OOOOOOOOOHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH Comic book pwnge 1337!?!??
Fantastic 4 aren't part of the Avengers.
In the Human Torch story titled "Captain America" in Marvel Comics' Strange Tales #114 (November 1963),[12] writer-editor Stan Lee and artist and co-plotter Jack Kirby depicted the brash young Fantastic Four member Johnny Storm, the Human Torch, in an exhibition performance with Captain America, described as a legendary World War II and 1950s superhero who has returned after many years of apparent retirement. The 18-page story ends with this Captain America revealed as an impostor: it was actually the villain the Acrobat, a former circus performer the Torch had defeated in Strange Tales #106. Afterward, Storm digs out an old comic book in which Captain America is shown to be Steve Rogers. A caption in the final panel says this story was a test to see if readers would like Captain America to return.Captain America was then formally reintroduced in The Avengers #4 (March 1964), which explained that in the final days of WWII, he had fallen from an experimental drone plane into the North Atlantic Ocean and spent decades frozen in a block of ice in a state of suspended animation. He quickly became leader of that superhero team. Following the success of other Marvel characters introduced during the 1960s, Captain America was recast as a hero "haunted by past memories, and trying to adapt to 1960s society."[13]
You know you are essentially concerned that they are having one guy who played a fictional character in a movie play another fictional character in another movie? I think they have a word for that. Actors.
Better pump yo brakes, son.
You're the dude, playin the dude, disguised as another dude.