Maybe. I remember when the trailers for Quantumania came out, people noted the similarities between the design of Kang's tech and the ten rings, but little seemed to have come from it.
It's only been two years since
Shang-Chi. After
The Avengers introduced the Tesseract and Loki's scepter, it was three years before we learned about the Infinity Stones and three more years before they were brought together. True, we're getting more new stories per year these days, which is probably why people are expecting faster payoff, but there's no need to rush it.
I have big worries that the areas of the Multiverse saga which are seen as failures will be abandoned without any followup. Like, I think Eternals had issues, but it was unfairly maligned. I feel pretty certain though that there's no intent to follow up on the threads left dangling at the end of this movie (which pointedly did not end with a proper resolution) any time before Secret Wars.
Yeah, it would be a shame if they didn't follow through. But that's exactly why I'm troubled by this narrative that the MCU is somehow failing and needs to be modified. I just don't see how it's materially worse than before. It's not like it hasn't had its ups and downs before, but they stuck with the plan in spite of it. They didn't abandon Thor after
The Dark World. They brought back the Hulk and even the Abomination, eventually, despite
The Incredible Hulk being less than a (heh) smash.
The question then is, why make it within a shared universe if you don't intend to use that shared universe?
The question is, how do you define "use?" Again, story is not exclusively about plot. The elements of drama are plot, character, setting, and theme. Distinct stories can make use of shared characters, like Nick Fury or John Diggle or Q, and they can make use of a common background to inform their stories. The DCEU movies over the past few years have, I feel, done a nice job of using the setting of a shared superhero universe to inform their own individual plots and characters. The universe is there to serve the stories, not the other way around. Having a large, complex universe lets you enrich the individual stories by making them feel like part of something bigger, something that has a deeper texture and history.
Also, as I said, the point of a shared universe is to work on
both the holistic level and the individual level, to appeal to both those audiences invested in the whole and those who are only interested in one or two parts. If it's strong on both the individual level and the combined level, then it's not a fatal thing if the interconnections take a back seat, because the individual parts are still satisfying in and of themselves.
But I think any writer needs to ask "Why is this story in the MCU?" Just like some stories can't work within Trek due to the type of universe it is (nihilistic posthumanism, for example), some stories just can't work any longer within the MCU. For example, given aliens have been known to exist since the Battle of New York, stories centered around a conspiracy to keep the existence of aliens (in general) secret don't work.
Good, because I hate stories like that. The point of speculative fiction should be to explore how the world is changed by its fictional premise. Hiding it to maintain a "real-world" status quo is wasting the potential of the concept. Plus, given how much damage has been done to the world in recent years by political and business leaders perpetrating lies and coverups for their own ends, I've developed a distaste for stories about people trying to hide the truth from the public.
But I don't see what point you're trying to make here. Of course there are certain stories that work in one setting but not in others. How is that unusual or bad?
Or, more saliently, since there's a broad stable of superheroes who already are known to exist, any story that relies on one (and only one) of them to save the entire Earth will be really hard to pull off.
Depends on the context. Maybe they're the only one in a position to address it, e.g. the Ant-Wasp Family were the only ones in the Quantum Realm and in a position to stop Kang. Maybe it develops fast enough that they don't have time to call for backup. Anyway, this is an issue that shared-hero universes have always had to deal with. It's a credibility issue, yes, but it's hardly unique to the MCU, and it's hardly a deal-breaker.
It's not the same, because Batman is not only the star of the Batman movies, but has generally existed within self-contained Batman universes. Not only that, but Kang wasn't being set up as Ant-Man's nemesis, but explicitly as a threat to the entirety of the Avengers (whatever the hell they are now).
I don't see how either of those differences is relevant to this specific point. No analogy is intended to draw an
exact parallel between two different things, merely to focus on the one thing they have in common. The differences unrelated to the analogy don't matter.
I simply object to the facile and absurd notion that the only way to make a villain threatening is to have them kill the hero. Since when? Hell, the Joker appeared to die in most of his early stories. He lost over and over again, but he was still an effective villain. So why should it be any different for Kang?
I've also just grown to hate narratives that allow for victories without any real sacrifice/ramifications for the character going on.
That seems needlessly negative. Life doesn't have to be a zero-sum game, especially in heroic narratives. I mean, doesn't it cheapen the idea of a noble sacrifice if it has to happen in every single case? Doesn't it just become routine and ordinary then?
I think part of the problem some people, myself included, have been having with Multiverse Saga so far, is that there doesn't seem to be the kind of obvious arc going through the movies and shows like there was throughout pretty much every entry in Infinity Saga. Pretty much everything connected to the build up of the Avengers, or the set up of the Infinity Stones and the conflict with Thanos in the Infinity Saga, But with the Multiverse Saga there doesn't really seem to be the same kind of arc, we've seen different timelines and we've met three variants of Kang, but there's no obvious connections to any of this. All of the visits to alternate universes have been completely unrelated to each other, and all of the encounters with Kangs have been unconnected, with the characters not aware of his other variants. They keep telling us that all of it building up to something in The Kang Dynasty and Secret Wars, but it's not as clear how that's happening as it was in the Infinity Saga.
I just don't see why everything should need to be building to a single climax just because that's how it was done before. Why can't the MCU be allowed to change and do things differently?
And yeah, I'll agree the continuity threads they've been laying haven't been as efficiently woven together as they were before, but my point is that that's not the only thing that matters here. It doesn't have to take away from the merits of the individual movies and series as distinct works. I mean, yeah, it annoys me that
Eternals ended with that ridiculous business of the stone giant sticking out of the Earth and then being ignored, but that doesn't make the rest of the movie worthless. Because continuity ties and setups are just one part of storytelling, not the only part that matters. Audiences today have become overly preoccupied with continuity to the degree that they can't see the trees for the forest.