Thread:Michalbr10/@comment-2073099-20190802172112/@comment-2073099-20190816174245

Hi I have since realised why you became confused with Marvel Time. You said ‘No, because: 15 - 2019 14 - 2018 (...) 1 - 2003.’ I understand you now. I have found the article you are referring to: Glossary:Sliding_Timescale Its says this passage of "one year" does not follow the Gregorian calendar from January 1 to December 31. It simply explains what I have been saying in a similar way. So it is not a mismatch. Gregorian means CALENDAR YEAR. So this is only an anniversary, like counting someone’s birthdays. So I am correct. Some people seem to think that the latest issues must be set in the current year. i.e. 2019. And that the previous years are compressed. This is wrong. I had the same idea myself years ago. It is not practical. It does not work. This ONLY works for people who ONLY read the LATEST stories. For them that is ok. However this is biased towards the latest stories. What about the older stories? If the ‘Modern Era’ continually moves forward then the ‘Pre-Modern Era’ has to stretch. The Modern era can NOT keep moving forward because there are old people in some stories that were young adults in World War 2. We need to consider how people age in ALL the stories, NOT just the latest. So the Modern era MUST always remain close to World War 2. The simple solution is to keep the Millenium at the millennium, as I have already explained. So the sliding timescale slides forward in the 20th century and backwards in the 21st century. We have already had a discussion about Marvel time many years ago and that is the best solution. No one is complaining. The Modern era and Marvel time is full of problems anyway and people just want to know what order to read the stories in. Your English is very good. I hope this makes sense now.