Ultron
Ultron | |
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Notable aliases | Ultron-5 Ultron-6 Ultron-7 Ultron-8 Ultron-9 Ultron-10 Ultron-11 Ultron-12 Ultron-13 Ultron-14 Ultron-15 Ultron-16 Ultron-17 Ultron-18 Crimson Cowl Ultron Prime Ultimate Ultron Hank Pym Doctor Doom Ultron Pym All-Father Ultron |
Abilities |
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Ultron (/ˈʌltrɒn/) is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by writer Roy Thomas and artist John Buscema, the character first appeared as an unnamed character in The Avengers #54 (July 1968), with his first full appearance in The Avengers #55 (August 1968). He is a self-aware and highly intelligent artificial intelligence in a robot body who develops a god complex and a grudge against his creator Hank Pym. His goal to destroy humanity in a shortsighted attempt at creating world peace has brought him into repeated conflict with the Avengers. Stories often end in Ultron's apparent destruction, only for the character to be resurrected in new forms.
Ultron's physical body is made of a durable alloy, and he has manifested various superpowers. These vary between different stories but generally include superhuman strength, speed, and agility, flight, and energy projection. The character usually operates alone or accompanied by legions of copies of his own robotic form known as Ultron Drones. Ultron is notable for being the first character in Marvel Comics to wield the fictional metal alloy adamantium[2] and for his (in-story) creation of the Vision.[3][2]
Debuting in the
Publication history
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (May 2014) |
The character Ultron initially appeared as an unnamed character in a cameo in
Jocasta, a robot created by Ultron featured in a number of Ultron storylines, was created by Jim Shooter and George Pérez for The Avengers #162 (August 1977).[7]
Fictional character biography
Creation and early appearances
Created by
Later, Ultron-5, the Living Automaton leads the Masters of Evil (consisting of Black Knight, Klaw, Melter, Radioactive Man, and Whirlwind) against the Avengers, having hypnotized Edwin Jarvis into working for him as the Crimson Cowl. While planning to blackmail New York, they were betrayed by Black Knight.[9]
Now referring to himself as Ultron-6, he uses the alloy
Battleworld and Ultron-12
Ultron-9 and Ultron-10 brainwash heroes into recreating the robot, before turning and being defeated.
Ultron-12 enters an alliance with the
Amalgamation and the Ultron Imperative
2000s
The Avengers discovered that Ultron's creations (Vision, Jocasta and Alkhema) have a secret program included—they are subconsciously compelled to rebuild Ultron. In this case, it is Alkhema who unintentionally rebuilds Ultron when attempting to create a new species of bio-synthezoids. However, Ultron-18 is composed of steel not adamantium, and is destroyed when Alkhema's subterranean base exploded after Hawkeye shot Alkhema with a vibranium arrow at Alkhema's request. Ultron's head was recovered by Antigone, an artificial girl and one of the synthezoids.[25]
Iron Man encounters a version from an old version of his armor and Ultron-18's head that leads the cult known as the
When Marvel launched a new title
However, this was not the end of Ultron, for his disembodied consciousness was thrown into the depths of space. He spent a few months floating through the cosmos as radio waves and energy. Eventually his signal was picked up by an outlying group of Phalanx who were attempting to contact the Technarchy. Fascinated by what he found, Ultron decided that the Phalanx lacked direction from a singular consciousness, and that he would be perfect for the role. Through sheer force of will, he merged himself with the Phalanx's programming. In turn, the Phalanx viewed Ultron as the sympathetic father they had yearned for. Under Ultron's guidance, the Phalanx and the Super-Adaptoid began the Annihilation: Conquest with invasions that started with the Kree space. Later by taking control of Adam Warlock's body, Ultron hopes to achieve "true techno-organic perfection" but is eventually forced to abandon Adam's body by the Technarchy Warlock and is later destroyed in combat by Wraith and Quasar.[30]
In the limited series Avengers/Invaders, it is revealed that S.H.I.E.L.D. Life Model Decoys have been partly replaced with versions of Ultron. When the original Human Torch appears in the present, they covertly parasitize the Human Torch's unique android physiology and become more human. The combined super teams (but mainly the Human Torch himself), however, discover the plan and destroy the androids.[31]
2010s
In the Mighty Avengers, Ultron is shown to infiltrate Jocasta and the Infinite Avengers Mansion. He names himself Ultron Pym and seeks to kill and replace his father before using his Infinite Mansion to conquer the universe.[32] Pym eventually offers Ultron a compromise, allowing Jocasta to be Ultron's bride, on the condition that Ultron banishes himself to ultraspace. Ultron agrees, but warns that he will be ruler of all someday.[33]
In The Avengers, the team visits a possible future in which almost all of humanity is destroyed by Ultron. Kang the Conqueror attempts to enlist them to defeat the robotic foe but another group of heroes and villains, plucked from all over time and space, ends up destroying this version.[34]
Later, also in Avengers, a cabal of super-intelligent supervillains discover a
During the "
It is later revealed that the Avengers had trapped an unidentified iteration of Ultron in deep space years earlier, sealing him inside a
As part of the "
During the "
During "Infinity Countdown", Ultron discovers that the Infinity Stones are restored and begins a quest to collect them all.[48] He goes to claim the Soul Gem while the aliens he infected with his virus are sent to Earth to take the Space Stone from Wolverine, and while they fail at their task, Ultron is able to steal the Soul Gem from Magus after killing the latter. Unbeknownst to Ultron, however, as he claimed the Soul Stone a fragment of Pym's soul enters the Soul World, where he is greeted by the fragment of Gamora's soul who revealed that he was going to be trapped there forever.[49] Ultron has also completely controlled the planet Saiph with Ultron hybrids and had captured the Silver Surfer. When Adam Warlock goes to Saiph, he discovers the hybrids infusing the Soul Stone into Silver Surfer's forehead while at the same time trying to transform him into an Ultron hybrid.[50]
During "The Ultron Agenda" arc, Ultron returns to Earth with plans to merge robots with humans like how Pym got merged with Ultron so that he can make the ultimate lifeform. In addition, he starts to call this form "Ultron Pym". After testing it on some people and some experiments on Wonder Man and Vision, Ultron Pym plans to make a fusion of Jocasta and Wasp. Iron Man and Machine Man interfere, with the resulting battle causing Iron Man to be molecularly bonded to the Ultronbuster armor.[51] The combined efforts of Stark Unlimited enable them to create an atomic separator that separates Stark from the Ultronbuster armor and Wonder Man from Vision.[52] Ultron Pym prepares to take revenge on Iron Man. This leads to Iron Man revealing what he discovered about the human and robot fusion. The person who merged with it has died and that the robot can only simulate their personality. In other words, his maker was killed when accidentally merging with Ultron. Learning about this and not wanting to risk proving Iron Man's point by having the atomic separator used on him, Ultron surrenders to Iron Man, knowing that Pym is dead. When the Avengers arrive, they restrain Ultron in a Vibranium casket reinforced with Asgardian magic until they can find a permanent place to have Ultron imprisoned.[53]
2020s
As Ant-Man and Stinger were moving Ultron's prison to a desert to shrink it into the Microverse where it will be in, Ultron masted the bug language where he contacted
It was revealed that the fragment of Hank Pym managed to escape from Ultron at the time and recreate his body which ended up older. While paranoid after being Ultron's "meat puppet", Hank Pym allied with Black Ant and they formed their version of the Lethal Legion by killing and reviving select villains. By the time Wasp learned the truth, Ultron-12 hijacked the "Victor Shade" persona in Whirlwind's body. Wasp remembered Ultron-12 as the "good Ultron" who then stated that he went through a soft reboot and knocked out Hank to protect him from the Lethal Legion who are being taken over by Ultron. In the nick of time, Wasp, Moon Knight, and Ultron-12 receive aid from Ant-Man, Mayor
Powers and abilities
The visual appearance and powers of the character have varied, but common powers include
Ultron's outer armor is usually composed primarily of adamantium, which is almost completely impervious to damage.
Ultron's travels through outer space have greatly expanded upon the mad machine's intellectual and mechanical capacity in new and intriguing ways. Having made contact with the parasitic biotechnical Phalanx species, Ultron has made his own derivative of the techno-organic virus called the Ultron Virus[61] through which Ultron gains vast conversion and roboticization capabilities, able to cast his own binary code into any conceivable form of machinery which he can steadily turn into an extension of the Ultron Intelligence. Making anything or anyone infected with his virus act according to his whims against their own free will.[62]
Being an adept technoform in any iteration, Ultron's newfound abilities to control, alternate, transform and assimilate with anything and everything via the parasitic insemination of his virulent machine algorithm in both organic and non-biological substrates gives him vast matter and energy reconfiguration abilities.[62][61] Ones powerful enough to commandeer whole planetary and even universal expanses in a single inning, on top of his natural ability to invent and fabricate the most sophisticated of mechanical systems ever conceived.[63] Through his vast technoformative abilities, Ultron could change and morph entire areas into sprawling masses of cables, pipes and transorganic metal that moved about in any given direction he willed it.[62] This effect gained more prominence with the more excess mass he could assimilate with his power, having once taken a slew of transmoded Kree Sentries into a massive body which reflected his physical likeness.[64]
Individuals infected with the Ultron Virus can spread it in a similar way to how biological viruses can transfer, through cuts and scratches or direct physical interaction such as barbs or plug-in like apparatuses generated from the transformed physiology.[65] Ultron later found himself physically as well as mentally bonded with his creator and long time adversary, Dr. Henry Pym. As such the fused entity now boasts all his robotic super robot's powers as well as Pym's genius science. Ultron can now change and alternate his size and mass at will through the acclimation of his maker's Pym Particle enhanced physiology.[66] Besides being able to grow to incredible heights in seconds, Ultron can shrink down to sub-quantum scale to shift between dimensions via accessing the Microverse or the Quantum Realm. Ultron once used such a tactic to shunt its mass into another dimension for the purpose of riding a neutrino to escape burning up in the sun.[67] Another practice the union share is a galaxy spanning collective mind established through the Ultron Virus, every iteration of Ultron created through initial infection share a hive minded intelligence where they all share each other's experiences. Anything the afflicted sees they all see, through which Ultron Prime is notified of anything they all come across effective immediately.[68]
Reception
Accolades
- In 2006, Wizard Magazine ranked Ultron 189th in their "Top 200 Comic Book Characters" list.[69]
- In 2014, IGN ranked Ultron 23rd in their "Top 100 Comic Book Villains" list.[70]
- In 2019, IGN ranked Ultron 18th in their "Top 25 Marvel Villains" list.[71]
- In 2022, The Mary Sue ranked Ultron 9th in their "Strongest Marvel Villains" list.[72]
- In 2022, Newsarama ranked Ultron 8th in their "Best Marvel supervillains" list.[73]
- In 2022, The A.V. Club ranked Ultron 20th in their "28 best Marvel villains" list.[74]
- In 2022, Screen Rant included Ultron in their "20 Most Powerful Marvel Villains" list.[75]
- In 2022,
Other versions
Age of Ultron
The 2013 crossover Age of Ultron storyline,[78] involves a post-apocalyptic future in which Ultron has taken over the world and exterminated most of the world's superheroes.[79] After Wolverine and the Invisible Woman try to avert this timeline by killing Hank Pym before Ultron's creation,[38] the resulting worse future prompts Wolverine to go back again and stop his past self from killing Pym, instead suggesting that Pym implant a command code in Ultron that will allow Pym to shut the robot down when he reaches a certain level of development.[80]
"Death of The Invisible Woman"
The Fantastic Four storyline "Death of The Invisible Woman" features an advanced humanoid called Alex Ultron, a member of the futuristic The Last Defenders.[81]
Deathlok-dominated future
In the pages of Savage Avengers, an unidentified Earth has its 2099 dominated by Deathloks led by a variation of Ultron who has taken the name "Deathlok Prime". Doom 2099 was shown to be an inmate at Hellrock Prison where he was held in a special area. When a time-displaced Dagger comes upon his cell, Doom 2099 is offered a deal to join the Avengers. Doom 2099 accepts so that he can take his revenge on Ultron.[82]
Earth-110
In the Earth-110 reality, Ultron assisted Doctor Doom, Hulk, Magneto, Namor, and Red Skull in taking over Manhattan.[83]
Earth-10943
In the first arc of the fourth Avengers series, Kang wages a war with Ultron in the not-too-distant future which causes the disruption of all time. The cause of the disruption is apparently Kang's recruiting of army after army from the timelines to battle Ultron—all to no avail: Ultron is supreme in this particular future.[84]
Galactus: Dawn of the Heralds
In an alternate universe, the Silver Surfer used the remnants of Ultron to resurrect Galactus, creating a fusion of Ultron and Galactus.[85]
Heroes Reborn (2021)
In the 2021 Heroes Reborn reality, Ultron was seen as an inmate of the Negative Zone and was among the inmates that escaped. This version was also merged with Hank Pym, but through being consumed by his works in cybernetics figuratively and literally. He and General Annihilus are defeated by Hyperion, who dismantles the former.[86]
Marvel Adventures
In the Marvel Adventures alternate universe, Ultron is a highly intelligent "neural network" that controls a section of the United States defense forces.[87]
Old Man Logan
In Mark Millar and Steve McNiven's 2008–2009 Old Man Logan story arc that appeared in Wolverine, the benevolent and peaceful Ultron 8 is the loving husband of Spider-Man's youngest daughter Tonya and the stepfather of Ashley.[88]
MC2
The title
Secret Wars (2015)
During the 2015 Secret Wars crossover event, the southern part of Battleworld is a wasteland uncontrolled by a baron. The wastelands are controlled by three ruling factions: Annihilus and his insect swarm, the Marvel Zombies, and Ultron who calls his realm "Perfection". When not battling among themselves, the factions assault a great wall made out of Ben Grimm called SHIELD, guarded by those banished from Battleworld called Hel-Rangers. Eventually, the three factions unite the powers and overrun the wall.[90][91][92]
The Last Avengers Story
The 1995 limited series The Last Avengers Story features a possible future in which Ultron-59 manipulates fellow Avengers foe Kang the Conqueror into attacking the Avengers. Ultron is destroyed by the Vision, sacrificing his own artificial life.[93]
Ultimate Marvel
The
Ultron Forever
In the 2014
What If?
Ultron was featured in some What If comics:
In the alternate universe of What If? Astonishing X-Men, the Danger Room got a body of her own and betrayed the X-Men. She eventually married Ultron and the two conquered the universe together.[101]
In other media
Television
- Ultron appears in The Avengers: United They Stand, voiced by John Stocker.[citation needed]
- Ultron makes a non-speaking cameo appearance in The Super Hero Squad Show episode "So Pretty When They Explode!".[citation needed]
- Ultron appears in The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes, voiced by Tom Kane.[102] This version was developed from Dr. Hank Pym's own brain patterns, initially starting as an army of peacekeeping drones (voiced by Wally Wingert[102]) that were used as the Big House's sentinels. However, Ultron obtains a genocidal view, battling the Avengers and also creating the Vision.
- Ultron appears in Truman Marsh (voiced by William Salyers[104]).
- Ultron appears in Marvel Disk Wars: The Avengers, voiced by Takumi Yamazaki in Japanese and Grant George in English.[102] This version was initially created as Hank Pym's lab assistant but rebelled after being upgraded in an attempt to hasten development of the Dimension Gate.
- Ultron appears in Lego Marvel Super Heroes: Avengers Reassembled, voiced again by Jim Meskimen.[102]
- Ultron appears in Marvel Super Hero Adventures, voiced by Michael Dobson.[102]
- Ultron appears in Lego Marvel Avengers: Time Twisted, voiced again by Michael Dobson.[102]
Film
Ultron appears in
Marvel Cinematic Universe
Ultron appears in media set in the
- Ultron first appears in the live-action film Ulysses Klaue into providing him with Vibranium. Despite being ambushed by Stark, Thor, and Steve Rogers, who destroy his body again, Ultron transfers his consciousness into another body identical to his previous body and shifts his focus towards creating an organic body using the Vibranium and the Mind Stone. However, he is betrayed by the Maximoffs after they discover his true intentions and loses the cradle containing the body to the Avengers, who subsequently upload J.A.R.V.I.S. into it and create the Vision. With his plan foiled, Ultron uses the Vibranium and Chitauri technology to make himself a more powerful body and to convert Sokovia's capital city of Novi Grad into a meteor. Ultimately, the Avengers thwart him once more while Wanda and the Vision destroy Ultron's body and Ultron himself respectively.
- An alternate timeline variant of Ultron appears in the Guardians of the Multiverseto stop him.
- Alternate timeline variants of the Ultron Sentries who serve the Illuminati of Earth-838 appear in the live-action film Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (2022), voiced by Ross Marquand.[111]
Video games
- Ultron appears in Captain America and the Avengers.[citation needed]
- Ultron appears as a boss in Marvel: Ultimate Alliance, voiced by James Horan.[102] This version is a lieutenant in Doctor Doom's Masters of Evil.
- Ultron appears as in Marvel Super Hero Squad Online, voiced by Tom Kenny.[citation needed]
- Ultron appears as a boss in Marvel: Avengers Alliance.[112]
- Ultron appears as a boss in Marvel Puzzle Quest.[113]
- Ultron appears as a boss and playable character in non-playable characters.[citation needed]
- Ultron appears as a boss and playable character in Marvel Heroes,[114] voiced again by Tom Kane.[102]
- Ultron appears as a boss and playable character in Marvel: Future Fight.[115] Additionally, both the original and MCU incarnations appear as alternate skins.[citation needed]
- The MCU incarnation of Ultron appears as a playable character and figurine in Disney Infinity 3.0, voiced again by Jim Meskimen.[116]
- Ultron, based on the MCU incarnation, appears as the final boss and playable character in Lego Marvel's Avengers.[117] Ultron Sentries also appear as playable characters.
- Ultron appears as a playable character in Marvel vs. Capcom: Infinite, voiced again by Jim Meskimen.[118] He uses the Space and Reality Stones to merge with the reploid Sigma to become "Ultron Sigma" so they can convert all organic life into their slaves using an improved Sigma virus.[119]
- Ultron appears in Marvel Powers United VR, voiced again by Jim Meskimen.[102]
- Ultron appears as a boss in , giving the Vision enough time to trap Ultron's programming within the Mind Stone.
- Ultron appears in Marvel Dimension of Heroes, voiced again by Jim Meskimen.[102]
- Two incarnations of Ultron appear in Marvel Future Revolution.[120]
Notes
- ^ The first use of the term adamantium in Marvel Comics was made in reference to Ultron in The Avengers #66, published in July 1969.
References
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- ^ a b c Couch, Aaron (May 1, 2015). "Marvel Legend Reveals What Stan Lee Initially "Hated" About 'Age of Ultron' Breakout". The Hollywood Reporter.
- OCLC 1047618717.)
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External links
- Ultron at Marvel.com
- Ultron on Marvel Database, a Marvel Comics wiki