In reading the material again, starstruck may not be the right term. It may be more accurate to say that he's a little quick to defer to those with more experience. Or at least he was in his early days. The partial page below is from Marvel Two-In-One #84.
But as was often the case back then, it ultimately leads to Alpha Flight being given the "rub". Sort of. At the end of the book, Thing tells the team "Say, now that it's all over, I gotta say you guy really have it together...for a bunch of amateurs".
High praise indeed. Weird way to sell one of your properties, Marvel. But at least the possibilities of Guardian's suit are displayed a fair bit, including its ability to interrupt the effect of earth's gravity on the wearer.
Here's where we get another opportunity to flesh out Guardians' background somewhat. Around the time that the second volume of Alpha Flight was coming out, Marvel Comics had a "Flashback" event by which they released "-1" issues of their books. Alpha Flight received such treatment with a story specific to the events leading up to Mac and Heather's wedding.
Not surprisingly, Wolverine also had such an issue, and Mac and Heather appeared in that (briefly) as well. But don't take my word for it, let Stan Lee describe it.
Ha! That's neat!
There actually was a small window of time in which Wolverine was found and the Richards family became the Fantastic Four. Good job of working that in by writer Larry Hama. I guess turning into a rock monster also turned Ben Grimm into a prejudiced prick, but who knows what kind of effect gamma rays can have?
Back to Marvel 2-in-1 #84, Alpha Flight's Shaman also has a bit of a fanboy moment when he speculates that maybe one day, his team might meet the Fantastic Four. Before long, Sue Richards does pop up in Alpha Flight (first volume) #4 as does Namor, the SubMariner. Of course, polite Canadian that he is, Guardian makes sure to refer to Namor as "your highness", bless 'im. :-)
The two teams do meet much later during Alpha Flight's first run, in issues 93 and 94, while Guardian (using the Vindicator name again, if I recall correctly) is in the middle of his short-lived android phase.
I doubt that "era" is thought of fondly by Alpha Flight fans, but from a Guardian-specific perspective, there are at least some interesting tidbits within that two-issue storyline.
The story's villain, Headlok, has psionic abilities. Guardian is half man half machine and Headlok can sense this. As such, Headlok provides some insight while scanning Guardian's mind.
"What do you have to show me, James Mcdonald Hudson? Clean. Precise. Logical. Like the rubber man's mind, but even MORE structured. You see EVERYTHING in absolutes, James? How limiting. Even I pity you, your rigid, mathematical method of seeing life!"Not a bad way to work in a little character building in your stories by writer Fabian Nicieza. Why he chose to do away with Guardian again just half a year later, after seemingly putting in a certain amount of effort into explaining his personality, remains a mystery to me. If anyone has any info or suggestions in regards to that, I'm all ears.
"Peeking into your mind is like looking under the hood of a car, James. You know what's going to be there, but you never know what's going to be wrong."
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