Thread:Nausiated/@comment-3406131-20161122175750/@comment-24867796-20170624141249

Nausiated wrote:

As for if it can be considered cannon or not, that is a matter of opinion. The Chronology Project is semi-official in the same way as the Unofficial Appendix is. I find that the lines are getting blurred a bit.

Examples:

Adventures of Captain America was long said to be not part of continuity. However, - featured Saurespritze as the primary villain in flashbacks. Also, Cynthia Glass (who also appeared in Adventures of Captain America) later appeared in -.

Well, I've just finished reading Steve Rogers: Super Soldier, and I still think that Adventures of Captain America is not canonical: in fact, the death of Cynthia Glass (shown in a flashback in ) is compleatly different than the one in. In SR:SS #3, we have Cynthia killed by an unnamed Nazi soldier, and her body is taken by Steve, who wears the classic suit with round shield; in AoCA #4, Cynthia is killed by the Red Skull, and her body falls to the ground, with Captain America (wearing the original suit which appeared in and the triangular shield) watching the scene without doing anything.

Maybe Ed Brubaker liked the character of Cynthia Glass and decided to use her even in the canonical history of Steve Rogers, since he knew that Adventures was not considered canonical... What do you think about this? :)

Since I haven't read She-Hulk, I don't know if Saurespritze's appearance recalled the events of Adventures, but I will try to search those issues.