Marvel have been making a killing recently, having taken back control of all their big properties and spun them out into an incredibly successful film franchise, merchandise, and spin-off cartoons which might not match the quality of the movies, but definitely have them rivalled in the moolah stakes. The likes of Ultimate Spider-Man look like masterpieces when you compare them to their Japanese equivalents, however, as Marvel have farmed out a bunch of their characters to net them some of that sweet anime money - regardless of the cost. And in the case of the Avengers, the cost has been buying into the merchandise-heavy world of Japanese cartoons (even worse than American, by all accounts), which means turning the superheroes into, essentially, Pokemon. The premise of Marvel Disk Wars: The Avengers is that Tony Stark invents something called a Digital Identity Securement Kit - or DISK, see? - which allows supervillains to be captured and contained in a small space. Like a Poke Ball. Except during the public unveiling Loki gets controls of the DISKs and traps a bunch of heroes in them. Now they can only be released for a short period of time, by the trio of kids who look after them, to fight the bad guys the trickster god released. Again, like Poke Balls. It's...it's not good.