Board Thread:Administrative/@comment-3406131-20140422203132/@comment-3406131-20140430060829

GrnMarvl14 wrote: Really, the only reason I'd consider them an exception is because they WERE a legal partnership in the comics, and it did later expand to include more. It's equivocal to the law firm of Nelson & Murdock, which (if it doesn't in some capacity) could have its own page. Even a long-standing duo like Cloak and Dagger are just...partners. It's a bit like having pages for married couples.

Facebook did it. Sooooooorry. =) (Well to be fair we have a page about the weddings.

Same goes for X-Factor Investigations, who is a legal business. But the problem is the formal characteristic of a team lose its defining powers with government or corporate teams: It is obvious (in my opinion) that Freedom Force, or the past and present X-Factor are/were formal groups but teams within organizations, while the fist X-Factor was a team (of mutants) posing as an organization/team (of mutants hunters). I get the need of a distinction but it seems hard to keep it for me.

But as most of the admins are for keeping the distinction, work for me.

GrnMarvl14 wrote: As for allies/enemies, it's not a bad idea at all, but you run the risk of both of those being filled to the brim and being absolutely massive. Think of the number of enemies Spider-Man has had. And the allies (think of an entry in that field for just about every issue of every Spider-Man Team-Up comic). A character like Falcon could largely be manageable, but Spider-Man? Wolverine? Captain America?

It's a good idea, it really is, but it's one of those "think of the hell you'll unleash" ideas.

Yep, that's what I thought.