

When we see Quicksilver A's use his ability, you actually get the sense that he's running really fast.
Quicksilver xmen movie#
This version of Quicksilver is so ridiculously overpowered that the movie is then forced to get rid of him before the climax.

Quicksilver A doesn't really seem to "run fast" so much as he does "basically stop time," allowing him to meander around the room repositioning bullets, taking time to taste some soup along the way. You would think that, both Quicksilvers being adaptations of the same character, they would also have the same powers, but their abilities actually vary in some pretty significant ways. Let's break it down by category, shall we? (Henceforth, I shall be referring to them as Quicksilver A - for Avengers - and Quicksilver X - for X-Men.) 1. Fans have been bitterly divided on which Quicksilver is the quote-unquote "better" one… so I've assembled here a completely scientific, 100 percent unbiased test to determine which is the defining version of the super-speedster. The former was played by 29-year-old American Horror Story actor Evan Peters, the latter by 25-year-old Kick-Ass star Aaron Taylor-Johnson. Thanks to a strange quirk of licensing, audiences were graced with two different versions of the same character in as many years, one in FOX's X-Men franchise and one in the M.C.U.'s burgeoning Avengers lineup. So why not take this golden opportunity to settle one of the biggest superhero debates in recent memory: Which Quicksilver is better, the one from 2014's X-Men: Days Of Future Past or the one from 2015's Avengers: Age Of Ultron? Finally, long-simmering tensions within the Marvel Cinematic Universe will reach a boiling point in May's Captain America: Civil War. Then, the Dark Knight and the Man of Steel will clash in the highly-anticipated Batman V Superman: Dawn Of Justice. First, Daredevil and the Punisher will go toe to toe in Season 2 of Netflix's Daredevil. 2016 will undoubtedly go down in cinema history as the year of the superhero grudge match.
