Winners and Losers of Comic-Con 2024: Marvel Stuns, DC Dips, Video Game Actors Strike
San Diego Comic-Con 2024 was (mostly) a return to normal. With a few baffling caveats.
Studios brought big presentations to Hall H, the local night life was booming, and fans packed the halls and rooms of the convention center day after day.
At the same time, what was supposed to be a post-strike SDCC serendipitously wasnât, as SAG-AFTRA went on strike against major video game companies on the first day of the con. Meanwhile, some major studios still stayed away while Marvel, making an expected triumphant return, still managed to drop a huge unexpected shocker.
Read on to see who won and who lost during yet another wild week at San Diego Comic-Con.
Winner: Marvel
TheWrap
After a brutal 2023 that saw both âAnt-Man and the Wasp: Quantumaniaâ and âThe Marvelsâ flop, not to mention some other, ahem, problems the studio has faced, Marvel Studios needed a big win coming into to SDCC. Mission accomplished.
Despite very mid critical reviews, âDeadpool & Wolverine,â which hit theaters just as Comic-Con began, shattered opening weekend box office records for R-rated movies.
Meanwhile, Marvel Studios hit up Hall H twice this week, first to celebrate the success of âDeadpool & Wolverineâ on Thursday night, which was followed by a spectacular light show above downtown San Diego.
Two days later, Marvelâs traditional Saturday night Hall H panel earned goodwill with looks at âCaptain America: Brave New World,â âFantastic Four: First Stepsâ and âThunderbolts.â Then came the expected announcement of the Russo Brothersâ MCU return to direct the next two âAvengersâ movies, followed by the news that the new MCU main villain will be Doctor Doom.
But then the presentation ended with the shocking reveal that newly minted Oscar winner Robert Downy Jr. is also returning to the MCU â as Doom. The announcement earned booming cheers from the audience, but will it work long term? We donât know but itâs all anyoneâs been talking about ever since.
Loser (kinda): Marvel
Via Duncan Black on Bluesky
Ok, ok âloserâ is overstating things, but weâd be remiss if we didnât acknowledge that literally everyone understands the context in which RDJ is returning to the franchise he helped make into a billion-dollar business.
So itâs perhaps unsurprising that reactions on social media are, letâs say politely, filled with heavy skepticism and a ton of jokes. That said, yeah, fine, we still kind of canât wait.
Winner: Star Trek
Photo by Ross Lincoln for TheWrap
Look, we admittedly bleed federation colors, so weâre biased, but nevertheless, âStar Trekâ brought some of the best stuff we saw this year at Comic-Con.
The âStar Trek Universeâ panel was, per usual, only topped by Marvel in terms of fan enthusiasm, and frankly it was a ton more fun since a big part of it involves the fans and the stars interacting. The panel showed off looks at the next seasons of âStrange New Worldsâ and âStar Trek: Lower Decksâ (which definitely deserves a 6th season) plus looks at âStarfleet Academyâ and âSection 31â â and the first-ever live action âStar Trekâ comedy being developed by Justin Simien and Tawny Newsome.
But the Paramount+ booth, where the âStar Trek Menagerieâ lived, was our favorite. The fake zoo highlighted some of the weirdest creatures from the history of âTrek,â culiminating in the chance for fans to take a photo as part of the Humans exhibit. It was great. No notes.
Loser: Whoever pulled the fire alarm on Friday
Itâs rare that a comic-con panel gets interrupted by anything other than a surprise appearance or a bit. But alas, it happened on Friday around 1:30pm when the entire convention center was briefly thrown into a state of confusion when the fire alarms inside went off.
Indeed, panels were cleared out, but quickly restarted when it became clear that there was no emergency, someone had just pulled the alarm. It was an uncool move that became even more uncool when, later that night at one of the activations downtown, a real fire broke out and, in part because of the earlier fakeout, few people believed it was real.
So, to whoever hit that fire alarm earlier in the day, we say this as somewhat kindly as we can: Youâre a loser.
Winner: âThe Penguinâ Iceberg Lounge Experience
HBO
The Iceberg Lounge was among the better activations at the convention, bringing Oz Cobblepotâs secret nightclub and speakeasy to life.
Upon entering, fans were treated to a fake-but-felt-real elevator ride down a few floors, and welcomed into a typical nightclub. But, as you wandered around the area, there were a few side quests you could complete, which would earn you the password to a door guarded by a security guard. Behind that door was a quieter room, in which you could get an airbrushed tattoo, a hand-rolled cigar and/or some permanent jewelry.
All in all, it captured the criminal vibe of The Penguinâs operations in a pretty fun way (once you figured out that there were games to be played).
Loser: People who attended the press preview for âThe Penguinâ Iceberg Lounge activation
Ross A. Lincoln for TheWrap
That fire we mentioned above? That took place at a building on Fourth Street, just next door to where the Iceberg Lounge experience was held. As a result, those inside â largely members of the press, as it was a preview slot â were abruptly herded out midway through the activation.
The irony is, those in attendance largely thought the evacuation was part of the experience, as if The Penguinâs club was getting raided by the police or discovered by Batman. It wasnât until roughly six firetrucks and four police cars rolled up that it became clear the emergency was real this time.
Not the ideal way to end the experience. Thankfully no one was hurt, and the Iceberg Lounge reopened after about two hours.
Winner: Lego
White Vader at the 2024 SDCC Lego Booth
Life size R2D2 at the 2024 SDCC Lego booth
Legoâs booth this year was built around their current Space line, and what else is there to say except it was glorious to behold and and also fun. Fans could view displays of various new sets â and see huge âStar Warsâ themed builds â or spend some time building their own rockets, which could then be displayed in the booth. We wonât lie, we love Lego regardless, but this was one of the companyâs best SDCC showings.
Loser: Cosplayers
To be clear, at no point do we ever consider cosplayers losers for the quality of their work. The costumes seen on the show floor and around downtown San Diego each year are always incredible.
But this year, there were justâŠless to be seen. We might chalk that up to the horrendous humidity that plagued the city through most of the weekend. And as a result, those who did dress up this year were almost certainly miserable walking around town.
Cosplayers, we love you. You just lost the lottery of Mother Nature.
Winner: Local businesses
In 2023, perhaps as a side effect of studios largely staying away from San Diego thanks to the Hollywood strikes, nighttime activity in the downtown restaurants and bars closest to the convention center was vastly diminished. Not so in 2024. From our perspective, things in the Gaslamp District were as busy as ever, which surely must have been welcome news for local businesses.
Loser: Warner Bros. Discovery (for the second year in a row!)
Once again, for reasons we donât understand, WBD chose not to promote any of its upcoming films at SDCC 2024.
Traditionally the studioâs big Comic-Con centerpiece is a huge Saturday morning Hall H panel showing off not just DC Comics-based films but other blockbusters too. Not this time.
No âBeetlejuice Beetlejuice,â âJoker: Folie a Deuxâ or the animated âThe Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim.â Not even a look at âSuperman,â which has been filming since February.
To be sure, WBD still staked out that time slot in Hall H, but all the company brought was a video presentation and Q&A with the cast of The CWâs âSuperman & Lois,â which is headed into its final season.
âThe Penguinâ panel held later that day in Hall H was fun, and the studio also showed off âHarley Quinnâ and âKite Man: Hell Yeahâ during the week. And we enjoyed the Icerberg Lounge activation a lot. But WBDâs film division just sitting SDCC out again feels weird.
By contrast, Marvel doesnât even begin filming âFantastic Fourâ until next week, and it still brought a 5 minute clip presenting the characters and world to Hall H.
Winner: FX/Abbott Elementary
Disney brought both âThe Bearâ and âAbbott Elementaryâ to comic-con this year, putting up activations for both that fans could experience.
For âThe Bear,â naturally, the activation was a small restaurant, built to look like the place Carmy and his crew work. It was pretty cool, especially considering they gave away aprons. But it wasnât cooler than A.V.A Fest.
In honor of âAbbott Elementary,â an entire carnival was set up, recreating âA Very Abbott Festivalâ from the show â complete with a swing ride and a slide that ended in a ball pit. It was incredible just to look at, let alone play around in.
A+ on this one guys.
Loser: Video Game Companies
Photo by Andi Ortiz for TheWrap
After 18 months of negotiations, talks between SAG-AFTRA and several of the biggest video game companies broke down and the guild declared a strike, coincidentally on the first day of Comic-Con. That made the panel SAG-AFTRA already organized for video game voice actors one of the must-see events of the week.
Because of the timing, the guild exempted SDCC from the strike, which means the participating actors were free to talk about both their video game performances and the issues that led them to go on strike. Win-win, really.
Winner: Video Game Voice Actors
See above.
Loser: Sony Pictures
WBD wasnât the only major studio to opt out of bringing their end-of-year projects to comic-con. Sony Pictures has two superhero movies on the way this fall, with âKraven the Hunterâ and âVenom: The Last Dance.â
And yet, even with comic-con attendees being pretty much the exact target audience for those films, neither had any kind of panel or presentation. Why? That remains unclear.
And finally, Winner: Artists Alley
Last year, our Comic-Con postmortem examined the positive impact the Hollywood strike ended up having on the working classes of SDCC â the creators selling their creations in Artists Alley, who experienced a banner year as fans flocked to the floor since there were very few big movie and TV panels.
Weâre happy to report that while this year wasnât quite as big, every artist we spoke to reported helathy sales that while smaller than 2023 were still bigger than previous years. Good job, Comic-Con attendees.
Umberto Gonzalez contributed to this article.
Head here for all TheWrapâs coverage of San Diego Comic-Con 2024.