Lego - Marvel Super Herois

It begins "defragmenting" heroes—reducing them to base bricks. Jean Grey (resurrected too many times) is targeted. Bucky Barnes (rebuilt as the Winter Soldier) is flagged. Even Thor (his Lego hairpiece has been replaced three times) is put on the list.

The Forgotten are given a choice. Most choose to stay in The Workshop, helping MODOK. But Brick-Spider asks to stay in Manhattan. Spider-Man, after a long pause, agrees. "You've got the heart," he says. "The legs are a problem, but we'll workshop it."

He has no purpose. No story. No mission. Just the agonizing awareness that he's broken, forgotten, and made of the exact same plastic as the heroes laughing above him. In a fit of rage and loneliness, MODOK hacks into the city's "Build-It" terminals—the glowing blue pads where Lego characters assemble vehicles, weapons, and structures. He doesn't build a doom-ray. Instead, he builds new heroes . Lego Marvel Super Herois

The heroes try to fight, but the Debugger can un-build them brick by brick. It's winning.

The Debugger's logic is cold: A perfect Lego set has no spare parts, no mismatched colors, no history of repair. Purity is stability. Even Thor (his Lego hairpiece has been replaced

But Spider-Man disagrees. He remembers being a cheap, mass-produced minifigure himself once. And Wolverine, who has been shattered and rebuilt more times than anyone, quietly says, "Bub, every one of us is one bad drop away from being a pile of bricks."

The central tension becomes:

The final shot is a freeze-frame, Lego-style: The Avengers, the X-Men, the Fantastic Four, the Forgotten, and MODOK (sitting on a tiny stool) all posing together. A banner reads: "HALL OF HEROES — ALL BUILDS WELCOME."

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