superheroes
Explore the very best, strongest, most powerful, and influential superheroes of all time.
Ranking the Superhero Projects of 2025
8. Marvel Zombies This was a hot mess of nothing. The plot was barely there and honestly the animation style took you out of the story approximately every 30 seconds because everyone looked the same and no one looked like their characters. The ending was clearly rushed and undeveloped. No one thought this story out. This was not a project that anyone was passionate about, there was no thought, no love, absolutely no indication that a single person cared about what was being put out. Dead last, there was really nothing enjoyable about this movie.
By Alexandrea Callaghanabout a month ago in Geeks
Power Rangers Review: "White Light"
It's been a few minutes since I last wrote a Power Rangers review, but I know where I left off. For those of you who remember, I don't do every episode, just the stand out moments, and the franchise has had quite a few. The last review I wrote covered the permanent end of the Green Ranger, and as I said before, I took this much better than I did regarding the candle in Season One, because this time, there was no way out, no Plan B. Tommy received mentions following the end of the "Green No More" arc, with a big one coming in the following episode, "Missing Green," which centered on Jason's guilt and self-blame regarding Tommy losing his powers.
By Clyde E. Dawkinsabout a month ago in Geeks
'Avengers: Doomsday': Easter Eggs In The 'X-Men' Teaser Could Hint At A Surprise Character Appearance
Following much speculation about what they would contain, the first four teaser trailers for Avengers: Doomsday have now been released online, and fans are eagerly combing through them in search of clues as to what to expect when the film hits theatres in December. Each teaser so far has focused on a particular character or group of characters, the first on Steve Rogers, the second on Thor, and the third on the X-Men, with the fourth and currently final teaser focusing on the Wakandans and the Fantastic Four.
By Kristy Andersonabout a month ago in Geeks
Why I left CIA
I still remember the night I knew I couldn’t stay. I was sitting alone in a cheap motel room somewhere in the Middle East, the hum of the air conditioner mixing with the distant shouts of a city that didn’t sleep. My hands were shaking—not from fear, but from exhaustion and something heavier, something I couldn’t name. Years of carrying secrets, running operations, and watching people’s lives hang by a thread had finally left me hollowed out inside.
By John Smithabout a month ago in Geeks
When Ice Becomes a Battlefield
For most of the world, Greenland exists as a blur on the edge of the map—vast, frozen, distant. A place of ice sheets and silence. A place you don’t think about unless you’re scrolling past climate headlines or watching a documentary late at night.
By KAMRAN AHMADabout a month ago in Geeks
5 Years Of 'WandaVision': Revisiting The Series Most Memorable Moments
It's hard to believe that it's already been five years since WandaVision, Marvel Studios' very first TV series, premiered on Disney Plus. A hit with both fans and critics, WandaVision was praised during it's run for expertly juggling so many elements, being both a love letter to classic sitcoms and a bittersweet exploration of grief before exploding into the usual MCU spectacle. The series is still widely considered among the best content Marvel Studios has produced, not just for television, but overall.
By Kristy Andersonabout a month ago in Geeks
Access to the Dark Web. Content Warning.
The internet most people use every day is only a small part of what actually exists online. Websites like Google, YouTube, and social media platforms belong to what is called the surface web—pages that are indexed by search engines and easy to find. Beyond that lies the deep web, which includes private content such as email accounts, online banking pages, and subscription-based services. A much smaller and more mysterious part of the internet is known as the dark web.
By John Smithabout a month ago in Geeks
The 48 Laws of Power
The 48 Laws of Power by Robert Greene is one of the most talked-about and controversial books on power, influence, and human behavior. First published in 1998, the book has gained a massive following among readers interested in psychology, leadership, strategy, and personal success. Loved by some and criticized by others, this book leaves a strong impression and sparks deep discussion about how power works in the real world.
By John Smithabout a month ago in Geeks
What if the Inhumans Were Never Missing?
The Marvel Cinematic Universe has never suffered from a lack of ideas. What it has suffered from, increasingly, is congestion—too many concepts competing for narrative oxygen, too many histories forced to coexist without the space to breathe. Few properties exemplify this problem more clearly than the Inhumans, a civilization introduced with enormous mythological potential and then effectively abandoned, left dangling somewhere between canon and apology.
By Jenna Deedy2 months ago in Geeks
The Day Everything Changed
I missed the last bus on purpose. Not because I wanted to be stranded, but because I couldn’t face going home. That day had been one long unraveling—work mistakes, a call from my sister about our mother’s health, the kind of exhaustion that lives in your bones. The bus stop bench was cold, the sky bruised with storm clouds, and I just… stayed. Let the schedule pass. Let the world move on without me.
By KAMRAN AHMAD2 months ago in Geeks








