What If...?: Captain Carter and the "evil" Dr. Strange from Multiverse of Madness were both first seen in this series.
Not quite. I don't remember who said it (probably Michael Waldron, the film's screenwriter) but the Captain Carter we see as part of the Illuminati is a different one from
What If...? I'm pretty sure the same is true for the evil Dr. Strange since the nature of his exile was different from the one seen in
What If...?
That said, the show did introduce the concepts of both of those characters and helped general audiences see where they
could have come from, even though they're not the same characters.
I've been thinking on how long Rhodey had been held by Gravik's Skrulls. According to the MCU wiki site, he had been replaced a few years after the events of "Endgame". Which makes sense to me. When exactly was it confirmed that Rhodey had been replaced by a Skrull before the events of "Endgame"? At a time when Gravik was still assisting Fury? Please remember that Rhodey had been wearing leg braces created by Stark Enterprises tech since the end of "Civil War". it possible that Gravik's supporters may have grabbed him, while he was undergoing some kind of medical check up . . . and not wearing his leg braces? Which would explain why Rhodey had required assistance out of Gravik's New Skrullos facility. Has anyone considered this?
Most people (including many reviewers, annoying) have
assumed his capture was longer based on the fact Rhodey couldn't walk on his initiative. But there are two obvious explanations, ones I hope either of which are true:
He was there for longer than most captured people which caused muscle atrophy and he couldn't walk right away.
OR.
The advance tech that Tony developed for him (originally external but may have became nano-based after
Infinity War) were removed.
It's been a while since I've seen 'Captain Marvel', but I'm pretty sure the whole point of the whole faster than light engine, was to be able to get the Skrulls to a place that the Kree couldn't find them. So it's not really a matter of no unoccupied habitable planets so much as no *safe* unoccupied habitable planets.
Just another one of many things the show did a piss-poor job of explaining, but I suppose we can surmise that they simply couldn't find anywhere suitable world outside the Kree Empire that wasn't also within the territory of some other multi-galaxy spanning Empire.
Yeah, this is one of my biggest complaints. There was no real explanation or even an
attempt to explain why
and how Nick and Carol failed at this. Simply "they failed."
Which is just piss poor writing. Deeply frustrating, not just because of the expectations for this show, but also because that could've easily been explained with a few lines. But no attempt at all? Ugh.
Maybe as soon as Carol got out beyond the borders of Kree space and out of reach of the UNTN, she ran smack into the Shi'ar. Then when she turned around and tried a different direction, all she could find was whole galaxies infested with the Symbiote Hive. When she tried yet again she met some silver bloke on a surf board who assured her that everything in that direction stretching back 13 billion lightyears had already been chomped by Galactus. By the time she ran into the Phalanx, it would have been pretty clear that the Milkyway is in the eye of a storm of unpleasantness and any attempt to move a refugee population through any of it is doomed to fail, and there's no way to even know if any safe harbour even exists on the other side.
Yup, any of those explanations would've served well, even in general terms for the mainstream audience but enough details for comic fans to go "Oh! I know who or what Carol ran into! Great set up for further down the line..."
But nope. Nothing.