>>73940
Unless it's a consistently ongoing series, or part of a consistently ongoing universe, you're better off thinking of "canon" as just being whatever the creators of the individual work you are looking at at the time considered to be canon. The AVP movies probably considered all of the previous Alien and Predator movies before them to be canon (even if they contradicted some things, those were just accidents, but they overall considered them when being created). Who thinks about tie in comics when creating anything? Very few creators, outside of maybe a few mega autistic Japanese franchises like Digimon, or the rare tie-in comic that is actually written by someone who writes main-series material as well.
But now you're talking about modern Marvel comics. You know what's canon to them? Nothing. Because modern Marvel does not hire people who like the things they're creating. They're hired specifically to spite the old works. The creators can't be bothered to actually watch or read the old works that their new works are based on. They just go by cultural osmosis and a few scattered memories of things they watched before they were assimilated by the hivemind. They can't be bothered to care about continuity when they write main-series capeshit, and those are series that are traditionally obsessed with continuity (and their disregard for it is helping to kill them). In a tie in comic to a movie franchise? They could not care less. But thankfully, nobody else could care less about their tie in comics either. Just as these SJWs don't care enough to have any other works be actually "canon" to their own, nobody cares about SJW works enough to make those SJW works canon to any other new material. Even other SJWs don't care enough to make other SJW stuff canon to their own material.
>>73947
That's not even a new thing. There's always been a multiverse (even during the era when they said there wasn't. And when they said the multiverse was limited, it wasn't) and Hypertime, and the nature of the main universe (and the multiverse and Hypertime) was always being fucked with by all the Crisis events. It's nothing new. However, Batman vs. Elmer Fudd, while "canon" in the extent that it exists in the wider multiverse (or omniverse, maybe, because it's outside the "Local Multiverse"), it's not "canon" in the sense of happening in the main universe or any of the other universes that are actually important. There's a big difference between something happening in the Anti-Matter universe of Qward, which is technically a different universe than the main one, but interacts with the main universe all the time as a regular location that characters just go to and from, and something like the Batman '66 universe, which has its own stuff going on (including comics and cartoons, including arguably even Superfriends) but never actually interacts with the main universe, or any other universe that interacts with the main universe, in any significant way.