With Captain America’s iconic vibranium alloy shield being broken twice in one week, what was once unthinkable has become a routine occurrence in the Marvel Universe and lost its meaning. As a matter of fact, it's become so commonplace, that two comics saw the shield destroyed in the same week.

The iconic circular version of Captain America’s shield, which debuted in 1941’s Captain America Comics #2, had remained unbroken by physical force for more than 40 years. It has been so indestructible that it took the Red Skull this long to destroy it. That is why seeing the shield broken in a pile of debris after Doctor Doom unleashed the Beyonder’s power in the original Secret Wars event in 1984-1985 was such a powerful image. Thanos breaking the shield with a mere swing of his hand in 1991’s The Infinity Gauntlet also ranks as one of Marvel’s most shocking moments. Destruction of Captain America’s shield had remained a rare event until the 2000s, when alternate timelines and universes saw it broken repeatedly. It was broken by King Hyperion, Ultron, Namora, King Thor, Valkryie, and the Serpent. There have even been instances where normal-looking arrows seemed to have pierced it. 

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In Avengers Tech-On #1 by Jim Zub and Chamba, an overpowered version of Steve Rogers’ long-time nemesis, the Red Skull, blasted the iconic weapon to bits. Meanwhile, in Savage Avengers #24 from Gerry Duggan and Patch Zircher sees the cannibal-sorcerer Kulan Gath took a bite out of it in Savage Avengers #24. Adding two more instances of a broken shield in the span of a week has substantially diminished the impact of such an act. Though the shattered shield has always been a great visual, its meaning has extended beyond the damage itself. Weapons like Captain America’s shield and Thor’s Mjolnir have become extensions of the heroes themselves, often carrying the same level of emotional attachment and symbolizing a key facet of the hero’s personality. For instance, his unbreakable shield has long symbolized Captain America’s unbreakable spirit.

That is why its earliest instances of being broken were accompanied by a sense that all hope was lost. When the shield’s destruction is no longer reserved for those rare, cataclysmic events, there is a risk of becoming less emotionally invested in its well-being during battle. Similarly, as more villains join the ranks of those who have broken the shield, it is less of a gauge of how a villain threatens the entire universe. It is no longer the turning point that it once was, instead feeling like just one more thing that happens throughout the course of a routine battle.

To maintain the impact of seeing Captain America’s shield damaged by a powerful foe and to rebuild emotional investment in this weapon, its destruction cannot become routine. As it stands, breaking Captain America’s shield has lost all meaning and must be reserved for rare circumstances for it to be imbued with meaning once again.

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