>>99806517We're just some anons, it's not our job to come up with plots for them. It's literally their job to be creative and write stories people would want to read.
But for a solo book, with the hero's personal life, you get to shift focus from being single, or dating, to adapting to married life, and how it affects his or her superhero career to have someone to confide in, someone waiting at home, not knowing if they'll come back alive, and how much of that stress and tension they can take.
For team books, where two superheroes are married to each other, it CAN be the end of their story, you can retire them and bring someone else onto the team to replace them. Or you can keep them around, as a positive contrast to the other characters' personal lives. You can explore the dynamics of people who work together who are also married, whether or not they'll unconditionally support each other on team business, how some petty domestic argument can spill over into the workplace, or the power-dynamics when one of them is the team's leader.
> Renew Your Vows sells like shit even with the addition of parenting subplots.It's an AU book, so it doesn't 'count' to a lot of readers, and none of the talent working on it are going to be selling books on the strength of their name.