List of Marvel Comics characters: B
Bagheera
Bagheera is a black panther, based upon The Jungle Book character of the same name.
Nakia Bahadir
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Nakia Bahadir is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. She is a Turkish girl and friend of Kamala Khan.[1]
Nakia Bahadir in other media
Nakia Bahadir appears in the
Bakuto
Further reading
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Bakuto is a fictional ninja in Marvel Comics. The character, created by Andy Diggle, Antony Johnston and Marco Checchetto, first appeared in Daredevil #505 (April 2010).
Bakuto, the head Daimyo of South America, meets with the other four Daimyos in Jigoku-Chu Castle in Japan. He shows some doubt in Matt Murdock leading The Hand and especially scoffs at White Tiger's involvement due to her being a woman. Beforehand, Bakuto killed his master, Izanagi, to showcase "[his] strength of will", even going so far as to not allowing him seppuku.
In the present, while having dinner, Bakuto's food is spiked causing him to hallucinate demons. Matt goes to check on him as Daredevil and are both immediately attacked by ninjas that were secretly sent by the other Daimyos. After defeating them, Matt is led to believe that someone is attempting to take Bakuto's life and ups the security. Despite this Bakuto believes that Matt was the one who sent the ninjas and begins plotting to kill him.[3] He is later confronted by a possessed White Tiger and killed in sword combat.[4]
Bakuto in other media
- Bakuto appears in the Joy Meachum, he and his men take Danny, but end up fighting him along with Colleen and Davos. Bakuto battles Colleen with swords, but he is stabbed by his former pupil. Colleen refuses to kill Bakuto, so Davos does it for her. His body then disappears. Colleen assumes that Bakuto's people took it, but Danny recalls that Harold Meachum managed to come back from the dead.[8]
- Bakuto reappears in The Defenders, revived to full health. He is established to be one of the five Fingers of the Hand, the others being Sowande, Madame Gao, Alexandra, and Murakami. He first appears when he accosts Colleen, Danny and Luke as they are escorting Claire to the 29th Precinct for protective custody, but escapes.[9] He is later present, along with Murakami and Madame Gao, when Elektra kills Alexandra and assumes command of the Hand.[10] The three Fingers express disdain with Elektra for her actions, but she is undeterred, only interested in cultivating the substance so she can have eternal immortality.[11] Nonetheless, the Fingers accost Matt, Luke and Jessica when they break out of the precinct and return to Midland Circle seeking to rescue Danny from Elektra. Bakuto comes close to finishing off Matt until Colleen shows up to fight him off. Bakuto remains upstairs to fight Colleen, Claire and Misty. Regaining the upper hand, Colleen kills Bakuto, but not before he manages to cut off part of Misty's right arm.[12]
Balthazar
Balthazar or Belathauzer in his first appearance, is a
Martine Bancroft
Martine Bancroft is a
Bancroft works as an assistant to Michael Morbius, whose experiments aim to cure his blood disease. They backfire and turn him into a vampire-esque individual.
Martine Bancroft in other media
Martine Bancroft appears in the live-action
Bruce Banner
Elaine Banner
Elaine Banner | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | The Savage She-Hulk #15 (April 1981) |
Created by | David Kraft (writer) Mike Vosburg (artist) |
In-story information | |
Full name | Elaine Ann Banner Walters |
Supporting character of | She-Hulk, Hulk |
Notable aliases | Aunt Elaine, Elaine Walters, Mrs Walters |
Elaine Banner or Elaine Walters is a
Elaine Banner is the sister of Susan Banner and Brian Banner. During their childhood, all three of them including their Mother were physically and mentally abused by their alcoholic father, Bruce Banner. For years they suffered but eventually they pulled through until he died. Even though Elaine and Susan learned to put it behind them' their brother Brian was not so fortunate.[volume & issue needed]
Susan, Elaine and Brian all wanted to move on with their lives but Brian was still suffering from the trauma of their childhood together and would do everything he could to spend as little time with his siblings as possible because he didn't want to relive anymore bad memories, straining the relationship between them.[volume & issue needed] Susan married a man by the name of Drake, and Brian ended up marrying a woman named Rebecca.
Elaine married
Since Morris was the Sheriff of the Los Angeles County Sheriff Department, he came across many enemies, the biggest one being the mobster Nicholas Trask.[volume & issue needed] Trask planned to murder Morris by making his death look like a drunk driving incident, but his plan backfired when Elaine had been the one driving to see Jennifer's dance recital with two of her friends.[volume & issue needed]
Elaine Banner in other media
- Elaine Banner Walters appears in The Incredible Hulk episode "Down Memory Lane".
- Elaine Banner appears in the Marvel Cinematic Universe/ Disney+ live-action series She-Hulk: Attorney at Law (2022), portrayed by Tess Malis Kincaid.
Rebecca Banner
Brian Banner
Bantam
Bantam is a fictional mutant. Created by Jim Lee and John Byrne, the character first appeared in The Uncanny X-Men #282.
Bantam is an assistant of
Bantam kept track of all of Fitzroy's time portals still in stasis. He was sensitive to the bioenergy emissions of other superhumans, allowing him to locate the site where the energy was released.
Bantam in other media
Bantam appears in the X-Men: The Animated Series two-part episode "One Man's Worth".
Barbarus
Eli Bard
Eli Bard aka Eliphas is a
Eli Bard was born "Eliphas" at the height of the Roman Empire. He was recognized as an outstanding soldier until a spear injury ended his military career. For a while he worked unsuccessfully as a poet until he met Aurelia, one of the most powerful women in Rome. He soon married her and achieved a position in the Senate. As a well-respected senator, he was known as a great orator and a friend to the army. His wife left him for a general named Mascius and conspired to give Mascius his seat in the Senate.[26]
Left with nothing, Eliphas was approached by
Eliphas, having at some point in time changed his name to "Eli Bard," finally located Selene in
He uses the virus to resurrect a variety of mutants, including
.When Bard returned to Proudstar's tribe's burial grounds to resurrect Caliban and Thunderbird, the spirits of the tribe rose to protect those buried there. Bard attacked them with Selene's mystical knife, transforming them into a
Bucky Barnes
Baron Blood
Baron Brimstone
Baron Mordo
Baron Samedi
Further reading
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Baron Samedi is the name of two fictional characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Rolando Samedi
The A.I.M. agent version, created by Len Wein and Gene Colan, first appeared in Strange Tales #171 (December 1973).
Within the context of the stories, Baron Rolando Samedi is a Haitian agent of
Vodou
Within
Baron Samedi in other media
The Vodou version of Baron Samedi appears in the
Baron Strucker
Baron Zemo
Heinrich Zemo
Helmut Zemo
Barracuda
Barrage
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Barrage is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Barrage is an
Turk Barrett
Breeze Barton
Base
Base (Hiro Sokuto) is a
Basilisk
Basilisk is the name of three fictional characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Basilisk (Basil Elks)
Basilisk | |
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Publication information | |
Hood 's unnamed crime syndicate | |
Abilities | Enhanced strength, stamina and reflexes Energy projection Temperature and molecular manipulation Volcano generation |
The Basilisk is a
The Omega Stone he was imprisoned in was found in a lava river by some Moloids who worshipped it.
The
The Basilisk reappeared in the
Dead Ringer later acquired a tissue sample from the Basilisk's body and assumed his form.[39]
During the "
During the "
The Basilisk was later hired by
Upon absorbing the Alpha Stone, Basil Elks possessed enhanced physical strength, reflexes, and stamina. The Basilisk's main offensive weapon were his eye beams, which could be concussive force (these could also be directed at the ground for limited flight) or energy that manipulated temperature (to boiling or freezing extremes) or molecules.[45] Upon absorbing the Omega Stone, Basilisk's powers increased to their full extent, allowing him to generate volcanoes worldwide, including in the Savage Land and New York City.[46]
Basilisk (Wayne Gifford)
Basilisk | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Morbius the Living Vampire #5 (January 1993) |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Wayne Gifford |
Abilities | Superhuman strength and agility Paralyzing stare |
The Basilisk is a lizard-like villain who first appears in
Wayne Gifford was a normal human until becoming the Basilisk, a large humanoid reptile. The creature possesses superhuman strength and agility, and a paralyzing stare. The Basilisk's one weakness is sunlight. In an inversion of a common horror trope, when looking in a mirror the Basilisk sees his ordinary human form.
Basilisk (Mike Columbus)
Basilisk | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | New X-Men #135 (December 2002) |
Created by | Grant Morrison Frank Quitely |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Mike Columbus[48] |
Team affiliations | Xavier Institute Student Body Brotherhood of Mutants |
Abilities | Paralyzing light pulse projection |
The Basilisk is a
The Basilisk joins the Brotherhood of Mutants. They take over New York City. While watching human prisoners march by, he makes a joke about a perceived bad smell. The Brotherhood's leader Magneto attempts to deliver a punishment, but kills the Basilisk instead.
Mike Columbus possesses an overly fleshy head devoid of all features except for sunken ears, a slit-like mouth, and a single centered eye socket. A camera-like device is located in this socket that allows the Basilisk to control his superhuman mutant ability to emit a pulse of high-frequency strobe light from his brain. The light paralyzes any sentient being that views it, while the length of the effect varies depending upon the willpower of the onlooker.
Battleaxe
Battleaxe (Anita Ehren) is a fictional character in the
An unlimited class wrestler, Battleaxe is a massive woman who carries an
Later, in Ms. Marvel's own series, Battleaxe fights the titular heroine in front of William Wagner's closed restaurant. Puppet Master's mind-controlled Chilean soldiers catch Battleaxe and try to take her with them. Ms. Marvel defeats them and takes the soldiers and Battleaxe on her minicarrier.[52]
Battleaxe has superhuman strength and durability. She carries a set of two axes which are her weapons of choice.
Battlestar
Batwing
Baymax
Beast
Beautiful Dreamer
Beautiful Dreamer | |
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Publication information | |
The 198 Morlocks | |
Abilities |
|
Beautiful Dreamer is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by Louise Simonson and June Brigman, the character made her first appearance in Power Pack #12 (July 1985). She belongs to the subspecies of humans called mutants, who are born with superhuman abilities.
Beautiful Dreamer's real name and past prior to joining the Morlocks are unknown. She followed the terrorist Morlock leader Masque for a time,[volume & issue needed] and committed criminal acts by manipulating others with her mental powers at his behest.[volume & issue needed] However, Beautiful Dreamer's primary motivation for doing so, as with most of her fellow Morlocks, is presumed to be her desire for company and community. Dreamer, along with several other Morlocks, confronts the Power Pack, when the young team enters the New York City sewers to look for their lost school books. The empathic Annalee, mourning her deceased children, wishes to have Beautiful Dreamer alter the memories of Power Pack. The goal is to have the Power Pack believe Annalee is their mother. Two of the X-Men, Nightcrawler and Kitty Pryde, stop this plan.[53]
When the Morlock leader Callisto had left for a time,
Beautiful Dreamer is one of the 198 mutants who retained their powers after the events of
Beautiful Dreamer possesses the ability to psionically alter the memories of others using her special "dream smoke" to implant false recollections.[54]
Beautiful Dreamer in other media
A character based on Beautiful Dreamer named Sonia Simonson / Dreamer appears in
Bedlam
Beef
Beetle
Beetle is the name of different fictional characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Abner Jenkins
Leila Davis
The second Beetle is Leila Davis. Created by writer
Leila Davis was the widow of minor
Leila is introduced as the widow of the
She began dating
Sometime later, Leila Davis is paroled from prison and immediately returns to her old ways. Donning a new red and black suit of weaponized armor and referring to herself as Hardshell, she allies with Boomerang, Rhino and the Vulture. The group becomes involved in a massive fight that also involves Stegron, Doctor Octopus, Swarm, the Answer, Jenkins and Spider-Man, with each party trying to gain control of an experimental gun. Spider-Man eventually stood victorious and most of the costumed criminals are taken into custody. Davis is teleported away by her husband, Ringer, who had survived being shot by Scourge, and had been turned into the cyborg Strikeback by the criminal organization A.I.M.[66]
She reappears years later taking on the
As the second Beetle, Leila eventually joins the group known as the Redeemers, which includes former members of the Thunderbolts.[68] When her true identity is revealed to the rest of her teammates, she tells them that her husband died some time earlier due to his body breaking down due to his cyborg enhancements.[69]
The group soon encounters the powerful super villain Graviton, and quickly into the fight he nonchalantly uses his gravity powers to crush the Beetle armor, with Leila inside, into a small cube, killing her instantly.[70]
Janice Lincoln
Hobgoblin's Beetle
The Hobgoblin later regained the services of Beetle.[72]
Earth-1610 Beetle
The
Beetle later breaks into Bolivar Trask's lab where Eddie Brock is held, leading to Venom chasing after Beetle. Just as Beetle is cornered, Venom is stopped by Spider-Man. When the Venom symbiote leaves Brock and attaches to Spider-Man, Beetle escapes in the confusion.[74]
Disguised as a civilian which Brock least expected, Beetle later captures Venom in Central Park and flies off with him to deliver Venom to Latveria.[75]
Beetle's suit is later seen being repaired by the Tinkerer when a group of villains arrives for weapons against Spider-Man.[76]
Beetle in other media
- The Abner Jenkins incarnation of the Beetle appears in Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends, voiced by Christopher Collins.[77]
- The Abner Jenkins incarnation of the Beetle appears in Iron Man, voiced by John Reilly.[77]
- The Ultimate Marvel incarnation of the Beetle appears in Ultimate Spider-Man (2012), voiced by Steve Blum.[77]
- Additionally, imaginary versions of the Abner Jenkins and Leila Davis incarnations of the Beetle make non-speaking cameo appearances in the episode "Beetle Mania".[citation needed]
- The Abner Jenkins incarnation of the Beetle appears in Avengers Assemble.[77]
- The Abner Jenkins incarnation of the Beetle appears in Spider-Man (2017), voiced by Fred Tatasciore.[77]
- The Abner Jenkins incarnation of the Beetle makes a non-speaking cameo appearance in Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse.[78] Additionally, an alternate universe version was intended to appear, but did not make the cut.[79][80]
- The Abner Jenkins incarnation of the Beetle appears in Spider-Man (1995).[citation needed]
- The Abner Jenkins incarnation of the Beetle appears as a boss in The Amazing Spider-Man: Lethal Foes.[81]
- The Abner Jenkins incarnation of the Beetle appears in Spider-Man 2: Enter Electro, voiced by Daran Norris.[77]
- The Ultimate Marvel incarnation of the Beetle appears in Ultimate Spider-Man (2005), voiced by Tucker Smallwood.[77] This version works for Latverian agents, collecting genetic information from superhumans to genetically-engineer super-soldiers.
- The Janice Lincoln incarnation of the Beetle appears as a boss in Marvel: Avengers Alliance.[82]
- The Ultimate Marvel incarnation of the Beetle appears as a playable character in Lego Marvel Super Heroes.[83]
Bela
Belasco
Bella Donna
Bellona
Bellona is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Bellona is a white-haired female who was among the different clones of
During the "
Bengal
Dexter Bennett
Bereet
Berzerker
Beta Ray Bill
Beyonder
Bi-Beast
Big Bertha
Big Man
Big Wheel
Big Wheel is the name of two fictional characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Jackson Weele
This section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. The specific problem is: Smoother rewrite needed. (April 2023) |
Big Wheel | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | The Amazing Spider-Man #183 (1978) |
Created by | Marv Wolfman (writer) Ross Andru (artist) Mike Esposito (illustrator) |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Jackson Weele |
Species | Human |
Team affiliations | Vil-Anon |
Abilities | Drives a large metal wheel equipped with guns and waldo-arms |
Big Wheel is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. His secret identity is Jackson Weele, who rides around in a large metal wheel vehicle.
Jackson Weele is a businessman who has embezzled from his company. Fearing that he might be caught, he hires a youthful criminal named Rocket Racer to steal the evidence that incriminates him. However, Rocket Racer opts to use the evidence to blackmail Weele instead. Despairing, Weele tries to commit suicide, but Rocket Racer prevents him from doing so. However, Racer is not particularly kind to Weele, disparagingly referring to him as "Big Weele". Humiliated by Rocket Racer's taunts, Weele visits the mechanical genius and underworld supplier Tinkerer, who the Rocket Racer boasted had upgraded his equipment. At Weele's urging, the Tinkerer creates a large metal wheel that can climb up buildings, complete with guns and waldo-arms.[86]
With this new vehicle, Weele becomes the supervillain known as "Big Wheel". Newly empowered, Big Wheel hunts down and chases Rocket Racer across the city. In the process, he ends up fighting the title character, Spider-Man. Spider-Man is also seeking Rocket Racer, whom he had battled in a previous issue. Unfortunately, Weele lacks practice in using his new device and, in the heat of battle, the Big Wheel topples off a high rooftop and plunges into the Hudson River. Spider-Man tries to save him, but comes up empty-handed. He presumes Jackson Weele died when the Big Wheel vehicle sank to the bottom of the river.[86]
Big Wheel did not appear in another comic book for more than twenty years. However, the story was picked up again by writer Cristos Gage. Weele survives his seemingly deadly encounter, turning up again with his Big Wheel vehicle while Spider-Man is in combat with
The Big Wheel is discussed in The Spectacular Spider-Man #21 (Jan. 2005) during a super-hero poker game. Spider-Man tells Reed Richards that the Big Wheel is one of the craziest things he has ever seen (along with a gang of mimes). The Human Torch says he has met the man at the 'Rusty Nail' and he is working as a security guard. The Torch also claims the Wheel's first name is Axel, although he may be joking.[88]
During the Civil War storyline, Big Wheel is shown being chased by the Harbor Patrol, implying that he returned to super-heroics despite the doubts he harbored in Spider-Man Unlimited.[89]
Later, he is brought in by Spider-Man and
Jackson later returns in a more jagged version of his Big Wheel machine and joins Blackout and other villains in a mission to kill Ghost Rider.[91]
As part of "
Big Wheel is later forced into committing crimes (such as stealing a prized pair of alpacas) for Lady Caterpillar who had abducted his girlfriend Rebecca Townley.[93]
Second Big Wheel
An unnamed operator of the Big Wheel was on a crime spree until he was defeated by Spider-Man.[94]
Reception of Big Wheel
In 2022,
Big Wheel in other media
- The Jackson Weele incarnation of Big Wheel appears in the Spider-Man: The Animated Series episode "Rocket Racer", voiced by Michael Des Barres. This version is an aeronautics expert who leads a gang of high-tech thieves and relies on proper timing and planning. After Rocket Racer steals technology from him, Weele seeks revenge, only to be defeated by the vigilante and Spider-Man.
- The Jackson Weele incarnation of Big Wheel appears in the Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur episode "Make It, Don't Break It", voiced by Sam Riegel.[96] This version is a RobotWarz player who sought revenge after losing a match.
- Big Wheel appears in Spider-Man: Mysterio's Menace.
- Big Wheel appears as an assist character in the PSP version of Spider-Man: Web of Shadows.
- A Marvel 2099-inspired incarnation of Big Wheel appears in the Nintendo DS version of Spider-Man: Edge of Time,[97] voiced by Steve Blum.
Baxter Bigelow
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Bird-Brain
Bird-Man
Bird-Man is the name of different characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Henry Hawk
Henry Hawk was a known criminal. Along with
Ape-Man, Bird-Man, and Cat-Man later rejoined the Ani-Men, and the Ani-Men went to work for Count Nefaria. Count Nefaria's scientists submitted the unwitting Ani-Men to processes that gave them superhuman powers and animal-like forms. The Ani-Men invaded the Cheyenne Mountain missile base for Count Nefaria, and fought the X-Men.[101]
The Ani-Men lost their superhuman powers and reverted to normal. Count Nefaria sent the four original Ani-Men to kill
Achille DiBacco
The
Bird-Man is later murdered by the Scourge of the Underworld, along with many other villains in the infamous "Bar with No Name" incident.[104]
Arnim Zola later created a proto-husk of him only for it to be killed by Deadpool.[105]
Bird-Man was among the eighteen criminals (that were murdered by the Scourge) who were resurrected by
Bird-Man was seen at Avengers Towers with the other villains when Norman Osborn says that the bounty is off Tony Stark's head.[110]
Unnamed Bird-Man
During the Civil War storyline, a third Bird-Man alongside a third Ape-Man and a third Cat-Man were among the villains in Hammerhead's supervillain army.[111]
Biri
Biri is a female black leopard whose mother, Julani, was shot by a guard at the Central Park Municipal Zoo, veterinarian Shanna O'Hara was asked to take her cubs Ina and Biri to Dahomey, Africa to release them into the wild.
Shanna stayed with the animals and they became her allies, but they were both killed when the sorcerer, Raga-Shah, transferred their life forces into the blood beast, Ghamola, which Shanna was forced to destroy.
Bishop
Derek Bishop
Derek Bishop is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character, created by Allan Heinberg and Jim Cheung, first appeared in Young Avengers #2 (March 2005). He is a wealthy individual, and the father of Kate Bishop / Hawkeye and Susan Bishop and the wife of Eleanor Bishop. Unfortunately, Derek secretly conspired with supervillains (such as the Kingpin and Madame Masque) to put a hit on Kate and Clint Barton / Hawkeye.[112][113]
Derek and Eleanor later appear as members of Madame Masque's West Coast incarnation of the Masters of Evil.[114]
Alternate versions of Derek Bishop
The
Derek Bishop in other media
Derek Bishop appears in the live-action
Eleanor Bishop
Eleanor Bishop is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character, created by Kelly Thompson and Leonardo Romero, first appeared in Hawkeye (vol. 5) #7 (June 2017). She is the mother of Kate Bishop and Susan Bishop. Although she was presumed deceased, Eleanor is revealed to be alive as a vampire while working as Madame Masque's silent partner.[118]
Eleanor and Derek later appear as members of Madame Masque's West Coast incarnation of the Masters of Evil.[114]
Eleanor Bishop in other media
Eleanor Bishop appears in the live-action
Bison
Bison is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Billy Kitson was a champion
Later on, Bison joined the 7th incarnation of the
It is revealed in the Guardians of the Galaxy series that Bison is one of the inmates left behind in the Negative Zone's Prison 42 where he, Condor, and Gorilla-Man are involved in a fight with Star-Lord who, with the help of Jack Flag, is trying to stop Blastaar and his horde from invading Earth via the closed portal.[122]
During the "Hunted" storyline, Bison was among the animal-themed characters captured by Taskmaster and Black Ant for Kraven the Hunter's "Great Hunt" sponsored by Arcade's company Arcade Industries. He was shot in the chest by the Hunter-Bots.[123] While working to avoid the Hunter-Bots, Spider-Man came across the bodies of Bison and the other victims of the Hunter-Bots.[124]
Black Ant
Black Ant is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
After Eric O'Grady was killed by Father's henchman while defending a child, Father created a Life Model Decoy of him called Black Ant who helped him in a yet unknown plan.[125] Black Ant is ultimately defeated alongside the other Descendants.[126]
As part of the "All-New, All-Different Marvel," Black Ant appears as a member of Hood's Illuminati.[127]
During the "
Black Ant and Taskmaster later attack Empire State University where Dr. Curt Connors was teaching a class. As the inhibitor chip prevents Connors from turning into Lizard, Peter Parker sneaks off to become Spider-Man. During his fight with Black Ant and Taskmaster, Spider-Man is exposed to the Isotope Genome Accelerator that splits him from his Peter Parker side.[130]
In a prelude to "
At the conclusion of "The Chameleon Conspiracy" arc,
During the "
Black Ant is later summoned by the Ultron/Hank Pym to free him from his imprisonment.[138]
After a fragment of Hank Pym's conscious broke free upon Ultron's defeat and reconstructed his body which was older, Black Ant was recruited by Hank Pym to help him kill and revive some villains to join their Lethal Legion so that they can prepare for Ultron's return.[139]
Black Bolt
Black Box
Black Cat
Black Catfish
Black Catfish is an anthropomorphic catfish and animal version of Black Cat.
Black Crow
Black Dwarf
Black Dwarf | |
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Publication information | |
Created by | Jonathan Hickman Jerome Opeña |
In-story information | |
Team affiliations | Black Order |
Abilities |
|
Black Dwarf is a fictional supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. He is a prominent member of the Black Order, a team of aliens who work for Thanos. Black Dwarf first appeared in a one panel cameo in New Avengers (vol. 3) #8 (September 2013) and was created by Jonathan Hickman and Jerome Opeña.[140] His full appearance, along with a number of the other members of the Black Order, takes place in Infinity #1 (October 2013).
Black Dwarf is a member of Thanos' Black Order where he is the powerhouse of the Mad Titan's army.[141]
When Thanos targeted Earth as the next planet he would raze during the Infinity, Black Dwarf arrived in Wakanda.[142] To his surprise, Black Dwarf found great resistance in that country and was forced to retreat. For his failure, Thanos expelled Black Dwarf from the Black Order.[143]
Thanos gave Black Dwarf one more chance to prove himself by sending him to protect The Peak and keep it from being reclaimed by the Avengers following their fight against the Builders.[144] During the fight against the Avengers, Black Dwarf was killed by Ronan the Accuser.[145]
During the "No Surrender" arc, Black Dwarf was resurrected by the
Black Dwarf in other media
- Black Dwarf makes non-speaking appearances in Avengers Assemble as a member of Thanos' Black Order.[147]
- Black Dwarf appears in Guardians of the Galaxy, voiced by Jesse Burch.[147]
- A variation of Black Dwarf, renamed Cull Obsidian, appears in media set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, portrayed by Terry Notary.[148][149]
- Introduced in the live-action film Mind Stone. However, Bruce Banner uses Iron Man's Hulkbuster armorto send Obsidian flying into Wakanda's force-field, killing the alien.
- An alternate timeline version of Obsidian appears in the live-action film Avengers: Endgame.[151] He joins Thanos in traveling through time to stop the Avengers from foiling Thanos' plans, only to be crushed by Scott Lang / Giant Man in the ensuing fight.[152]
- Alternate timeline versions of Obsidian appear in the Collector instead of Thanos, who reformed years prior. In the episode "What If... Zombies?!", another variant of Obsidian joins Maw in traveling to Earth to obtain the Time Stone, only to be killed and zombified by a zombified Iron Man, Doctor Strange, and Wong.
- Introduced in the live-action film
- Black Dwarf appears as a mini-boss and boss in Marvel Avengers Alliance.[153]
- Black Dwarf, as Cull Obsidian, appears as a boss and unlockable playable character in Marvel Future Fight.[154]
- Black Dwarf, as Cull Obsidian, appears as an unlockable playable character in Lego Marvel Super Heroes 2 via the "Marvel's Avengers: Infinity War Movie Level Pack" DLC.[155]
- Black Dwarf, as Cull Obsidian, appears as a support character in Marvel Puzzle Quest.[156]
- Black Dwarf, as Cull Obsidian, appears as an unlockable playable character and mini-boss in Marvel Contest of Champions.[157]
- Black Dwarf, as Cull Obsidian, appears as a boss in Marvel Ultimate Alliance 3: The Black Order, voiced again by Jesse Burch.[147]
Black Fox
Black Fox is the name of two fictional characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Raul Chalmers
Black Fox | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | The Amazing Spider-Man #255 (Aug 1984) |
Created by | Tom DeFalco Ron Frenz |
In-story information | |
Partnerships | Red Ghost |
Notable aliases | Raul Chalmers |
Black Fox is a fictional villain appearing in
Black Fox is a jewel thief with a long international career. In his sixties, he yearns to pull off one last big heist so that he can retire for good to the French Riviera. However, his retirement plans continue to be deferred due to unfortunate encounters with super-beings. In each of his encounters the Fox, having no super-human powers of his own, is in way over his head. The thief's usual response when caught by a superhero is to surrender and negotiate release, which he accomplishes with fabricated stories about his poor wife and children or his poor deceased mother. However, in his last encounter with Spider-Man, the Fox was unable to pull the same trick and was carted off to jail.
In addition to coming into conflict with Spider-Man, Black Fox has been forced to lead the
He was defeated by
Dr. Robert William Paine
"Black" Jack Tarr
Black Knight
Black Mamba
Black Marvel
Black Panda
Black Panda is an anthropomorphic panda and animal version of Black Panther.
Black Panther
T'Chaka
T'Challa
Shuri
Black Racer
Black Rider
Black Sky
Black Spectre
Black Swan
Black Talon
Black Tarantula
Black Tiger
Further reading
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Black Tiger (Abraham "Abe" Brown) is a fictional martial arts superhero in Marvel Comics. The character, created by Steve Englehart and Jim Starlin, first appeared as Abe Brown in Deadly Hands of Kung Fu #1 (April 1974), and as Black Tiger in Deadly Hands of Kung Fu #1 (April 1974).
He's the brother of Hobie Brown (aka the Prowler).[159] Abe took up martial arts and befriended fellow martial artists Lin Sun and Bob Diamond. Together they found three jade tiger amulets and became the Sons of the Tigers.[160] The Sons of Tigers would team up with other heroes such as Spider-Man, Iron Fist and the Human Torch.[161] Abe and the Sons of Tigers broke up when Lin and Bob started fighting over a woman, throwing their amulets away in the process.[162]
Abe later took a vacation and had his suitcase was switched by a mysterious woman named Brillalae. The suitcase contained the Black Tiger costume and Abe's plane was hijacked by men who were looking for it. The plane crashed, but Abe managed to survive. Abe chased one of the hijackers, named Mole, and both ended up getting captured by the Bedouins who forced them to fight for the title of Black Dragon.[163] Abe defeated Mole and won the costume, becoming Black Tiger.[164][165] Abe was last seen having helped form the Penance Corps.[166]
Black Tiger in other media
- Abraham Brown appears in the Silvermane forces the Prowlerto take on Spider-Man's bounty with failure. Unsuccessful in the encounter, the two formed a reluctant alliance to save Abraham from Silvermane. While Abraham runs off to call the police, Spider-Man and the Prowler fight Silvermane. After Silvermane's defeat, the Prowler thanks Spider-Man, giving a battery essential to the latter's science project in the process. As Spider-Man swings off, Abraham gets confused about Spider-Man being in a science fair.
- Abe Brown appears in Flash Thompsonanswers a question incorrectly. It is implied that he has a great deal of respect towards Peter as he openly voices his disdain towards Flash's constant verbal bullying of him and poked fun when Peter took Flash's place in the decathlon.
- Abe Brown is listed as the "director" of the alternate reality 1950s-style
Black Tom Cassidy
Black Widow
Claire Voyant
Natalia Romanova / Natasha Romanoff
Yelena Belova
Monica Chang
Tania
Blackheart
Blacklash
Blacklight
Blackout
Blackout is the name of different characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Marcus Daniels
Half-demon
Blackwing
Blade
Donald Blake
Further reading
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Dr. Donald "Don" Blake is the fictional human identity of Marvel Comics character Thor. The character, created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, first appeared in Journey into Mystery #83 (August 1962).
Donald Blake is a construct of
Alternate versions of Donald Blake
- In the Ultimate Marvel Universe, Donald Blake is the human reincarnation of Balder.
- A non-powered version of Blake appears as a resistance fighter in an alternate history timeline where the Nazis have won World War II.[172]
Donald Blake in other media
- Donald Blake appears in "The Mighty Thor" segment of The Marvel Super Heroes, voiced by Chris Wiggins.
- Donald Blake appears in the Spider-Man episode "Wrath of the Sub-Mariner", voiced by Jack Angel.
- Donald Blake appears in The Incredible Hulk Returns, portrayed by Steve Levitt. This version is a separate entity who can summon Thor by crying Odin's name while holding Thor's hammer.
- Donald Blake appears in The Incredible Hulk, voiced by Mark L. Taylor.
- Donald Blake makes a cameo appearance in Doctor Strange: The Sorcerer Supreme.
Blank
Blastaar
Siena Blaze
Siena Blaze | |
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Publication information | |
All New Exiles | |
Abilities | Electromagnetic energy generation, flight, teleportation. |
Siena Blaze (also spelled Sienna Blaze) is a fictional mutant appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character has appeared in the X-Men comics series. Introduced as a villain in the Marvel Universe, she later became a hero during her brief period in the Ultraverse. Following a long absence, the character returned in X-Force vol. 3, #22.
Siena Blaze starts out as a member of the thrill-seeking
Siena proves formidable in both encounters, fighting to a draw each time, before parting ways.Later, she attempts to kill the villain
Siena meets her apparent death at the
Siena Blaze in other media
Siena Blaze appears as a boss in X-Men: Gamesmaster's Legacy.
Blazing Skull
Blindfold
Blindspot
Bling!
Blink
Bliss
Blitz
Blitz is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Jamie Zimmerman was created by Terry Kavanagh and Alex Saviuk, and first appeared in Web of Spider-Man #99 (April 1993). A female member of the New Enforcers, she possessed super-human strength and agility as well as a heavily armored costume, and Spider-Man was initially unaware of her capabilities.[181] Blitz was ultimately defeated by Spider-Man and Blood Rose.[182]
Blitzkrieg
Blitzkrieg is a fictional character in the
Franz Mittelstaedt was born in Backnang, Germany. He was inspecting an electrical power plant when a stray bolt of lightning struck a faulty generator and bathed him in electricity. When he emerged from his coma weeks later, he found that he could summon lightning at will to wield as a weapon. He decided to use his powers in the name of democracy.
Later he was teleported away by the
Blitzkrieg later joined the German superhero team Schutz Heiliggruppe, along with
Blitzkrieg later traveled to Buenos Aires to investigate the deaths of a number of South American superheroes, including his former ally Defensor. Blitzkrieg was confronted by his teammate Zeitgeist, who turned out to be the serial killer Everyman. Everyman killed Blitzkrieg, adding him to his long list of murdered superheroes, but Blitzkrieg was later avenged by Hauptmann Deutschland, now known as Vormund, who killed Everyman.
Blitzkrieg possessed the ability to summon lightning mentally, at up to 15 million volts. He can manipulate all forms of electrical energy, using them to allow him to fly, create electrical energy shields and cages, and electrical tornadoes. He is also immune to electricity, and can sense electrical transmissions and track them to their source.
Blizzard
Blob
Blockbuster
Blockbuster is the name of different characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Michael Baer
Man-Brute
The Man-Brute first appeared in Captain America #121 (January 1970), and was created by Stan Lee and Gene Colan. The character subsequently appears as Blockbuster in Omega the Unknown #7 (March 1977), and #9 (July 1977), in which he is killed.
The man originally known as the Man-Brute was an ex-convict whose strength was boosted by a factor of twelve by Professor Silas X. Cragg. Cragg was an enemy of Captain America from the World War II era who had developed a variant of the Super Soldier Serum which he used to empower the Man-Brute. Cragg sent the Man-Brute to attack Captain America at a charity event, but when the Man-Brute ran into his own estranged son he became upset at what he had become. Man-Brute attacked Cragg, who backed into a high voltage machine and was electrocuted.[183]
Renaming himself Blockbuster, he sought to acquire wealth for his son Robert, to give him a better life and keep him from becoming a criminal like himself. He robbed a bank, leading to conflict with the NYPD and then Omega the Unknown. Omega felt empathy for Blockbuster and his son, and let the man escape with the money. After Blockbuster robbed a diamond store, the owner offered a thousand dollar reward to which Omega responded. After struggling with Omega a few times, Blockbuster was incinerated by the second Foolkiller.[184]
Blockbuster possessed superhuman strength, durability, endurance, etc. He was an experienced street fighter, although he did not demonstrate any advanced fighting skills.
Blonde Phantom
Blood Brothers
Bloodaxe
Bloodhawk
Bloodlust
Bloodscream
Bloodshed
Bloodshed | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Web of Spider-Man #81 (October 1991) |
Created by | Kurt Busiek Steven Butler |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Wyndell Dichinson |
Species | Human |
Abilities | Trained mercenary Skilled hand to hand combatant Superhuman strength and durability Specialized armored suit grants: Retractable bladed weapons |
Bloodshed (real name Wyndell Dichinson) is a fictional supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. It is also the name of a supervillain in Marvel's Razorline imprint, as well as a character in comics from an acquired company, Malibu Comics. Bloodshed first appeared in Web of Spider-Man #81 (October 1991), and was created by Kurt Busiek and Steven Butler.
Wyndell Dichinson and his 16-year-old brother are caught in a car theft by the heroic Spider-Man and apprehended by the police. Ricky goes to jail but Wyndell manages to escape and flee the country before his court date takes place. He becomes a mercenary somewhere in the Far East. He begins work in Thailand, where he is approached and employed by Mr. Bazin.[185]
Wyndell fails an American drug smuggling operation for Bazin and ends up deep in debt. He approaches his brother to ask for money; at that point he has only three days left to pay. Bazin became impatient and decided he wanted Bloodshed dead. Wyndell and his brother are confronted by gangsters, which catches the attention of Spider-Man. In the meantime, Bazin had placed a bomb in Ricky's home. It explodes, seemingly erasing all traces of the brothers. Spider-Man presumes them to be dead.[186]
Bloodshed is revealed alive during the
Later in Civil War: War Crimes, he is visible among an army of super-villains organized by Hammerhead. Although this grouping is captured by Iron Man and S.H.I.E.L.D. agents, Bloodshed's fate in the ensuing melee is unknown.[188]
Bloodshed is part of
Cullen Bloodstone
Elsa Bloodstone
Ulysses Bloodstone
Bloodstrike
Bloodstrike | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Folding Circle Thunderbolts | |
Abilities | Super-strength |
Bloodstrike (Eric Conroy) is a fictional supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Eric Conroy's father, Lt. Mark Conroy, served in the Vietnam war. Lt. Conroy's unit, calling themselves the Half-Fulls, discovered an ancient temple deep in the jungles of
Eric was once the enforcer for a mobster in
The Folding Circle arrives at the temple, along with the
Blood Spider
The Blood Spider (Michael Bingham) is a
Blood Spider is a mercenary trained by
Solo joined the fray on the side of the wall-crawler and helps to defeat the three villains and thwart Red Skull's machinations who was using the mercenaries to guard private files sought by Spider-Man in reference to his parents.[volume & issue needed]
Years later, Blood Spider appears with Death-Shield and Jagged Bow among the criminals vying for the multi-million dollar bounty that was placed on
Of the trio, Blood Spider was the only character who displayed any superhuman abilities. He was able to shatter a solid concrete wall with a very powerful move, indicating he possessed some degree of superhuman strength. He was not as powerful as Spider-Man, and not nearly as fast. He carried a back pack and wrist devices capable of shooting webbing similar to that of Spider-Man, but much weaker. An ordinary human in peak physical condition, such as Solo, was able to tear through it, which would not have been possible with Spider-Man's webbing. Blood Spider's costume has several design elements that Bagley would later incorporate into the redesign of Ben Reilly's Spider-Man costume. The most prominent of the traits is the use of a larger, symmetrical spider emblem on the front and back, the legs of which meet on the shoulders.
Blood Spider in other media
- Blood Spider appears in Wolf Spider, who steals the shard the trio found. In the episode "Return to the Spider-Verse" Pt. 4, Wolf Spider captures Blood Spider, along with several of his multiversal doppelgangers, to drain their essence, only to be defeated by the "prime" Spider-Man. After being rescued, Blood Spider and the other doppelgangers return to their respective universes.
- Blood Spider appears as a playable character in Spider-Man Unlimited.
- Blood Spider appears in the Peter Parker is an imposter. Under his own Spider-Man persona, the former shows no interest in protecting and saving lives, stating he is the true Spider-Man as he is willing to kill whereas Peter will not. This disregard for human life causes the public to turn against Spider-Man, though a large number of people believe they are two separate people due to subtle yet obvious differences in their appearance. Eventually, Peter is able to draw the imposter into a public confrontation and prove his innocence. Subsequently, Blood Spider is defeated and incarcerated.[198]
Bloodwraith
Bloodwraith (Sean Dolan) is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. He was created by Mark Gruenwald, Dann Thomas, Roy Thomas and Tony DeZuniga, and first appeared in Black Knight #2 (July 1990).
Bloodwraith is the murderous enemy of
Sean Dolan was an amateur swordsman with no special abilities. When Sean drew the ebony blade, he found himself overwhelmed and controlled by all the souls of those the sword had slain, and became the Bloodwraith. The Bloodwraith was dark black in color and appeared in costume. The sword constantly craved new blood to add, and those it slew found their souls locked in an eternal battle of good vs. evil in a dimension inside the sword. Bloodwraith rides his winged horse, Valinor, and is an expert swordsman. He can control the ebony blade rather like a telekinetic. When separated from the blade, he can sense its presence and instantaneously teleport to its location. The ebony blade could slice through anything and, previously, would curse its wielder with petrification if its wielder used the blade to draw blood. When he wielded Proctor's sword, the Bloodwraith and Valinor appeared much more skeletal and could channel powerful blasts through the sword. When powered by the Slorenian souls, Bloodwraith became composed of an energy unknown to man, and both he and the sword grew to gigantic size.
Blue Blade
The Blue Blade (real name Roy Chambers
After the 1940s the character disappeared into obscurity until 2007, when he reappeared in the limited series The Twelve.[201] a Blue Blade is a very powerful weapon of the mystic oceans of the Baru Triangle
Blue Blaze
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (November 2023) |
Blue Blaze (real name Spencer Keen) is a superhero granted enhanced strength, dense skin, increased endurance and an increased life span by a mysterious blue energy source, and appeared in Mystic Comics #1–4.
Blue Diamond
Blue Eagle
Blue Marvel
Blue Shield
Blue Streak/Bluestreak
Blue Streak/Bluestreak is the name of different characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Don Thomas
Blue Streak | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Captain America #217 (Dec. 1978) |
Created by | Roy Thomas (Writer) John Buscema (Artist) |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Don Thomas |
Team affiliations | S.H.I.E.L.D. Corporation |
Abilities | Jet-skating suit grants: Various built in weapons Rapid healing[202] Ability to skate at superhuman speeds |
Blue Streak first appeared in
In Captain America #217 S.H.I.E.L.D. decides to put together a group of Super-Agents, of which Blue Streak becomes a member.[203] Later in Captain America #218 Captain America outed Blue Streak as a spy for the Corporation.[204] After the events of issues #217–218, Justin Hammer re-designed Blue Streak's equipment and funded his operations.[205] After leaving prison, the Blue Streak led a successful career as a professional criminal in the American Midwest. Blue Streak was contacted by Gary Gilbert about the serial killings of super-villains. Blue Streak was invited to join an underground network to locate and eliminate the killer, but he refused. Shortly afterwards, Blue Streak had a run-in with Captain America, and while making his escape, was subsequently murdered by the Scourge of the Underworld.[206]
In Captain America #427 the shape-shifter Dead Ringer obtained samples of dead tissue from Blue Streak's body so he could impersonate him.[207]
In Punisher vol.7 #5 Blue Streak appeared as one of the eighteen criminals, all murdered by the Scourge, to be resurrected by
Jonathan Swift
Blue Streak | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Ricadonna | |
Abilities | Jet-skating suit grants: Various built in weapons Ability to skate at 125 miles per hour |
Blue Streak (Jonathan Swift) first appeared during the height of the "Civil War" storyline. He is the successor of the original Blue Streak.[211] Using money from one of his heists, Blue Streak forms a team of similarly garbed thieves called Fast Five, consisting of Gold Rush, Silver Ghost, Green Light and Redline.[212]
During the "Avengers: Standoff!" storyline, Blue Streak and the rest of the Fast Five appear as inmates at Pleasant Hill which secretly serves as a S.H.I.E.L.D. Prison[213]
During the "Opening Salvo" part of the "Secret Empire" storyline, Blue Streak appears as a member of the Army of Evil.[214]
Blue Streak in other media
An original incarnation of Blue Streak appears in the Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur episode "Roller Jam!", voiced by Manny Jacinto. This version is Brian Glory, a skating enthusiast who seeks to challenge Moon Girl to a skating competition, but is consistently ignored.
Bob, Agent of HYDRA
Elias Bogan
Ahura Boltagon
Ahura is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. He appeared in Marvel Graphic Novel #39, created by Ann Nocenti and Bret Blevins.[215]
He is usually depicted as a member of the
Bomblast
Bombshell
Bombshell is the name of different fictional characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Wendy Conrad
Wendy Conrad is a mercenary specializing in explosives hired to kill
Lori and Lana Baumgartner
Mother/daughter criminal duo Lori and Lana Baumgartner, who originally existed in the Ultimate Marvel Universe, worked together as the Bombshells until Lana dissociated from her mother and began acting as a full-time superheroine. After Secret Wars (2015), Lana / Bombshell is now currently displaced to Earth-616, and is a member of the Champions led by Kamala Khan / Ms. Marvel.
Bombshell in other media
- Wendy Conrad appears in Tracksuit Mafia.
- The Lana Baumgartner incarnation of Bombshell appears as a playable character in Spider-Man Unlimited.[citation needed]
Bonebreaker
Alexander Bont
B.O.
B.O. is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
B.O. was an alien who arrived on Earth-8311 and was discovered initially by Orson Whales, who sent him to the Daily Beagle.
Boom-Boom
Boomerang
Boomerang is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Fred Myers was born in
After the Secret Empire collapsed, Boomerang returned to his native Australia and laid low for a few years, perfecting his deadly aim and making modifications to his weapons. Once he was ready, he returned to America and began offering his services as a freelance assassin-for-hire. His first mission was to assassinate
Boomerang was then recruited by
Around this time he also worked for the villain the Owl. He teamed up with the super-powered villain Grizzly. Both created new stylish outfits for themselves, Boomerang's resembling a three-piece business suit.[239] This did not last long, however, and he soon returned to his old costume.
Boomerang has been a member of
Boomerang plays a small role in the "Secret War" crossover event.[241]
During the "Civil War" storyline, Boomerang is briefly shown as a captive of Baron Zemo, captured before Zemo's team was given official sanction to take down villains.[242]
Despite this, he appears with
During the "
During the "
Boomerang appeared as a hired goon of the Rose and came into conflict with Jackpot, where he discovered her secret identity. He tracks Sara down at her house and murders her husband in front of her and her daughter.[248]
Boomerang appears later as a member of
After being imprisoned at the Raft, Boomerang was selected to be a part of the "beta team" of the
As part of the "
In the series
During the "
Boomerang later becomes the roommate of Peter Parker.[256][257]
During the "Hunted" storyline, Boomerang was seen as a patron at the Pop-Up with No Name.[258]
During
Boomerang in other media
- Frederick Myers / Boomerang appears in The Marvel Super Heroes,[261] voiced by Ed McNamara.[citation needed]
- Frederick Myers / Boomerang appears in The Avengers: United They Stand,[262] voiced by Rob Cowan.[citation needed] This version is a member of Baron Helmut Zemo's Masters of Evil.[263]
- Frederick Myers / Boomerang appears in Ultimate Spider-Man, voiced by Rob Paulsen.[264]
- An alternate universe-displaced incarnation of Frederick Myers / Boomerang appears in Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse.[citation needed] Additionally, a female version known as Cavewoman Boomerang was intended to appear, but did not make the cut.[265][266]
- Frederick Myers / Boomerang appears as the first boss of The Uncanny X-Men.[267] This version is a mutant with near-perfect throwing accuracy.
- Frederick Myers / Boomerang appears as a boss in The Amazing Spider-Man and Captain America in Dr. Doom's Revenge!.[268][269]
- The Ultimate Marvel incarnation of Frederick Myers / Boomerang appears as a boss in Ultimate Spider-Man.[270]
- Frederick Myers / Boomerang appears in Marvel Trading Card Game.[271]
- A Marvel Noir-inspired incarnation of Frederick Myers / Boomerang appears as a boss in the Nintendo DS version of Spider-Man: Shattered Dimensions, voiced by Jim Cummings.[272]
- Frederick Myers / Boomerang appears as a boss and as an unlockable playable character in Marvel: Avengers Alliance.[citation needed]
- Frederick Myers / Boomerang appears in Marvel: Avengers Alliance 2.[273]
- In 2014, Hasbro released a Frederick Myers / Boomerang action figure as part of the Marvel Legends action figure line.[274][275]
Bor
Further reading
|
Bor Burison is an
Bor, son of Buri, became the ruler of
Loki would impersonate Bor's ghost to get Odin to defeat
During the "
Bor once again returns to halt the wedding between Asgardian Sigurd and Valkyrie Dísir, causing much ire with the two as well as Danielle Moonstar, Hela, and Loki.[279]
Bor in other media
Bor appears in a flashback depicted in Thor: The Dark World, portrayed by Tony Curran.
Bova
Melissa Bowen
Further reading
|
Melissa Bowen is the mother of Tandy Bowen (the superhero known as Dagger) in Marvel Comics. The character, created by Bill Mantlo and Rick Leonardi, first appeared in Cloak and Dagger #4 (January 1984). The character, a wealthy socialite, was depicted as being very emotionally distant from Tandy.[280] When Tandy runs away, Melissa is irritated at her daughter due to the cost of hiring people to search for her.[281]
Melissa Bowen in other media
Melissa Bowen appears in the Freeform series Cloak & Dagger, portrayed by Andrea Roth.[282] After the car accident that killed Nathan Bowen on the night with the Roxxon Gulf Platform collapsed, Melissa struggled to make ends meet while dealing with the fact that Roxxon repossessed some of Nathan's stuff from her home upon her husband's death and posthumously firing with the help of her lawyer boyfriend Greg Pressfield. While she still loves her daughter, Melissa has since become an alcoholic and a drug pusher and has been working low paying jobs that she keeps getting fired from.[283] Despite her many flaws, she does show genuine concern for her daughter.[284] She further ends up in a relationship with her lawyer, but she breaks up with Greg. She immediately regrets this, but Greg is murdered by a female hitwoman posing as a water jug delivery person.[285] Melissa and Tandy celebrate the anniversary of Nathan's death. Tandy and Tyrone later access Melissa's memory where it was shown that Nathan once slapped Melissa for spilling coffee on paperwork; this led to Tandy taking up Peter Scarborough's offer to pay to get Melissa out of the trailer park.[286] The female hitperson that killed Greg confronts Melissa at her home working under Scarsborough's orders by the time Tandy visits her mother. The hitperson gives Tandy until the count of three to come out before she shoots Melissa.[287] Thanks to a tactic by Tandy, her mother is saved from the hitwoman and left to confront Scarsborough. Following the Terrors crisis, Melissa is cleaning up her house as Tandy comes home showing her a newspaper stating that Roxxon was responsible for the incident.[288] Tandy and Melissa have improved their relationship where they attend a women's support group.[289] Tandy later finds alcohol, pills, and Chinese food on Melissa's counter where Tandy figures out that her mother has relapsed.[290] Melissa is later seen among the women enthralled by Andre Deschaine.[291] Melissa appears inside the Loa Dimension watching Andre's performance. After being hit by Tandy's light attack, she, Mikayla Bell, and Mina Hess hold Andre as Tyrone and Tandy finish Andre off. Melissa is later seen seeing Tandy off when her daughter leaves New Orleans.[292]
Box
Jamie Braddock
Chris Bradley
Chris Bradley | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Gene Nation New Mutants | |
Notable aliases | Bolt, Maverick |
Abilities | Able to generate and control electricity (electrokinesis) |
Christopher Bradley, formerly known as Bolt and Maverick, is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, in particular those featuring the X-Men. He is a young mutant who first appeared in X-Men Unlimited #8.[citation needed] The character has appeared in several X-Men animated series and was portrayed by Dominic Monaghan in the 2009 film, X-Men Origins: Wolverine.
Chris Bradley was first introduced as a young boy who began suffering from increasingly painful headaches. The headaches resulted from his electrical mutant powers, which manifested and grew out of control in the middle of a class at school, leaving him unconscious. He was rescued by Jean Grey and Gambit, who had been sent by Professor Xavier to keep an eye on him and approach him should his powers reveal themselves. After taking him home, the X-Men offered him training at the Xavier Institute for Higher Learning. At first Chris was reluctant, but after being shunned by his best friend, agreed to join the school.
Chris spent several weeks at the school, quickly developing close friendships with the X-Men, particularly Iceman, whose own youthful personality seemed to connect well with Chris'. However, when the Beast ran a medical test on Chris, it was revealed that he was infected with the Legacy Virus, which would eventually kill him. Chris was afraid of what his future would hold, but Iceman and the other X-Men offered him aid should he ever need it.[293]
During the "X-Men: Zero Tolerance" storyline, in which the mutant hating Bastion began to target the X-Men, they lost touch with Chris. This left Bradley hurt with feelings of abandonment, particularly as his illness was growing steadily worse.[294]
He soon found a mentor in
When Maverick disappeared and was believed dead, Bolt took the Maverick alias for himself and joined the Underground, a group founded by
During the events of "
Chris Bradley in other media
- Chris Bradley appears in Victor Creedfor use in Stryker's experiments.
Isaiah Bradley
Brain Drain
Brainchild
Abigail Brand
Ellen Brandt
Further reading
|
Ellen Brandt is a supporting character in Marvel Comics. The character, created by Roy Thomas, Gerry Conway and Gray Morrow, first appeared in Savage Tales #1 (May 1971). She is the love interest of Man-Thing.
Brandt grew up in a loveless, emotionless household which she had hoped to escape.
Ellen Brandt in other media
- Ellen Brandt appears in Eric Savin attack Tony Stark, but Stark is able to cause an explosion that sends her flying into a set of power lines, fatally electrocuting her.
- The Iron Man 3 iteration of Ellen Brandt appears as a playable character in Lego Marvel's Avengers.[citation needed]
Betty Brant
G. W. Bridge
Brimstone Love
Britannia
Britannia is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Britannia is a member of the new UK Marvel superhero team
Carl Brock
First appearance | The Amazing Spider-Man #375 (March 1993) |
---|---|
Created by | David Michelinie, Mark Bagley |
Species | Human |
Further reading
|
Carl Brock is a character in
Carl was a businessman who lacked any form of emotion, until he met his love Jamie. They soon married and decided to have a family, but Jamie died when giving birth to their son Eddie. Carl would be cold and unloving towards Eddie, generally ignoring and only giving half-hearted compliments to his son. Eddie tried everything to gain his father's affection but it was never enough. Things only became worst after the teenaged Eddie got drunk and accidentally ran over a neighbor's young son while driving with friends to which Carl went near bankrupt when he used most of his money to cover the incident, causing his resentment towards his son to increase.
Anne Weying had gotten mysteriously pregnant with Eddie's child, leaving their son Dylan Brock with Carl who raised the boy as his own. Despite providing Dylan with a degree of love, Carl was abusive and even injured his grandson.[308] When Eddie returned to his father, Carl didn't attempt to help his son and ordered Dylan to go inside home as the Maker's agents recaptured Eddie.[309] Eddie came back and again tried to seek amends with his father, but Carl angrily told Eddie to leave as he didn't consider Eddie as his son.[310] Dylan thought that Eddie was an older brother and went to Eddie to know but Dylan sent Eddie to the hospital; however, Carl arrived and forced Dylan to get in the car. When Dylan tried to argue and saw Eddie as a great person, Carl was about to lash out, but Venom's humanoid form confronted Carl inside their minds and Venom left Carl in the desert all alone.[308]
Other versions
The Ultimate Marvel version of the character is Edward Brock Sr., an expert in bio-engineering and father of Eddie Brock Jr. He was a close friend with Richard Parker, with the two working together on the Venom project under Bolivar Trask's employment.[311] He along with Richard, Mary Parker and his wife died from the plane crash orchestrated by Trask to gain the project's full ownership.[312] But unbeknownst to Bolivar, Brock had kept a portion of the organism hidden for his son to inherit.[313]
In
In Venom: Beyond, Carl attended his son's funeral from a distance after the latter went through with suicide. Carl had a depressed look on his face while Anne was the only one to attended in person.
Carl Brock in other media
Edward Brock Sr. appears in Ultimate Spider-Man, voiced by Terrence Stone. This version tested the Venom suit personally while on the plane that he lost control of, which led to his and Richard Parker's deaths.
Dylan Brock
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (November 2023) |
Dylan Brock is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Eddie Brock
Nicholas Bromwell
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (November 2023) |
Nicholas Bromwell is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Broo
First appearance | mutant |
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Further reading
|
Broo is a fictional character from
He has been the object of bullying because of his odd behavior; however, he does not seem to understand teasing and even takes it as a compliment. He has developed a relationship with Idie,[316] and was at the top in his class behind Quentin Quire.
After discovering a robot placed there by the
Broo was often seen attacking fellow students and support staff at Killgore's school, random, brutal violence being fully supported and encouraged by the teachers.[
During the Battle of the Atom, Broo babysat Shogo Lee.[324]
Broo later appears as a member of the Agents of Wakanda.[325]
When Wolfsbane of the New Mutants comes into possession of a Brood King egg, Broo informs her of the object's significance, just as the Brood attack Krakoa en masse to retrieve it. Broo journeys into space along with the rest of the X-Men to lure the Brood away, and eventually ends up eating the egg's contents, making him a Brood King.[326]
Broo is a Brood mutant because he can feel compassion and has high intelligence. Like the rest of the Brood, Broo has several powers, including enhanced strength, enhanced speed, enhanced agility, ability to breathe in space, and insect wings that allow him to fly. His increased intelligence has resulted in funding for his beloved school; Broo has developed a line of pastries that cause the consumer to lose weight.[327]
Vanessa Brooks
Tara Vanessa Cross-Brooks is a character in
Vanessa Brooks in other media
- A character inspired by Vanessa Brooks called Miriam the Vampire Queen appears in the Spider-Man episode "The Vampire Queen", voiced by Nichelle Nichols. She is an ambitious vampire who incurs the wrath of Blade and Morbius. After draining people of plasma, she assembles the Neogenic Recombinator to turn everyone in New York into vampires. However, her plan is foiled by Blade, Morbius, Spider-Man, Black Cat, Terri Lee, and Abraham Whistler, though Miriam manages to escape.
- Vanessa Brooks appears in Blade (1998), portrayed by Sanaa Lathan.
- Vanessa Brooks makes a non-speaking appearance in Marvel Anime: Blade.
Brother Tode
Brother Voodoo
Brothers Grimm
Bruiser
Brutacus
Brute
Brute is the name of different fictional characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Reed Richards
Morlock version
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (November 2023) |
Brute is a member of the Morlocks and the brother of Hump.[332]
Personality construct
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (November 2023) |
An unnamed female Brute is a personality construct with super-strength that is a minion of Bagdal.[333]
Bucky
Bug
Bulldozer
Bullet
Bullet (Buck Cashman) is a character appearing in Marvel Comics. He first appeared in Daredevil #250 (January 1988), and was created by Ann Nocenti and John Romita Jr. A covert agent of the United States government, he wears a facemask while acting as a mercenary.
He participates in a scheme on the Kingpin's behalf. Bullet has the environmental protection organization "Save the Planet" bombed in a terrorist fashion then "arrested" the supposed saboteur who is released through legal maneuvering, and killed a man in toxic waste and framed the Save the Planet environmentalists. Matt Murdock / Daredevil confronted Bullet both times, and the two fought. Bullet realized that Daredevil was the man who fought him previously but does not know the costumed crimefighter's true identity. Bullet confessed to his crimes to the police but made a single phone call to which all charges against him are dropped and he's released. He is also the father of Lance Cashman who he supports despite his activities and usually leave at his place alone, and has Lance frequently lie to alibi his father.[334]
Bullet joined criminals recruited by Typhoid Mary in an assault alongside Bushwacker, Ammo and the Wildboys that nearly killed Daredevil.[335] Daredevil later decided to get revenge on Bullet, tracking Lance and helped against some bullies, earning Lance's trust. Lance managed to convince Daredevil to not fight his father, but Bullet misunderstood and believed Daredevil threatened Lance and the two fought before Lance stopped the fight. Bullet admitted actually liking Daredevil, attacking previously only because he had been hired to.[336] Bullet is later hired for the Kingpin's interests to buy land that would rise in value with a highway's construction, intimidating constructor Mr. Zeng to not help Ben Urich to which Daredevil is asked to help and publicly fought Bullet who relinquished the fight. Bullet is also having contempt for Gloria, Lance's mother who rarely accepts responsibilities to stay with Lance.[337]
After his citizenship revoked due to his mercenary actions at some point, Bullet works with
Bullet is hired alongside the Rhino, Crossbones, Stilt-Man and Bullseye by Quinn Stromwyn and Una Stromwyn to go on a rampage through Hell's Kitchen, but is defeated by Daredevil.[340]
He acted as the
Bullet survived and is imprisoned in the Myrmidon prison which he was broken out of by Daredevil to join the Fist alongside
Bullet was among the villains that were killed by
Bullet in other media
Buck Cashman appears in Daredevil: Born Again, portrayed by Arty Froushan.[345]
Bullseye
Bulwark
Bumbler
The Bumbler is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. He was created by Cody Ziglar and Natacha Bustos, and first appeared in Miles Morales: Spider-Man #25 (April 2021).
The Bumbler is a honey bee-themed criminal who encounters Miles Morales several times throughout his career.[346][347]
During the events of "
The Bumbler possesses bee-themed gadgets and weapons, including armor equipped with flight wings and can produce electric shocks, "Honeybombs" that generate honey and high-tech firearms.[346][347]
Nathaniel Bumpo
Sonny Burch
Further reading
|
Sonny Burch is a minor character in Marvel Comics. The character, created by writer John Jackson Miller and artist Jorge Lucas, first appeared in Iron Man (vol. 3) #73 (December 2003).
As chairman of Cross Technological Enterprises, he acquires Iron Man's technology patents to be sold to various companies to improve his own political position.[350][351] However, Burch had neither the knowledge nor care to fully understand that even Iron Man's outdated technology is too sophisticated for adapting; examples of Burch's incompetence include a submarine where Iron Man and Captain America save the military personnel,[350] a missile defense system for the U.S. Government,[352] and Oscorp's imperfect battlesuits and military drones.[350][353] Technological mistakes threaten a cargo plane carrying Iron Man's various armors (which were salvaged after blackmailing Carl Walker[354]) to crash into Washington, D.C., resulting in Burch taking a gun and committing suicide.[355] Fortunately, Iron Man saves the plane's personnel and guides it into a controlled crash-landing.[356]
Sonny Burch in other media
A variation of
Burglar
The Burglar is a character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by writer Stan Lee and artist Steve Ditko, the character first appeared in Amazing Fantasy #15 (August 1962).[358] The character was left unnamed in most of his appearances. He is the first criminal faced by Spider-Man. The Burglar is the killer of the hero's uncle and surrogate father figure Ben Parker.[359]
Little of the Burglar's early history is known, but it is mentioned that even in his younger years he was a robber. Caught at some point in his life, the Burglar became the cellmate of an elderly gangster named Dutch Mallone. The Burglar learned from Dutch, who talked in his sleep, about a large possession of money the aged gangster had hidden in a suburban home, which the Burglar planned and schemed to get (ironically as Peter Parker's Uncle Ben and Aunt May would accidentally discover, the possession had since been devoured by silverfish).[360]
Wanting to find out the location of the home where Mallone's possession was, the Burglar successfully robs a television station for information. Peter Parker, who had become a minor celebrity as Spider-Man, did not bother to stop him despite having the opportunity to do so. Learning that the house where Mallone's money had been hidden was the Parker house, the Burglar breaks into it searching for the money, killing Peter's uncle Ben Parker when he surprised the Burglar. Fleeing the scene, the Burglar is chased by police to an abandoned warehouse. A police officer outside Peter Parker's house told Peter Parker what happened and that his Aunt May is with a neighbor next door. Upon being told where the Burglar is, Spider-Man heads to the abandoned warehouse. Wanting to avenge the death of his Uncle Ben, Spider-Man attacks and knocks out the Burglar. It is then that Spider-Man realizes that the man is the thief he had encountered earlier at the television station. The Burglar was later left to be captured by the authorities by Spider-Man who upon realizing that he could have prevented Ben's death by simple humanitarian behavior in the earlier encounter decided to use his powers more responsibly, never again ignoring a crime if he could help it.[361]
Years later, the Burglar had served his time and was released from prison despite being deemed mentally unstable by psychiatrists.[362] Still searching for Mallone's treasure, the Burglar rented the old Parker home. After tearing it apart and finding nothing, he instead decided to interrogate Ben Parker's widow May Parker who now resided in a nursing home. The Burglar partnered with the nursing home's owner and head doctor Ludwig Rinehart, who was actually the supervillain Mysterio. The two took May captive and faked her death. The partnership later soured and the two criminals turned on each other, with Rinehart revealing his true nature before beating and imprisoning the Burglar. Escaping Mysterio, the Burglar retreated to the warehouse where he was first captured by Spider-Man—and where he has been holding May Parker captive. Spider-Man soon tracked down and confronted the Burglar to whom he revealed his true identity as Ben Parker's nephew. Believing that Spider-Man was about to kill him as revenge for murdering Ben, the Burglar suffered a fear-induced heart attack and died.[360]
The Burglar had a daughter named Jessica Carradine, a photographer who had a brief relationship with Spider-Man's clone Ben Reilly. She believed the murder her father committed was an accident—that the gun Ben Parker was shot with was his own, which went off by accident during a fight—and that Spider-Man had murdered him to stop him from revealing the truth about his "innocence". After learning that Ben Reilly was Spider-Man,[363] she first threatened to expose him with a photograph she took of him unmasked. Having witnessed Ben risk his life to save innocent people in a burning skyscraper, Jessica decided against it and gave him the photograph. She later visited Ben Parker's grave to apologize for her previous poor perception of him.[364]
Burglar in other media
- The Burglar appears in the Spider-Man (1967) episode "The Origin of Spider-Man,"[365] voiced by an uncredited actor.
- The Burglar makes a non-speaking appearance in a flashback in the Spider-Man (1981) episode "Arsenic and Aunt May".[366]
- The Burglar appears in a flashback in the Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends episode "Along Came Spidey",[367] voiced by an uncredited actor.
- The Burglar makes a non-speaking appearance in a flashback in the Spider-Man (1994) episode "The Menace of Mysterio".[368]
- The Burglar appears in the opening sequence of Spider-Man Unlimited which briefly recreates Spider-Man's origins along with Uncle Ben's death.
- The Burglar, amalgamated with Walter Hardy, appears in The Spectacular Spider-Man, voiced by Jim Cummings in the episode "Intervention" and James Remar in the episode "Opening Night".
- The Burglar makes a non-speaking appearance in a flashback in the Ultimate Spider-Man episode "Great Power". After killing Ben Parker, he is cornered by Spider-Man, who intends to kill him, but is unable to bring himself to do so and leaves him for the police instead.
- The Burglar appears in the Spider-Man (2017) "Origins" shorts, voiced by Benjamin Diskin.[369] This version was caught by Spider-Man at an abandoned warehouse. Spider-Man attacks him, but stops upon recognizing him. Using the opportunity to break free from Spider-Man's grip, the shaken Burglar runs out of the warehouse and immediately surrenders to the police that were waiting outside.[370]
- The Burglar appears in Spider-Man trilogy, portrayed by Michael Papajohn.[371]
- In Spider-Man (2002), he is credited as "Carjacker."[372] He robs a fight promoter who had cheated Peter Parker out of a cash reward. Wanting to get even, Peter lets the robber go despite having the chance to stop him. After his Uncle Ben is killed, Peter chases who he believes is the murderer and discovers the robber he let go earlier. The carjacker attempts to shoot him, but ends up tripping and falling to his death.
- In Spider-Man 3, he is credited as Dennis Carradine.[373] The Parker family learn that the carjacker was not Ben's killer. Instead, it was Carradine's partner, Flint Marko,[374] who accidentally shot Ben when the former startled him.
- The Burglar appears in The Amazing Spider-Man, portrayed by Leif Gantvoort.[375] This version is credited as "Cash Register Thief." He distracts a deli clerk after he refuses to let Peter Parker buy a bottle of milk so he can steal money from the till. The thief gives the bottle to Peter, who allows him to escape in return. On his way out, the thief runs into Ben Parker and drops his gun. The latter sees and tries to grab it, but the thief kills him in the ensuing struggle before escaping. After Peter finds Ben's body and eventually realizes it was the thief he allowed to escape, he works to track down his uncle's killer, only to encounter dead ends. By the sequel, it is implied that Spider-Man eventually caught the thief.
- The Burglar appears as the first boss of the Spider-Man film tie-in game, voiced by Dan Gilvezan. This version, also known as Spike, is the ringleader of the "Skulls", a notorious gang specializing in stealing and selling automobiles on the black market. When Spider-Man seeks out his Uncle Ben's murderer, Spike and the Skulls fortify their warehouse hideout, but Spider-Man infiltrates the building and defeats the Skulls before confronting Spike. The gang leader fights back, but is defeated and attempts to back away as Peter realizes his actions of letting Spike escape caused his uncle's death. Spike stumbles and fall through a nearby window to his death.
- The Burglar appears in The Amazing Spider-Man 2 film tie-in game, voiced by Chris Edgerly. Two years after his Uncle Ben's death, Spider-Man resumes his hunt for his uncle's killer, starting by interrogating Herman Schultz, who reveals his identity as Dennis Carradine, a low-level thug who has been selling advanced weaponry to gangs. Spider-Man later tracks down Carradine, who takes a driver hostage. After Spider-Man rescues the driver, Carradine crashes the car and is slaughtered by the "Carnage Killer" shortly before Spider-Man discovers his corpse in an alley.
Burner
Noah Burstein
Noah Burstein is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character, created by Archie Goodwin and George Tuska, first appeared in Hero for Hire #1 (June 1972).
Noah Burstein is a scientist who worked on recreating the super soldier serum that created
Burstein and Claire are later kidnapped by
Noah Burstein in other media
Noah Burstein appears in Luke Cage, portrayed by Michael Kostroff.[380]
Bushman
Bushmaster
Bushwacker
Butterball
Butterball is the name of two fictional characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Vivian Dolan
Emery Schaub
Emery Schaub is a superhero in the
An invulnerable overweight fry cook, Schaub is recruited to the Initiative program and given the codename Butterball. Despite Schaub's invulnerability, his lack of physical strength, skill, and wits make him an inappropriate candidate for the superhero program.[381]
When
Butterball in other media
The Emery Schaub version of Butterball appears in Lego Marvel's Avengers, voiced by Patrick Seitz.
Butterfly
Buzz
The Buzz | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Spider-Girl Annual #1999 (Sept. 1999) |
Created by | Tom DeFalco Ron Frenz |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Jack Benjamin Jameson |
Team affiliations | New Warriors |
Partnerships | Spider-Girl |
Notable aliases | JJ |
Abilities | Powered armor grants: Superhuman strength Flight 360 degree vision via goggles Gauntlets that fire electric blasts or streamers of sticky adhesive |
The Buzz (Jack "JJ" Jameson) is a fictional character appearing in
Jack Jameson, or JJ to his friends, accompanied his grandfather, J. Jonah Jameson, C.E.O. of Jameson Communications (publisher of the
Dr. Sonja Jade turned out to be a traitor who took Marla, Jonah Jameson and Buzz Bannon hostage and was stealing the project files and armor. While her minions went to retrieve the armor, JJ and Richie Robertson discovered what was happening and triggered a fire alarm. Buzz used the distraction to overcome most of his guards, but he was shot in the abdomen during the fight, while Richie was beaten unconscious. Buzz and JJ manage to escape and get to the armor. A few moments later, the Human Fly rescues the hostages and went after the villains, but Dr. Jade got away due to an explosion. Later on that evening Buzz Bannon's body was discovered. JJ had donned the armor, but he could not tell his grandfather (who, in a fit of rage, accused the Human Fly of killing Bannon). JJ knew that the body armor was the only way he could get revenge for Buzz's death. He kept the armor a secret from his grandfather and, in memory of his friend, called himself the Buzz. Richie, having seen Buzz die, agreed to help JJ with his armor from an electronics equipped van. With Richie's help, the Buzz was able to find and defeat Dr. Jade. The Buzz soon met Spider-Girl, but she was leery of him since she read in the Daily Bugle that he was a murderer. Buzz managed to convince her that he wasn't, and later helped her form a new team of New Warriors.
Buzzard
Buzzard is an anthropomorphic opossum and animal version of Vulture.
Byrrah
Byrrah is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Byrrah was a member of the Atlantean royalty, and a citizen of Atlantis. Byrrah and Namor were close friends at childhood though they became rivals.[388] Byrrah considered Namor a "half-breed" and unfit to rule Atlantis. Byrrah vied with Namor for the Atlantean throne when Emperor Thakorr was injured.[389]
Byrrah was possible heir to the throne while Namor was gone. When Namor did return, Byrrah used a mind-control device to force the Atlanteans to choose him as ruler and exile Namor. Byrrah formed an alliance with Namor's enemies Attuma and Warlord Krang to defeat him, but failed and was exiled from Atlantis.[390] With Krang and Doctor Dorcas, he unsuccessfully attempted to turn Atlantean public sentiment against Namor.[391] He next formed alliances with Llyra and the Badoon, and battled Namor and Namorita.[392] The two cousins later reconciled, and Namor pardoned Byrrah's crimes.
Byrrah brought word to Namor of Attuma's takeover of Atlantis.[393] Alongside Namor, Byrrah battled Attuma's forces but they were defeated.[394] Alongside Alpha Flight, Byrrah aided Namor and the Avengers against Attuma again.[395] With his fellow Atlanteans, Byrrah helped Namor establish the new kingdom of Deluvia.[396]
Byrrah in other media
- Byrrah appears in the "Namor" segment of The Marvel Super Heroes, voiced by Chris Wiggins.
- Byrrah appears as a mini-boss in Marvel: Ultimate Alliance, voiced by James Horan. This version is a member of Doctor Doom's Masters of Evil.
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