![]() ![]() ![]() If anything, it is a family drama writ large and taken to an absurd level. Despite an appearance by Iron Man and references to a plethora of past events and characters, The Vision has very little to do with the larger Marvel world, and it is this distance and its sincere exploration of its dark subject matter that allows it to surpass its genre by leaps and bounds. ![]() In fact, there is little to no heroism in it at all. The Vision is not a traditional "superhero" comic book. And from that moment on, everything goes downhill. Everything seems to be going well at first, until a villain unexpectedly drops in while Vision is away. Their children, created as teenagers, need to attend a local high school in order to learn how to work with humans, and Virginia is waiting to hear back about job opportunities in order to keep herself occupied. They move into a new house in the Virginia suburbs of Washington, D.C., where Vision works as a liaison to the President. ![]() The Vision, the Marvel superhero and "synthezoid" who has spent years fighting alongside the Avengers (saving the world no less than 37 times by his own estimation), has chosen to create a family in order to continue his quest of becoming "normal." He crafts a wife named Virginia in the same way he himself was created (using the brainwaves from a human), and by combining the two of their brainwave patterns (remember, it's comics), they also bring forth their twin children, Vin and Viv. ![]()
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