Board Thread:Administrative/@comment-61022-20170426203615/@comment-1895174-20170427015750

2) There is a call for it. If they didn't, other users wouldn't be creating "reading order" pages. Readers are certainly interested otherwise these sorts of things would not be compiled. As for editors, it's something that intermediate editors have been able to do. There's a difference between compiling a reading order for issues and intricately detailing the exact order in which panels and pages across different comics take place. Does this solve any problem that simply stating issues take place concurrently doesn't already properly address? Is there really anyone out there who needs a tool to tell them exactly when to jump from one comic to the other and back again on the off chance they have all of them open in front of them at the same time? 3) As for prohibitively complicated... How? Anyone who does the proper research can do this. There are the last run of the Official Marvel Index that does this for pretty well every major character up to Siege. Then there is the Chronology Project website (which is semi-official since the chronology people were hired by Marvel to do the official indexes), then there are countless areas you can verify the order of appearances. The proper research is a lot to ask for if you don't have those other concurrent issues on hand. And it's all for minutiae. I don't understand why we should add another layer of things to do on a page for minimal gain when so much of what is already needed isn't getting done.