conners (dinosaur), and eventually Osbourne (also dinosaur?) are all lab-table mutates, the prior two by their own doing. Octavius' mutation was accidental, though, which was the original reason he'd used a hostage to press-gang Pym into creating a cure. Then, as part of a [[Kick the Dog]] moment, he reveals to Pym that he'd been experimenting on Janette while she was in his keep, mutating her into an insect hybrid.
* [[Instant Plunder Just Add Pirates]]: Kingpin (Captain Wilson Fiske, the King's Pin) and Bullseye (The Bull's Eye) are pirates in this continuity.
* [[Instant Plunder, Just Add Pirates]]: Kingpin (Captain Wilson Fiske, the King's Pin) and Bullseye (The Bull's Eye) are pirates in this continuity.
* [[Jekyll and Hyde]]: {{spoiler|Hulk is the good persona, Banner is a sadistic bastard who was one of the best torture agents in England.}}
* [[Jekyll and Hyde]]: {{spoiler|Hulk is the good persona, Banner is a sadistic bastard who was one of the best torture agents in England.}}
* [[Put On a Bus]]: At the end of the first series the characters talk of making the colony a safe haven for people with unusual abilities. At the beginning of 1602: New World there is a vague mention of the Witchbreed leaving, and they have not been seen or mentioned anywhere else in the follow-up series since.
* [[Put on a Bus]]: At the end of the first series the characters talk of making the colony a safe haven for people with unusual abilities. At the beginning of 1602: New World there is a vague mention of the Witchbreed leaving, and they have not been seen or mentioned anywhere else in the follow-up series since.
** Except Hal McCoy (Beast), who ends up as a test subject for Octavius, and mutated to his familiar blue, ape-like form.
** Except Hal McCoy (Beast), who ends up as a test subject for Octavius, and mutated to his familiar blue, ape-like form.
* [[Redemption Equals Death]]: Deciding to become a good man, {{spoiler|Banner}} goes to subject himself to execution. {{spoiler|Possibly subverted, however, in that it was likely a ploy to get close to King James as he was shown [[Hulking Out]] }}
* [[Redemption Equals Death]]: Deciding to become a good man, {{spoiler|Banner}} goes to subject himself to execution. {{spoiler|Possibly subverted, however, in that it was likely a ploy to get close to King James as he was shown [[Hulking Out]] }}
* [[Revenge Before Reason]]: Arguably Lord Iron, who doesn't particularly give a damn about either side of the fight, but sides with King James because it means getting to kill Banner.
* [[Revenge Before Reason]]: Arguably Lord Iron, who doesn't particularly give a damn about either side of the fight, but sides with King James because it means getting to kill Banner.
* [[Roaring Rampage of Revenge]]: Once McCoy is released from captivity, he rips his way through the military guards in an attempt to find Octavius, not knowing he's already fled.
* [[Roaring Rampage of Revenge]]: Once McCoy is released from captivity, he rips his way through the military guards in an attempt to find Octavius, not knowing he's already fled.
* [[Shout Out]]: The 1602 version of Namor is called "Numenor" after [[JRR Tolkien (Creator)|JRR Tolkien]]'s Atlantis, while his kingdom is called Bensaylum after Francis Bacon's ''New Atlantis''.
* [[Shout-Out]]: The 1602 version of Namor is called "Numenor" after [[J. R. R. Tolkien|JRR Tolkien]]'s Atlantis, while his kingdom is called Bensaylum after Francis Bacon's ''New Atlantis''.
** Also, The Sandman in this continuity has powers over dreams, much like another [[The Sandman|Sandman]] from a [[DC Comics|Different Company]], instead of being able to turn into sand. It's a bit of an in-joke, considering [[Neil Gaiman|who wrote the original series]].
** Also, The Sandman in this continuity has powers over dreams, much like another [[The Sandman|Sandman]] from a [[DC Comics|Different Company]], instead of being able to turn into sand. It's a bit of an in-joke, considering [[Neil Gaiman|who wrote the original series]].
* [[Sissy Villain]]: King James.
* [[Sissy Villain]]: King James.
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* [[Stuffed Into the Fridge]]: Arguably, {{spoiler|Virginia Dare, in ''1602: Spider-Man''}}.
* [[Stuffed Into the Fridge]]: Arguably, {{spoiler|Virginia Dare, in ''1602: Spider-Man''}}.
* [[Sufficiently Advanced Alien]]: Near the end of ''1602: Fantastick Four'', the main characters catch a glimpse of the giant form of [[The Watcher]] looking down upon them. Everybody is convinced they saw the face of God.
* [[Sufficiently Advanced Alien]]: Near the end of ''1602: Fantastick Four'', the main characters catch a glimpse of the giant form of [[The Watcher]] looking down upon them. Everybody is convinced they saw the face of God.
* [[Timey Wimey Ball]]: {{spoiler|At the end of Spider-Man 1602, we find out that in the 40s, the Americans discovered an unfinished version of the serum Pym had created from Peter's blood, and [[Stable Time Loop|refine it to create Captain America]].}}
* [[Timey-Wimey Ball]]: {{spoiler|At the end of Spider-Man 1602, we find out that in the 40s, the Americans discovered an unfinished version of the serum Pym had created from Peter's blood, and [[Stable Time Loop|refine it to create Captain America]].}}
** It's also possibly implied that {{spoiler|history eventually corrected itself to the point that [[World War II]] starts off as normal. Meaning that ''everything'' Rohjaz has done to prevent his world from coming to be was all for nothing}}.
** It's also possibly implied that {{spoiler|history eventually corrected itself to the point that [[World War II]] starts off as normal. Meaning that ''everything'' Rohjaz has done to prevent his world from coming to be was all for nothing}}.
* [[Walk the Plank]]: The crew on Captain Stacy's ship are just about to kill Peter for being Witchbreed when he saves his life by saving their asses from the pirate ship ''The King's Pin''.
* [[Walk the Plank]]: The crew on Captain Stacy's ship are just about to kill Peter for being Witchbreed when he saves his life by saving their asses from the pirate ship ''The King's Pin''.
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[[Category:Better Than It Sounds/Comic Books]]
[[Category:Better Than It Sounds/Comic Books]]
[[Category:Marvel 1602]]
[[Category:Marvel 1602]]
[[Category:Trope]]

Latest revision as of 11:27, 31 December 2014

"We live in a time of miracles and wonders and I cannot say that it pleases me."
Queen Elizabeth

It is the year 1602, during the reign of Queen Elizabeth the First and all is not well in Merry Olde England. Strange storms have rocked the continent, the sky has been cast in haunting tones, rumour on the street speaks of the end-times and only one man might discover the truth of these unusual occurences. He is Doctor Stephen Strange, The Queen's Physician.

Marvel 1602 was an Elseworld miniseries written by Neil Gaiman, transporting the Marvel Universe into the Elizabethan Era. It took heroes such as Nick Fury, The X-Men, Daredevil, Doctor Strange and Spider-Man and found a way to make them work in the period and tell an original tale centering upon them.

The original mini-series has had several follow-ups by other writers, focusing on particular (sets of) characters. 1602: A New World by Greg Pak, which introduces Lord Iron, Fantastick Four 1602 by Peter David, and Spider-Man 1602 by Jeff Parker.

Tropes used in Marvel 1602 include:
  • Alien Space Bats: The universe was normal until superheroes started appearing in it four hundred years too early. Yes, the dinosaurs are "normal". Dinos and prehistoric beasts really DID roam the lands a little before the colonists arrived in official Earth-616 canon. In fact, the Savage Land still has dinosaurs.
  • Ambiguously Gay: James keeps calling Brother Petros "pretty", as well as saying the Inquisitor must've been pretty as a young man. This is Foreshadowing the fact that the latter is the father of the former. It also has some basis in reality, being a popular theory on James of Scotland held by many historians.
  • Ambiguously Jewish: Averted/Justified. Enrique was born to a Jewish family, but was one of the forcibly converted children baptized during a burning.
  • Animal Motifs
  • Apocalyptic Log: Doctor Strange, once he's sentenced to death.
  • Aristocrats Are Evil: James of Scotland.
  • A Wizard Did It: People keep asking Strange how he does various magical acts. his response is usually along the lines of "I am a wizard." This is something of an open secret. He is later executed. No, not for magic, for being a traitor.
  • Badass: Sir Nicholas Fury and Matthew Murdock "The Bard".
  • Elemental Powers: The four crew members of the Fantastick are even more obviously this than their mainstream Marvel counterparts.
  • Elseworld
  • Exty Years From Now: Set 400 years before it was published.
  • Everything's Better with Dinosaurs: America has been replaced by the Savage Land in this continuity, so it's now crawling with dinosaurs. According to the page at the end of the comic, it's because Neil Gaiman likes dinosaurs.
  • Historical Domain Character: Queen Elizabeth, King James, Virginia Dare.
  • Historical Villain Upgrade: James again.
  • Hope Spot: Cleo asks that Strange not be executed for practicing magic. King James says he won't be, and Virginia grins broadly while The Stoic Rojhaz even cracks a smile. Then James continues that Strange is going to executed for treason.
  • Knight Templar: The Grand Inquisitor, charged with ferreting out Witchbreed. Actually one himself, as he's this world's Magneto.
  • Let's You and Him Fight
  • Leaning on the Fourth Wall/Medium Awareness: At one point, Reed says that he believes that the fundamental particles of the Universe are stories, and that they are in a universe that favors them. He posits that stories can never truly end. Ben Grimm asks if it would be possible to restore his humanity, and Reed responds that the "laws of story" would prevent any cure from lasting long. This has happened several times in mainstream Marvel.

'Reed:" For in the end, alas, you are much more interesting and satisfying as you are.

The sequels provide examples of:

  • A God I Am: Octavius, when he embraces his transformation instead of trying to undo it.
  • Dropped A Bridge On Her: Natasha, a major character from the original miniseries, questions Doom about his plans... and he pushes her off his flying ship to her death.
  • I Have Your Wife: Baron Octavius keeps Henri Le Pym working for him by continually reminding him that if he doesn't comply with demands, his lady, Janette, will be fed to Conners, who is almost fully dinosaur in this world.
  • Karmic Death: Osborne is horribly wounded by cannonfire when the Kingpin's pirates attack. While he survives the initial attack, he contracts a horrific case of gangrene, and the narration states that he will die in a matter of days.
  • Mad Scientist: Octavius (squid), Conners (dinosaur), and eventually Osbourne (also dinosaur?) are all lab-table mutates, the prior two by their own doing. Octavius' mutation was accidental, though, which was the original reason he'd used a hostage to press-gang Pym into creating a cure. Then, as part of a Kick the Dog moment, he reveals to Pym that he'd been experimenting on Janette while she was in his keep, mutating her into an insect hybrid.
  • Instant Plunder, Just Add Pirates: Kingpin (Captain Wilson Fiske, the King's Pin) and Bullseye (The Bull's Eye) are pirates in this continuity.
  • Jekyll and Hyde: Hulk is the good persona, Banner is a sadistic bastard who was one of the best torture agents in England.
  • Put on a Bus: At the end of the first series the characters talk of making the colony a safe haven for people with unusual abilities. At the beginning of 1602: New World there is a vague mention of the Witchbreed leaving, and they have not been seen or mentioned anywhere else in the follow-up series since.
    • Except Hal McCoy (Beast), who ends up as a test subject for Octavius, and mutated to his familiar blue, ape-like form.
  • Redemption Equals Death: Deciding to become a good man, Banner goes to subject himself to execution. Possibly subverted, however, in that it was likely a ploy to get close to King James as he was shown Hulking Out
  • Revenge Before Reason: Arguably Lord Iron, who doesn't particularly give a damn about either side of the fight, but sides with King James because it means getting to kill Banner.
  • Roaring Rampage of Revenge: Once McCoy is released from captivity, he rips his way through the military guards in an attempt to find Octavius, not knowing he's already fled.
  • Shout-Out: The 1602 version of Namor is called "Numenor" after JRR Tolkien's Atlantis, while his kingdom is called Bensaylum after Francis Bacon's New Atlantis.
  • Sissy Villain: King James.
  • Steampunk: Lord Iron's lightning bottle powered armor, which is the only thing keeping him alive after Banner got through with him.
  • Stuffed Into the Fridge: Arguably, Virginia Dare, in 1602: Spider-Man.
  • Sufficiently Advanced Alien: Near the end of 1602: Fantastick Four, the main characters catch a glimpse of the giant form of The Watcher looking down upon them. Everybody is convinced they saw the face of God.
  • Timey-Wimey Ball: At the end of Spider-Man 1602, we find out that in the 40s, the Americans discovered an unfinished version of the serum Pym had created from Peter's blood, and refine it to create Captain America.
    • It's also possibly implied that history eventually corrected itself to the point that World War II starts off as normal. Meaning that everything Rohjaz has done to prevent his world from coming to be was all for nothing.
  • Walk the Plank: The crew on Captain Stacy's ship are just about to kill Peter for being Witchbreed when he saves his life by saving their asses from the pirate ship The King's Pin.