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1!!The following have their own pages:
2[[index]]
3* TheArtifact/TheDCU
4* TheArtifact/MarvelUniverse
5[[/index]]
6----
7!!Other Comics
8* ''ComicBook/ArchieComics'':
9** [[CloudCuckooLander Jughead's]] beanie. Back in the forties it was quite common for kids to take old fedora hats and cut them into these crowns, and a boy Jughead's age wearing one basically meant he was a bit immature. Nowadays it's a one-of-a-kind trademark. Even the more modern ''ComicBook/ArchieComics2015'' reboot keeps it, though at least it showed that Jughead wore a fedora before his family went from RichesToRags.
10** This was played straight for the longest time with Archie's [[TheAllegedCar 1916 Ford Model T jalopy]], but finally averted in issue #238 of ''ComicBook/LifeWithArchieTheMarriedLife'' when his jalopy is permanently destroyed and replaced with the more modern Ford Mustang ([[StatusQuoIsGod that's still a piece of crap]]).
11** Pop Tate's Choklit Shoppe, a soda shop, has been [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] as a hopeless anachronism for decades. There have been attempts to update it such as remodeling it as a independent fast food joint in the 1970s/80s and a internet cafe in the 1990s.
12* The most oddball example has to be ''ComicBook/SuperDuck''. He started out as a superhero, as his name suggests, but after three issues, he became a lederhosen-wearing average duck sharing misadventures with his nephew Fauntleroy and girlfirend Uwanna, all while still going by the name "Super Duck". A short-lived revival in TheNineties restored him back to "the Cockeyed Wonder" he was originally intended to be. But when he returned again in 'A Night at the Comic Book Shop', he reverted back to the lederhosen-wearing average duck depiction.
13* ''ComicBook/SpirouAndFantasio'':
14** Spirou wears the costume (or at least nowadays the hat) of a hotel groom / elevator operator. The [[OutdatedOutfit costume is painfully out of date]], but so integral to the character, even when he's wearing more modern attire, pieces of it keep showing up (usually the hat).
15** Spoofed in ''ComicBook/LePetitSpirou'', where he wears it as a ''young boy''. So do his mom and dad. It's a family tradition.
16* ''ComicBook/SonicTheHedgehogArchieComics'':
17** This started to happen with the Freedom Fighters in Archie's ''Sonic The Hedgehog'' series. In fact, for a time, they'd been dropped almost entirely while the comic focused on Sonic and Tails during their World Tour arc. Other characters seemed to fade from prominence and exit the story entirely, but the Freedom Fighters seemed to cling on because they were there from the beginning. However, with Ian Flynn taking over as writer, a lot of the artifact characters are getting repurposed, given expanded roles and more nuance.
18** Another artifact was the series' focus on the rebel war between the Freedom Fighters and Dr. Robotnik. Though Robotnik was KilledOffForReal in issue #50, 25 issues later, the series hit its inevitable StatusQuoIsGod with the good doctor's return, albeit with an AlternateSelf of Robotnik who had actually existed in the continuity long before this point and went by Robo-Robotnik before taking on the Dr. Eggman name. Over a hundred issues later? Robotnik's empire is in ruins after a series of numerous defeats. By then, he isn't even the master of it anymore, having gone insane and deposed by his nephew [[TheStarscream Snively]] and his new gal-pal, the Iron Queen.
19** As a result of being a long-running title, many of its elements, characters and settings in are remnants of the American ''Sonic'' media and lore from back when the comic originated. For instance, being originally based on ''WesternAnimation/SonicTheHedgehogSatAM'', the comic was said to take place on Mobius, just like the [=DiC=] ''Sonic'' cartoons from back then. And some elements and names come from the early American continuity from the games. These days the games follow the original Japanese continuity worldwide, which resulted in some of these elements being scrapped. Archie has generally tried to keep up with the games (ie: renaming Floating Island to Angel Island, making the characters closer to their game incarnations, etc.), but as they can't move the whole cast to another planet, the comics were (until a CosmicRetcon did away with it) the only adaptation that still used Mobius. Similarly, many characters that are still featured in the title (the aforementioned Freedom Fighters being the most notable and prominent ones) come from the [=DiC=] ''Sonic'' cartoons from back then and, as the comic became closer to the games, they felt increasingly out of place.
20** Sonic's romance with Sally (and several other female characters) is an artifact from prior to Sonic being established as a CelibateHero in the games. In the games, Sonic avoids romance and his relationships with girls are limited to only occasional ShipTease. However, by the time this was revealed the comics had already given him a girlfriend as well as a few other love interests. Sonic stayed flirtatious until the CosmicRetcon, which reversed his relationship with Sally to strictly platonic.
21** For most of the run, the characters ages matched the ages given in ''[=SatAM=]'' and other western media. They couldn't be changed without a {{retcon}}, so they stayed that way until the CosmicRetcon. Thus, Tails was ten-going-on-eleven instead of his standard age of eight. This created trouble with Charmy. The American manual for ''Knuckles Chaotix'' listed him as a teenager so the comics made him a teen with a girlfriend. ''Sonic Heroes'' finally gave Charmy an official age in Japan: ''six''. To combine the two, Charmy in the comics received a brain injury that made him act like a little kid.
22** Julie Su is Knuckles' main LoveInterest and girlfriend. This caused some issues when the games introduced Rouge as a character that Knuckles routinely has ShipTease with.
23** The comic's portrayal of echidnas, including the reveal that Knuckles is not the last echidna, predates ''VideoGame/SonicAdventure'''s introduction of Knuckles' tribe.
24* ''ComicBook/OrientMen'' was originally basically a superhero parody, who battled crooks and giant apes and ghosts. Then the comic switched to more eclectic humor and plotline, and though Orient Men still wore his superhero cape and [[{{Flight}} flew around]], his "superhero" status became more and more ignored.
25* ''ComicBook/MortadeloYFilemon'' were originally a pair of detectives, with Filemón being the self-important boss and Mortadelo being the incompetent subordinate who would mess things up in every strip. Two decades later, they moved to an agency working as regular employees with the same responsibilities. Despite this, Mortadelo keeps calling Filemón "Boss", because it had already become his second name.
26* Creator/ImageComics started off with a ClicheStorm of NinetiesAntiHero comics such as ''ComicBook/{{Spawn}}'', ''ComicBook/{{Witchblade}}'', and ''ComicBook/YoungbloodImageComics''. Around the turn of the century, Image [[GrowingTheBeard decided to diversify its output]], and largely phased out such stories in favor of independent comics like ''ComicBook/TheWalkingDead'', with the comparatively light ''ComicBook/{{Invincible}}'' being one of their few major superhero efforts. Nonetheless, many of the books created by founders who haven't left still stick around, despite being completely out of place on Image's current lineup; ''ComicBook/SavageDragon'' is even ''[[LongRunners still]]'' written and drawn by Erik Larsen. Image mostly keeps these books out of the public eye, only drawing attention to them for special issues like anniversaries.
27* A few G1-based Franchise/{{Transformers}} comics series set in modern times still keep the classic alt modes of the Transformers. Iconic characters like Blaster (other than maybe in a hipster's hand, where would you see a tape deck boombox anymore) and Optimus Prime (it's incredibly rare to see a 1980 Arcliner tractor trailer still on the road) particularly stand out.
28** For some Transformers series, having alternate modes (cars, jets, etc) as a means of disguise is treated as an artifact. In ''Anime/TransformersEnergon'' transforming into alt mode is used almost exclusively for driving (yes, driving) through outer space. The [[ComicBook/TheTransformersIDW IDW comics]] have varied, depending on if the stories were set on Earth or set in space. [[ComicBook/TheTransformersMoreThanMeetsTheEye More recent comics]] set in space even lampshade the pointlessness of alt modes- some of the main characters go through the entire series wihout ever transforming on-panel, and more only do so once or twice. Of course, alt modes will always remain, [[MerchandiseDriven for obvious reasons]].
29** It's especially strange in the 2010s ''Robots in Disguise'' series. As it's a sequel to ''Prime,'' the world has long known who and what the Transformers are and treating their existence as this big secret makes ''no'' sense.
30* ''ComicBook/DisneyDucksComicUniverse'': Donald Duck's uncle Scrooge [=McDuck=] usually wears a top hat and spats that were considered a very elegant and high class accessory until about [=WW2=]. Even by the time Scrooge [=McDuck=] was created in 1947, they were already on their way out. Usually worn only by the very rich on gala occasions, spats and top hat signaled [=McDuck=]'s wealth and position in society (as well as his advanced age). Now neither accessory is used by practically anybody however dandy-ish, and they've been out of fashion for so long that younger readers might not get the original meaning. And yet the hat and spats are such an iconic part of Scrooge [=McDuck=]'s image. Of course, a BornInTheWrongCentury look isn't out-of-character for Scrooge either, and the canon timeline of the Ducks stories as laid down by Barks and used by Rosa has most of Scrooge's life being in the late 19th/early 20th centuries, with his canonical death being in the 1960s.
31** His pince-nez glasses may be also included in this trope.
32** Creator/DonRosa eventually provided a HandWave in ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcduck'', where Scrooge initially buys a fairly spiffy and modern(ish) suit after cementing his status as a millionaire, only to get pelted by tomatoes on returning to his native Scotland. Realizing there's not much point to ''trying'' to look rich, he gets the "classic" suit at a local bric-and-brac.
33** And while we're on the subject, how about that money bin? Back in the 40s and 50s, the U.S. dollar was still attached to the gold standard. This meant that physically holding on to vast amounts of gold and paper currency made at least some sense. But in the early 70s, the U.S. dropped the gold standard and also, nowadays, with the widespread use of [[TechnologyMarchesOn fiat money, electronic money and credit]], hoarding all that humongous tangible wealth in one vault practically makes no financial sense. Again, [[JustifiedTrope justified]] at the end of ''The Life and Times of Scrooge [=McDuck=]'', where Scrooge explains to his nephews that the vast majority of his wealth is tied up in business across the world; the physical money in the bin is merely what he's earned through his own hard work and adventures.
34* ''ComicBook/SonicTheComic'' had Mobius as an artifact in the final arc, based off of ''VideoGame/SonicAdventure''. ''Adventure'' takes place on Earth alongside humans, however the comic explicitly took place on an alien planet called "Mobius" where humans weren't native. As a result, ''Adventure'' is ''very loosely'' adapted in ''Sonic the Comic'' and many elements were AdaptedOut.
35* ''ComicBook/{{Diabolik}}'': In Clerville, death sentences are executed via guillotine the early issues, when the story was supposed to be set in France). Every time Diabolik is arrested, the police needs only to file the paperwork to try and behead him, as when he was sentenced to death, and not even an abolitionist lawyer appealing on his behalf could change it. Actually beheading him, on the other hand, is quite complicated...
36* In IDW's 2005 ''[[ComicBook/HasbroComicUniverse Transformers]]'' books, it was initially intended that Arcee was the only female Cybertronian, and was the result of a forcible MadScientist's experiment [[BeingTorturedMakesYouEvil that drove her violently insane]]. Fan reception to the idea was roundly negative, not only for [[MenAreGenericWomenAreSpecial its offensive connotations]] and [[VoodooShark not making much sense,]] but also because it seemingly made it impossible for female characters besides Arcee to exist (and if they would, they'd have to share Arcee's crappy origin and psychosis). Future writers decided to declare that female Cybertronians besides Arcee did indeed exist, with a variety of origins--some of whom were simply created as female due to their colonies progressing in a different fashion, others modified themselves in a manner approximating [[UsefulNotes/{{Transgender}} human transgenderism]]. But Arcee kept her origin to the end, albeit with a few retcons to make it somewhat more palatable, and while her violent attitude was downplayed through CharacterDevelopment, it still made her stick out quite a bit compared to [[TheHeart Arcee's standard take]].
37
38!!Multiple Media
39* In the superhero genre, the SecretIdentity trope often exists as an artifact, used whether or not it makes sense for the individual hero in question. Many early superheroes had secret identities pretty much because Franchise/{{Superman}} had one, and [[FollowTheLeader if he did it, that must be a trope worth copying]]. Notably, many adaptations and "new" incarnations of superhero characters either dispense with the SecretIdentity altogether or use it, but have it known to a large number of friends and family:
40** Reading Franchise/WonderWoman's early [[MediaNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfComicBooks Golden Age]] stories, one gets the distinct impression the standard "secret identity protection" tropes are used mostly due to the [[FollowTheLeader "Superman does it"]] school of ExecutiveMeddling. The tropes are there, but usually dealt with in a perfunctory manner, and you can practically sense that writer William Moulton Marston is bored with them and eager to move on to the fun stuff. Notably, apart from sheer physical strength, Diana Prince is almost indistinguishable from Wonder Woman—extremely smart and capable, and recognized as a top counter-intelligence agent in her own right. Most recent incarnations of Wonder Woman have dispensed with Diana Prince altogether.
41** In [[MediaNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks Silver Age]] ''ComicBook/IronMan'' stories, it often seems like keeping his identity a secret causes Tony Stark more problems than it solves. At the very least, it seems like letting his fanatically loyal employees Happy Hogan and Pepper Potts in on the secret would be a good idea. [[Film/IronMan The movies]] dispensed with any notion of a secret identity by the end of the first one.
42** Many modern writers have found [[ComicBook/TheMightyThor Thor's]] "Dr. Donald Blake" secret identity to be dispensable (the only supporting cast member Blake had was Jane Foster, and she was considered a lot less interesting than the Asgardians; indeed, even Creator/StanLee and Creator/JackKirby had her PutOnABus eventually), and it's only used in [[Film/{{Thor}} the 2011 movie]] as a brief ContinuityNod. The only use Blake has had in years is a weird, separate persona to Thor in JMS' run, and even there he was more of a plot device than anything else.
43** The Jaime Reyes ComicBook/BlueBeetle is an example of a more modern approach to the secret identity. In his 2006-2009 series, he ''technically'' had a secret identity, but his close friends and immediate family were all [[SecretKeeper in on the secret]]. Curiously, the 2011 ComicBook/New52 relaunch took a more "classical" approach to the secret identity, as the Blue Beetle armor physically prevents Jaime from revealing his secret identity to others.
44** ComicBook/CaptainAmerica. Why would the government devote significant money and resources to create an elite special forces symbol of America in the largest war in its history, only to hide him out as a buck private? Not only would this [[CannonFodder risk getting him killed in combat taking some stupid bridge]], but it also forced him to make up some lame excuse every time he needed to slip away for a real mission. As with Thor and Iron Man, [[Film/CaptainAmericaTheFirstAvenger the 2011 movie]] dispensed with the secret identity altogether.
45*** Another serious artifact to deal with Cap is [[ComicBook/BuckyBarnes Bucky]]. While ComicBook/{{Robin}} can be explained as Batman's apprentice at best and part of Batman's eccentricities at worst, Captain America is an agent for the US military, which makes Bucky a ChildSoldier operating with their knowledge. Today in the comics, Bucky is largely treated as a [[OlderThanHeLooks remarkably young looking]] agent who started with Cap at 15 years old (really young, but not unprecedented at that time), and was a 19-year-old (and thus of an entirely legal age) by 1945 and existed to basically perform black ops duties that Cap couldn't -- this also made him a highly skilled soldier and thus it made sense why he, well, survived fighting alongside Cap for as long as he did. The film, ''Film/CaptainAmericaTheFirstAvenger'', avoids the issue entirely by making Bucky Steve Rogers' contemporary in age who just looks like a kid compared to Steve after his Project Rebirth enhancements.
46** They are even beginning to apply this to ''Franchise/{{Batman}},'' of all people. With Batman (as of mid-2011) franchising out his name, a public awareness that maybe he's more than one guy, and the fact that Wayne has publicly admitted to funding Batman, the response when someone says, "Bruce Wayne is Batman," tends to be, "So?" As many of his enemies (including Ra's al-Ghul, Bane, the Black Glove, Riddler, and possibly Joker) know his identity, and all of his close friends and family tend to be badass in their own right, his secret ID is getting pointless.
47*** This was especially ludicrous at the character's start, when he had no supporting cast but Alfred, who would have been well-protected in Stately Wayne Manor even when Batman was away.
48*** There's also the fact that Bruce is probably one of very few fantastically wealthy people in a certain age range that saw his parents murdered before his eyes as a child. He'd be at the top of any short list of Batman candidates.
49*** This is probably why 90s and 00s Batman writers tended to refer to Batman as [[SecretIdentityIdentity the "real" identity]] and Wayne as the mask, since that era's Batman tended to only use Wayne publicly as part of a greater plan. After the success of ''Film/TheDarkKnightTrilogy'', the push has gone closer to Wayne being the real person.
50** This actually gets [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] in ''ComicBook/UltimateSpiderMan''. Over the course of the 100+ issues, every member of his Rogue Gallery, and damn near every supporting character learned that Peter was Spider-Man. After his death, Flash Thompson, who is sitting alone in a classroom, questions if he was the only person who ''didn't'' know.
51* The idea that superheroes [[ThouShaltNotKill never kill their enemies]] is a carryover from MediaNotes/TheComicsCode. During this time in MediaNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks, it was mandated that the heroes couldn't kill their enemies because they were supposed to be writing for children.[[note]]Even then, some heroes, most notably Franchise/{{Batman}}, were mandated to never kill their enemies ''before'' the Silver Age even began, with the Comics Code simply spreading it to the other heroes.[[/note]] As the years passed, when the code waned in effect before eventually being dropped entirely, there was no restriction against heroes killing. However, the idea that heroes don't kill was so ingrained in the public consciousness that it formed the idea of what a superhero is, and thus, it remained long after. Also, it's a convenient way to ensure a hero's RoguesGallery stays around. The full implications of this have been explored many, ''many'' times.

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