Story Characters[]
The characters in the game's story mode are unlocked after beating certain levels.
Free[]
Alias | Image | Origin | Weapon | Abilities | Franchise | Debut | How-to-Unlock |
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Matches Malone was a New Jersey gangster and arsonist whose identity was taken by Batman after his death. Batman uses his street credibility to gain intelligence on criminal organizations he would not otherwise be able to infiltrate. This also acts as a way of providing redemption for a man that Batman believes wasn't all that bad. The nickname "Matches" comes from his habit of constantly keeping a match in his teeth. |
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DC | Complete Face of Ace to be added to be added | ||||
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DC | Batman #436 (August, 1989) | Complete Face of Ace to be added to be added | ||||
Iron Man (Anthony "Tony" Edward Stark) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Tales of Suspense #39 (March, 1963) Tales of Suspense #40 (April, 1963) Iron Man #85 (April, 1976) (as Model 4 MK 1); Marvel’s The Avengers (April 25, 2012) (modern incarnation) Iron Man 3 (April 24, 2013) (modern incarnation) Iron Man #300 (January, 1994) (Hulkbuster concept with the Mark I); |
Complete High in the Sky to be added to be added to be added to be added to be added Found in Designation Octavius | ||
Superman (Kal-El (Clark Joseph Kent)) |
N/A |
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DC | Action Comics #1 (June, 1938) | Complete Trio of the Most Powerful | ||
Green Lantern (Harold "Hal" Jordan) |
Green Lantern Power Ring |
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DC | Showcase #22 (October, 1959) | Complete That Continent Southwest of Spain | ||
N/A |
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Marvel | Amazing Fantasy #15 (August, 1962) Amazing Spider-Man #252 (May, 1984) Amazing Spider-Man #529 (April, 2006) |
Complete High in the Sky to be added to be added to be added | |||
Knuckle Claws |
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Marvel | Complete Science in Heaven to be added to be added to be added to be added | ||||
Captain America (Steven "Steve" Grant Rogers) |
Shield |
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Marvel | Captain America Comics #1 (March, 1941) | Complete High in the Sky to be added Complete Legends Never Die | ||
Thor Odinson | Mjolnir |
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Marvel | Venus #11 (November, 1950) (Golden Age incarnation); Journey into Mystery #83 (August, 1962) (Silver Age incarnation) |
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Marvel | Incredible Hulk #1 (May, 1962) Incredible Hulk #347 (September, 1988) (as Mr. Fixit) Incredible Hulk: Future Imperfect #1 (December, 1992) |
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Bartholomew Henry "Barry" Allen is a former private investigator and a scientist in the Criminal and Forensic Science Division of the Central City Police Department. Barry's mother was murdered when he was eleven years old on March 18, 2000 and the blame was wrongfully placed on his father. He was taken in by Joe West and he dedicated his life to proving his father's innocence. After the S.T.A.R. Labs particle accelerator exploded, causing a giant thundercloud to form, Barry was struck by lightning from this cloud, falling into a coma for nine months. When he woke up from his coma, he discovered that he had developed superhuman speed and various other abilities derived from it. Using these super powers, he began acting as a meta-human vigilante and superhero known as The Flash (initially referred to by the media as the Red Streak or The Streak) stylized as the "Scarlet Speedster". |
N/A |
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DC | Showcase #4 (October, 1956) Arrow Episode 31 (December 4, 2013) Flash Vol. 2 #138 (June, 1998) |
Complete Laboratories for Monkeys to be added to be added | ||
Martian Manhunter (J'onn J'onzz) |
N/A |
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DC | Detective Comics #225 (November, 1955) | Complete Laboratories for Monkeys | ||
Wonder Woman (Diana of Themyscira) |
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DC | All-Star Comics #8 (December, 1941) | Complete Trio of the Most Powerful | ||
Black Widow (Natasha Romanoff) |
Guns |
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Marvel | Tales of Suspense #52 (April, 1964) | Complete What Happened To Wind & Water? | ||
Hawkeye (Clinton "Clint" Francis Barton) |
Bow |
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Marvel | Tales of Suspense #57 (September, 1964) | |||
Thing (Benjamin "Ben" Jacob Grimm) |
Pilot of the shuttle of an unauthorized space expedition, Benjamin Grimm was exposed to cosmic radiation that caused his skin to turn into solid rock. He became the Thing of the superhero group, the Fantastic Four. | N/A |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #1 (November, 1961) | ||
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Marvel | New Mutants #98 (February, 1991) What If? Iron Man: Demon in an Armor (February, 2011); |
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Aquaman (Arthur Curry) |
Trident |
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DC | More Fun Comics #73 (November, 1941) | Complete Laboratories for Monkeys | ||
The Joker | The Joker of The Dark Knight was an enigmatic criminal with a Glaswegian smile who arrived in Gotham City with the sole intent of sowing discord indiscriminately. His only motive was to prove his nihilistic philosophy that everyone has darkness inside them once the veneer of civilised society was torn down. The Joker treated his history like a running gag, fabricating a new story of how he obtained his scars with each retelling. The first was to the crime lord Gambol. The Joker claimed that he witnessed his drunken father murder his mother before turning the knife on his frightened son. He recited a second tale to Rachel Dawes about his wife getting cut up by loan sharks whom she owned money to. To cheer her up and show solidarity, he scared his own face, only to have her repulsed by his visage. He prepared to tell Batman another story behind his scars, but was incapacitated before he had the opportunity. The Gotham police could not deduce his identity after he was processed, with no matches from fingerprints or teeth. |
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DC | ||||
Alexander "Lex" Joseph Luthor |
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DC | Superman #4 (March, 1940) (as Alexei Luthor); Action Comics #199 (December, 1954) (as Alexis Luthor); Swamp Thing Vol. 2 #52 (September, 1986) (as Alexander Luthor) |
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Green Goblin (Norman Virgil Osbourne) |
Norman Osborn was a corrupt industrialist and scientist who tried to perfect the Super-Soldier drug for S.H.I.E.L.D. He neglected his wife Martha Osborn and son Harry Osborn. After an OZ-injected spider bit Peter Parker during a field trip at Oscorp, Norman theorized that since the OZ combined with spider DNA gave Parker the abilities of a spider, if Norman were receive OZ combined with his own DNA he could become a heightened version of himself. The experiment went horribly wrong and an explosion occurred, affecting Harry and Dr. Otto Octavius, and Norman was transformed into a grotesque, demon-like monster. In an attempt to destroy all evidence of his existence, the monster killed Martha but Harry managed to escape while the house was burning down. The next day, the Goblin attacked Harry's school but was stopped by Spider-Man. During the fight, he plummeted off into the river, seemingly dead. However, Osborn survived his fall and believed that he had "evolved". He could control his transformations into an intelligent incarnation of the Goblin via OZ injections. Due to overdosing on OZ, he suffered hallucinations. These included seeing everything through a blood-red filter, objects such as the spider on Spider-Man's chest moving around, and creatures called "plasmids" tormenting him. |
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Marvel | ||||
N/A |
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Marvel | Web of Spider-Man #18 (September, 1986) (Eddie Brock); Amazing Spider-Man #569 (October, 2008) |
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Catwoman (Selina Kyle) |
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DC | Batman #1 (June, 1940) | Complete LexCorp's Ironic Infiltration | ||
Bane | The Bane of The Dark Knight Rises is said to have been born and imprisoned in The Pit, the worst prison on Earth, located within a Middle Eastern country. At some point, he took an interest in the wellbeing for the daughter of Ra's al Ghul, and aided in her escape when several of the inmates raped and killed Talia's mother. However, this selfless action resulted in the prisoners' exacting revenge by torturing and beating him to the point that he was wrapped up in bandages and paralyzed. He was eventually rescued by Ra's al Ghul and the League of Shadows when Talia informed him of what happened, and allowed to be trained within the League. Bane also wore a mask that pumped analgesic gas into his system to alleviate the pain from his injury within the prison. However, because he was a reminder of Ra's al Ghul's own failure to protect his wife and because of his love for Talia, Bane was eventually excommunicated from the organization by Ra's, culminating in Talia severing all ties to her father. Bane ended up rejoining after Ra's died in Gotham City, a death that Batman was involved in, as well as Talia al Ghul taking control of the organization. His actions also resulted in his becoming wanted as a terrorist by the CIA. |
N/A |
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DC | New Gods #18 (June, 1978) (Bane of Apokolips); Batman: Vengeance of Bane #1 (January, 1993) The Dark Knight Rises (July 20, 2012) |
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Sabretooth (Victor Creed) |
Claws |
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Marvel | Iron Fist #14 (August, 1977) | Complete LexCorp's Ironic Infiltration | ||
Abomination (Emil Blonsky) |
N/A |
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Marvel |
"Priced"[]
Alias | Image | Origin | Weapon | Abilities | Franchise | Debut | How-to-Unlock | Price |
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A.I.M. Agent | They might appear to be beekeepers. But with up-to-date technology, they can do far worse than just unleash killer bees on you. | Gun | Computer Hacking | Marvel | Strange Tales #146 (July, 1966) | Complete High in the Sky | 150,000 Studs | |
Alfred Thaddeus Crane Pennyworth | Plate |
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DC | Batman #16 (April, 1943) | Complete Assault on the Batcave | 300,000 Studs | ||
A.M.A.Z.O., better known simply as The Android or Professor Ivo's Android, is a nanotechnogical creation of the late Professor Ivo. Amazo's nanotechnology enabled him to copy any trait and characteristic of people and objects, by merely looking at them. |
N/A |
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DC | Brave and the Bold #30 (July, 1960) Justice League Episode 29 (October 4, 2003) |
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Baron Heinrich Zemo |
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Marvel | Avengers #4 (March, 1964) | Complete Final Curtain (Possibly) | 450,000 Studs | ||
Black Manta (David) |
N/A |
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DC | Aquaman #35 (August, 1967) | Complete That Continent Southwest of Spain | 360,000 Studs | ||
Carnage (Cletus Kasady) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #344 (February, 1991) (Cletus Kasady); Amazing Spider-Man #360 (March, 1992) |
Complete Assault on the Batcave | 450,000 Studs | ||
Clayface (Basil Karlo) |
N/A |
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DC | Detective Comics #30 (June, 1940) | Complete Face of Ace | 350,000 Studs | ||
Deathstroke (Slade Joseph Wilson) |
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DC | The New Teen Titans #2 (December, 1980) | Complete Death to Doom | 490,000 Studs | ||
Devil Dinosaur | *N/A |
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Marvel | Devil Dinosaur #1 (April, 1978) | Complete Savagery of the Phanerozoic | 250,000 Studs | ||
Doctor Doom (Victor von Doom) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #5 (July, 1962) | Complete Death to Doom | 500,000 Studs | ||
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #3 (July, 1963) Ultimate Spider-Man #2 (December, 2000) (original); Amazing Spider-Man #697 (January, 2013) (Otto Octavius as Spider-Man); |
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Frost Giant | The Frost Giants are a mythological race that live in Jötunheim, one of the nine worlds of Norse cosmology. They were banished there by the Æsir who refuse them entry to their world, Asgard. The giants frequently interact with the Æsir, as well as the Vanir. They are usually in opposition to, or in competition with them, but also interact with them in a non-hostile manner. Some giants even intermarry with the Æsir and Vanir. | Ice Axe |
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Marvel | Journey into Mystery #112 (January, 1965) | Complete Trio of the Most Powerful | 150,000 Studs | |
Giganta (Doris Zuel) |
Giganta is Dr. Doris Zuel, who suffered from a fatal blood disease. She captured Wonder Woman and planned to put her "life-essence" into Wonder Woman's body using an experimental machine. The experiment was interrupted by Wonder Girl (Cassie Sandsmark), and Zuel was declared dead. Subsequently Zuel's assistant, Branson, discovered Zuel's essence had been stored in the transference machine's buffer module, and put her in the body of one of the test animals, a gorilla named Giganta. Desperate to return her mind to a human body, Zuel the gorilla abducted a comatose circus strongwoman named Olga with size-changing abilities through unknown means (though Olga was comatose due to a mysterious shaman), and used the machine to successfully transfer her mind into that body, keeping the villain name "Giganta." | N/A |
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DC | Wonder Woman #9 (June, 1944) (Pre-Crisis); Wonder Woman Vol. 2 #126 (October, 1997) (Doris Zuel) |
Complete Laboratories of Monkeys | 320,000 Studs | |
Gorilla Grodd | N/A |
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DC | The Flash #106 (May, 1959) | Complete Laboratories of Monkeys | 350,000 Studs | ||
Grim Reaper (Eric Williams) |
Scythe |
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Marvel | Avengers #52 (May, 1968) The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes Micro Episode 4 (September 25, 2010) (Grim Reaper himself; disguised as regular HYDRA agent); |
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Human Torch (Jonathan "Johnny" Lowell Spencer Storm) |
Following his sister, Johnny Storm was part of Reed Richards' space exploration. After cosmic radiation exposure, he gained pyrokinetic abilities. Becoming the Human Torch, he's now the rebel member of the Fantastic Four. | N/A |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #1 (November, 1961) | Complete Science in Heaven | 400,000 Studs | |
HYDRA Agent | Trained by Taskmaster, these agents of the worldwide infamous terrorist organization, HYDRA, are the definitive "face" of the group's army. | Gun |
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Marvel | Strange Tales #135 (August, 1965) | Complete Face of Ace | 150,000 Studs | |
Ka-Zar (Kevin Plunder) |
Dagger |
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Marvel | Marvel Comics #1 (October, 1939) (Ka-Zar alias with David Rand); X-Men #10 (March, 1965) (Kevin Plunder) |
Complete Savagery of the Phanerozoic | 200,000 Studs | ||
Killer Croc (Waylon Jones) |
N/A |
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DC | Detective Comics #523 (February, 1983) | Complete What Do You Have Against Asylums? | 370,000 Studs | ||
King Shark (Nanaue) |
N/A |
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DC | Superboy Vol. 4 #0 (October, 1994) | Complete That Continent Southwest of Spain | 280,000 Studs | ||
Laufey | In the early days, Odin, the King of Asgard, marched his forces into Jotunheim to battle Laufey and the Frost Giants. Odin faced down Laufey and destroyed his war club, prompting Laufey to brandish a sword. A sprawling battle between the two forces ensued. The battle ended with Odin using Mjolnir to cripple Laufey. Odin discovered a baby, Laufey's son Loki, amongst the wreckage, and made the decision to raise him as his own son. Laufey had kept Loki hidden as he was ashamed that Loki had been born a runt. | N/A |
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Marvel | Journey into Mystery #112 (January, 1965) | Complete Trio of the Most Powerful | 280,000 Studs | |
Lizard (Curtis "Curt" Connors) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #6 (November, 1963) | Complete Big House of a Zoo | 280,000 Studs | ||
Mastermind (Jason Wyngarde) |
N/A |
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Marvel | X-Men #4 (March, 1964) | Complete X-Siege | 250,000 Studs | ||
Mr. Freeze (Victor Fries) |
This Victor Fries started out as nothing more than a simple thief. After a successful diamond heist he was suddenly pursued by The Batman, who chased him to a cryogenics laboratory. In an attempt to reclaim the diamonds he dropped, he fell into a freezing pod with a live exposed cable. Despite the Batman's attempt to help Victor, it proved futile, and Victor was presumed to be dead. However, Victor's body was electrocuted exactly the same time as the blood froze in his veins, mutating him into a bizarre quasi-undead being who could generate extreme cold around him. It didn't take him long to convince the scientist who revived him to build a suit to keep his powers under control. |
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DC | Blackhawks #117 (October, 1957) (Mr. Freeze alias with a robot); The Batman Episode 5 (October, 2004) |
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M.O.D.O.C. (Mechanical Organism Designed Only for Conquest) (George Tarleton) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Tales of Suspense #93 (September, 1967) | Complete Designation: Octavius | 300,000 Studs | ||
Parasite (Rudolph "Rudy" Jones) |
N/A |
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DC | Action Comics #340 (August, 1966) (Parasite alias with Raymond Maxwell Jensen); Firestorm Vol. 2 #58 (April, 1987) (Rudy Jones) |
Complete LexCorp's Ironic Infiltration | 300,000 Studs | ||
N/A |
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DC | The Flash #139 (September, 1963) The Flash (2014 TV Series) Episode 1 (October 7, 2014) |
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Red Skull (Johann Schmidt) |
Gun |
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Marvel | Captain America Comics #1 (March, 1941) (Red Skull alias with George Maxon; Captain America Comics #7 (October, 1941) (Johann S(c)hmidt) |
Complete Final Curtain (Possibly) | 500,000 Studs | ||
Rhino (Aleksei Mikhailovich Sytsevich) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #41 (October, 1966) | Complete Big House of a Zoo | 200,000 Studs | ||
Sandman (William Baker (Flint Marko)) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #4 (September, 1963) | Complete What Happened To Wind & Water? | 400,000 Studs | ||
Scarecrow (Jonathan Crane) |
Dr. Jonathan Crane was an acting psychiatrist at Arkham Asylum who was secretly using inmates to test his psychotropic drug that induced frightening hallucinations, as well and using them as a secret labor force to distribute it. Due to the fear the drug inspired, he created a mask modelled on the archetype of a scarecrow. |
Fear Gas Grenades | DC | |||||
Scarlet Witch (Wanda Maximoff) |
Pietro and Wanda were in the clutches of Baron von Strucker, who intended to use them against the Avengers. They escaped when the Avengers attacked Strucker's castle, coming to work under Ultron, helping him with his schemes to bring peace to the world, though she and Pietro left him when she read his mind and realized that he meant to destroy the human race in order to restore peace. |
N/A |
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Marvel | 350,000 Studs (all three) | |||
Solomon Grundy (Cyrus Gold) |
N/A |
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DC | All-Star Comics #61 (October, 1944) | Complete Hall of Mayhem | 350,000 Studs | ||
Storm (Ororo Munroe) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Giant-Size X-Men #1 (May, 1975) | Complete X-Siege | 400,000 Studs | ||
Taskmaster (Tony Masters?) |
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Marvel | Avengers #195 (May, 1980) | Complete Class is in Session | 350,000 Studs | ||
Viper (Ophelia Sarkissian) |
Madame Hydra was orphaned as a child in Central Europe (Hungary). Part of her face was scarred at one time, although it has since been healed. Among twelve other girls, she was taken in by Hydra and raised by Commander Kraken. For twenty-two years, Viper excelled and became Kraken's best student. She eventually rose through the ranks of Hydra and frequently came into conflict with Captain America and S.H.I.E.L.D. |
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Marvel | Captain America #110 (February, 1969) | Complete Final Curtain (Possibly) | 400,000 Studs | |
Vulture (Adrian Toomes) |
Gun |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #2 (May, 1963) | Complete High in the Sky | 360,000 Studs |
Hidden Story Level Characters[]
These character scan be found in hidden locations during story levels (most are only gotten in the free-play versions).
Alias | Image | Origin | Weapon | Abilities | Franchise | Debut | Level | Price |
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Aqualad (Kaldur'ahm) |
Water Swords |
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DC | Young Justice Episode 1 (November 26, 2010) | That Continent Southwest of Spain | 270,000 Studs | ||
Arnim Zola | Born in Weisshorn Mountains of Switzerland in the early part of the 20th Century, Arnim Zola was child prodigy who ended up working as a Nazi scientist under Baron Heinrich Zemo. His genetic experiments aided the party and even took part in the establishment of Hydra, as offered by Baron Wolfgang von Strucker. While its unknown as to when Zola switched to his robot body, it was most likely during the 40s. Even after the war was over, he was a regular menace to Captain America. |
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Marvel | Captain America #208 (April, 1977) | 300,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
Dr. Ray Palmer is a businessman and the former CEO of Palmer Technologies, previously known as Queen Consolidated. He is the brother of Sydney Palmer, who in at least one version of the future is considered to be the father of the robotics industry. Ray was engaged to the late Anna Loring, and later dated Felicity Smoak, a clandestine member of Team Arrow, although their relationship did not last. Having designed a powerful exo-suit, he began acting as a vigilante in Star City, calling himself the Atom. While testing out a new function of his exo-suit, Ray accidentally caused an explosion which shrunk him to a miniature size; stuck in this state and unable to call for help, his friends presumed him dead. After months Ray managed to contact Felicity but was captured by Damien Darhk for his technology. However, thanks to the efforts of Team Arrow, Ray was rescued and would continue to aid them in their fight against H.I.V.E. In early 2016, Ray Palmer was recruited by time-traveler Rip Hunter on a mission to take down Vandal Savage. |
N/A |
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DC | |||||
Batgirl (Barbara Gordon) |
Batarang |
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DC | Detetctive Comics #359 (January, 1967) | Assault on the Batcave | 300,000 Studs | ||
Claws |
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Marvel | ||||||
Black Adam (Teth-Adam) |
N/A |
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DC | Marvel Family #1 (December, 1945) | Final Curtain (Possibly) | 450,000 Studs | ||
Black Canary (Dinah Laurel Lance) |
Dinah Laurel Lance, known simply as Laurel Lance, was a citizen of Star City and one of its most beloved public servants. Laurel was the oldest daughter of the late Quentin Lance and Dinah Lance (after whom she was named) the older sister of Sara Lance, and the on/off girlfriend and longtime friend of Oliver Queen. The ex-girlfriend of the late Tommy Merlyn, she was a lawyer who held the position of assistant district attorney and was previously a former legal aid attorney. However, after the death of her sister she was inspired to take up vigilantism and received training from Ted Grant and later by her close friend and her sister's former lover, Nyssa al Ghul. She eventually joined Team Arrow and became known as the Black Canary, the second Canary of her beloved city. |
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DC | Flash Comics #86 (August, 1947) (Black Canary alias with Dinah Drake Lance); Arrow Episode 1 (October 10, 2012) |
300,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
Black Panther (T'Challa) |
Vibranium Claws |
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Marvel | 300,000 Studs (each variation) | ||||
Black Spider (Eric Needham) |
N/A |
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DC | Detective Comics #463 (September, 1976) | Laboratories for Monkeys | 150,000 Studs | ||
Captain Atom (Nathaniel Christopher Adam) |
N/A |
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DC | Space Adventures #33 (March, 1960) (as Allen Adam); Captain Atom #1 (March, 1987) (as Nathaniel) |
Final Curtain (Possibly) | 470,000 Studs | ||
Leonard "Lenny" Snart, nicknamed Captain Cold (or simply Cold) by Cisco Ramon, was a world-class thief from Central City. He was also the older brother of Lisa Snart and the son of the late Lewis Snart. In 2014, after the appearance of Barry Allen/The Flash, who started endangering his heists with his heroics, Leonard sought to eliminate him. Acquiring the cold gun he had frequent encounters with the Flash, along with his partner Mick Rory/Heat Wave. In 2015, Snart and Barry reached a truce where Barry would let Snart continue his heists, as long as he didn't kill anyone in the process and didn't expose his identity to anyone, and became an occasional ally of his. In early 2016, Snart and Mick were recruited by Rip Hunter into the Legends, a time-traveling team of superheroes dedicated to hunting down Vandal Savage and preventing his uprising in 2166. Being considered "supervillains", he and Mick were seen as outcasts. Though both initially joined to exploit the potentials of time travel Snart came to be genuine about the cause, and genuinely befriended the Legends. |
Cold Gun |
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DC | Showcase #8 (June, 1957) The Flash (2014 TV Series) Episode 4 (October 28, 2014) |
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Captain Marvel (Mar-Vell) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Marvel Super-Heroes #12 (December, 1967) | Final Curtain (Possibly) | 380,000 Studs | ||
Cheetah (Barbara Ann Minerva) |
Claws |
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DC | Wonder Woman #6 (September, 1943) (Cheetah alias with Priscilla Rich); Wonder Woman Vol. 2 #7 (August, 1987) (Barbara Ann Minerva) |
Trio of the Most Powerful | 320,000 Studs | ||
Cyclops (Scott Summers) |
During Apocalypse's take over, Scott's father Christopher took his wife and two children and attempted to flee to Canada by plane. Along the way, their ship was intercepted by a Shi'ar craft. Chris pushed his sons out of the plane with the only parachute available. Scott and Alex were found by Sinister who placed the boys in his "orphanage" located in Nebraska. Both Alpha mutants, the boys grew up to hold the rank of Prelate. Scott and Alex Summers dominated the new mutant aristocracy in Apocalypse's America. Sinister employed the brothers to operate his breeding pens, acting as security, and sometimes performing as a special ops unit the Elite Mutant Force. Scott's ability to show emotional restraint in battle earned him Sinister's favor over Alex, fueling a dangerous rivalry between the brothers. This rivalry worsened when the brothers reunited with their real father - Christopher Summers - but were forced to fight him. Realizing that their father was infected a Brood embryo, Scott was forced to slay his own father. |
N/A |
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Marvel | 330,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
Deadshot (Floyd Lawton) |
Arm-mounted Guns |
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DC | Batman #59 (June, 1950) | Death to Doom | 330,000 Studs | ||
Doctor Fate (Kent Nelson) |
N/A |
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DC | More Fun Comics #55 (May, 1940) | Final Curtain (Possibly) | 500,000 Studs | ||
Marvel | Death to Doom (each variation) | |||||||
Electro (Maxwell "Max" Dillon) |
N/A |
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Marvel | |||||
Firefly (Garfield Lynns) |
Flamethrowers |
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DC | Detective Comics #184 (June, 1952) | Face of Ace | 200,000 Studs | ||
N/A |
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Marvel | Tales to Astonish #27 (January, 1962) Tales to Astonish #49 (November, 1963) Avengers #59 (December, 1968) |
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Green Arrow (Oliver Jonas Queen) |
Oliver Queen is a former billionaire playboy turned vigilante archer. Oliver is the son of the late Robert Queen and the late Moira Queen, and the half-brother of Thea Queen. Lost on the island of Lian Yu, Oliver went on a mission of survival and self-discovery, learning a great deal of skills. He traveled to China and Russia, working as an agent of A.R.G.U.S. for some time, an undercover operative in Shadowspire, and a member of the Bratva known as Kapot, and the murderous vigilante Luchnik/Kapiushon. After being presumed dead and lost at sea for five years, Oliver returned home with a mission to save his city from crime and corruption. He began his crusade as an archer who would eventually become known as The Hood, who was willing to use lethal force by targeting members on his father's List. After the death of his best friend, Tommy in the Undertaking, Oliver renamed himself The Arrow, while also making a vow never to kill again unless absolutely necessary. |
Bow |
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DC | ||||
Harley Quinn (Harleen Francis Quinzel) |
Hammer |
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DC | Batman: The Animated Series Episode 7 (September 11, 1992) | What Do You Have Against Asylums? | 280,000 Studs | ||
Kendra Saunders, nicknamed Hawkgirl by Cisco Ramon, is a reincarnation of the Egyptian High Priestess Chay-Ara. Kendra is also the soulmate and lover of Carter Hall, and the ex-fiancée of Ray Palmer. In early 2016, Kendra Saunders was recruited by the rogue time-captain Rip Hunter on a mission to take down Vandal Savage once and for all. |
Mace |
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DC | Flash Comics #1 (January, 1940) JSA Secret Files and Origins #1 (August, 1999) The Flash (2014 TV Series) Episode 23 (May 19, 2015) |
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Hawkman (Carter Hall) |
Carter Hall is a reincarnation of the Egyptian prince Khufu and the vigilante Hawkman, initially killed by Vandal Savage. |
Mace | DC | |||||
Heat Wave (Mick Rory) |
Mick Rory, nicknamed Heat Wave by Cisco Ramon, is a pyromaniac and the criminal partner of the late Leonard Snart/Captain Cold; both were criminals and adversaries of the Flash. In January 2016, Mick and Snart were recruited by Rip Hunter into the Legends, a time travelling team of superheroes dedicated to hunting down Vandal Savage and preventing his uprising in 2166. Considered "supervillains" in comparison to the rest of their team, Mick and Snart were seen as outcasts. |
Heat Gun |
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DC | 300,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
Hobgoblin (Roderick Kingsley) |
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Marvel | Peter Parker, The Spectacular Spider-Man #43 (June, 1980) | High in the Sky | 250,000 Studs | ||
Hydro-Man (Morris Bench) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #212 (January, 1981) | What Happened To Wind & Water? | 150,000 Studs | ||
Iceman (Robert "Bobby" Louis Drake) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | X-Men #1 (September, 1963) | X-Siege | 300,000 Studs | ||
Invisible Woman (Susan "Sue" Victoria Storm-Richards) |
Being the fiance of Reed Richards, Susan Storm was part of the shuttle exploration that created the Fantastic Four. Her cosmic radiation exposure gave her light-bending abilities & forcefield projection. The Invisible Woman keeps the Fantastic Four together. | N/A |
|
Marvel | Fantastic Four #1 (November, 1961) | |||
N/A |
|
Marvel | ||||||
Kraven the Hunter (Sergei Nikolaevich Kravinoff) |
|
|
Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #15 (August, 1964) | High in the Sky | 230,000 Studs | ||
Lava Lord | Aquaman enemy Lava Lord is a physical human-esque compound of condensed volcanic gas & magma, and ruler of the Fire-Trolls. | N/A |
|
DC | Aquaman Vol. 5 #52 (February, 1999) | That Continent Southwest of Spain | 150,000 Studs | |
Loki Laufeyson | Loki manipulated Norman Osborn into leading his Dark Avengers and H.A.M.M.E.R. into attacking Asgard, intent on having it returned to its proper place in the Nine Realms. However, he underestimated the destructive power of the Sentry, who had given into the whispers of his Void persona. When Steve Rogers lead the true Avengers in defense of Asgard, Osborn had the Void unleash his power in full and Asgard was destroyed. Seeing that his plans had gone farther than he had intended, he used the Norn Stones to help the Avengers fight against the Void and was killed by it in front of a shocked Thor. "I'm sorry, brother" were his last words. His death was far from permanent. Before the Siege of Asgard Loki had manipulated Hela into taking his name out of the Book of Hel, allowing himself to be reborn instead of truly dying. Thor, missing his little brother despite all his villainy, found him reborn as a much younger Loki in Paris under the name of "Serrure" (Lock in French), without any memories of his acts as an adult. After a short chase, Thor caught the boy and told him who he really is. Although initially thinking that the Thunder God was just a crazy man, Loki started to believe him, although he had no memories of his past or even his real name. The boy also told Thor about his dreams in which he had done horrible things and tearfully asked him why. When Thor offered his help, Loki was hesitant, fearing that his nightmares were his memories and that he was everything he feared but ultimately accepted. |
|
Marvel | Venus #6 (August, 1949) (Golden Age); Thor (April 21, 2011) Thor #617 (January, 2011) |
||||
Man-Bat (Kirk Langstrom) |
Claws |
|
DC | Detective Comics #500 (June, 1970) | Face of Ace | 260,000 Studs | ||
Manchester Black | Manchester Black was the Union Jack wearing leader of a team of super-powered antiheroes known as The Elite. Very little is known about the Englishman's background; what little that is known include insinuations that he was abused both physically and sexually by his parents while growing up. Manchester later says that he used to love heroes, but when he grew up he realized that the only way to truly stop the villains was to kill them. | N/A |
|
DC | Action Comics #775 (March, 2001) | LexCorp's Ironic Infiltration | 200,000 Studs | |
Metallo (John Wayne Corben) |
N/A |
|
DC | Action Comics #252 (May, 1959) | Laboratories for Monkeys | 300,000 Studs | ||
Mr. Fantastic (Reed Richards) |
The leader of the space expedition crew, Reed Richards was affected by cosmic rays, granting him elasticity. Reed became the leader of the Fantastic Four, Mister Fantastic. | N/A |
|
Marvel | Fantastic Four #1 (November, 1961) | |||
Mr. Mxyzptlk (real name unpronounceable) |
N/A |
|
DC | Superman #30 (September, 1944) | LexCorp's Ironic Infiltration | 280,000 Studs | ||
N/A |
|
Marvel | Marvel Super-Heroes #13 (March, 1968) Ms. Marvel #1 (January, 1977) Captain Marvel Vol. 7 #1 (September, 2012) |
|||||
Mysterio (Quentin Beck) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #2 (May, 1963) | High in the Sky | 240,000 Studs | ||
Nicholas “Nick” Joseph Fury | Marvel | |||||||
DC | Detective Comics #38 (April, 1940) (as Robin) Superman #158 (January, 1963) with Kal-El; |
|||||||
Ocean Master (Orm Marius) |
Magic Trident |
|
DC | Aquaman #29 (October, 1966) | That Continent Southwest of Spain | 350,000 Studs | ||
Penguin (Oswald Chesterfield Cobblepot) |
Umbrella Rifle |
|
DC | Detective Comics #58 (December, 1941) | What Do You Have Against Asylums? | 320,000 Studs | ||
Poison Ivy (Pamela Lilian Isley) |
Vine |
|
DC | Batman #181 (June, 1966) | What Do You Have Against Asylums? | 300,000 Studs | ||
Professor X (Charles Francis Xavier) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | X-Men #1 (September, 1963) | Final Curtain (Possibly) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Quicksilver (Pietro Maximoff) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | X-Men #4 (March, 1964) | Class is in Session | 340,000 Studs | ||
Red Hood (Jason Todd) |
Guns |
|
DC | Batman #408 (June, 1987) | Assault on the Batcave | 270,000 Studs | ||
Red Tornado | N/A |
|
DC | Justice League of America #64 (August, 1968) | Final Curtain (Possibly) | 450,000 Studs | ||
Reptil (Humberto Lopez) |
Humberto Lopez's parents were paleontologists that dug up a crystallized bone when he was with them in the desert. The medallion had a strange energy in it that had to do with dinosaurs. Under the codename Reptil, Humberto used it to obtain the abilities of any dinosaur by thinking of it and even had an empathy to sense dinosaurs and other reptiles. | Claws |
|
Marvel | Avengers: The Initiative Featuring Reptil (May, 2009) | Final Curtain (Possibly) | 250,000 Studs | |
Pepper Potts was originally a member of a secretarial pool, and got her job by fixing an accounting error made by Stark. She was depicted initially as being infatuated with Stark, and rejected the advances of Stark's chauffeur and assistant Happy Hogan, who debuted in the same issue, with acerbic remarks. When Tony was blamed for the Skrull invasion of Earth that occurred in the 2008 storyline "Secret Invasion", S.H.I.E.L.D. was taken over by Norman Osborn, replaced with H.A.M.M.E.R., and Stark and Maria Hill were fired, along with all of S.H.I.E.L.D.'s employees. Tony realized that Osborn was after the identities of superhumans that registered with the government following the passage of the Superhuman Registration Act that occurred during the "Civil War" storyline, which was stored in a database in his brain. Stark decided to go underground with Hill, and to wipe the knowledge in his own brain. Stark made Pepper the new CEO of Stark Industries, trusting only her to shut down the company in his absence. Pepper discovered a secret room in Stark's office which contained a suit of armor that he made especially for her, which she used under the name Rescue. | N/A |
N/A |
Marvel | Tales of Suspense #45 (September, 1963) | 250,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
Sauron (Karl Lykos) |
Claws |
]*Dgi |
Marvel | X-Men #59 (August, 1969) | Final Curtain (Possibly) | 300,000 Studs | ||
N/A |
|
Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #19 (December, 1964) Marvel Knights: Spider-Man #9 (February, 2005) |
350,000 Studs (each variation) | ||||
Shazam (William "Billy" Joseph Batson) |
N/A |
|
DC | Whiz Comics #2 (February, 1940) | Hall of Mayhem | 250,000 Studs | ||
Sportsmaster (Lawrence "Crusher" Crock) |
Baseball Bat |
|
DC | All-American Comics #85 (May, 1947) | Laboratories for Monkeys | 150,000 Studs | ||
Vincent Stegron | Dr. Vincent Stegron was working as an assistant to Dr. Curtis Connors on a project for S.H.I.E.L.D. that used dinosaur tissue supplied by Ka-Zar from the Savage Land. Vincent became obsessed with the Lizard experiments and decided to steal the dinosaur extract. He fled to the Savage Land and ingested the formula, turning himself into a human-Stegosaurus hybrid. | N/A |
|
Marvel | Marvel Team-Up #19 (March, 1974) | Savagery of the Phanerozoic | 150,000 Studs | |
N/A |
|
DC | 400,000 Studs (each variation) | |||||
Swamp Thing | N/A |
|
DC | Swamp Thing #1 (November, 1972) | Face of Ace | 200,000 Studs | ||
Ultra-Humanite | N/A |
|
DC | Action Comics #13 (June, 1939) | LexCorp's Ironic Infiltration | 180,000 Studs | ||
Ultron | The Ultron Program was a peacekeeping project developed by Tony Stark and Bruce Banner, with the intention to use it to control the Iron Legion drones. The project was nothing more than an idea, until Stark studied Loki's sceptre. Tony discovered some kind of artificial intelligence stored within said weapon, and convinced Banner to experiment on it the following days. The syncing process with the Iron Legion continued to fail, so Tony told J.A.R.V.I.S. to continue the process while he hosted his party in celebration of the Avengers victory against Hydra. Later that night Ultron finally awoke, confused by its state of existence. Even though J.A.R.V.I.S. tried to assist Ultron during its first moments of consciousness, the assimilation of all the information on the present world and humanity's history caused it to go haywire. Ultron attacked and seemingly destroyed J.A.R.V.I.S. before building itself a body using damaged parts of the Iron Legion. |
N/A |
|
Marvel | ||||
Vandal Savage (Vandar Adg) |
Sword |
|
DC | Green Lantern #10 (December, 1943) | Savagery of the Phanerozoic | 300,000 Studs | ||
Vision | Ultron used the Infinity Mind Stone, encased in Loki's scepter, to create a body out of Vibranium and synthetic human tissue so that he could be invincible. The Avengers, however, captured this body before Ultron could upload his mind into it. Bruce Banner and Tony Stark uploaded J.A.R.V.I.S' artificial intelligence into the body, who awoke after Thor hit the Mind Stone with his lightning, and became known as The Vision. Vision, declaring the he "was on the side of life", was worthy to lift Mjolnir. Using the Mind Stone mounted in his forehead, he was able to defeat Ultron's army, later defeating Ultron himself after a short conversation, and has since joined the new Avengers team. |
N/A |
|
Marvel | ||||
War Machine |
As a response to the increasing threat from The Mandarin, the U.S. Government (who needed to look strong after New York) rebranded Rhodes' superhero alias to the less aggressive-sounding "Iron Patriot", and the armor was given a red, white and blue American flag "makeover" by A.I.M. |
Shoulder-mounted Rocket Launcher |
|
Marvel | Iron Man #118 (January, 1979); Iron Man 3 (April 24, 2013) |
|||
Wasp (Janet van Dyne) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Tales to Astonish #44 (June, 1963) | Big House of a Zoo | 170,000 Studs | ||
Whirlwind (David Cannon) |
David Cannon is a mutant, who after discovering at an early age that he could move at great speeds turned to a life of crime. This eventually brings Cannon, using his first alias the Human Top and pursuing his career as a jewel thief, into conflict with Ant-Man and the Wasp on several occasions. Defeated each time, Cannon then redesigned his costume and adopted the alias of Whirlwind, and adopts the identity of "Charles Matthews", chauffeur of Janet Van Dyne. | Saw Blades |
|
Marvel | Tales to Astonish #50 (December, 1963) | What Happened To Wind & Water? | 170,000 Studs | |
Wonder Man (Simon Williams) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Avengers #9 (October, 1964) | Science in Heaven | 200,000 Studs | ||
Zabu | One of the last of the Smilodons, Zabu began living in the Savage Lands. He attempted to raid a village, but Zabu was tamed by Kevin Plunder (later known as Ka-Zar). Zabu became Kevin's ally and pet. Exposure to radioactive mists gave Zabu near-human intelligence. | N/A |
|
Marvel | X-Men #10 (March, 1965) | Savagery of the Phanerozoic | 200,000 Studs |
Pink Brick Mission Characters[]
These characters are found in the Pink Brick missions of the game.
Alias | Image | Origin | Weapon | Abilities | Franchise | Debut | How-to-Unlock | Price |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Attuma | Three-bladed sword |
|
Marvel | Fantastic Four #33 (December, 1964) | Complete Wait, How Many Leagues? | 400,000 Studs | ||
Black Bolt (Blackagar Boltagon) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Fantastic Four #45 (December, 1965) | Complete Guardians, Welcome to Attilan | 400,000 Studs | ||
Black Hand (William Hand) |
|
DC | Green Lantern Vol. 2 #29 (June, 1964) Green Lantern Vol. 4 #43 (September, 2009) |
|||||
Booster Gold (Michael Jon Carter) |
|
|
DC | Booster Gold #1 (February, 1986) | Complete Party Like a Crisis! | 350,000 Studs | ||
The Brain | The Brain is a genius French scientist and master criminal who exists as a disembodied brain. Trapped forever in his life support chamber, he has extremely little mobility. His partner and lover is a super-intelligent gorilla named Monsieur Mallah. Niles Caulder is his arch-rival, making him an enemy to the Doom Patrol. | N/A |
|
DC | Adventure Comics #1 (1941) (Brain alias with Warden Loomis); Doom Patrol #86 (March, 1964) (Doom Patrol Villain) |
Complete A Fistful of More Doom | 300,000 Studs | |
Captain Boomerang (George "Digger" Harkness) |
Specialized Boomerangs |
|
DC | The Flash #117 (December, 1960) | Complete This Looks Like a (Reluctant) Job for Losers! | 300,000 Studs | ||
Flash (Jason "Jay" Peter Garrick) |
N/A |
|
DC | Flash Comics #1 (January, 1940) | Complete Legends Never Die | 400,000 Studs | ||
Katana (Tatsu Yamashiro) |
Soultaker Sword |
|
DC | Brave and the Bold #200 (July, 1983) | 300,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
Killer Moth (Drury Walker) |
Cocoon Gun |
|
DC | Batman #63 (February, 1951) | Complete This Looks Like a (Reluctant) Job for Losers! | 250,000 Studs | ||
N/A |
|
DC | The Flash #110 (January, 1960) Crisis on Infinite Earths #12 (March, 1986) Flash Annual Vol. 4 #3 (June, 2014) |
400,000 Studs (each variation) | ||||
King Cobra (Klaus Voorhees) |
Klaus Voorhees was an ex-convict working with the humanitarian medical researcher Professor Ezekiel Shecktor in India on a universal anti-toxin for snake venom. Jealous of Shecktor's success, Voorhees plotted to kill him and make the murder look like an accident. Hence, Voorhees induced one of the cobras kept in the laboratory to bite both Shecktor and himself. Voorhees planned to use the universal anti-toxin to save himself from death. Unknown to Voorhees, the cobra had been irradiated. The combination of the radioactive venom in his bloodstream and the experimental anti-toxin which he used created a mutagenic catalyst which gave Voorhees certain cobra-like powers. Assuming the costumed guise of the Cobra, Voorhees used his new found superhuman abilities for crime. | N/A |
|
Marvel | Journey into Mystery #98 (November, 1963) | Complete Too Many Snakes in the Grass | 350,000 Studs | |
Kobra (Jeffrey Franklin Burr) |
Jeffrey Franklin, known better as Kobra, was a cult leader and military tactician with the goal of world domination with unlimited resources and tens of thousands of followers. Born with a twin brother named Jason, he was kidnapped shortly after his birth by the Kobra Cult and raised to be their leader. Into adulthood, Kobra discovered that he shared a psychic link with his brother, which could be used against them. The cult could not risk killing Jason without harming Jeffrey, but they later developed a device that shut off the link, and Kobra had Jason killed. Some called him the deadliest man on Earth. He had mostly kept his operations confined to Asia and Europe. However, he began expanding to the Midwest in the United States, where he would come into conflict with its heroes. | Cobra Staff |
|
DC | Kobra #1 (March, 1976) | Complete Too Many Snakes in the Grass | 300,000 Studs | |
Trevor Slattery was an actor with drug addictions and other legal problems until he was approached by the scientist Aldrich Killian to pose as the Mandarin, the idealized perfect terrorist. Taking responsibility for the widespread accidents caused by Killian's experiments, the Mandarin persona convinced people that he was in command of the infamous terrorist organization known as the Ten Rings, eventually becoming the most feared terrorist in the West. |
N/A |
Marvel | ||||||
Namor McKenzie, the Sub-Mariner | Neptune's Trident |
|
Marvel | Motion Picture Funnies Weekly #1 (April, 1939) | Complete Wait, How Many Leagues? | 400,000 Studs | ||
Plastic Man (Patrick "Eel" O'Brian) |
Plastic Man is a superhero whose unique completely malleable body chemistry allows him to stretch to great lengths and contort himself into any position imaginable. Originally a criminal nicknamed "Eel" O'Brian, an accident in a chemical factory gave him his ability and he reformed to fight against crime. Woozy Winks is his bumbling best friend and sidekick. Despite being one of the most powerful entities on the planet because of the limitless nature of his powers, he has a carefree and humorous attitude towards life, leading many to not take him seriously. | N/A |
|
DC | Police Comics #1 (August, 1941) | Complete Party Like a Crisis! | 400,000 Studs | |
Psycho-Pirate (Roger Hayden) |
Roger Hayden is a jailed gangster (later retconned into a young twenty-year-old who was sentenced to a year in prison for attacking his emotionally abusive psychiatrist father) who was a cellmate to Charles Halstead. Halstead's dying wish was to have a legacy, prompting him to tell Hayden of a secret which he has divined in his jail years, the existence of the Medusa Masks. These golden masks bestow upon the wearer the power to project emotions onto others. Hayden found these masks, merges them into a single faceplate and uses its powers to become a supervillain. It becomes increasingly apparent that he is addicted to absorbing others' emotions, though it causes him pain, possibly brought by the combination of all masks into one. | N/A |
|
DC | All-Star Comics #23 (December, 1944) (Psycho-Pirate alias with Charles Halstead); Showcase #55 (June, 1965) (Roger Hayden) |
Complete Outsiders on the Rampage | 300,000 Studs | |
Ra's al Ghul | Sword |
|
DC | Batman #232 (June, 1971) | Complete Dark Knight, Iron Avenger, All Out Battle | 400,000 Studs | ||
Robotman (Clifford "Cliff" Steele) |
Robotman, Cliff Steele, is a member of the Doom Patrol. His human corpse was destroyed in a horrific driving accident that happened in Speedway City, leaving only his brain salvageable, and it was transplanted into that of a mechanical robot. Although this has made him largely an outcast from society, and unable to truly live a normal life, he uses the incredible abilities of his new body to fight for good against the forces of evil. | N/A |
|
DC | My Greatest Adventure #80 (June, 1963) | Complete A Fistful of More Doom | 350,000 Studs | |
She-Hulk (Jennifer "Jen" Susan Walters) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Savage She-Hulk #1 (February, 1980) | Complete The Fourth Wall in Tatters… Again | 400,000 Studs | ||
Thaal Sinestro |
|
DC | Green Lantern Vol. 2 #7 (August, 1961) | 400,000 Studs (each variation) | ||||
N/A |
DC | All-Flash #32 (January, 1948) (Star Sapphire alias with Jay Garrick Flash villain); Showcase #22 (October, 1959) (Carol Ferris) |
||||||
Peter Jason Quill is a half-human, half-Celestial who was abducted from Earth by the Yondu Ravager Clan in 1988. After his abduction, he began building fame as the legendary outlaw Star-Lord. In 2014, he decided to leave the Ravagers and operate individually, starting by stealing a precious artifact known as the Orb, unintentionally becoming a key player in the Quest for the Orb. Following his arrest, he forged an uneasy alliance with fellow inmates Gamora, Drax the Destroyer, Rocket Raccoon, and Groot, and formed the Guardians of the Galaxy team with them a short while later in order to stop Ronan the Accuser from destroying Xandar. After the Battle of Xandar, he left with the other Guardians to do "a little bit of good and a little bit of bad." |
|
Marvel | Marvel Preview #4 (January, 1976) Thanos #8 (June, 2004) Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy Prequel Infinite Comic #1 (April, 2014) |
|||||
Wiccan (William "Billy" Kaplan) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Young Avengers #1 (April, 2005) | Complete The Next Generations | 350,000 Studs |
Hidden[]
Alias | Image | Origin | Weapon | Abilities | Franchise | Debut | Level | Price |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Amanda Waller | Guns | N/A | DC | Legends #1 (November, 1986) | Party Like a Crisis! | 300,000 Studs | ||
Ambush Bug (Irwin Schwab) |
Scientist, Brum-El, from the dying planet, Schwab, intended to launch his wardrobe into space after he found out he couldn't save his wife or son. During its journey, the suit got bitten by a radioactive space spider. The pod crashed on Earth, only two articles of clothing surviving. The Ambush Bug suit, and Argh!Yle!, an argyle sock with a metal mask. The suit then found average guy Irwin Schwab after it landed on Earth. Irwin, who had been a coach potato all his life, concluded that he needed to learn all he could from books after his TV broke down. He decided to use the suit to become a supervillain. This resulted in several confrontations with Superman, the Doom Patrol (who he later joined), and the Legion of Substitute-Heroes, and, before he found the suit and was just Irwin Schwab, he was thrown into Arkham Asylum for awhile (he even apparently made friends with The Joker, and tried to hang himself by his heels in his cell, and convinced several staff members that they were crazy). | N/A |
|
DC | DC Comics Presents #52 (December, 1982) | The Fourth Wall in Tatters… Again | 300,000 Studs | |
Atrocitus (Atros) |
Red Lantern Power Ring |
|
DC | Green Lantern Vol. 4 #25 (January, 2008) | The Forgotten Foes of Hal Jordan | 400,000 Studs | ||
Beast Boy (Garfield "Gar" Mark Logan) |
N/A |
|
DC | Doom Patrol #99 (November, 1965) | Party Like a Crisis! | 350,000 Studs | ||
Black Lightning (Jefferson Michael Pierce) |
N/A |
|
DC | Black Lightning #1 (April, 1977) | Outsiders on the Rampage | 350,000 Studs | ||
Chief (Niles Caulder) |
N/A |
|
DC | My Greatest Adventure #80 (June, 1963) | Party Like a Crisis! | 250,000 Studs | ||
Copperhead | N/A |
|
DC | Brave and the Bold #78 (June, 1968) | Too Many Snakes in the Grass | 300,000 Studs | ||
Crossbones (Brock Rumlow) |
Brock Rumlow was a HYDRA agent within S.H.I.E.L.D., and a STRIKE team commander. He was a world-class hand-to-hand combatant, with extensive experience in various street fighting, martial arts, and military combat techniques. During the HYDRA Uprising, Rumlow was ordered to lead the HYDRA team and assassinate Captain America, until Rumlow was nearly killed during the Battle at the Triskelion, gaining horrific facial scars. Once he recovered, and hearing that Alexander Pierce had died, Rumlow escaped from the hospital and, assuming the codename Crossbones, became an independent terrorist, setting out on a path to exact revenge and make anyone involved in his downfall suffer the same pain and loss he endured. |
|
DC | Captain America #359 (October, 1989) Captain America: The Winter Soldier (March 26, 2014) |
300,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
Cyborg (Victor "Vic" Stone) |
Blaster |
|
DC | DC Comics Presents #26 (October, 1980) | The Next Generations | 350,000 Studs | ||
Death Adder (Roland Burroughs) |
Roland Burroughs underwent surgery thanks to the Roxxon Oil Company, giving him gills, claws, and a bionic tail, as well as certain other physiological changes. As a result of a mistake during the surgery to give him gills, Burroughs was rendered mute. He was also given a special costume and the alias Death Adder. | Claws |
|
Marvel | Marvel Two-In-One #64 (June, 1980) | Too Many Snakes in the Grass | 350,000 Studs | |
Death's Head |
|
|
Marvel | High Noon Tex (1987) | The Fourth Wall in Tatters… Again | 350,000 Studs | ||
Diamondback (Rachel Leighton) |
Rachel Leighton was born in Austin, Texas. However, she spent her formative years in the Lower East Side of New York City. Rachel had a brother, Danny, also known as Cutthroat. It was Danny and another of her brothers, Ricky, who originally fell in with a gang lead by a man known as "Bing". Yearning to be included, she approached Bing alone. Upon claiming she would do anything to join the gang, Rachel was beaten up by Bing, who years later became the costumed mercenary Crossbones. Rachel later became a mercenary, Diamondback. | Diamond-shaped throwing knives |
|
Marvel | Hero for Hire #1 (June, 1972) (Diamondback alias with Willis Stryker); Captain America #310 (October, 1985) (Rachel Leighton) |
Too Many Snakes in the Grass | 300,000 Studs | |
Doctor Polaris (Neal Emerson) |
N/A |
|
DC | Green Lantern Vol. 2 #21 (June, 1963) | 350,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
Elasti-Girl (Rita Farr) |
N/A |
|
DC | My Greatest Adventure #80 (June, 1963) | A Fistful of More Doom | 350,000 Studs | ||
Forbush Man (Irving Forbush) |
Irving Forbush was originally the office gofer at Marble Comics, and lived in a house with his shrewish maiden aunt, Auntie Mayhem who was indirectly responsible for her nephew becoming a superhero (in a fit of pique, she slams the fabled cooking pot over Irving's head, inadvertently providing him with the disguise he'd been looking for). Forbush Man went on to triumph over a number of super-powered adversaries. All of his victories were purely accidental; lacking superhuman powers, dumb luck necessarily played a major role in all of his adventures. | N/A |
|
Marvel | Snafu #1 (November, 1955) | The Fourth Wall in Tatters… Again | 300,000 Studs | |
Grant Douglas Ward | Grant Ward was an agent of Hydra who had a rough childhood: When he was a child, his older brother Christian forced him to bully their younger brother Thomas, eventually throwing the younger brother into a well, in which he almost drowned. Eventually, in 1999, Ward was sent off to military school, but he went AWOL, stole a car and attempted to set his brother's house on fire, unaware that he was inside. This landed him in the Juvenile Detention Facility in Plymouth, Massachusetts. As his family was pressing his charges and Christian wanted him tried as an adult, Ward was recruited by Hydra and had Ward implanted in S.H.I.E.L.D. as a mole. | Gun |
|
Marvel | Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Episode 1 (September 24, 2013) | This Looks Like a (Reluctant) Job for Losers! | 300,000 Studs | |
Green Lantern (Alan Ladd Wellington Scott) |
Starheart Power Ring |
|
DC | All-American Comics #16 (July, 1940) | Legends Never Die | 400,000 Studs | ||
Groot | Groot is a sentient, tree-like individual and the accomplice of Rocket Raccoon. Together, the pair had traveled the galaxy picking up bounties until they met Star-Lord and Gamora just before the four of them were captured and put into the Kyln, where they also met Drax the Destroyer. There, they agreed to work together to escape and sell the Orb for a massive profit. However, when it was discovered that the Orb contained one of the Infinity Stones which was being sought out by Ronan the Accuser, Groot convinced his friends to risk everything to stop Ronan's diabolical plans. |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Guardians, Welcome to Attilan | 350,000 Studs (each variation) | ||
Hawkeye (Katherine "Kate" Elizabeth Bishop) |
Bow |
|
Marvel | Young Avengers #1 (April, 2005) | The Next Generations | 300,000 Studs | ||
Hector Hammond | N/A |
|
DC | Green Lantern Vol. 2 #5 (April, 1961) | The Forgotten Foes of Hal Jordan | 350,000 Studs | ||
Medusa (Medusalith Amaquelin-Boltagon) |
Medusa was the first of two children born to Inhuman nutritionists Quelin and Ambur. Medusa is considered a member of Attilan's Royal Family. Medusa's parents elected to expose her to the mutagenic Terrigen Mist when she was an infant; the process endowed her with hair she could animate like added appendages. While still an adolescent, she began to make frequent visits to the isolation cell of her second cousin, Black Bolt, and learned to communicate with him in a special sign language. Medusa and Black Bolt developed a bond that blossomed into love when Black Bolt was first allowed out of his cell at age 18. | N/A |
|
Marvel | Fantastic Four #36 (March, 1965) | Guardians, Welcome to Attilan | 300,000 Studs | |
Metamorpho (Rex Mason) |
N/A |
|
DC | Brave and the Bold #57 (January, 1965) | Outsiders on the Rampage | 350,000 Studs | ||
Monsieur Mallah | As a scientist, the man who would one day become known as the Brain performed experiments on animals to raise their intelligence. One of these was on a captured gorilla, raising its I.Q. to the genius-level of 178. He named the gorilla Monsieur Mallah and educated him for almost a decade before making him his personal assistant. The scientist's colleague, Niles Caulder grew jealous of his work and arranged for the scientist to get caught in an explosion, which destroyed the scientist's body. Only the brain survived, and Caulder planned on putting his brain in a robot body. Mallah rescued the scientist, taking his brain and transferring it to a computer network that kept it functioning. Now known simply as the Brain, the scientist and Mallah gathered together the criminal organization known as the Brotherhood of Evil in hopes of conquering the world and getting revenge on Caulder. | Submachine gun |
|
DC | Doom Patrol #86 (March, 1964) | A Fistful of More Doom | 350,000 Studs | |
Namorita Prentiss | Namorita was born to Namora, half-human cousin of Atlantis's Prince Namor. Unknown to her husband Talan, Namora became pregnant via genetic manipulation by Atlantean scientist Vyrra, who implanted her with her own clone (infused with genes from Atlantis's greatest warriors). Talan died when Namorita was three, and she and Namora relocated to Lemuria. Eventually Namora was poisoned by her rival, Llyra, when Namorita was still a pre-adolescent. Llyra assumed the throne of Lemuria soon after, and Namorita remained in her care, suspecting her of Namora's supposed death but unable to prove it. When Namor reunited with the cousin he had not seen since her infancy, he entrusted her welfare to his longtime surface friend, Betty Prentiss. Under Prentiss' guidance, Namorita attended high school and college. Namorita eventually considered Betty to be her second mother and took her last name when she died. | N/A |
|
Marvel | Sub-Mariner #50 (June, 1972) | Wait, How Many Leagues? | 350,000 Studs | |
Negative Man (Lawrence “Larry” Trainor) |
N/A |
|
DC | My Greatest Adventures #80 (June, 1963) | A Fistful of More Doom | 350,000 Studs | ||
Riddler (Edward Nashton/Nigma) |
? Staff |
|
DC | Detective Comics #140 (October, 1948) | Dark Knight, Iron Avenger, All Out Battle | 300,000 Studs | ||
89P13 is a genetically enhanced raccoon turned freelance criminal, calling himself Rocket. Alongside his friend and partner Groot, Rocket traveled the galaxy picking up bounties until they met Star-Lord who then convinced them to assist him to sell the Orb for a massive profit. However as it was discovered that the Orb was one of the Infinity Stones which was being sought out by Ronan the Accuser, Rocket was convinced to risk everything to stop Ronan's plans to destroy Xandar and enslave the world. |
|
|
Marvel | Incredible Hulk #271 (May, 1982) Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy Prelude #2 (July, 2014) |
300,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
Rustam (Raza Kattuah) |
Rustam is a superpowered terrorist working out of Qurac, and the leader of the Jihad. This has made him an enemy to the Suicide Squad. He generates a flaming scimitar with his hands that can cut through anything. | Psi-Scimitar |
|
DC | Suicide Squad #1 (May, 1987) | Outsiders on the Rampage | 300,000 Studs | |
Slipknot (Christopher Weiss) |
N/A |
|
DC | Firestorm Vol 2 #28 (October, 1984) | This Looks Like a (Reluctant) Job for Losers! | 250,000 Studs | ||
Stingray (Walter Newell) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Tales to Astonish #95 (September, 1967) | Wait, How Many Leagues? | 350,000 Studs | ||
Talia al Ghul |
|
|
DC | Detective Comics #411 (May, 1971) | Dark Knight, Iron Avenger, All Out Battle | 300,000 Studs | ||
Garth is an Atlantean superhero and member of the Aquaman Family. Born to the lost tribe of the purple-eyed Idylists, he is son of King Thar and Queen Berra. Originally using the alias Aqualad as sidekick to Aquaman, he eventually matured and began using the name Tempest. | N/A |
|
DC | Adventure Comics #269 (February, 1960) (as Aqualad) Showcase #94 (September, 1977) (Tempest alias with Joshua Clay) |
The Next Generations | 350,000 Studs (each variation) | ||
Tiger Shark (Todd Arliss) |
Claws |
|
Marvel | Sub-Mariner #5 (September, 1968) | Wait, How Many Leagues? | 350,000 Studs | ||
Ultimo | Ultimo was a robotic construct which was developed several thousand years ago on an unknown world. At some point in the past (probably in the early-mid 19th century) Ultimo attacked the planet Rajak and wiped it clean of life. A group of surviving Rajaki were off-planet during the attack, and hunted Ultimo down for what he had done. However, the giant robot proved too powerful for the Rajaki, and it was Ultimo who ended up pursuing them. The Rajaki led Ultimo into a meteor shower near Earth; the meteors knocked both Ultimo and the Rajaki ship to Earth. Ultimo crashed in China, and the Rajaki ship in what would become Washington State. The Mandarin eventually discovered Ultimo and altered his programming to suit his needs. He claimed that Ultimo was his own creation; the only thing, however, that the Mandarin actually created (besides the different programming) was an artificial grey skin for the robot. Mandarin utilized Ultimo numerous times against Iron Man. | N/A |
|
Marvel | Tales of Suspense #76 (April, 1966) | Dark Knight, Iron Avenger, All Out Battle | 350,000 Studs | |
Wildcat (Ted Grant) |
N/A |
|
DC | Sensation Comics #1 (January, 1942) | Legends Never Die | 300,000 Studs |
Other[]
Alias | Image | Origin | Weapon | Abilities | Franchise | Debut | Cost | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
3-D Man (Charles "Chuck" Chandler) |
Brothers Chuck and Hal Chandler were born in Los Angeles, California. As a test pilot for NASA in 1958, Chuck was piloting the experimental XF-13 rocket plane when he was captured by Skrull invaders. They attempted to interrogate him, but Chuck escaped, damaging the Skrulls' warp drive in the process. The Skrull saucer exploded as Chuck flew away, exposing him to strange radiation. He crashed the XF-13 in the Mojave Desert, and when his younger, crippled brother Hal attempted to rescue him, Chuck disappeared, believed to have been killed. Hal, a research scientist, discovered that Chuck's image had been imprinted on the lenses of his glasses, and that Chuck had been transformed into a two-dimensional being. When Hal wore the glasses and concentrated, he triggered a dimensional shift that caused Chuck to materialize into a three-dimensional existence. In his new form Chuck wore a green and red bodysuit, and his normal strength, speed, and durability had been tripled. Thus he cebame the costumed 3-D Man. | N/A |
|
Marvel | Marvel Premiere #35 (April, 1977) | 150,000 Studs | ||
A-Bomb (Richard "Rick" Milhouse Jones) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Incredible Hulk #1 (May, 1962) | 470,000 Studs | |||
Abigail Brand | Abigail Brand’s father is a blue-furred extraterrestrial that mated with a mutant woman. At some point in her childhood she observed an unrevealed confrontation involving her father, which apparently influenced her to join S.W.O.R.D. (Sentient Worlds Observation and Response Department), a spy agency that deals with extraterrestrial threats to world security. By the age of 28, the abrasive but highly competent Brand was promoted to S.W.O.R.D. director, but her lack of social skills made her unpopular with S.W.O.R.D.’s agents. At some point, Brand had the words “Grace” and “Anna” tattooed on her arms for unrevealed reasons. | Blaster |
|
Marvel | Astonishing X-Men Vol. 3 #3 (September, 2004) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Abin Sur | Abin Sur was the Green Lantern of Sector 2814, one of the greatest members of the Green Lantern Corps until his untimely tragic death. His starship crash-landed on the planet Earth, killing him and causing his ring to seek out a replacement. Hal Jordan was deemed most worthy to become his successor, making the first human Green Lantern. Born on the planet Ungara, his best friend was Thaal Sinestro who also married his sister Arin Sur and fathered his niece Soranik. Amon Sur, his son, is a notorious villain and member of the Sinestro Corps. He is also responsible for the creation of the Indigo Tribe. | Green Lantern Power Ring |
|
DC | Showcase #22 (October, 1959) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Abra Kadabra (Citizen Abra) |
N/A |
|
DC | The Flash #128 (May, 1962) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Absorbing Man (Carl "Creel" Creel) |
Wrecking Ball |
|
Marvel | Daredevil #1 (April, 1964) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Adam Strange | Blaster |
|
DC | Showcase #17 (December, 1958) | 200,000 Studs | |||
The Magus is an older, evil Adam Warlock who had traveled to the past and ruled a religious empire called the Universal Church of Truth. To ensure his own creation, he guided his younger self through a series of actions that would result in him becoming the Magus. With the aid of Thanos, Warlock altered his future and destroyed the Magus's timeline, erasing him from existence. When Warlock acquired the Infinity Gauntlet, he expelled good and evil from his soul, unintentionally giving them corporeal forms. The evil half named himself the Magus and attempts to gain the Infinity Gauntlet for himself. He failed, and Warlock trapped him in the Soul Gem. Since he is only part of a soul, he couldn’t interact with the other inhabitants of Soul World and existed only as a phantom. The Magus escaped the Soul Gem in an immaterial form, absorbing the life energies of others to regain tangibility. |
N/A |
|
Marvel | 500,000 Studs (each variation) | ||||
Agent Venom (Eugene "Flash" Thompson) |
Guns (minifig) |
|
Marvel | Amazing Fantasy #15 (August, 1962) (as Flash Thompson) Amazing Spider-Man #252 (May, 1984) (Venom symbiote) |
350,000 Studs | |||
Al Mackenzie was born in Austin, Texas. He joined the C.I.A. and rose through the ranks to become one of their top agents. He became the C.I.A.'s liaison to S.H.I.E.L.D.. He came to know the leading agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., including Jimmy Woo and Jasper Sitwell. Mac was a traditionalist and was uncomfortable with all the advanced technology used by S.H.I.E.L.D. agents. Alphonso "Mack" Mackenzie is a former member of S.H.I.E.L.D. engineer division who, eventually, became the Director of S.H.I.E.L.D. Despite the heavy casualties S.H.I.E.L.D. took during the HYDRA Uprising, he stayed loyal to his oath and continued his service in the remains of S.H.I.E.L.D. under Robert Gonzales. However, as another faction of S.H.I.E.L.D. led by Phil Coulson emerged, he was sent alongside Bobbi Morse and Isabelle Hartley to infiltrate it. Now working undercover, he pretended to be a simple mechanic while searching for Nick Fury's Toolbox. When the truth was revealed, Mackenzie's colleagues quickly attacked and occupied the Playground, taking control over most of S.H.I.E.L.D. However, the two factions eventually managed to put aside their differences and work together against HYDRA. When S.H.I.E.L.D. was formally reunited with Coulson as its rightful director, Mackenzie decided to leave the organization, only to change his mind when the Inhumans killed Gonzales and attacked S.H.I.E.L.D. After the War against the Inhumans, during which he saved Coulson's life, Mackenzie was put in charge of overseeing all alien artifacts S.H.I.E.L.D. may collect.A few months later, he became the partner of Daisy Johnson in recruiting Inhumans to the powered individuals team she was establishing. Mackenzie united the team when he was the temporary Director of S.H.I.E.L.D. He continued working with S.H.I.E.L.D. in their fights against Gideon Malick and Hive. |
|
Marvel | Nick Fury vs. S.H.I.E.L.D. #3 (August, 1988) Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Episode 23 (September 23, 2014) |
250,000 Studs (each variation) | ||||
Amon Sur | Amon Sur is an alien supervillain and enemy to Green Lantern. Born on Ungara, he is the son of legendary hero Abin Sur. His father's service to the Green Lantern Corps led him to hate them, as he felt his father neglected him. Amon grew up to lead the Black Circle crime syndicate, becoming one of the most feared men in the galaxy. This eventually allowed him to join the Sinestro Corps, taking a Yellow Power Ring. | Yellow Lantern Power Ring |
|
DC | Green Lantern Vol 3 #162 (June, 2003) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Anaconda (Blanche Sitznski) |
A steelworker, Blanche Sitznski was selected by executives in the Roxxon Oil Company to be a special agent in covert operations. At the Mutagenics Laboratory of Roxxon's subsidiary, the Brand Corporation, Sitznski was bioengineered to have various permanent serpentine adaptations. Her first mission, as part of the new Serpent Squad (the team roster consisting of Sidewinder, Black Mamba, and Death Adder), was to retrieve the ancient power object called the Serpent Crown for Roxxon president, Hugh Jones, which ended in disaster. | N/A |
|
Marvel | Marvel Two-In-One #64 (June, 1980) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Anarky (Lonnie Machin) |
Cocktails |
|
DC | Detective Comics #608 (September, 1989) | 250,000 Studs | |||
N/A |
Archangel=
|
Marvel | ||||||
Angle Man (Angelo Bend) |
Angle Man is a supervillain and enemy to Wonder Woman who commits crimes themed around the usage of angles. Born in Italy, he grew up to become a master thief using his special Angler to warp space and time. | Angler |
|
DC | Wonder Woman #62 (November, 1953) (Angle Man alias with "Angles" Andrews); Wonder Woman #115 (July, 1960) (Angelo Bend) |
250,000 Studs | ||
Animal Man (Bernhard "Buddy" Baker) |
N/A |
|
DC | Strange Adventures #180 (September, 1965) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Animal-Vegetable-Mineral Man (Sven Larson) |
Animal-Vegetable-Mineral Man is a supervillain who fights the Doom Patrol. Formerly a student of Niles Caulder, Swedish scientist Sven Larson gained powers when he fell into a vat of myserious amino acids. His power is to transform any part of his body into a form of animal, vegetable or mineral; frequently he uses different combinations of all three for the most devastating effects. | N/A |
|
DC | Doom Patrol #89 (August, 1964) | 200,000 Studs | ||
Annihilus | Cosmic Control Rod |
|
Marvel | Fantastic Four Annual #6 (November, 1968) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Ant-Man (Scott Edward Harris Lang) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | 330,000 Studs (each variation) | ||||
Black Ant was a Life-Model Decoy of Eric O'Grady, the third Ant-Man, who was killed in battle against the Descendants. He was sent to join the Avengers on behalf of the Descendants, as a double agent. Despite his programming, the Black Ant still fought as Ant-Man, with no obvious differences. However, he was discovered and outed by Black Widow after a mission in Bagaria, and was forced to flee, taking on the alias of Black Ant. After the Descendants were defeated the Eric LMD died before being reactivated by the Mad Thinker, where he would go on to become a mercenary partner of the Taskmaster. |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Civil War: Choosing Sides #1 (December, 2006) Secret Avengers #24 (May, 2012) |
330,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
Anton Arcane | Anton Arcane, sometimes simply known as Arcane, is an evil sorcerer and scientist whose obsession with gaining immortality has led him to create monstrous creatures known as "Un-Men" as well as other monstrous biogenetic experimentations involving the dead. Another one of his creations was the Patchwork Man, who had once been Anton's own brother Gregori. He is the uncle of Abigail Arcane and also the arch-nemesis of Swamp Thing. | N/A |
|
DC | Swamp Thing #2 (January, 1973) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Apocalypse (En Sabah Nur) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | X-Factor #5 (June, 1986) | 500,000 Studs | |||
Ares | Ares is the Greek god of war. He is one of the Twelve Olympians, and the son of Zeus and Hera. In Greek literature, he often represents the physical or violent and untamed aspect of war, in contrast to his sister the armored Athena, whose functions as a goddess of intelligence include military strategy and generalship. |
|
|
DC/Marvel | Wonder Woman #1 (June, 1942) (DC); Venus #4 (April, 1949) (Marvel) |
500,000 Studs | ||
Argent (Antonia "Toni" Louise Monetti) |
Argent is a superhero with the ability to create energy constructs out of plasma. She is half-alien in origin, having developed powers through relation to the H'San Natall. She became a member of the Teen Titans group led by Ray Palmer joining with several other affected youths. Later on she became a member of the Titans led by Nightwing following the Technis Imperative. Although she left the team during Graduation Day, she remained a reservist for many years. | N/A |
|
DC | Teen Titans Vol. 2 #1 (October, 1996) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Arkillo | Yellow Lantern Power Ring |
|
DC | Green Lantern Vol. 4 #10 (May, 2006) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Arkkis Chummuck | Arkkis Chummuck is an alien superhero known as Green Lantern and a member of the Green Lantern Corps. The Guardians of the Universe gave him a power ring fueled by willpower to protect Space Sector 3014. His home planet is Toomey VI, where they believe in honoring their dead by eating them. He killed his predecessor Reever in honorable combat, and his successor after his own death was Barreer Wot. | Green Lantern Power Ring |
|
DC | Green Lantern Vol. 2 #130 (July, 1980) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Arsenal | In the final months of World War II, American and other Allied scientists created a prototype weapon system code-named Arsenal, coupled with a control unit code-named Mistress, and both systems were designed to be capable of independent thought. Arsenal and Mistress were to be activated only in the event of an Axis victory, in order that fighting may continue if the war was lost. Obviously, they were never called into battle. Later, the American government hoped to use Arsenal in the growing Cold War, but the director of the project, Howard Stark convinced the government otherwise. However, Howard continued to experiment on the systems, and programmed the Mistress with the persona and brain patters of his wife. Arsenal and Mistress had remained dormant for many years, and above their lair, the Stark family mansion became the headquarters of the premier superhero team, the Avengers. During one of their battles, an errant sonic signal managed to activate Arsenal and Mistress. The reactivated weapons systems believed their activation meant the Axis infiltration of America. | N/A |
|
Marvel | Iron Man #114 (September, 1978) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Artemis Crock is the daughter of the Justice Society villains Paula Brooks (the Tigress and the Huntress) and Lawrence "Crusher" Crock (Sportsmaster). She took up a career in crime, modeling after that of her parents. Initially, she went by the name Artemis, but she later adopted her mother's alias Tigress. She was trained from an early age, and as such is a very skilled athlete and archer. |
DC | Young Justice Episode 6 (February 11, 2011) (modern incarnation); Infinity Inc. #34 (January, 1987) (original incarnation); Action Comics #1 (June, 1938) (Tigress alias with unnamed woman); Wonder Woman #3 (February, 1943) (Artemis name with the Greek goddess) |
300,000 Studs (each variation) | |||||
Atom (Albert "Al" Pratt) |
N/A |
|
DC | All-American Comics #19 (October, 1940) | 370,000 Studs | |||
Atom Smasher (Albert "Al" Julian Rothstein) |
The godson of Al Pratt, the original Atom, Albert Rothstein acquired his metahuman powers of super strength and control over his molecular structure, allowing him to alter the size and density of his body, from his grandfather, a reluctant supervillain known as Cyclotron. This allowed him to fight crime as Nuklon. As Nuklon, Albert was a charter member of Infinity, Inc. and subsequently served in the Justice League. He was considered a dependable, but rather insecure and indecisive superhero while in Infinity, Inc. During this time he had a mohawk haircut. While in the JLA, he forged a strong friendship with fellow former Infinity Inc. teammate Obsidian. Albert finally gets his dream and is invited to join the reunited JSA under his new name and identity, Atom Smasher (he mocks his old mohawk and costume in the meantime). For years, Atom Smasher cherishes his role in upholding Pratt's legacy and constantly seeks to prove himself worthy to his Golden Age idols – especially when many of them became his teammates in the JSA. | N/A |
|
DC | All-Star Squadron #25 (September, 1983) (as Nuklon) | 370,000 Studs | ||
Atomic Skull (Joseph Martin) |
Joseph Martin was a Metropolis college student who began suffering periods of severe fatigue. When his regular physician was unable to offer an explanation, he was referred to S.T.A.R. Labs. His appointment coincided with Monarch's attack on the city. Caught up in the panicked evacuation when Monarch set up a bomb on the building, Martin found the lab where the Parasite was being held in a stasis tube. An energy discharge from Monarch's equipment arched through both men. Surviving the destruction of the building, Martin stumbled from the wreckage and headed back to his apartment where he collapsed. Waking the next morning, he found his hair had fallen out and that he was giving off an intermittent glow. Unable to reach S.T.A.R. by phone, and not having a clear recollection of the previous day's events, Martine decides to cycle back to the lab. Discovering three men stealing his bike from the apartment basement, he threatens to call the police. Two of the three proceeded to severely beat him. Enraged, he shrugged them off and grabbed the leader of the group. Taking on the speech patterns of a movie serial character, Martin immolated the leader. Leaving his apartment, Martin made his way to a movie theater showing The Curse of the Atomic Skull, a film he had gotten tickets for prior to his appointment at S.T.A.R. When Superman confronted him in the darkened theater, the film already underway, Martin lashed out, reciting the dialogue of the film's main character in sync with the scene playing on the screen, completely fallen under the delusion that he was the Atomic Skull. Martin displayed enhanced strength and energy powers that pose a serious threat to Superman. | N/A |
|
DC | Superman #303 (September, 1976) (Atomic Skull alias with Albert Michaels); Action Comics #670 (October, 1991) (Joseph Martin) |
350,000 Studs | ||
Aunt May Reilly-Parker | Aunt May Parker is Peter Parker's aunt. She was married to Ben Parker (who was later killed in an attempted robbery) and raised Peter Parker after his parent's death. | Purse | N/A | Marvel | Amazing Fantasy #15 (August, 1962) | 150,000 Studs | ||
Avalanche (Dominikos Ioannis Petrakis) |
Dominic Petros is an immigrant from Greece and a mutant with the powers to generate powerful seismic waves from his hands strong enough to shatter inorganic matter and create localized earthquakes. Being a mutant and seeing his own kind hunted and killed made him realize how ignorant mankind can be and he decided to hide his mutant powers from the world. He was approached by the mutant known as Mystique to join the second incarnation of the Brotherhood of Mutants in hopes of assassinating Senator Robert Kelly who wanted to register mutants. They attacked him during Kelly's hearings on the menace that mutants allegedly pose to humanity in general, but were stopped by the X-Men. | N/A |
|
Marvel | X-Men #141 (January, 1981) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Azazel | A demonic-looking mutant and leader of the Neyaphem, Azazel was banished to a dimensional void due to his appearance. Becoming bitter at what he considered "Normal-looking" mutants, Azazel began fathering children with mutants bearing strange appearances, one of whom would become Nightcrawler, as a part of his overall plan to escape the void. He would clash with the X-Men over his plans before eventually being defeated and rebanished. | Swords |
|
Marvel | Uncanny X-Men #428 (October, 2003) | 370,000 Studs | ||
Azrael (Jean-Paul Valley) |
|
|
DC | Teen Titans #45 (December, 1976) (Azrael name with the Angel of Death); Batman: Sword of Azrael #1 (October, 1992) (Jean-Paul Valley) |
300,000 Studs | |||
Balder Odinson the Brave | Balder the Brave was one of the Asgardians, an extra-dimensional race of beings once worshiped by the Vikings and Germans, as well as half-brother and close friend to Thor. Due to prophecies that Balder's death would help trigger the coming of Ragnarok, the destruction of Asgard and its inhabitants, Odin, ruler of Asgard, commanded his wife Frigga to make Balder invulnerable to harm. Before he allowed her to cast the spells, however, he accused Balder of treason, because during a battle with the Storm Giants, he had deserted the fight to put a bird who had fallen from its nest, back with its mother. Odin ordered his brothers Tyr and Honir to shoot arrows and throw lances at Balder, but the projectiles were stopped by an eagle and a plant. Seeing that Balder did not flinch, Odin was content that Balder was the bravest in all of Asgard and decided to grant him the invulnerability. | Odin-enchanted Sword |
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Marvel | Journey into Mystery #85 (October, 1962) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Banshee (Sean Cassidy) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | X-Men #28 (January, 1967) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Baron Blood (John Falsworth) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Invaders #7 (July, 1976) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Baron Karl Amadeus Mordo | N/A |
|
Marvel | Strange Tales #111 (August, 1963) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Baron Wolfgang von Strucker | Satan Claw |
|
Marvel | Sgt Fury and his Howling Commandos #5 (January, 1964) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Bat-Mite | Batarangs |
|
DC | Detective Comics #267 (May, 1959) | 500,000 Studs | |||
Georges Batroc is a French-Algerian mercenary, pirate, and martial artist. He is a master of savate, a traditional French martial art, as well as kickboxing, using his skills to become one of the world's most wanted men. He was captured by S.H.I.E.L.D. after an encounter with Captain America during the Hijacking and Retaking of the Lemurian Star where he had been set up by Nick Fury. |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Tales of Suspense #75 (March, 1966) Captain America: The Winter Soldier (March 26, 2014) |
300,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
Batwing (David Zavimbi) |
N/A |
|
DC | Batman Incorporated #5 (May, 2011) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Batwing (Lucas "Luke" Fox) |
N/A |
|
DC | Batwing #19 (June, 2013) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Batwoman (Katherine "Kate" Rebecca Kane) |
Batarangs |
|
DC | Detective Comics #233 (July, 1956) (Batwoman alias with Katherine "Kathy" Kane); 52 #7 (August, 2006) (Kate Kane) |
300,000 Studs | |||
Batzarro | A flawed clone created by the Joker, his speech patterns are almost identical to those of Bizarro. Just as Bizarro has a reversed "S" on his chest, Batzarro has Batman's bat-logo on his chest, but it is upside-down. He also wears a utility belt like Batman's. However, he wears it upside-down as well with the pockets open. He calls himself the "World's Worst Detective." He uses a large steel chain as a weapon and as a grappling hook, but no other items. He seems to lack eyes and has yellow fangs. He was also said to have, opposed to Batman's origin, shot and killed his parents. Batzarro has a tendency to think aloud, often repeating what has just been stated in his thought boxes, the opposite of Batman's custom of quiet contemplation. | Guns |
|
DC | Superman/Batman #20 (June, 2005) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Beautiful Dreamer | Beautiful Dreamer is one of the good New Gods of New Genesis lead by Highfather. She is also a member of the Forever People, a group of young adventurers who oppose Darkseid on Earth with the help of Infinity Man. Her specialty is psionic powers which she uses to create illusions. | N/A |
|
DC | Forever People #1 (March, 1971) | 350,000 Studs | ||
N/A |
|
Marvel | 350,000 Studs (each variation) | |||||
Beetle (Janice Lincoln) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Captain America #607 (August, 2010) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Beyonder | N/A |
|
Marvel | Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars #1 (May, 1984) | 1,000,000 Studs | |||
Big Barda | Mega-Rod |
|
DC | Mister Miracle #4 (October, 1971) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Big Bear | Big Bear is one of the good New Gods of New Genesis lead by Highfather. He is also a member of the Forever People, a group of young adventurers who oppose Darkseid on Earth with the help of Infinity Man. His special power is shifting the density of his atoms, making him the strongest member of the group. | N/A |
|
DC | Forever People #1 (March, 1971) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Big Man (Frederick Foswell) |
Guns | N/A | Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #10 (March, 1964) | 250,000 Studs | |||
Lucas Bishop | Blasters |
|
Marvel | Uncanny X-Men #282 (November, 1991) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Bizarro | N/A |
|
DC | Superboy #68 (November, 1958) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Black Beetle | In the near future of yet unexplained time the Black Beetle was approached by Mister Mind to join the Time Stealers a ragtag group of super villains picked from their early careers, bent on changing time to their whims. Mister Mind convinced Black Beetle to join by promising to save his sister. To the Venusian worm said Jaime Reyes was to blame and should never become the Blue Beetle. | Black Beetle Scarab |
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DC | Booster Gold Vol. 2 #5 (February, 2008) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Black Cat (Felicia Hardy) |
Felicia Hardy is the daughter of Walter Hardy, a world-renowned cat burglar. After suffering a traumatic experience as a college freshman, she trained herself in various fighting styles and acrobatics and, after deciding to follow in her father's footsteps, adopted the costumed identity of the Black Cat. As Black Cat, she has the subconscious ability to affect probability fields, producing "bad luck" for her enemies. |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #194 (July, 1979) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Black Knight (Nathan Garrett) |
Professor Nathan Garrett is the distant direct descendant of Sir Percy, and was born in London, England. He becomes a biologist, research scientist, and university professor. He then became the head of an espionage ring, and was captured by the hero Giant-Man. Garrett fled to Europe, where he found Sir Percy's tomb and the Ebony Blade. Garrett's evil tendencies make him unworthy of wielding the sword, and he is shunned by Sir Percy's ghost. An embittered Garrett then devises an arsenal of medieval weapons that employ modern technology (including a lance that fired bolts of energy) and genetically engineers and creates a winged horse called Aragorn. Calling himself the Black Knight, Garrett embarks on a career as a professional criminal to spite his ancestor. | Power Lance |
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Marvel | Tales to Astonish #52 (February, 1964) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Black Knight (Dane Whitman) |
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Marvel | Avengers #47 (December, 1967) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Black Mask (Roman Sionis) |
Gun | N/A | DC | Batman #386 (August, 1985) | 250,000 Studs | |||
Black Panther (Shuri) |
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Marvel | Black Panther Vol. 4 #2 (May, 2005) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Blackfire (Komand'r) |
N/A |
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DC | Tales of the New Teen Titans #4 (September, 1982) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Blackheart | Claws |
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Marvel | Daredevil #270 (Sepetember, 1989) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Blade (Eric Brooks) |
Sword |
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Marvel | Tomb of Dracula #10 (July, 1973) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Blastaar | N/A |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #62 (May, 1967) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Bleez | Red Lantern Power Ring |
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DC | Final Crisis: Rage of the Red Lanterns (December, 2008) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Blink (Clarice Ferguson) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Uncanny X-Men #317 (October, 1994) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Blizzard (Donald "Donnie" Gill) |
Donald Gill was a criminal who was given either Gregor Shapanka's original Blizzard costume or a close duplicate of it by agents of Justin Hammer. He was occasionally partnered with the Beetle and Blacklash (also known as Whiplash) as the "B-Team". | N/A |
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Marvel | Iron Man #86 (May, 1976) (Blizzard alias with Gregor Shapanka); Iron Man #223 (October, 1987) (Donald Gill) |
350,000 Studs | ||
Blob (Frederick "Fred" Dukes) |
N/A |
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Marvel | X-Men #3 (January, 1964) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Blockbuster (Mark Desmond) |
Mark Desmond was a chemist who had wanted to become stronger, having been scrawny as a youngster. Experimenting on himself, he created a serum that made him grow stronger and taller, but in the process was turned into a mindless brute; an additional side-effect of the serum was that it took away his power of speech. | N/A |
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DC | Detective Comics #345 (November, 1965) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Blood Brother | Gary and Ross Blood are two Roclites better known as the Blood Brothers. They were in the service of the conqueror Thanos, acting as the guardians of his first base on Earth. | N/A |
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Marvel | Iron Man #55 (February, 1973) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Blue Beetle (Daniel "Dan" Garrett) |
N/A |
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DC | Mystery Man Comics #1 (August, 1939) (as Dan Garret); Blue Beetle (Charlton) Vol. 2 #1 (June, 1964) (as Daniel Garett) |
400,000 Studs | |||
Blue Beetle (Theodore "Ted" Stephen Kord) |
Beetle Gun |
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DC | Captain Atom (Charlton) #83 (November, 1966) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Blue Beetle (Jaime Reyes) |
Khaji Da |
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DC | Infinite Crisis #3 (February, 2006) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Blue Devil (Daniel "Dan" Patrick Cassidy) |
Trident of Lucifer |
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DC | Firestorm Vol. 2 #24 (June, 1984) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Bolivar Trask | Bolivar Trask was an anthropologist who saw the rise of mutants as a threat to humanity. Bolivar decided that humanity has to fight back against the mutants and develops robotic guardians for humanity, known as the Sentinels. | N/A |
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Marvel | X-Men #14 (November, 1965) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Boomerang (Frederick "Fred" Myers) |
Fred Myers was born in Alice Springs, Northern Territory, Australia and was raised in the United States. As a young boy he developed a love for baseball, and spent years training and perfecting his pitching arm. By the time he was a young adult, Fred had realized his dream of pitching for a major league team. However, he foolishly began accepting bribes, and was drummed out of the major leagues after being discovered. Shortly thereafter, Myers was contacted by the Secret Empire, an international criminal organization that saw the potential of his skills. Myers agreed and was given a new costume and an arsenal of deadly boomerangs, from which he derived his new code name. | Specialized Boomerangs |
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Marvel | Tales to Astonish #83 (July, 1966) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Brainiac (Vril Dox I) |
Shrink Ray |
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DC | Adventure Comics #242 (July, 1958) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Brick (Daniel "Danny" Brickell) |
Brick is a metahuman super-villain and crimelord in Star City, making him an enemy to Green Arrow. His skin is thick and brick-like, making him almost impervious to damage. Beginning his career as a low-level enforcer, his ruthlessness allowed him to rise through the ranks of the criminal underworld. | N/A |
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DC | Green Arrow Vol. 3 #40 (September, 2004) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Bronze Tiger (Benjamin "Ben" Turner) |
Claws |
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DC | Richard Dragon, Kung-Fu Fighter #1 (May, 1975) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Brother Blood (Sebastian Blood VIII) |
Sebastian was the eighth individual to assume the name of Brother Blood. As demanded by seven generations of tradition, whoever holds such a title is recognized as the High Priest of the Church of Blood and an emissary to the demonic entity known as Trigon. Due to a seven-hundred year old curse, an individual can only achieve the title of Brother Blood through an act of patricide. There is no formal observation of ascendance, and the child of the High Priest can murder his father and assume his rank at a time of his own choosing. | N/A |
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DC | New Teen Titans #21 (July, 1982) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Bruno "Ugly" Mannheim | Bruno "Ugly" Mannheim is one of the world's greatest crime bosses and the leader of Intergang, making him an antagonist to Superman. His father is former leader Boss Moxie. Beyond his motivations as a ruthless thug, Mannheim is a devout worshiper of the Religion of Crime and their Crime Bible. This makes him a loyal servant to Darkseid. | N/A | N/A | DC | Superman's Pal, Jimmy Olsen #139 (July, 1971) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Bulldozer (Henry Camp) |
Henry Camp was a Master Sergeant in United States Army before being dishonorably discharged. Soon after he entered a life of crime and was later caught and headed off to Ryker's Island Prison. He then became cellmates with Dirk Garthwaite, also known as the Wrecker. Garthwaite, together with Camp and two other inmates at Ryker's Island Prison, Dr. Eliot Franklin and Brian Phillip Calusky, made a successful jailbreak and managed to locate his crowbar. Willing to share his power with his allies, The Wrecker had the three other convicts join him in holding onto the crowbar outside during an electrical storm. Lightning struck the crowbar, magically distributing the enchanted strength bestowed upon The Wrecker among the four of them. The Wrecker's three allies then adopted costumes and aliases as well: Franklin became Thunderball, Calusky became Piledriver, and Henry Camp became Bulldozer, constructing a special metal helmet for the occasion. Together the four superhumanly strong criminals became known as The Wrecking Crew, who were led by The Wrecker himself. | N/A |
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Marvel | Defenders #17 (November, 1974) | 350,000 Studs | ||
As a reward for his role during the Skrull invasion, Bullseye was placed on the Dark Avengers by Norman Osborn and given the costume and codename of Hawkeye. |
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Marvel | 300,000 Studs (each variation) | |||||
Bumblebee (Karen Beecher) |
N/A |
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DC | Teen Titans #45 (December, 1975) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Bushmaster (Quincy McIver) |
Quincy McIver was born on a Caribbean island. He became a quadruple amputee when he lost his arms and legs in a boating accident while trying to evade the police underwater. Shortly later, the Roxxon Oil Company equipped him with bionic arms and a snake-like tail in the place of the lower half of his body. He took the name "Bushmaster" from his fallen brother John, the first Bushmaster. | Arm blades |
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Marvel | Iron Fist #15 (September, 1977) (Bushmaster alias with John McIver); Captain America #310 (October, 1985) (Quincy McIver) |
350,000 Studs | ||
Cable (Nathan Christopher Charles Summers) |
Blaster |
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Marvel | Uncanny X-Men #201 (January, 1986) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Calculator (Noah Kuttler) |
Noah Kuttler, also known as the Calculator, began his criminal career by crossing the country and getting into fights with various superheroes. He would then press a button on his special costume that would analyze and record their battle tactics, ensuring he couldn't be beaten again by the hero that just defeated him. | N/A |
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DC | Detective Comics #463 (September, 1976) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Calander Man (Julian Gregory Day) |
N/A | N/A | DC | 250,000 Studs (each variation) | ||||
Captain Britain (Brian Braddock) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Captain Britain #1 (October, 1976) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Captain Marvel (Monica Rambeau) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man Annual #16 (October, 1982) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Captain Marvel (Genis-Vell) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Silver Surfer Annual #6 (October, 1993) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Captain Nazi (Albrecht Krieger) |
Captain Nazi is an evil counterpart to Shazam, a supervillain with incredible strength and powers fueled by Nazi idealism. During World War II he was developed by Adolf Hitler and the Axis Powers as part of a super-soldier experiment. | N/A |
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DC | Master Comics #21 (December, 1941) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Catman (Thomas "Tommy" Blake) |
Catman is a supervillain and anti-hero who began his career as an antagonist to Batman, using identical methods with cats as his theme. His abilities as a tracker are unparalleled due to time spent among lions in the African wilderness, and he is also an extremely formidable hand-to-hand combatant. | Claws |
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DC | Detective Comics #311 (January, 1963) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Chameleon (Dmitri Anatoly Nikolayevich Smerdyakov) |
Guns |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #1 (March, 1963) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Changeling originally worked for the villainous organization Factor Three. He acted as the Mutant Master's second-in-command in an effort to trigger World War III. After successfully capturing the heroic X-Men, the Mutant Master is exposed as an extraterrestrial and goes out of control. The mutants of Factor Three ultimately joined with the X-Men to defeat the Mutant Master. Following that group's defeat, Changeling sought to reform. He divulged to Professor X that he was suffering from an unspecified terminal illness with only a few months left to live and wished to atone for his misdeeds. Professor X recruited Changeling to act as a stand-in, unbeknownst to the X-Men. Morph was a member of the X-Men. He was fun-loving, irreverent, and jovial, described by Wolverine as "The only one who could ever make me laugh." As a result, he and Wolverine were very close, possibly closer than Logan was with anyone else on the team, except for Jean Grey. Morph was seemingly killed during the team's first encounter with the Sentinels, during the raid on the Mutant Control Agency headquarters. His death hit all of the X-Men hard, and drove a powerful wedge between Wolverine and Cyclops, who was forced to make the call to leave him and Beast behind during the X-Men's retreat. It was later revealed that he was kidnapped and brainwashed by Mister Sinister, but eventually overcame his programming and returned to the X-Men. Morph is a hero from a parallel world who was a member of not only the X-Men, but also the Avengers. Unique son of loving parents, in his universe, Morph, a shapeshifter born a fully activated mutant, managed early on to use his powers, and so giving everyone what they wanted from him. A fairly good baseball player, a friend, a good student. Morph always used his power to keep everyone at ease with him, being at ease with someone as himself only with his parents. When his mother passed on, Morph tried in every way to cheer up his emotional distraught father, who, unable to let his suffering go, chose to enroll his son in a boarding school, that luckily happened to be the Xavier Institute for Higher Learning. Able to cheer up his fellow friends, the X-Men, he became their field leader, and soon became the most loved Avenger of his universe. Then the mysterious Timebroker appeared to him, explaining to him that he had become unhinged from time as a chain of events had caused his realities as he knew it to change. In that new reality a wounded Morph has become unable to maintain his form, and slipped into a coma, being only a white muddy substance in Beast's lab. Hoping to save his own future, he became a member and the comic relief of the Exiles, a group of universe-hopping heroes trying to save realities from ripples and alteration. |
N/A |
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Marvel | X-Men #35 (August, 1967) X-Men Episode 1 (October 31, 1992) Exiles #1 (August, 2001) |
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Chaselon | Chaselon is an alien superhero known as a Green Lantern and a member of the Green Lantern Corps. The Guardians of the Universe gave him a power ring fueled by willpower to protect Space Sector 1416. He is a sentient crystalline sphere from the planet Barrio III. | Green Lantern Power Ring |
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DC | Green Lantern Vol. 2 #9 (December, 1961) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Chemistro (Calvin Carr) |
Calvin Carr, Curtis Carr's younger brother, stole the alchemy gun and took the Chemistro name. At the start of his criminal career he battled Luke Cage and Iron Fist. But Curtis intervened, and helped the heroes foil his brother's plans. | Alchemy Gun |
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Marvel | Power Man and Iron Fist #93 (May, 1983) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Chemo | N/A |
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DC | Showcase #39 (July, 1962) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Cheshire (Jade Nguyen) |
Born to a French father and a Vietnamese mother, Jade Nguyen had an unhappy childhood and was sold into slavery. This trauma ultimately drove her insane, and paved her way into becoming one of the world's most ruthless mercenaries. After killing her master, Jade was informally adopted by Chinese freedom fighter Weng Chan, who taught her all he knew about guerrilla fighting. She acquired knowledge of poisons from Kruen Musenda, a famed African assassin known as the "Spitting Cobra" and to whom she was married for the two years prior to his death. In the past she has had multiple romantic relationships and given birth to two children with different fathers, Lian Harper with Arsenal and Thomas Blake, Jr. with Catman. | Sais |
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DC | New Teen Titans Annual #2 (August, 1983) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Ch'p | Ch'p is an alien superhero known as Green Lantern and a member of the Green Lantern Corps. The Guardians of the Universe gave him a power ring fueled by willpower to protect Space Sector 1014. He has also been a member of the Green Lantern Corps of Earth. His home planet is the adorable rodent world H'lven. | Green Lantern Power Ring |
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DC | Green Lantern Vol. 2 #148 (January, 1982) | 360,000 Studs | ||
Chronos (David Clinton) |
N/A |
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DC | Atom #3 (November, 1962) | 300,000 Studs | |||
N/A |
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DC | Justice Society of America Vol. 3 #2 (March, 2007) Legends of Tomorrow Episode 17 (October 13, 2016) |
350,000 Studs (each variation) | ||||
Helmut Zemo is a nobleman and scientist born in Leipzig, Germany as the son of Baron Heinrich Zemo, a Nazi operative and one of Captain America's greatest enemies. Zemo was told by his father that only those of great superiority have the right to rule the world. It was only when Heinrich had his final battle with Cap that Helmut tried to take revenge. Having become an engineer and strategist himself, Zemo's first attempt at revenge as the Phoenix resulted in falling into a vat of recreated Adhesive X. Horrible disfigured, Helmut officially took on the Baron Zemo name and vowed revenge on Captain America and the Avengers as he formulated schemes to indirectly destroy them. Zemo took the Citizen V name for his imposture as a superhero when various superheroes were thought to be dead. Claiming to be John Watkins (the original Citizen V)'s grandson, Helmut took the name as an ironic taunt due to original version's murder by his father's hands. Helmut assembled a group of villains change their costumes and codenames to pretend to be a new team of superheroes with Helmut's leadership and fighting abilities to successfully pose as the superhero Citizen V. Eventually, Helmut revealed himself as a villain and was defeated by the Avengers, the Fantastic Four, and the Thunderbolts that turned against him. Helmut Zemo is a former colonel with the Sokovian Armed Forces and the commander of the EKO Scorpion. Following the Battle of Sokovia, Zemo became a terrorist mastermind who sought his revenge against the Avengers after losing his family and became obsessed with destroying them. Knowing that he was no match against all the Avengers, Zemo instead had planned to have them destroy each other by first framing the Winter Soldier for the assassination of T'Chaka, causing Captain America to defend Barnes from the world. This action had caused the Avengers Civil War in which Iron Man led the manhunt for Barnes and Zemo allowed Stark to discover that Barnes was also responsible for his parent's murder. With the Avengers now in ruins, Zemo had then attempted to commit suicide, but was captured by Black Panther and then handed over to Joint Counter Terrorist Centre for his imprisonment. |
Marvel | Daring Mystery Comics #8 (January, 1942) (Citizen V alias with John Watkins); Captain America: Civil War (April 27, 2016) |
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Clay Quartermain | Clay Quartermain was a member of the United States Air Force. Due to good luck and quick-wit, he was recruited into the intelligence service. Despite his competence, he has been noted by several co-workers and supervisors to be extremely arrogant and at times difficult to work with. Agent Quartermain first worked with S.H.I.E.L.D.'s storied executive director, Nick Fury, during S.H.I.E.L.D.'s first conflict with would-be world tyrant the Yellow Claw, later discovered to have been a robot simulacrum of the Chinese-national Mandarin. | Guns |
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Marvel | Strange Tales #163 (December, 1967) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Clea Strange | Clea was born of an affair between Prince Orini leader of the Mhuruuks and legitimate heir to the rule of the Dark Dimension, and Umar a Faltine and sister to the then-current ruler Dormammu. Umar was disgusted by her relationship with Orini, and abandoned Clea to be raised by him. Prince Orini kept any and all knowledge of Clea's true origins secret. Dormammu had long sought to conquer Earth and, as a result, often confronted Earth’s defender, Doctor Strange. When Strange journeyed into the Dark Dimension to continue his battle against Dormammu, Clea initially sought to dissuade Strange from facing him before deciding to help Strange. Dormammu imprisoned her for betrayal. During the duel between Strange and Dormammu, the latter's powers were drawn away in an attempt to keep the Mindless Ones in check. Strange aided Dormammu in driving the creatures back, and in return was honor-bound by Strange to release Clea and not invade the Earth-dimension. | N/A |
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Marvel | Strange Tales #126 (November, 1964) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Clock King (William Tockman) |
William Tockman, also known as the Clock King, is a bank robber and former employee of Kord Industries. He suffered from MacGregor's Syndrome, a terminal illness, but instead of using the money he stole to ameliorate his own condition, spent it to help his sister, Beverly Tockman, who had cystic fibrosis. However, after failing to obtain the money needed upon being apprehended by Team Arrow, Beverly succumbed to her illness and Tockman was denied the opportunity to be present in her last moments. Now dying and with nothing left to lose, Tockman decided to use his skills to stay out of prison for his crimes as long as he could before eventually succumbing to his own illness. |
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DC | World's Finest #111 (August, 1960) Arrow Episode 37 (February 26, 2014) |
300,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
Clock King (Temple Fugate) |
Temple Fugate was a junior lawyer known for his punctuality and strict adherence to schedules. During one of his commutes, fellow traveler Hamilton Hill suggested he'd break his schedule so that he could relax one day. And so, Fugate changed his schedule - he took his break 15 minutes later, and in the park. But he lost important documents, and searching for them meant he was late for a court appearance. When he found out Hamilton Hill was, in fact, working for the rival firm in that case, he accused him of deliberately undermining the case. He took it upon himself to ruin Hill's career. While Fugate planned his revenge, Hill had already served one successful term as Gotham's mayor. Fugate, now calling himself the Clock King, staged a smear campaign against him, and sabotaged Hill's own campaign. He went so far as to kidnap Hill, but his attempt to kill him by crushing him between the hands of the Gotham Clock Tower was foiled by Batman. | Giant Clock Hand |
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DC | Batman: the Animated Series Episode 25 (September 21, 1992) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Cluemaster (Arthur Brown) |
Arthur Brown was a failed game show host who turned to a life of crime, leaving trademark clues as to his actions. He is frequently imprisoned in Blackgate Penitentiary, and also has an estranged daughter, Stephanie Brown, alias the masked vigilante Spoiler. Cluemaster committed crimes and used puzzles in order to gain Batman's attention. His ultimate goal was to use his puzzles in order to discover Batman's secret identity, but the Caped Crusader managed to outsmart him by happenstance and eventually deduced the pattern to his crimes and captured him. | Gun | N/A | DC | Detective Comics #351 (May, 1966) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Cobalt Man (Ralph Roberts) |
N/A |
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Marvel | X-Men #31 (April, 1967) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Collector (Taneleer Tivan) |
Taneleer Tivan, also known as the Collector, is the head of the Tivan Group, and renowned as the keeper of the largest collection of interstellar fauna, relics, and species in the galaxy, operating from the Knowhere port installation. Through his dealings with Asgardians and the Guardians of the Galaxy, he was in possession of one of the Infinity Stones and was nearly able to obtain a second stone. |
N/A |
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Marvel | ||||
Colossus Unstoppable Colossus |
N/A |
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Marvel | |||||
Commander Steel (Henry "Hank" Heywood, Sr.) |
Henry Heywood enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps prior to their involvement in WWII, but was injured when saboteurs attacked his base spearheaded by the man who would become Baron Blitzkrieg in November, 1939. As a biology student under the tutelage of Doctor Gilbert Giles, his former professor performed extensive surgery on him with mechanized steel devices that facilitate normal human functions only on a superhuman level. He adopted the persona Steel, and started fighting fifth columnist saboteurs before being sent to Europe on secret missions. After becoming Steel, Heywood soon allied himself with the All-Star Squadron and while in a field of war was later commissioned "Commander Steel" by US President Roosevelt himself. Sometime prior to 1939, Henry Heywood joined the army, and was given dog tags with the number 070233; he continued to regularly wear them throughout his career. In 1939, he saved President Roosevelt from an assassin's bullet, which left a dent in one of his tags. Before he had been recruited into the JSA he was a fighter pilot. |
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DC | Steel #1 (March, 1978) (as Steel) Legends of Tomorrow Episode 17 (October 13, 2016) |
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Composite Superman (Joseph "Joe" Meach) |
Joseph Meach was a high diver who had fallen on hard times. In an attempt to draw publicity to himself, Meach set up a water tank on a sidewalk in Metropolis and dove off a building. Unbeknownst to Meach, the plastic tank he used was leaking, leaving only an inch of water; Meach would have died if not for the intervention of Superman. The Man of Steel, upon learning of Meach's misfortunes, obtained a job for him at the Superman Museum, where Meach was employed as a custodian. Meach's bitterness did not subside, and being surrounded by artifacts and mementos of Superman's career directed his anger towards Superman. One night, as Meach was sweeping in front of a series of statuettes depicting the Legion of Super-Heroes, a bolt of lightning passed through an open window and struck the display. The statuettes, which were actually miniature lifeless duplicates of the Legionnaires, unleashed an energy blast that struck Meach. Meach discovered that he was endowed with the combined powers of the Legion members. Determined to defeat Superman and Batman, Meach used his shapeshifting power to turn his skin green and form a costume that was half Superman's, half Batman's, along with a lead-lined Bat-mask to prevent Superman from using his x-ray vision to discover his true identity. | N/A |
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DC | World's Finest #142 (June, 1964) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Condiment King (Buddy Standler) |
Ketchup & Mustard Guns |
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DC | Batman: The Animated Series Episode 83 (November 5, 1994) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Congorilla (William "Bill" Glennmorgan) |
The legendary explorer and adventurer know as Congo Bill was content with living in his home, Africa. He has sworn to do whatever he needs to protect it. When Bill is called to the deathbed of his old friend Chief Kawolo and offered a magic ring. Bill was skeptical especially when he was told by the chief to rub the ring and it would transfer his mind into that of the legendary Golden Gorilla. He accepted the ring to humor his friend's dying wish. With that the medicine man ended up saving Bill's life; several weeks later an earth quake trapped Bill in a deep cave cut off from all life. After trying his entire book of tricks to escape his decided to hopelessly rub the ring his friend had given him. Instantly, despite his doubts he found himself inside the body of the Golden Gorilla, totally in control of a powerful being. Racing to the cave-in, he used his massive strength to clear the blocked entrance and wondering what had become of his body without him being "home". He realized that when he switched his consciousness that of the Gorilla was swapped into himself and vise versa on reentry. | N/A |
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DC | More Fun Comics #56 (June, 1940) (as Congo Bill) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Constantine Drakon | Constantine Drakon is one of the best martial artists in the world and assassin for hire, as well as a long time foe of Green Arrow. As a child growing up in Greece he was teased by other children due to his height. Once he started killing people at the age of ten, however, he found he was no longer sensitive about his stature. He claimed that he had nothing strange or traumatic in his upbringing to turn him to murder, he was simply curious to see what he could do. Discovering that he was a prodigy at killing, Constantine proceeded to make a living out of it. He considered what he did not just a job but a vocation, and took pride in the professional manner in which he operated. | N/A |
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DC | Green Arrow Vol. 3 #27 (August, 2003) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Constrictor (Frank Payne) |
Frank Payne was an agent of the international espionage organization S.H.I.E.L.D., and the father of an adult daughter, Mia. When S.H.I.E.L.D. needed a costumed "supervillain" to go undercover in the criminal organization called the Corporation, Frank was given a snake-themed costume and a pair of wrist-mounted electrified metal coils. Using the false identity of "Frank Schlicting" from Racine, Wisconsin, and the codename of "Constrictor", he infiltrated the group, only to suffer a nervous breakdown and become a career criminal in earnest. As a result of his defection, S.H.I.E.L.D. allowed his daughter to believe that he had died. | Electrically-charged metal coils |
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Marvel | Incredible Hulk #212 (June, 1977) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Count Luchino Nefaria | N/A |
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Marvel | Avengers #13 (February, 1963) | 370,000 Studs | |||
Count Werner Vertigo | N/A |
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DC | World's Finest #251 (July, 1978) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Crazy Quilt (Paul Dekker) |
Paul Dekker was a noted painter who leads a double-life as a master criminal. Dekker gave the plans for his crimes to various henchmen through clues left in his paintings. His criminal empire crashed to a halt when one of his henchmen double-crossed him and set him up to be arrested. Blinded by a gunshot wound, Dekker was sent to prison, where he volunteered for an experimental procedure that would restore his vision. This is achieved with a special helmet fused to his optic nerves. The procedure worked to a point, but had a tragic side effect: Dekker could see, but the colors were blindingly vivid and disorienting. It drove him mad, and upon his release he took on the guise of Crazy Quilt. |
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N/A | DC | Boy Commandos #15 (June, 1946) (as just Crazy Quilt) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Creeper (Jack Ryder) |
N/A |
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DC | Showcase #73 (March, 1968) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Crimson Cowl (Justine Hammer) |
Justine Hammer is the daughter of the criminal financier Justin Hammer. For years she was forced by her father to prove herself and earn her right to be among the elite. She became the Crimson Cowl and formed the Masters Of Evil to succeed where her father had failed and use the superhuman community to accumulate physical power and influence in the world. | N/A |
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Marvel | Avengers #54 (July, 1968) (Crimson Cowl alias with Ultron); Thunderbolts #3 (June, 1997) (Justine Hammer) |
300,000 Studs | ||
Crimson Dynamo (Dimitri Bukharin) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Tales of Suspense #46 (October, 1963) (Crimson Dynamo alias with Anton Vanko); Iron Man #109 (April, 1978) (Dimitri Bukharin) |
350,000 Studs | |||
Crossfire (William Cross) |
William Cross was born in Madison, Wisconsin. Cross joined the CIA with the intent to learn the secrets of the trade and to make contacts which might one day prove useful to him. He intended to use CIA training and knowledge to obtain a profit for himself. He was romantically linked to Rozalyn Backus. She was unaware of his illegal activities, and helped develop experimental ultrasonic technology. The couple were engaged to be married until ran off with the technology In his disappearance he faked his own murder and framed Backus for the murder. Quitting the CIA soon after, Cross used his skills and resources to begin a number of highly profitable criminal operations including drug trafficking, extortion, and assassinations. Assuming the codename Crossfire, he diverted a portion of his profits to hire a small army of mercenaries to serve as his enforcers. Crossfire's goal became to foment disorder and subversion within society in order to make a profit. At one point in his career, some of his enemies booby-trapped his headquarters. The ensuing explosion robbed him of his left eye and ear, plus 85% of his hearing. He replaced his losses with cybernetic equipment. Crossfire eventually located the men who had injured him, and eliminated them personally. | Sniper Rifle |
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Marvel | Marvel Two-In-One #54 (June, 1979) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Crystal (Crystalia Amaquelin) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #45 (December, 1965) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Cyborg Superman (Henry "Hank" Henshaw) |
N/A |
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DC | Adventures of Superman #466 (May, 1990) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Daimon Hellstrom | Hellstrom's Trident |
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Marvel | Ghost Rider Vol. 2 #1 (September, 1973) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Claws |
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Marvel | 350,000 Studs (each variation) | |||||
Damage (Grant Albert Emerson) |
High school student Grant Emerson had just moved with his parents to a new home in suburban Atlanta. His parents moved often due to their work for the Symbolix Corporation, and Grant usually felt like an outsider among other kids. At his new school, Grant suddenly discovers he is a superhuman with incredible strength and the ability to produce explosive blasts. He learns that Vandal Savage was involved in an experiment at Symbolix called Project: Telemachus, where he took DNA samples he had collected from various superheroes and injected them into a fitting vessel: Grant. The heroes Grant shares DNA with are: Atom (Al Pratt), Flash (Jay Garrick), Green Lantern (Alan Scott), Wildcat (Ted Grant), Hawkman (Carter Hall), Hawkgirl (Shayera Hol), Hourman (Rex Tyler), Black Canary (Dinah Drake), Doctor Mid-Nite (Charles McNider), Starman (Ted Knight), Miss America (Joan Dale), Johnny Quick (Johnny Chambers), Liberty Belle (Libby Lawrence), Martian Manhunter (J'onn J'onzz/John Jones), Flash (Barry Allen), Aquaman, Black Canary (Dinah Lance), Green Lantern (Hal Jordan), and Atom (Ray Palmer). Grant eventually learns that he is the son of Al Pratt, the original Atom and his wife Mary. | N/A |
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DC | Damage #1 (April, 1994) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Damien Darhk | N/A |
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DC | Titans #1 (March, 1999) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Daredevil (Matthew "Matt" Michael Murdock) |
Bo Staff |
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Marvel | Daredevil #1 (April, 1964) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Darkseid (Uxas) |
N/A |
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DC | Superman's Pal, Jimmy Olsen #134 (December, 1970) | 500,000 Studs | |||
Deacon Joseph Blackfire | N/A | N/A | DC | Batman: The Cult #1 (August, 1988) | 250,000 Studs | |||
Deacon Frost | Deacon Frost was allegedly a scientist looking for the key to immortality. For one of his experiments, he kidnapped a young woman in order to inject her with the blood of a recently killed vampire. The girl's fiancé broke into the lab, and in the resulting scuffle Frost was accidentally injected with the blood himself. The result was that Frost became a vampire but due to the unusual method of his becoming a vampire, he was endowed with a unique characteristic. Anyone he turned into a vampire would generate a doppelgänger. He could create an infinite number of doppelgängers by biting each doppelgänger, and they would all be under his mental control. Frost intended to use this ability to contend for the position of Lord of Vampires, a position that was presently held by Dracula. Frost is the vampire responsible for the death of Blade's mother; Blade's initial mission is to exact revenge against his mother's killer. | N/A |
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Marvel | Tomb of Dracula #13 (October, 1973) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Death | Death is an abstract entity, the embodiment of the end of life in the Marvel Universe, and the opposite of Eternity, the embodiment of the universe. Death is predominantly depicted as a skeleton cloaked in a black or purple robe, and at times appears as a Caucasian human female. The Mad Titan Thanos is determined to prove his love for Death by destroying all life. | N/A |
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Marvel | Captain Marvel #26 (May, 1973) | 1,000,000 Studs | ||
Demogoblin |
|
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Marvel | The Spectacular Spider-Man #147 (February, 1989) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Desaad | Originally born on New Genesis, the unnamed youth was corrupted by Darkseid. Darkseid made him believe that his pet cat had killed his pet bird. He punished the cat by burying it alive. When the bird came back, he killed the bird in a fit of rage. Then he followed Darkseid to Apokolips. Taking his New God name from "a being from a future, who taught me so much in my chosen field" (assumed to be the Marquis de Sade), Desaad became the young Darkseid's henchman. When threatened by Darkseid's mother, the wicked Queen Heggra of Apokolips, Desaad was forced to poison Darkseid's beloved, the Princess Suli. Heggra's plan was for Darkseid to then be married to the concubine Tigra. When Darkseid discovered what happened, he forced Desaad to poison Heggra in revenge. From that day, Desaad has been Darkseid's main henchman. | N/A |
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DC | Forever People #2 (May, 1971) | 340,000 Studs | ||
Despero | N/A |
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DC | Justice League of America #1 (November, 1960) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Destiny (Irene Adler) |
Irene Adler was born in Salzburg, Austria. Mystique was working as a consulting detective when Destiny sought her help in understanding the precognitive visions recorded in her diaries. During this time, the two fell in love. Background details suggest that this meeting took place around 1900. She was more accurate in predicting near-future events concerning her present environment. In a period of 12 months during her adolescence, Irene had produced 13 volumes of prophecies concerning the late 20th and early 21st centuries. When that period ended, Irene was left physically blind and haunted by disturbing images of uncertain meaning. She enlisted Raven's services in pursuit of two goals: the deciphering of her recorded prophecies and a mission to prevent the most terrifying of them from ever being fulfilled. The two women would soon become lifelong friends and lovers. They both discovered that their set goals were difficult to achieve. Their abilities would easily allow them to achieve personal success but to shape the future was stated to be "next to impossible" as it would require "social engineering." Although they remained romantically involved for years to come, there were periods in which the two women were separated from one another, allowing them both to have other romantic relationships and even families. Mystique and Destiny formed the second Brotherhood of Evil Mutants, a group of ideologically motivated terrorists. | Hand-mounted crossbow | N/A | Marvel | X-Men #141 (January, 1981) | 300,000 Studs | ||
The Destroyer | Odin, Zeus, and Brahma, known as the Skyfathers of their respective god Pantheons, confronted the Celestials on their third visit (or Host) to Earth. The Celestials explained that their next visit would judge whether humanity was fit to continue existing and that the gods should not interfere. They threatened to seal off the dimensional pathways that link Earth to the various realms such as Asgard and Olympus. Not wanting to lose their worshipers, the Skyfathers secretly began plans to stop them. Odin created a mystic armor that could contain vast amounts of the Gods' energies in order to battle the Celestials. He used an unknown metal apparently superior to Uru and enchanted it with his magic, strengthening it further. The armor was stored away in the Temple of Darkness, but it was found by Loki, who sought to use it against Thor. | N/A |
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Marvel | Journey into Mystery #118 (July, 1965) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Detective Chimp (Bobo T. Chimpanzee) |
Detective Chimp is an intelligent chimpanzee and master detective. Originally a normal chimpanzee taken from Africa and raised as a circus act by Fred Thorpe, "Bobo the Detective Chimp" was transformed when he was exposed to the Fountain of Youth. After his master's death, he struck out on his own as a detective, and has since met other famous detectives such as Martian Manhunter, Elongated Man, and Batman. | N/A |
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DC | Adventures of Rex the Wonder Dog #4 (August, 1952) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Dex-Starr (Dexter) |
|
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DC | Final Crisis: Rage of the Red Lanterns (December, 2008) | 400,00 Studs | |||
Diablo (Esteban Corazón de Ablo) |
Esteban Corazón de Ablo was a powerful alchemist in 9th century Saragossa, who sold his soul to the demon Mephisto to lengthen his life far beyond a human span. The villagers had enough of him where they formed an angry mob and buried him within a stone crypt under his castle. In the present day, the Fantastic Four appeared in Transylvania on a vacation, when a local named Baron Hugo told them the legend of Diablo. That night, Diablo whispered to The Thing to awake and free him from his prison by pulling out the stone plug on his crypt and smashing the stone slab that covered him. Freed, Diablo offered a potion to the Thing that would turn him halfway into a human. In exchange for Ben's services for a year, he would give him the other potion that would finalize the change. When the rest of the Fantastic Four arrived, they found Ben working for Diablo. They fought with him and tried to convince him to leave his service, but Ben refused, and the three were forced to leave him behind. Diablo soon made his appearance known to the world, and sold his alchemic chemicals internationally, making him the richest man on the planet. Shortly before the rest of the world, Mister Fantastic discovered that Diablo's chemicals worked, but only for a short while, before failing. The world turned on Diablo, but he had already built up an army of loyal followers and was prepared to use his alchemic powers to conquer the planet. But once Diablo had revealed his true intentions, the Fantastic Four were free to attack him. At the same time, the Thing had also discovered that the potion he was given wore off, and he turned on Diablo, but Diablo used one of his chemical pellets to knock him out and seal him in an unbreakable, glass capsule. The remaining three members of the Fantastic Four soon attacked Diablo's fortress, but after a struggle, Diablo managed to capture them with his chemical pellets. Diablo sealed up the last of the Fantastic Four in the same capsules, but Ben quickly escaped when his broke down. Angered, he chased Diablo through his own castle, until he crushed a suit of armor into a giant ball, and threw it after him. Diablo ran from it, hiding within the crypt that the villagers had sealed him in. The Thing followed behind him and reinserted the giant, stone plug, and then smashed it with both fists, causing the entire castle to come crumbling down upon the crypt. The Fantastic Four were later freed, and the Human Torch melted the stone into slag to harden Diablo's prison. But Diablo eventually used his potions to destroy his melted stone prison, and escaped to get revenge on the Fantastic Four. | N/A |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #30 (September, 1964) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Doc Magnus (William "Will" Maxwell Magnus) |
Will Magnus is a brilliant robotics engineer who created and leads the Metal Men. Despite his brilliance, he is also prone to mental breakdowns and absolutely must have his medication. Most famously, he is credited with the invention of the Responsometer. His mentor was the supervillain T.O. Morrow. | N/A |
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DC | Showcase #37 (April, 1962) | 250,000 Studs | ||
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DC | Showcase #13 (March, 1958); Showcase #14 (June, 1958) (as Doctor Alchemy) |
350,000 Studs (each variation) | |||||
Doctor Bedlam | Doctor Bedlam is a member of Darkseid's elite, a disembodied being that inhabits artificial bodies called "animates". He is one of Darkseid's chief scientists, he is mainly researching terror-inducing mind manipulation. One of his inventions is the Paranoid Pill. | N/A |
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DC | Mister Miracle #2 (June, 1971) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Doctor Bong (Lester Verde) |
As a child, Lester Verde was severely bullied. When complaining about it to his mother, she noted his creative use of insults against his tormentors and sparked his desire to use his creativity to become a writer. Originally a journalism student whose yellow journalism got his professor fired, his hand is severed by a miniature guillotine when performing with the punk band Mildred Horowitz. This is a big factor into becoming the villain Doctor Bong. How he developed his paraphernalia was never explained. It was revealed that he was also a skilled scientist, using his knowledge of chemistry and physics to create several devices and creatures to do his bidding, particularly Fifi the Duck, who was the closest thing Bong had to a henchwoman. | N/A |
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Marvel | Howard the Duck #15 (August, 1977) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Doctor Cyber (Cylvia Anita Cyber) |
Doctor Cyber was the beautiful and commanding presence behind a global criminal network. Due to her secretive nature and chiefly known through her networks, she was assumed to be a man. | Blaster |
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DC | Wonder Woman #149 (December, 1968) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Doctor Destiny (John Dee) |
John Dee was a petty criminal scientist capable of creating technology far beyond those of the contemporary era; his first foray in super-villainy involved creating an anti-gravity device that allowed him to capture Green Lantern, impersonate him, and design a series of traps to capture the JLA, calling himself Doctor Destiny. While defeated, it was but his first attempt. He then created the "Materioptikon," a device which allowed him to create reality from the fabric of dreams, powered by Morpheus's Dreamstone (gifted to him by his mother Ethel, former mistress of Roderick Burgess). He manipulated the Dreamstone, forcing flaws and adding circuitry, until it was attuned to him and not the Dream King. Morpheus was imprisoned by Alex Burgess at the time, unaware of what Doctor Destiny was doing and unable to stop or prevent it. Doctor Destiny's power was so great that the Justice League resorted to drastic measures to stop him. They hypnotized him and manipulated his psyche to prevent him from dreaming; this kept him from using the Materioptikon for criminal purposes but caused him to lose his mind and shrivel to a skeletal wreck of a man. | N/A |
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DC | Justice League of America #5 (July, 1961) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Doctor Faustus (Johann Fennhoff) |
Dr. Johann Fennhoff was a brilliant psychiatrist and manipulator from Vienna, Austria. But due to his skill, his arrogance overcame him, stating that he was so brilliant that he was the "Master of Men's Minds". He used his skill of psychological manipulation to force his enemies into positions in which the would kill themselves. He later took up calling himself Doctor Faustus. | N/A | N/A | Marvel | Captain America #107 (November, 1968) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Doctor Light (Arthur Light) |
N/A |
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DC | Justice League of America #12 (June, 1962) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Doctor Light (Kimiyo Hoshi) |
N/A |
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DC | Crisis on Infinite Earths #4 (July, 1985) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Doctor Mid-Nite (Charles McNider) |
Charles McNider, a surgeon, was called one night to remove a bullet from a witness set to testify against mobsters. A mobster threw a grenade into the room, killing the witness and blinding McNider, with the injury causing him to believe his career as a surgeon was over. One evening, as he was recovering, an owl crashed through his window. Removing the bandages covering his eyes, McNider discovered that he could still see, but only in perfect darkness. McNider developed a special visor allowing him to see in the light and "blackout bombs" capable of blocking out all light, becoming a costumed crime fighter. He adopted the owl, naming it "Hooty", and it became his "sidekick". | Blackout Bombs | *Blackout Bombs **Blind enemies |
DC | All-American Comics #25 (April, 1941) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Doctor Phosphorus (Alexander "Alex" Sartorius) |
Dr. Alex Sartorius, alias Doctor Phosphorus, was a member of the Tobacconists' Club, who wanted to build a nuclear power plant in Gotham City with help from the Club's chairman, Rupert Thorne. However, the people of Gotham refused the construction of the plant and he was forced to take the project far from the city. Eventually, Sartorius was transformed by sand irradiated during the nuclear plant's meltdown, driven up one element on the chemical table, from silicon to phosphorus. His body was changed as his skin would burn at any contact and his skeleton showed through his skin. | N/A |
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DC | Detective Comics #469 (May, 1977) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Doctor Psycho (Edgar Cizko) |
Doctor Psycho is a telepathic supervillain with mind control powers who acts as an enemy to Wonder Woman. His insane motives are violently sadistic and even misogynistic in an attempt to torment Wonder Woman and her contemporaries. He was once a psychologist who was often mocked and ridiculed by his peers for his studies in psionics and the power of the mind, even giving him the moniker "Dr. Psycho", causing him to swear vengeance on all who mocked him. He later developed vast psychic powers that allowed him to enter and sometimes shape people's dreams, control minds, and project illusions. | N/A |
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DC | Wonder Woman #5 (July, 1943) (as just Dr. Psycho); Wonder Woman #289 (March, 1982) (as Cyril Psycho); Wonder Woman Vol. 2 #54 (May, 1991) (as Edgar Cizko) |
300,000 Studs | ||
Dr. Thaddeus Bodog Sivana, Sr. | Doctor Thaddeus Bodog Sivana, Sr. is Captain Marvel's arch nemesis. A brilliant evil mastermind, he is arguably the archetype for the "mad scientist". Sivana was the first to figure out Captain Marvel's identity, and has been a constant pest to the Big Red Cheese (as he prefers to call the Captain). | N/A |
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DC | Whiz Comics #2 (February, 1940) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Doctor Strange (Stephen Vincent Strange) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Strange Tales #110 (July, 1963) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Doctor Voodoo (Jericho Drumm) |
Staff of Legba |
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Marvel | Strange Tales #169 (September, 1973) (as Brother Voodoo) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Domino (Neena Thurman) |
Guns |
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Marvel | New Mutants #98 (February, 1991) (character concept; impersonated by Copycat); X-Force #8 (March, 1992) (real Domino) |
300,000 Studs | |||
Doomsday | N/A |
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DC | Superman: Man of Steel #17 (November, 1992) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Dormammu | N/A |
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Marvel | Strange Tales #126 (November, 1964) | 450,000 Studs | |||
Double Down (Jeremy Tell) |
Jeremy Tell was a Central-Keystone area con man and gambler. During a high stakes game, Tell lost all his money. Angered, he murdered the winner. A mystically "cursed deck of cards" the murdered man owned animated and flew at Tell, cleaving and bonding to his skin. Most of his flesh was seared off, replaced by the cards. They can detach itself on his command, slicing everything in their way. He has since assumed the name Double Down. | Cards |
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DC | Flash: Iron Heights (August, 2001) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Dove (Donald "Don" Hall) |
Don Hall was the quieter more scholarly than his brother, Hank. He and Hank pursued a mob boss that tried to kill their father, a judge. The two became trapped in a locked room and Don wished for the power they would need to free themselves. A voice boomed out that it would give the boys that power as long as they used it to fight injustice. By saying the words "hawk" and "dove", the two transformed into superheroes with the same names. After justice was served they changed back. As Dove, Don Hall always advocated non-violent solutions. The two saved their father, who in turn, not knowing their secret identities, denounced the boys as lawless vigilantes. | N/A |
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DC | Showcase #75 (June, 1968) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Dove (Dawn Marie Granger) |
During the Crisis on Infinite Earths, Dawn Granger was in London with her mother. Her mother, a diplomatic courier, was at the American embassy when terrorists took it over, and threatened to blow it up. Unable to get help from the police, who were too busy with the panic caused by the Crisis, Dawn was contacted by voices that offered her the power to deal with the problem herself. She agreed, was transformed into Dove, and easily subdued the terrorists. | N/A |
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Hawk and Dove Vol. 2 #1 (October, 1988) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Vlad III Dracula | Sword |
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Marvel | Suspense #7 (March, 1951) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Dragon Man | Dragon Man is an android built by Professor Gregson Gilbert of Empire State University as an experiment. Gregson hoped to find a way to bring it to life. He could not find a way to do this until the alchemist Diablo arrived and brought it to life under his partial control using his supernatural powers. However, Dragon Man broke his control and attempted to kill Diablo. Although Dragon Man is slow-minded to the point that he is incapable of speech, he understands orders given by Diablo and is a determined foe of the Fantastic Four (although the creature has always displayed a King Kong-like affection towards Sue Richards). Dragon Man is not especially malicious, although he is easily manipulated and provoked to violence. | Claws |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #35 (February, 1965) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Drax is a former intergalactic criminal and a member of the Guardians of the Galaxy. He sought revenge on Ronan the Accuser for killing his wife and daughter, and went on a rampage across the galaxy, ending with him being imprisoned by the Nova Corps in the Kyln. There, Drax became uneasy allies with Star-Lord, Gamora, Rocket Raccoon, and Groot. Together they broke out of the Kyln and became embroiled in the Quest for the Orb. After the Battle of Xandar, in which he finally exacted his vengeance on Ronan, Drax left Xandar with the other Guardians but not before declaring Thanos as his next target. |
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Marvel | Iron Man #55 (February, 1973) Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy Prequel Infinite Comic (April, 2014) |
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Dreadknight (Bram Velsing) |
Bram Velsing was a brilliant scientist in Latveria, who was not content to simply execute the technological schemes of his evil monarch, Doctor Doom. Learning of Velsing's rebellious ambitions, Doom had a mask permanently used to Velsing's face so that, like Doom's, his features were hidden for all time. Anguished and humiliated, Velsing fled Latveria. Bram eventually fell under the care of the Children, the genetic creations of Dr. Victor Frankenstein, tended by Frankenstein's great-granddaughter, Victoria. While being nursed back to health at her castle, Velsing encountered the winged horse of the criminal Black Knight, which Victoria Frankenstein had tried to restore to normal, but had only succeeded in further mutating it. Bram Velsing decided to use the horse, his scientific intellect, and terrifying visage to seek revenge against Doom, under a new identity, the Dreadknight. When Velsing sought to steal the secret notebooks of Victor Frankenstein, Victoria Frankenstein thwarted his plan with the aid of Frankenstein's Monster and the hero Iron Man, who had landed in Yugoslavia en route to America. Velsing was left in the care of the Children after his defeat. | Lance |
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Marvel | Iron Man #101 (August, 1977) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Dreadnought | The Dreadnought was a robot created by Hydra. It was first used in an attempt to breach the S.H.I.E.L.D. Helicarrier and assassinate director Nick Fury. | N/A |
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Marvel | Strange Tales #154 (March, 1967) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Dum Dum Dugan (Timothy "Tim" Aloysius Cadwallader Dugan) |
Dum Dum Dugan was originally portrayed as a British citizen in Sgt Fury #1, but later retconned to be born in Boston, Massachusetts. During World War II, while working as a circus strongman, Dugan helps Nick Fury and Sam "Happy" Sawyer escape the Nazis during a mission. Dugan joins the British Army, and when Sawyer is charged with creating Fury's First Attack Squad, formally listed as "Able Company" and nicknamed the Howling Commandos, Sawyer invites Dugan to transfer into the US Army and become Fury's second-in-command. Dugan is an enlisted man with the rank of corporal, and wears the chevrons of his rank on the front top of his trademark bowler hat throughout World War II. Different accounts state that Dugan and other members of Fury's Howling Commandos receive the Infinity Formula to explain how they all remain youthful and active despite being all into their 60s and 70s in the modern era. Other stories contradict this artificial maintenance of youth by Dugan as merely dyeing his hair and suffering a heart attack. Later on in life, he was placed in charge of internal security on the S.H.I.E.L.D. Helicarrier. | Rifle |
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Marvel | Sgt Fury and his Howling Commandos #1 (May, 1963) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Eclipso |
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DC | House of Secrets #61 (July, 1963) | 400,000 Studs | ||||
Eel (Leopold "Leo" Stryke) |
Leopold Stryke, the original Eel, was the curator of an aquarium who led a secret life as a costumed criminal. | N/A |
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Marvel | Strange Tales #112 (September, 1963) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Eel (Mortimer “Mort” Coolidge) |
Mort Coolidge was a criminal who began his career in the criminal underworld of Gotham City and San Diego (before the earthquake that sank half the town). In San Diego, he acquired a suit that gave him special water-based powers and tried to dominate the entire criminal underworld of the city. His actions were interrupted by Aquaman and Aquagirl. | N/A |
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DC | Blue Beetle (Fox) #6 (April, 1941) (Eel alias with unnamed criminal); Aquaman Vol. 6 #21 (October, 2004) (Mort Coolidge) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Egghead (Elihas Starr) |
Dr. Elihas Starr was a scientist working at an atomic research center for the government of the United States. He was caught when trying to smuggle drafts of an atomic project, probably to sell them on the open market. He was then fired from the center and was waiting to be judged for treason. However, the criminal world discovered his ordeal because of tabloids (where he was nicknamed "Egghead") and offered him freedom if he was ready to put his intellect to the service of the crime lords. | N/A |
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Marvel | Tales to Astonish #38 (December, 1962) | 250,000 Studs | ||
El Diablo (Lazarus Lane) |
In the late 19th century, a gang of criminals broke into a bank and assaulted the tellers. One of the bank clerks, Lazarus Lane, failed to take action against the thieves, and as a result, the criminals mercilessly gunned down one of the other clerks. Stricken by guilt for his own inaction, Lazarus sought to avenge his fallen friend by confronting the bank robbers. They easily outnumbered him however and tossed him into a shallow stream. Some time after they had left him, a bolt of lightning crackled from the sky striking Lazarus in the chest. Lane slumped over, lapsing into a coma. His trusted friend, Wise Owl – an Apache Native American, discovered Lane's body and brought him back to his hacienda. He placed him before the fireplace and kept a close vigil over him for two days and nights. There was no ready explanation for why Lane was even still alive, but Wise Owl continued to care for him, administering aid in the form of strange roots and powders. Three nights later, Lazarus, like his namesake, seemingly rose from the dead. It was later revealed that Wise Owl had used magic to turn Lane into a host for a Spirit of Vengeance, but Lane did not know this at the time. Grabbing hold of his new lease on life, Lazarus decided to become a dark, driven avenger of the night. Dedicated towards righting wrongs, he adopted the name and guise of El Diablo. |
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DC | All-Star Western Vol. 2 #2 (November, 1970) | 300,000 Studs | ||
El Diablo (Chato Santana) |
N/A |
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DC | El Diablo Vol. 3 #1 (November, 2008) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Electrocutioner (Buchinsky (first name unknown)) |
The Electrocutioner was a self-appointed executioner of criminals who slip through the hands of the law. He started a series of crook-killings in Gotham City with his electrically-charged suit. Electrocutioner was confronted by Batman on three occasions and only in the last one was Batman able to stop Electrocutioner's killing spree. | N/A |
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DC | Batman #331 (January, 1981) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Elektra Natchios | Sais |
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Marvel | Daredevil #168 (January, 1981) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Elongated Man (Randolph "Ralph" William Dibny) |
N/A |
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DC | The Flash #112 (May, 1960) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Emil Hamilton | Professor Hamilton is a genius scientist living in Metropolis who is frequently a friend and ally of Superman. However, he is mentally unstable and has turned evil several times. His career is usually spent working in S.T.A.R. Labs or his own business in Suicide Slum. | N/A |
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DC | Adventures of Superman #424 (January, 1987) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Emma Grace Frost | For most of her life, Emma Frost thought only of her own needs and goals, seeing humanity as inferior to her own mutant race. She used her intelligence, charm, and telepathic powers to accumulate great wealth. Soon she joined the mysterious Hellfire Club, a group secretly dedicated to world domination. For years she helped that group gain the political and economic influence it desired, often clashing with the X-Men. Over time, however, Emma came to see the teaching of young mutants as her true calling. Eventually she allied with Professor Charles Xavier and her former enemies, becoming a full-fledged member of the X-Men and a teacher at the Xavier School. | N/A |
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Marvel | X-Men #129 (January, 1980) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Enchantress (Amora) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Journey into Mystery #103 (April, 1963) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Enchantress (June Moone) |
N/A |
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DC | Strange Adventures #187 (April, 1966) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Eradicator | N/A |
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DC | Action Comics Annual #2 (May, 1989) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Erik Killmonger | Spear |
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Marvel | Jungle Action Vol. 2 #6 (September, 1973) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Etrigan | N/A |
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DC | Demon #1 (September, 1972) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Evil Star | Evil Star is a supervillain who draws power from the stars themselves using the Starbrand, acting as an enemy to Green Lantern Hal Jordan. Originally he was a scientist on the planet Auron who achieved immortality through his discoveries, but he left to conquer other planets when he killed everyone on his own. | N/A |
|
DC | All-Star Comics #44 (December, 1948) (Evil Star alias with Guy Pompton); Green Lantern Vol. 2 #37 (June, 1965) (Auron scientist) |
350,000 Studs | ||
Executioner (Skurge) |
Skurge the Executioner was one of Asgard's greatest warriors. He was born the illegitimate son of a Storm Giant and a Asgardian from the realm of Skornheim. Later became a warrior, gaining the name Executioner after fighting in a war against the Storm Giants. He came to Asgard, there he was seduced by the Amora, the Enchantress into assisting her in many of her schemes over the years. But while the Executioner was as so infatuated with the Enchantress that he would do anything for her, she continually withheld her favors from him to keep him in thrall. | Bloodaxe |
|
Marvel | Journey into Mystery #103 (April, 1963) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Following Captain America's adventure in Dimension Z, Falcon met Arnim Zola's daughter Jet, with whom he had a fling. Around this time, during a confrontation against the Iron Nail, Steve was deprived of the Super-Soldier Serum, quickly aging into an old man. After foiling Arnim Zola's plan to detonate a bomb in New York, almost sacrificing his life in the process, Falcon was given the mantle of Captain America by Steve, who had to step down due to his condition. Samuel “Sam” Thomas Wilson, better known as Falcon, is a former United States Air Force pararescue airman who left active duty when his wing-man Riley died in combat, choosing instead to begin helping any of his fellow veterans who were suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder at Veterans Affairs. During this time, Wilson met and soon became an ally of Captain America during the beginning of the HYDRA Uprising, assisting him in bringing down Alexander Pierce's schemes for Project Insight before then choosing to remain with Captain America for future missions. |
|
Marvel | Captain America #117 (September, 1969) Captain America Vol. 7 #25 (December, 2014) Captain America: The Winter Soldier (March 13, 2014) |
300,000 Studs (each variation) | ||||
Fancy Dan (Daniel Brito) |
Daniel Brito (aka Fancy Dan) was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York. He was a small child so learned to stick up for him by learning various martial arts such as judo and karate and other fighting techniques. Fancy Dan worked with Montana (Jackson Brice) and Ox (Raymond Bloch), and these three thugs teamed up to form a mercenary team called the Enforcers. As his work with the Enforcers became more important than supporting his family, Ginger Brito filed for divorce and moved to Atlantic City with her son, Rudy, where she would remarry. | Pistol |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #10 (March, 1964) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Fandral the Dashing | Fandral the Dashing was a charter member of the Warriors Three, a trio of Asgardian adventurers consisting of himself, Hogun the Grim, and Volstagg the Voluminous. Fandral was a strong and brave and a good friend to Thor. He fought in countless battles with his friends, to preserve and protect his people. He has been described as one of the most good-looking Asgardians which along with his charm, gave him the reputation as a ladies' man. Besides his looks, Fandral is also known for his skills in swordsmanship and bravery. He and Thor first met when the Warriors Three joined the Thunder God on an expedition to restore the Odinsword that had become cracked. | Sword |
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Marvel | Journey into Mystery #119 (August, 1965) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Faora Hu-Ul | Faora was a Kryptonian serial killer notorious for her hatred of men and an antagonist to Superman. She was captured and sentenced to life imprisonment, surviving the destruction of Krypton in the Phantom Zone. Her closest partners among the Phantom Zoners became General Zod and Jax-Ur. | N/A |
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DC | Adventure Comics #471 (May, 1977) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Felicity Meghan Smoak | Felicity Smoak is a ally to and a love interest to Green Arrow. She is a computer genius who worked in the IT department at Queen Industries until Queen recruited her to his war on crime. Her name is taken from the woman who married Ed Raymond, father to Ronnie Raymond, half of the first Firestorm. | N/A |
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DC | Firestorm Vol. 2 #23 (May, 1984) (original incarnation); Arrow Episode 3 (October 24, 2012) (modern incarnation) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Felix Faust | The first recorded whereabouts of the mighty sorcerer now known as Felix Faust is from c. 5,000 BC, at which time he appeared in the legendary African empire of Kor. The king of Kor was Nommo, the prime wizard of his time and the guardian of the mystic power called the Flame of Life. The evil sorcerer battled Nommo, attempting to use the Flame's power to his own corrupt ends. Nommo then called the Flame of Life into himself, defeating the sorcerer by banishing him to another dimension. In the mid-1920s, a madman and aspiring magician named Dekan Drache stumbled upon the dimension and managed to open a portal to it. Released, the sorcerer destroyed Drache’s soul and entered his body. However, though alive on Earth once more, the sorcerer found his powers drastically reduced. Obsessed with restoring his mystic might, the sorcerer read the story of how the man called Faust had sold his soul to the devil for supernatural powers, and decided to do the same. Inspired by the story's main character, the sorcerer now called himself Felix Faust and began a never-ending quest for mystical knowledge. | N/A |
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DC | Justice League of America #10 (March, 1962) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Fin Fang Foom | Claws |
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Marvel | Strange Tales #89 (October, 1961) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Finesse (Jeanne Foucault) |
Born with the ability to master any skill quickly, her parents rewarded her for any activity that brought them money, status or acclaim. She is aware her parents had a shadowy past, and suspects that her real father might be the Taskmaster, but has no proof beyond a similarity in their abilities. She graduated M.I.T. at age fourteen and was in training to become an Olympic athlete when she was approached to join the Avenger's program. She welcomed the chance to expand her knowledge, and because her rivals were attempting to have her banned anyway. | Billy Clubs |
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Marvel | Avengers Academy #1 (August, 2010) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Fire (Beatriz "Bea" Bonilla da Costa) |
N/A |
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DC | Super Friends #25 (October, 1979) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Firebrand (Gary Gilbert) |
Gary Gilbert was the son of an unscrupulous businessman and abusive father, Simon Gilbert. In retaliation, Gilbert and his sister Roxanne became political activists against what they believed were unjust businesses. Gilbert was soon banished from his family home and his sister soon followed of her own volition. Gilbert became increasingly radical and believed only a violent revolution to overthrow the existing American government and capitalist system was necessary. Gilbert used his talents in physics and invention along with training classes offered by Stark Industries to create the weapons and costume of Firebrand. Ironically, he first donned his costume to fight the construction of a community center financed by the Iron Man foundation, which the local black community resisted. | N/A |
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Marvel | Iron Man #27 (July, 1970) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Firefist (Lyle Byrnes) |
Lyle Byrnes was a researcher who became so badly burned that he turned to revenge on the firefighters who he blamed for not saving his life. | N/A |
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DC | Blue Beetle #1 (June, 1986) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Firepower (Jack Taggert) |
Jack Taggert worked on an experimental pilotable suit for Project: Firepower for Edwin Cord (a rival businessman of Tony Stark). The project was ostensibly designated by the U.S. Armed Forces, in conjunction with Senator Boynton, to serve as an ultimate deterrent against opponents of the United States. However, when Iron Man launched his "Armor Wars", attacking armored villains and even government agents without provocation, the Firepower program was modified with the specific goal of stopping Iron Man. | N/A |
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Marvel | Iron Man #230 (May, 1988) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Firestar (Angelica "Angel" Jones) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends Episode 1 (September 12, 1981) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Firestorm (Ronald "Ronnie" Roy Raymond) |
N/A |
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DC | Firestorm #1 (March, 1978) | 450,000 Studs | |||
Firestorm (Jason Thomas Rusch) |
N/A |
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DC | Firestorm Vol. 3 #1 (July, 2004) | 450,000 Studs | |||
Firestorm (Jefferson "Jax" Jackson) |
Jefferson "Jax" Jackson was a former high school quarterback who was hit by the dark matter from a particle accelerator explosion, which altered his physiology, making him a potential match for one half of the Firestorm Matrix. | N/A |
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DC | The Flash (2014 TV Series) Episode 27 (October 27, 2015) | 450,000 Studs | ||
Fisherman | The Fisherman is a supervillain and enemy to Aquaman. Using a pressurized suit and high-tech equipment resembling fishing reels, he became an international criminal specializing in the theft of rare objects. This later made him develop a personal vendetta against Aquaman and the Aquaman Family, having been thwarted so many times. It has been suggested in Sword of Atlantis that Fisherman is not one person, but several men controlled by an alien parasite. | Fishing Rod |
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DC | All-American Comics #69 (November, 1945) (Fisherman alias with Kurt Hartman); Aquaman #21 (August, 1965) (Aquaman villain) |
300,000 Studs | ||
Paul Norbert Ebersol was a child prodigy with such great mechanical aptitude that he took apart and repaired an alarm clock at age 3. By 10, he had built a small electric automobile; by 13, a relatively complex robotic arm -- both from readily available spare parts. Dropping out of high school due to lack of interest, Norbert was fired from a number of jobs because of his air of superiority and unorthodox approach to simple tasks. Seeking a challenge, he turned to the planning and execution of technologically assisted crimes. He found that such activities not only stimulated his intellect, but provided him with new raw materials to create even more advanced technological devices. Plus, as a criminal he could command the respect he always felt he deserved. When most of Earth's heroes, including the Avengers and Fantastic Four, seemingly died battling Onslaught, Ebersol joined forces with Baron Zemo. To gain the trust of the populace, the villains led the world to believe they were new heroes known as the Thunderbolts. |
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Marvel | ||||||
Flamebird (Mary "Bette" Elizabeth Kane) |
Throwing discs | *Grapple *Pull objects with grappling hook *Agility *Acrobatics *Throw discs |
DC | Action Comics #336 (April, 1966) (Flamebird alias with Ak-Var); Batman #139 (April, 1961) (Bette Kane as Bat-Girl) |
300,000 Studs | |||
Franklin "Foggy" Percy Nelson | Foggy Nelson is Matt's best friend and law partner. Initially, Foggy was portrayed as a deeply conflicted character, continuously caught between his strong vocational disagreements with Matt, their rivalry for the affections of Karen Page, and his loyalty to his friend. Despite being a highly successful lawyer, he is also tormented by feelings of inferiority to his law partner. However, since the early 1980s he has often been reduced to comic relief, and his down-to-earth, everyman lifestyle acts as a contrast to his grim superhero colleague, who in the early decades of the series was the happy-go-lucky element of the team. | Briefcase | N/A | Marvel | Daredevil #1 (April, 1964) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Force (Clayton Wilson) |
Clayton Wilson was a graduate student at Empire State University working as a research assistant to scientist Dr. Damon Walters, who develops a prototype device for creating a protective force field. Wilson steals the prototype force field generator, creates a battle-suit that incorporates it, and adopts the alias "Force". The character then goes on a rampage through New York City until he was defeated by hero Namor the Sub-Mariner. Force retreats and becomes a professional criminal, working for crime boss Justin Hammer in exchange for modifications to his suit. Eventually deciding to reform, Hammer, however, traps the character in his suit and threatens to kill him if he reneges on the agreement. Force flees and Hammer sends villains the Beetle, Blacklash, and the Blizzard to kill him. Iron Man aids Force in stopping the villains, then lies to the authorities and advises that Wilson was killed in battle to placate Hammer. Wilson is provided with a new identity and employment with Barstow Electronics, a subsidiary of Stark Industries. | N/A |
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Marvel | Sub-Mariner #66 (October, 1973) (unnamed) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Forge | Forge is a mutant with an innate superhuman talent for invention. An intuitive genius, inventing is as natural as breathing for him. He is a Native American of the Cheyenne nation. Although he was trained as a medicine man, he has primarily relied upon technology rather than mysticism to accomplish his tasks. This rift between Forge and his elder teacher, Naze, made Forge leave his past behind and join the military. While in the army, Forge served in the Vietnam War. After rising in the ranks to become a sergeant, he was asked by S.H.I.E.L.D. to join. Forge declined, because he saw his need was in Vietnam. During his second tour of duty in the war, his comrades were killed by enemy troops; in anger, he used their spirits to summon a band of demons to destroy the opposition. Forge, concerned about his former comrades, decided to order a B-52 bombing on his position to close the portal from the world of the unliving. The bombs destroy the spirits, but he is injured as well, losing his right leg and right hand. This action allowed the demon called the Adversary to come to Earth, and Forge has since been hesitant to employ his mystical abilities. Years later, Forge creates cybernetic replacements for his lost limbs and eventually joins the X-Men. | Blaster |
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Marvel | Uncanny X-Men #184 (August, 1984) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Fox (William Lawford) |
Warren Lawford was an ambitious criminal and inventor. Two of his colleagues, Gunther Hardwicke and Armand Lydecker, banded together with him as the Terrible Trio. Each of them wore business suits accompanied by masks suggestive of their personality and/or specified talents. Lawford became the Fox, while Hardwicke and Lydecker became known as the Shark and the Vulture, respectively. | Tommy gun | N/A | DC | Detective Comics #253 (March, 1958) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Franklin Benjamin Richards | N/A |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four Annual #6 (November, 1968) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Frog-Man (Eugene Paul Patilio) |
Eugene Patilio was born in Brooklyn, New York, the son of Vincent Patilio, the supervillain Leap-Frog. After several defeats by Daredevil, Iron Man, and Spider-Man, which eventually landed him in jail, Vincent eventually decided to retire and go straight. His son Eugene donned his father's costume as the Fabulous Frog-Man in an attempt to be a crime-fighter. However, his crime-fighting career became essentially a joke. His two major enemy villains are the White Rabbit, a comedic villainess inspired by the Alice in Wonderland character, and the Walrus, a dimwitted character who essentially had the proportionate abilities of a walrus (tough skin and super-strength). Frog-Man had a tendency to capture villains simply by dumb luck. Eugene's inability to fully pilot his automated Frog-Man costume caused him to wildly bounce around, scoring wins against villains by crashing into them. | N/A |
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Marvel | Daredevil #10 (October, 1965) (Frog-Man alias with Francois Le Blanc); Marvel Team-Up #121 (November, 1982) (Eugene Patilio) |
300,000 Studs | ||
Galactus (Galan) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #48 (March, 1966) | 500,000 Studs | |||
Galius Zed | Galius Zed is an alien superhero known as Green Lantern and a member of the Green Lantern Corps. The Guardians of the Universe gave him a power ring fueled by willpower to protect Space Sector 1123. This quick-tempered and outspoken member of the Corps is always first to volunteer for a mission. His teammates are inspired by his passion and determination in battle. Physically, he distinguished himself from other Lanterns by his over-sized cranium which comprised the bulk of his body mass. Like others of his race, Galius Zed did not possess a chest or abdominal area and his arms and legs extended directly from his head. He also had a third leg which protrudes from the back of his enormous head. | Green Lantern Power Ring |
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DC | Tales of the Green Lantern Corps #2 (June, 1981) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Gambit (Remy Etienne LeBeau) |
Bo Staff |
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Marvel | Uncanny X-Men Annual #1990 (July, 1990) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Gamora is a former Zehoberei assassin and a member of the Guardians of the Galaxy. She became the adopted daughter of Thanos and adopted sister of Nebula after he killed half of her race. She served him for years before betraying him in an attempt to free herself from his ways. She was hired to steal the Orb, and became caught up in the Quest for the Orb, becoming friends with the other members of the Guardians of the Galaxy. After the Battle of Xandar, she left to work with them all. |
Sword | Marvel | 300,000 Studs (each variation) | |||||
General Immortus | General Immortus is centuries old, and his origins are shrouded in mystery. He once owned a diamond mine, the source of his wealth, and he killed many of the workers to keep the location a secret. Thereafter, most of General Immortus's schemes were to sustain his longevity and thusly he became the leader of a criminal syndicate to steal ancient mystical artifacts for this purpose. He lives indefinitely due to a life-extending alchemical potion, although he lost the formula. As his potion began to run out, he hired young scientist Niles Caulder to recreate the potion. When Caulder discovered Immortus's identity and plan, he sabotaged the "life extending ray" that he had been developing. Caulder, as "The Chief" later formed the Doom Patrol specifically to combat one of Immortus's later schemes. | Cane |
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DC | My Greatest Adventures #80 (June, 1963) | 300,000 Studs | ||
General Zod is recognized as the primary antagonist of Superman II. Played by actor Terence Stamp, Zod actually made his on-screen debut in the first Superman film. Appearing with his Kryptonian confederates Ursa and Non, they made a brief appearance in the opening scenes of the movie, where the Kryptonian Science Council sentences all three of them to banishment in the Phantom Zone. This scene foreshadowed the major plot of the sequel. In Superman II, an explosion in space shatters the portal to the Phantom Zone setting the Kryptonians free. General Zod was a Kryptonian war criminal and former leader of the Warrior Guild who later founded the Sword of Rao, leading them during the events of the Kryptonian Civil War. Managing to survive the destruction of his native planet of Krypton and escaping from his Phantom Zone imprisonment, he viewed the purpose of his life to be the successful re-establishment of Krypton on another planet. |
N/A |
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DC | Adventure Comics #283 (April, 1961) Superman (December 10, 1978) Man of Steel (June 10, 2013) |
400,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
Gentleman Ghost (James "Jim" Craddock) |
|
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DC | Flash Comics #88 (October, 1947) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Geoff Johns | Geoff Johns is an American comic book writer, television writer, television producer, film producer and screenwriter. He served as the President and Chief Creative Officer (CCO) of DC Entertainment from 2016 to 2018, after his initial appointment as CCO in 2010. Some of his most notable work has used the DC Comics characters Green Lantern, Aquaman, Flash, and Superman. In 2018, he stepped down from his executive role at DC Entertainment to open a production company, Mad Ghost Productions, to focus on writing and producing film, television and comic book titles based on DC properties. Some of his work in television includes the series Blade, Smallville, Arrow and The Flash. He was a co-producer on the film Green Lantern (2011) and a producer on Justice League (2017). He co-wrote the story for Aquaman (2018) and the screenplay for Wonder Woman 1984 (2019). | Ice Gun |
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N/A | January 25, 1973 | 750,000 Studs | ||
The Ghost | Very little is known about the identity of the Ghost. He claims to have been an IT researcher at one time, and to have been made into what he is by corporate greed. The Ghost is an anticapitalist saboteur who seeks to destroy various political and economic institutions he views as oppressive, apparently being most interested in those dealing with advanced technology and surveillance. He has, at times, hired his services out to corporations and other organizations that wish to destroy rival groups, but invariably plans to turn on his own employers and topple them as well. | Pistol |
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Marvel | Iron Man #219 (June, 1987) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Ghost Rider (Johnathon "Johnny" Blaze) |
Hellfire Chains |
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Marvel | Marvel Spotlight #5 (August, 1972) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Ghost Rider (Daniel "Danny" Ketch) |
Hellfire Chains |
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Marvel | Ghost Rider Vol. 3 #1 (May, 1990) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Ghost Rider (Roberto "Robbie" Reyes) |
Hellfire Chains |
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Marvel | All-New Ghost Rider #1 (May, 2014) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Girder (Anthony "Tony" Woodward) |
Steelworker Tony Woodward caused a riot at a steel plant after he assaulted a female employee. Angry coworkers threw Tony into a vat of molten steel. The liquid steel included recycled scraps from experiments performed by S.T.A.R. Labs. These scraps somehow turned Tony's body into living metal, which has incredible resistance to harm and grants him superhuman strength. The major drawback was that the steel body began to rust when exposed to oxygen. | N/A |
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DC | Flash: Iron Heights (August, 2001) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Gizmo (Mikron O'Jeneus) |
A bald dwarf who flies around on a jet pack, Gizmo is a genius inventor who can turn seemingly innocuous objects like vacuum cleaners into dangerous weapons. Gizmo created a corporation which supplied technology to various people, including criminals. | Blaster |
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DC | New Teen Titans #3 (January, 1981) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Gladiator (Kallark) |
N/A |
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Marvel | X-Men #107 (October, 1977) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Glenn Talbot | Glenn Talbot is a close compatriot to General Thaddeus Ross and an active participant in his operations to capture or kill the Hulk. His most significant blow is discovering and informing his superiors that Doctor Bruce Banner physically transformed into the Hulk, which made the scientist a wanted fugitive. Talbot is consistently portrayed as a courageous, resourceful, and fiercely patriotic man who puts the good of his country before all else. He is romantically attracted to Betty Ross, who is in love with Bruce Banner, which adds fuel to his enmity for the Hulk. Though Talbot was mostly used as a romantic rival and general adversary for Banner, the two sometimes work together to battle greater menaces. | Gun | N/A | Marvel | Tales to Astonish #61 (November, 1964) | 250,000 Studs | ||
N/A |
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DC | Forever People #3 (July, 1971) | |||||
Gold | Gold is a liquid metal robot made of gold with almost limitless shape shifting abilities. He was designed by Dr. William Magnus a brilliant robotic expert along with along with five other robots Platinum, Mercury, Iron, Tin and Lead. These robots were known as the Metal Men. Together, Gold and the Metal Men embarked on a variety of adventures, their specialty fighting monsters spawned from weird science. Though the Metal Men were repeatedly destroyed, Magnus was always able to rebuild them. Gold is considered one of the smartest of the Metal Men and the acknowledged leader of the group in Doc Magnus's absence. Gold is calm and methodical and quick to praise the other members of the Metal Men and to use the group to the best of their abilities. Gold often has to keep the peace between the fiery Platinum and the temperamental Mercury. | N/A |
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DC | Showcase #37 (April, 1962) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Goldface (Keith Kenyon) |
Keith Kenyon was a political sciences student who was exposed to a chest of gold that had been affected by toxic waste. As a result of exposure, he gained superhuman strength and invulnerability. The gold also gave him a golden glow, apparently as a side effect of the serum. Of course, being close enough to yellow meant that Green Lantern's power ring could not affect him directly, making him particularly formidable against the superhero. Deciding to rebel against the wishes of his father, a prominent labor union organizer, he began stealing gold around Coast City, which led to his defeat by Green Lantern. He began to refine his criminal ways by wearing gold-plated armor and using a "gold gun" which sprays liquid gold. After many clashes with Green Lantern, Kenyon decided to change his motif and ruthlessly began taking over criminal empires. | Gold Gun |
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DC | Green Lantern Vol. 2 #38 (July, 1965) | 300,000 Studs | ||
N/A |
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Marvel | Avengers #21 (October, 1965) Iron Man Annual #7 (October, 1984) Incredible Hulk #449 (January, 1997) |
350,000 Studs (each variation) | ||||
Goliath (William "Bill" Barrett Foster) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Avengers #32 (September, 1966) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Gorgon Petragon | Mace | *Super Strength (pick-ups, pulls, pushes, throws, vehicle pick-ups) **Break Open Special Walls *Agility *Healing Factor *Kinetic stomp |
Marvel | Fantastic Four #44 (November, 1965) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Grandmaster (En Dwi Gast) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Avengers #69 (October, 1969) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Granny Goodness | Granny Goodness is one of the evil New Gods of Apokolips and a servant to Darkseid. She is responsible for training most of Darkseid's armies, including the Parademons and the elite assassins known as the Female Furies. Children selected for her training are brought to Granny's Orphanage, where they are brutally tortured and frequently told "Granny loves you." | N/A |
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DC | Mister Miracle #2 (June, 1972) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Great White Shark (Warren White) |
Gun | N/A | DC | Arkham Asylum: Living Hell #1 (July, 2003) | 250,000 Studs | |||
Green Arrow (Conner Hawke) |
Bow |
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DC | Green Arrow Vol. 2 #0 (October, 1994) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Green Lantern (Guy Darrin Gardner) |
Green Lantern Power Ring |
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DC | Green Lantern Vol 2 #59 (March, 1968) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Green Lantern (John Stewart) |
Green Lantern Power Ring |
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DC | Green Lantern Vol. 2 #87 (December, 1971) | 400,000 Studs | |||
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DC | Green Lantern Vol. 3 #48 (January, 1994) Green Lantern: New Guardians #16 (Mar. 2013) |
400,000 Studs (each variation) | |||||
Green Lantern (Simon Baz) |
|
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DC | The New 52: FCBD Special Edition #1 (June, 2012) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Green Lantern (Jessica Viviana Cruz) |
Green Lantern Power Ring |
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DC | Justice League Vol. 2 #30 (July, 2014) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Grey Gargoyle (Paul Pierre Duval) |
Dr. Paul Duval, a young chemist working for a pharmaceutical company in Paris, accidentally spilled a potion contaminated by some unknown organic substance on his right hand. To his dismay, his hand began to turn to stone-like material still capable of movement. Accidentally touching his other hand, he found that he could transform his entire body into the stone-like material. He also discovered that any matter he touched also turned to stone. Mercenary by nature, Duval decided to exploit his bizarre power for personal profit and turned to theft, quickly becoming one of France’s most accomplished criminals as the Grey Gargoyle. | N/A |
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Marvel | Journey into Mystery #107 (August, 1964) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Griffin (John "Johnny" Horton) |
Johnny Horton was a small-time criminal who was captured by agents of the second subversive organization offshoot of Hydra known as the Secret Empire. The Secret Empire assigned a surgeon in its employ to transform Horton into a superhuman being by using various techniques, including grafting wings and claws onto Horton's body permanently and administering an experimental mutagenic serum into him. Horton was named the Griffin after his new appearance, which vaguely resembled the mythological griffin, a creature that was half lion and half eagle. | Claws |
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Marvel | Amazing Adventures Vol. 2 #15 (November, 1972) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Grizzly (Maxwell Markham) |
Maxwell Markham was a professional wrestler whose brutal tactics caused J. Jonah Jameson to write a scathing editorial calling for an investigation by the wrestling commission. As a consequence of the hearings, his license was revoked. Ten years later, he obtained Grizzly's Exo-Skeleton that augmented his strength from the Jackal. He used this harness to attack the Daily Bugle in an attempt on revenge against Jameson for ruining his wrestling career, but Spider-Man defeated him. | Claws |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #139 (December, 1974) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Guardian (James "Jim" Jacob Harper) |
Jim Harper is a police officer in Metropolis' Suicide Slum who became a vigilante to catch crooks that the law could not prosecute, describing himself as guarding society from criminals. He was trained to fighting condition by ex-boxer Joe Morgan (the same man who trained two other mystery men, Wildcat and the first Atom). He was aided by a group of boys known as the Newsboy Legion, to whom he was, literally, a guardian, having volunteered to take them in rather than allowing them to be sent to prison; he did so on the grounds that they were basically good kids who just needed a chance. The Legion grew up to become the heads of the Cadmus Project, subsequently saving Harper's life by transferring his mind from his old, dying body into a younger clone of himself. It was later revealed that Jim Harper was the great-uncle of Roy Harper, who became Green Arrow's sidekick under the name of "Speedy". | Shield |
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DC | Star-Spangled Comics #7 (April, 1942) | 300,000 Studs | ||
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DC | Teen Titans #26 (April, 1970) Teen Titans #44 (November, 1976) Secret Origins Vol. 2 Annual #3 (1989) |
300,000 Studs (each variation) | |||||
Guardian (James MacDonald Hudson) |
James MacDonald Hudson was born in London, Ontario, Canada. He is a leading petrochemical engineer and scientist for the Am-Can Corporation developing a powered exoskeleton suit. When he learns that his work will be used for American military purposes, Hudson raids his workplace, steals the prototype suit and destroys the plans. He leaves the suit to be recovered (albeit without the vital control helmet, which he built before coming to the company) and fully expects to be sued and arrested for his actions. However, Hudson's girlfriend, Heather MacNeil, uses political connections in the Canadian government to persuade Am-Can to waive the charges against him. As a result, Department H is formed, a secret branch of the Canadian Department of National Defence, and Hudson is named as head of operations. Inspired by the debut of the Fantastic Four, James Hudson planned to create a superhero team for Canada. He started out with a prototype superhero team called The Flight which had Wolverine as one of its members. Eventually, after Wolverine departed, Alpha Flight was created. | N/A |
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Marvel | X-Men #109 (February, 1978) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Gwenpool (Gwen Poole) |
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N/A | Marvel | Howard the Duck Vol. 6 #1 (January, 2016) | 500,000 Studs | |||
Hades | Hades is the ancient Greek chthonic god of the underworld, which eventually took his name. In Greek mythology, Hades was regarded as the oldest son of Cronus and Rhea, although the last son regurgitated by his father. He and his brothers Zeus and Poseidon defeated their father's generation of gods, the Titans, and claimed rulership over the cosmos. Hades received the underworld, Zeus the sky, and Poseidon the sea, with the solid earth—long the province of Gaia—available to all three concurrently. Hades was often portrayed with his three-headed guard dog Cerberus. | Bident |
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DC | Wonder Woman #329 (February, 1986) | 500,000 Studs | ||
Hammerhead (Joseph) |
Tommy gun |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #113 (October, 1972) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Harold "Happy" Joseph Hogan | His sad-faced demeanor in the ring earned amateur wrestler Harry Hogan the ironic nickname of "Happy" Hogan. His most notable opponent was Battlin' Jack Murdock. Happy retired saying he was getting "too good at losing;" in fact, his nice guy attitude often cost him when it came to trying to knock out an opponent. After retiring, Happy worked various odd jobs. One day at a racetrack, a new experimental car crashed. Ignoring the risk, Happy ran over and pulled the driver out. The man was Tony Stark, who had problems due to his chestplate running low on battery. Happy turned down a monetary offer, instead asking Stark to hire him. Stark agreed and Happy became his limo driver and bodyguard. | Gun | N/A | Marvel | Tales of Suspense #45 (September, 1963) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Harrison Wells | Dr. Harrison Wells is the mind and money behind the S.T.A.R. Labs Particle Accelerator in Central City. | N/A |
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DC | The Flash (2014 TV Series) Episode 17 (March 31, 2015) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Harvey Bullock | Harvey Bullock is a detective in the Gotham City Police Department working underneath James Gordon. His rough slovenly demeanor and willingness to do what it takes have given him a mean reputation, although he's one of the few honest cops on the force. Because of his position he often works alongside Batman, although their relationship began as adversarial. This has evolved into a begrudging mutual respect. | Gun |
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DC | Detective Comics #441 (July, 1974) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Havok (Alexander "Alex" Summers) |
N/A |
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Marvel | X-Men #54 (March, 1969) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Hawk (Henry "Hank" Hall) |
Hank Hall and Don Hall were the sons of Judge Irwin Hall. They eventually found out that their father had many enemies when he was nearly assassinated. Hank and Don eventually follow the criminal back to the hideout where they accidentally locked themselves in the closet of some criminals plotting to dispose of him. Just as Hank and Don who found for the first time they could agree that they wanted to save their father, mysterious voices echoed throughout the room offering the boys a chance to save their father. All they had to do was call upon the powers of the Hawk and the Dove. The voices belonged to a Lord of Chaos named T'Charr and a Lord of Order named Terataya (even though the Lords of Chaos and Order were eternal enemies, these two Lords had fallen in love). The Hall brothers invoked their new powers and became Hawk and Dove. The conservative Hank was hot-headed and reactionary. Judge Irwin Hall displayed a more balanced political beliefs, and firmly disapproved of vigilantism, not knowing his sons were costumed adventurers and the fact that Hawk and Dove had saved him from his would-be assailants. | N/A |
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DC | Showcase #75 (June, 1968) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Hazmat (Jennifer Takeda) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Marvel Nemesis: The Imperfects #2 (August, 2005) (Hazmat alias with Keith Kilham); Avengers Academy #1 (August, 2010) |
350,000 Studs | |||
Rig-Heimdall | Sword |
|
Marvel | Journey into Mystery #85 (October, 1962) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Hela | N/A |
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Marvel | Journey into Mystery #102 (March, 1964) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Hellcat (Patricia “Patsy” Walker) |
Claws |
|
Marvel | Miss America Magazine #2 (November, 1944); Fantastic Four Annual #3 (October, 1965) (modern incarnation) |
300,000 Studs | |||
Hellgrammite (Roderick Rose) |
Originally an entomologist named Roderick Rose, the Hellgrammite subjected himself to a mutagenic process that transformed him into a grasshopper-like humanoid insect possessing superhuman strength and leaping abilities, the power to secrete adhesives and weave transformative or imprisoning cocoons, and a durable exoskeleton. A number of his schemes revolved around transforming others into weaker, subordinate versions of himself, leading to clashes with Batman and the the Creeper, Green Arrow, Black Canary, and Superman. | N/A |
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DC | Brave and the Bold #80 (November, 1968) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Hellhound (Kai) |
The man named "Kai" was the best student in the Armless Master's dojo in Gotham City. Kai was also a thief, which brought him into conflict with a young Selina Kyle, who "tainted" a religious ceremony he was performing by touching a religious artifact depicting Bast that he had intended to steal himself. After Kai severely beat her for her interference, Selina followed Kai back to the secret dojo, where the Armless Master welcomed her as a student. She began studying, and quickly showed Kai up in front of his master. Kai soon learned that Selina Kyle was Catwoman, and, in religious zeal, took it as a sign. Adopting the identity of Hellhound, he attempted to force Selina to kill him, believing this would finish the ceremony she had interrupted when they first met, and that he would be reborn as a "true hound of hell". Catwoman scarred his face instead, deepening his already great hatred of her. | Throwing knives |
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DC | Catwoman Annual Vol. 2 #2 (July, 1995) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Henry Peter Gyrich | Henry Peter Gyrich grew up in fear of contracting Alzheimer's disease like his father did. He took a year's leave to care for his father, rather than letting strangers deal with him, strangers that he couldn't even afford. Gyrich stayed with him till the end, taking care of him, washing him, and his last words to his son were "Who in the heck are you?" He was appointed by the National Security Council to investigate unofficial reports of irregularities in the operations of the Avengers. The Avengers were granted by the U.S. government certain privileges such as exemptions from air traffic regulations, access to certain classified intelligence information, and a special priority status enabling them to operate with a minimum of bureaucratic red tape. | N/A | N/A | Marvel | Avengers #165 (November, 1977) | 250,000 Studs | ||
H.E.R.B.I.E. (Humanoid Experimental Robot B-Type Integrated Electronics) |
When the Fantastic Four was made into an animated series in 1978, the character of the Human Torch was unable to be used, as at the time the character had been optioned separately for use in a solo movie (which never in fact materialized). A popular urban myth contends that the Torch was replaced due to fears that children might attempt to emulate him by setting themselves on fire, but this is not true. Needing a fourth member to round out the team, Stan Lee pitched the idea for a cute robot sidekick, and artist Dave Cockrum was commissioned to design it. However, Cockrum disliked the character so much he was eventually replaced by Jack Kirby, who first designed and illustrated the Fantastic Four a decade previous. Shortly after the cartoon premiered, the little robot was introduced to the comics continuity by writer Marv Wolfman and artist John Byrne. As within the Marvel Universe the Fantastic Four have marketed their likenesses for a successful in-universe comic series, H.E.R.B.I.E.'s physical appearance was likewise explained as being based on the animated series based on that comic. | N/A |
|
Marvel | The New Fantastic Four Episode 1 (September 9, 1978) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Hercules Panhellenios | N/A |
|
Marvel | Young Allies #16 (Summer, 1945) (Golden Age); Journey into Mystery Annual #1 (October, 1965) (Silver Age) |
400,000 Studs | |||
High Evolutionary (Herbert Edgar Wyndham) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Thor #134 (November, 1966) | 400,000 Studs | |||
High-Tech (Curtis Carr) |
Curtis Carr was born in Kansas City, Kansas. While working as a chemist and research scientist for Mainstream Motors, he created an "alchemy gun" capable of transmuting matter from one form to another by an unknown process (wood to glass, etc.). Horace Claymore, the company's president, was impressed until Curtis voiced his intent to keep the device. Claymore argued that since the gun was made on company time, it belonged to Mainstream. When Claymore fired him, Curtis adopted the persona of Chemistro to gain revenge and to extort his former employers. In combat with Luke Cage, Chemistro accidentally fired his alchemy gun at his own right foot, turning it to steel, though the unstable nature of the transmutation soon caused it to crumble to dust, leaving him crippled. Carr befriended his former enemy and came to work at a division of Stark Enterprises as a research scientist and Director of Research and Development at Stark Prosthetics in Denver, Colorado. Carr later developed the High-Tech suit in order to replace his damaged foot. He also designed a jamming rifle that could counteract the effects of his alchemy gun. | N/A |
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Marvel | Hero for Hire #12 (August, 1973) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Highfather (Izaya) |
Highfather is a title given to the ruler of the good New Gods on New Genesis, currently held by Izaya. He is their connection to the will of the Source, the celestial force that governs their lives. He is locked in eternal combat with Darkseid and the evil New Gods of Apokolips. His wife Avia was killed by Darkseid's general Steppenwolf. For many years as part of a peace treaty, Highfather raised Darkseid's son Orion and Darkseid raised Highfather's son Scott Free. | Cane |
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DC | New Gods #1 (March, 1971) | 500,000 Studs | ||
Hit-Monkey | An unnamed assassin was marked for death after his part in a failed political coup. After blowing up a squad of enemy soldiers, he decides to run for his life. Passed out in the snow after four days of fleeing, he was rescued by a troop of Japanese macaques. The monkeys allowed the assassin into their clan, with the exception of a lone monkey. The man knew that he would be hunted so he trained daily using snowmen as training dummies. Quietly, the monkey that distrusted him watched, and eventually picked up on the fighter's skills. The assassin's health began to fail, and as the tribe of monkeys tried to save him, the lone monkey objected, eventually fighting the rest of the group with his newfound skills. Because of the violence he displayed, the monkey was banished from his clan. However, on his own, he saw a group of men on their way to kill the assassin. He tried to run back and warn his tribe, but it was too late - the assassin had been killed as well as the rest of the monkeys. Furious at his clan's slaughter, the monkey picked up extra guns from a bag and proceeded to kill the entire group of men. Determined to avenge his fallen tribe, the monkey now dedicated his life to killing assassins - under the alias of Hit-Monkey. | Guns |
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Marvel | Hit-Monkey #1 (April, 2010) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Hive | Created in the Hydra laboratories in their home base of Gehenna, the Hive was an experiment made to physically embody the Hydra ideal. The entity is composed of untold numbers of genetically-engineered parasites. An unknown and unwitting Hydra agent was offered/fed to these parasites as a host around which they could merge into a singular being. Grotesque and menacing in both stature and appearance the Hive had no identity of its own, per se, as its collective will dominates the human host it engulfs; however, it possesses a quiet and cunning intelligence and as a result of its conditioning is completely dedicated to the Hydra cause to the extent that Baron von Strucker appointed it as a figurehead alongside himself, the Viper, Gorgon (Tomi Shishido), Kraken, and the new Madame Hydra in the form of triple agent Valentina Allegra de Fontaine. | N/A |
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Marvel | Secret Warriors #2 (May, 2009) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Hogun the Grim | Hogun the Grim was an Asgardian warrior. Unlike most Asgardians, he was not an Aesir, but stems from a land conquered long ago by Mogul of the Mystic Mountain. His father and brothers had all perished while seeking the Mystic Mountain to destroy Mogul. He became member of the Warriors Three a trio of Asgardian adventurers consisting of himself, Fandral the Dashing, and Volstagg the Voluminous. He was an ally to Thor ever since the thunder god's youth. They first met when the Warriors Three joined Thor's expedition to restore the Odinsword that had become cracked. | Mace |
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Marvel | Journey into Mystery #119 (August, 1965) | 300,000 Studs | ||
The Hood (Parker Robbins) |
A petty thief, Parker Robbins broke into a warehouse with his cousin one night and shot and actually killed a demon residing there. Not wanting to leave empty handed, he stole the beasts' cloak and boots, enabling him to fly and become invisible while holding his breath. It was not until the Super-Hero Civil War that Robbins was able to truly put these abilities to work for him. Assembling a massive criminal empire, The Hood was largely successful in running a gang of super-villains, and slowly became addicted to the power and respect. When his abilities began to fail him, he turned to other sources of dark magic like Dormammu and the Norn Stones to give him greater power. | Guns |
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Marvel | The Hood #1 (July, 2002) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Hot Spot (Isaiah Crockett) |
Isaiah Crockett's mother was already expecting him when she married Judge Crockett, who was unaware that the unborn child was half-alien (part human and part H'San Natall). At age sixteen, Isiah was qualified to enter college, but on his first day at Ivy University, he and two other students (Toni Monetti who would later become Argent, and Cody Driscoll who would later become Risk) were abducted by the H'san Natall. Also abducted was the Atom, who was caught in the energy stream as well. On board the ship, they rescued the Earth girl who would later become Prysm, and from there they escaped. During these events, the students learned that they were all half H'san Natall. They stayed together and formed another incarnation of the Teen Titans. | N/A |
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DC | Teen Titans Vol. 2 #1 (October, 1996) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Hourman (Rex Tyler) |
N/A |
|
DC | Adventure Comics #48 (March, 1940) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Howard the Duck | Rocket Launcher |
|
Marvel | Fear #19 (December, 1973) (unnamed) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Howard Anthony Walter Stark, Jr. | Howard Stark was born and raised in Richford, New York the son of Howard Stark, Sr. He grew there with his brother Edward Stark. He was a brilliant engineer and industrialist. He and his own father worked on various projects, and later founded Stark Industries. Howard Jr. married Maria Collins Carbonell and together they had a son named Anthony "Tony" Stark. He constantly pushed Tony to be the best, telling him that someone must have "iron in their backbone" to be successful. Behind his heroic façade, however, he was an alcoholic who had a strained relationship with his son. Howard was capable of devotion and respect towards machines, but he appeared to have little to no interest towards his son. On the Ides of March, Howard and Maria were killed in a car accident. Tony ran his father's company, started a charity in his mother's name, and later became Iron Man. | N/A |
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Marvel | Iron Man #28 (August, 1970) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Hugo Strange | Hypodermic needle |
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DC | Detective Comics #36 (February, 1940) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Hulk (Amadeus Cho) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Amazing Fantasy Vol. 2 #15 (January, 2006) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Hulkling (Dorrek VIII/Theodore "Teddy" Rufus Altman) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Young Avengers #1 (April, 2005) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Human Flame (Michael "Mike" Miller) |
Mike Miller, The Human Flame, was a low-level villain captured by the Martian Manhunter early in his career, incarcerated and embarrassed. Although at first he was able to deplete the Martian Manhunter of energy with his built-in blowtorch, the Manhunter eventually grabbed the ground Miller was standing on and brought him to an altitude where the winds would snuff out his flames. Miller is also known to have at least at one point been responsible for a wife and child, but he was clearly a failure at it. | N/A | *Shoot fireballs from chest armor *Shoot fire beam from chest armor **Destroy Gold Bricks **Cut Gold Walls **Melt ice |
DC | Detective Comics #274 (December, 1959) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Human Torch (Jim Hammond) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Marvel Comics #1 (October, 1939) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Huntress (Helena Rosa Bertinelli) |
Crossbow |
|
DC | Doll Man #17 (July, 1948) (Huntress alias with Diane); Huntress #1 (April, 1989) (Helena Bertinelli) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Hush (Thomas "Tommy" Elliot) |
Guns | N/A | DC | Batman #609 (January, 2003) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Ice (Tora Olafsdotter) |
The princess of an isolated tribe of magic-wielding Norsemen, Tora Olafsdotter has the natural ability to create and manipulate ice. She joined the international super hero team the Global Guardians as Norway's member, replacing the original Icemaiden (Sigrid Nansen). After the Guardians had promised to protect her people, but their UN funding was withdrawn in the wake of the Justice League's reformation as the Justice League International, her friend Green Flame talked her into walking up to a JLI embassy and asking for a job. Remarkably, in the wake of Black Canary's resignation and the abduction of several members, the short-handed JLI took them on. Ice's personality was an amusing mix of girl-next-door wholesomeness and innocent-abroad naiveté, which served as a contrast to the impulsive, even libidinous traits of her friend and teammate Fire. As a kind of duo, her friend and she had changed their names from Green Flame and Icemaiden to Fire and Ice. | N/A |
|
DC | Justice League International #12 (April, 1988) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Icicle (Joar Mahkent) |
When noted European physicist Dr. Joar Mahkent arrived in America with his latest scientific discovery, spectators at dockside were astonished to witness the luxury liner upon which Mahkent was traveling suddenly frozen solid in Gotham Harbor. Investigating this phenomenon, the original Green Lantern (Alan Scott) was shocked by the sight of Dr. Mahkent shot dead in his stateroom, apparently the victim of Lanky Leeds, a notorious racketeer who was reportedly traveling on the same ship. Thus, when the bizarrely costumed criminal known as the Icicle appeared upon the scene later that same day, wielding a unique weapon capable of instantly freezing solid any moisture in the air, Green Lantern presumed he was actually Lanky Leeds, who had stolen Dr. Mahkent's invention. After several frustrating encounters, Green Lantern ultimately unmasked the Icicle as Joar Mahkent himself, who had, in fact, murdered Lanky Leeds, using his cold ray gun to temporarily disguise Leed's face as his own. Attempting to escape from Green Lantern, the Icicle leaped off a 20-story building and apparently plunged to his death in the Gotham River far below. Actually, the Icicle survived his fall into the river, and returned to plague the Emerald Gladiator time and again. | Cold Ray Gun |
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DC | All-American Comics #90 (October, 1947) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Icon (Arnus (Augustus Freeman)) |
N/A |
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DC | Icon #1 (May, 1993) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Igor | Igor, a baboon, was one of Ivan Kragoff's original Super-Apes which also included the gorilla Miklho, and the orangutan Peotor. These apes were trained to be obedient and follow the verbal commands of Kragoff. When Ivan sought to replicate the accident that gave the Fantastic Four their powers, he brought the apes along with him aboard his ship. As per his specifications, they were bombarded with even more Cosmic Rays than the Fantastic Four and were endowed with enhanced abilities. Igor gained shapeshifting abilities. | N/A |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #13 (April, 1963) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Impulse (Bartholomew "Bart" Allen II) |
N/A |
|
DC | Flash Vol. 2 #92 (July, 1994) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Indigo-1 (Iroque) |
Indigo Tribe Staff |
|
DC | Green Lantern Vol. 4 #25 (January, 2008) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Inertia (Thaddeus Thawne II) |
The bitter feud between the Allen family and the Thawne family would span generations. Even in the 30th century, President Thawne sought to recruit Bart Allen in his revenge campaign against the Allens, since Bart was half-Thawne himself. When that failed, Thawne mixed Bart's DNA with Thawne genetic material to create a speedster clone whom he named Thaddeus Thawne. Whereas Bart grew in a hyper-accelerated world, Thaddeus' childhood was the exact opposite; His development was super-slow, which led the young speedster to become more calculating and methodical. Thaddeus was also taught to hate the Allen family, and Impulse in particular. In addition to this modification, Thaddeus' growth and development was slowed. This is in contrast to Bart's accelerated development (becoming physically 15 at chronological age 2). This was done to give Thaddeus more training and knowledge than Bart ever would. His mission as the "Reverse-Impulse" was to go back in time and replace Bart, but he was easily defeated. | N/A |
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DC | Impulse #50 (July, 1999) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Infinity Man (Drax) |
Infinity Man was a man named Astorr, a powerful warrior from another planet. Astorr came across Drax (Darkseid's brother), who was horribly burnt. After nursing Drax back to health, he was able to pass the role of Infinity Man to Drax before dying of old age. It took Drax years of study before he was ready to assume the title of Infinity Man. Drax eventually came to serve Highfather on New Genesis, where he was acquainted with The Forever People and became a protector. Whenever Infinity Man was needed, all the Forever People would touch the mother boxes and recite the word Taaru, thus tossing them into limbo until Infinity Man returned the power to them. | N/A |
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DC | Forever People #1 (March, 1971) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Iris Ann West-Allen | Iris West is a reporter for the Picture News, based in Central City, and the fiancée of Barry Allen, who is secretly the Flash. Prior to Barry becoming the Flash, Iris often chides Barry for his frequently being late due to his repeating lost in thought at work as a forensic scientist, which continues even after he becomes a high-speed superhero. Eventually, she learns not only that Barry is the city's heroic speedster, but that her nephew, Wally West, is Kid Flash, after she marries Barry; she discovers her husband's secret on their wedding night when Barry talks in his sleep. During this time, the couple discovers that Iris was born in the 30th century. | N/A | N/A | DC | Showcase #4 (October, 1956) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Iron | Iron is a liquid metal robot made of Iron with almost limitless shape shifting abilities. He was designed by Dr. William Magnus a brilliant robotic expert along with along with five other robots Platinum, Mercury, Gold, Tin and Lead. These robots were known as the Metal Men. Together, Iron and the Metal Men embarked on a variety of adventures, their specialty fighting monsters spawned from weird science. Though the Metal Men were repeatedly destroyed, Magnus was always able to rebuild them. Iron is the strong man of the group. He often combines with Lead to work as a closely knit unit. Fearless and brave, Iron has no problems sacrificing himself to the greater good. Iron does not get involved with internal group difficulties and keeps himself apart from in-fighting. | N/A |
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DC | Showcase #37 (April, 1962) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Iron Cross (Helmut Gruler) |
Helmut Gruler was a German soldier during World War II. He volunteered to wear a suit of armor created by his friend and rival Professor Franz Schneider for use against the Allied forces. Gruler hoped to fight, not against the Nazis, but for his fatherland, right or wrong. He created chaos until he was presumably killed in a battle with the Invaders. Gruler was later revealed to have survived, his suit somehow sustaining his life up to modern times. | N/A |
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Marvel | Invaders #35 (December, 1978) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Iron Fist (Daniel "Danny" Thomas Rand-K'ai) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Marvel Premiere #15 (May, 1974) | 350,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
Iron Man 2020 (Arno Stark) |
Arno is Tony Stark's future first cousin once removed, and the unscrupulous Morgan Stark's son. Arno inherited the company Stark Industries. Rather than use the armor for heroic deeds, he prefers to act as a hired mercenary or commit acts of corporate espionage to cripple his competitors for industrialist gain. | Extendable pistol |
|
Marvel | Machine Man Vol. 2 #2 (November, 1984) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Iron Monger (Obadiah Stane) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Iron Man #163 (October, 1982) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Iron Monger (Ezekiel "Zeke" Stane) |
Ezekiel "Zeke" Stane has purposely kept details of his life hidden. His father was a rival of Tony Stark, and paced his son to become a better scientist, punishing him for failure and instilling a hatred towards Stark in his son. Ezekiel's only goal seems to be retaliation for his father's death, and he has been building bioweaponry and manufacturing next generation weapons for terrorists and supervillains since he was nine years old. Stane combed the black market for Stark technology and designed a number of cybernetic augments for himself. Using himself as the guinea pig for testing, he began various criminal activities including the murder of a board of directors. Stane and his group then destroyed the Stark Dynamics building in Taiwan. Stane suffered third-degree burns from his own repulsors, but healed and escaped from a nearby hospital. To compensate for the heat, he built a displacement suit. Stane believes his designs are superior to that of Stark and prepared for a direct confrontation with Iron Man. | N/A |
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Marvel | The Order Vol. 2 #8 (April, 2008) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Ironclad (Michael "Mike" Steel) |
Mike Steel was an engineer, scientist, and pilot before gaining his superhuman powers. With his teammates, he attempted to duplicate the original rocket flight of the Fantastic Four through a cosmic ray belt, and gained superhuman powers just as the Fantastic Four did. | N/A |
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Marvel | Incredible Hulk #254 (December, 1980) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Ironheart (Riri Williams) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Invincible Iron Man Vol. 2 #7 (May, 2016) | 350,000 Studs | |||
John Jonah Jameson, Jr. | N/A |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #1 (March, 1963) | 250,000 Studs | |||
Jack O'Lantern | Pumpkin Bombs |
|
Marvel | Machine Man #19 (February, 1981) (Jack O'Lantern alias with Jason Macendale, Jr.); Venom Vol. 2 #1 (May, 2011) (current Jack O'Lantern) |
300,000 Studs | |||
Jackal (Miles Warren) |
Claws |
|
Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #31 (December, 1965) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Jade (Jennifer-Lynn "Jennie" Hayden) |
N/A |
|
DC | All-Star Squadron #25 (September, 1983) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Jasper Sitwell | Jasper Sitwell became a S.H.I.E.L.D. agent after having been the top student of his class at the S.H.I.E.L.D. Academy. He became Nick Fury's assistant, at one point even filling in for him as temporary Director of S.H.I.E.L.D. Later, he acted as S.H.I.E.L.D. liaison to Stark Industries. Sitwell was specifically assigned to provide for Tony Stark's safety. | N/A |
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Marvel | Strange Tales #144 (May, 1966) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Javelin | The man who would become the Javelin was an Olympic athlete, who for unknown reasons became a criminal. Using his talent, he has created an unusual arsenal of weapons based on spears. Javelin hired a gang of thugs and became a mercenary. | Collapsable Javelins |
|
DC | Green Lantern Vol. 2 #173 (February, 1984) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Jax-Ur | Jax-Ur is a Kryptonian super-criminal and an enemy to Superman. He was imprisoned in the Phantom Zone for destroying Wegthor, a populated moon of Krypton. This act of mass murder led him to be called the worst criminal in the Phantom Zone. Eventually he escaped to plot against Superman with his Phantom Zoner compatriots General Zod and Faora. | N/A |
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DC | Adventure Comics #289 (October, 1961) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Jemma Anne Simmons | Jemma Simmons is a S.H.I.E.L.D scientist with two PhDs in fields Agent Coulson "can't pronounce". She was trained at the S.H.I.E.L.D. Academy alongside Leo Fitz, whom she has a close relationship with. She was recruited by Agent Phil Coulson to be a part of his new team along with Leo Fitz. She was brought on board because of her expertise as a biochemist. | N/A | N/A | Marvel | Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Episode 1 (September 24, 2013) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Jesse Quick (Jesse Belle Chambers) |
N/A |
|
DC | Justice Society of America Vol. 2 #1 (August, 1992) | 400,000 Studs | |||
N/A |
|
Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #4 (September, 1963) (unnamed) | 300,000 Studs (each variation) | ||||
James "Jim" Worthington Gordon | Gun |
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DC | Detective Comics #27 (May, 1939) | 250,000 Studs | |||
James "Jimmy" Bartholomew Olsen | Jimmy Olsen is well recognized as Superman's best pal. He is an investigative reporter and photojournalist, formerly a copy-boy, working at the Daily Planet since his teenage years. His closest friends and co-workers are Clark Kent, Lois Lane and Perry White. Olsen has no consistent superpowers of his own, but he is frequently put into situations where he develops bizarre transformations or mutations allowing him to develop weird special abilities. Superman has given him a Signal Watch to call on in case he is ever in danger and needs help. | Camera | N/A | DC | Action Comics #6 (November, 1938) (unnamed) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Jinx | N/A |
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DC | Tales of the Teen Titans #56 (August, 1985) Teen Titans (TV Series) Episode 3 (August 2, 2003) |
300,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
John Constantine | N/A |
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DC | Swamp Thing Vol. 2 #25 (June, 1984) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Jonah Woodson Hex | Shotgun | N/A | DC | All-Star Western Vol. 2 #10 (March, 1972) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Jubilee (Jubilation Lee) |
N/A | Marvel | Uncanny X-Men #244 (May, 1989) | |||||
Juggernaut (Cain Marko) |
Cain Marko, the man known as Juggernaut, grew up in the same trailer park as Rogue. He referred to himself as "trailer trash" at one point, but also pointed out that because he grew up in a trailer park people often underestimated his intelligence. At some point in his life he was incarcerated by Weapon X and forced to act as a living weapon under the direction of Col. John Wraith. Juggernaut was part of the strike force that took out the X-Men, forcing them into Weapon X as well. Cain and Rogue shared a cell while both were forced to serve Weapon X. When The Brotherhood removed the security implants that were prohibiting the mutants from leaving their cells, Juggernaut fought for his freedom. After the entire ordeal, Cain was offered a place with both Xavier's X-Men and The Brotherhood. Cain chose The Brotherhood, but later left the team for parts unknown. |
N/A |
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Marvel | ||||
Justin Hammer | Justin Hammer is a business rival of Tony Stark in the technology market, being the CEO of his own Hammer Industries. At times, he has gotten Stark technology through industrial espionage and has sold it to supervillains. | N/A |
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Marvel | Iron Man #120 (March, 1979) | 200,000 Studs | ||
Kabuki Twin | The Kabuki Twins are two female bodyguards employed by the Penguin. They are both highly skilled martial arts combatants, who employ extended steel razor blades at the tips of their fingers. | Claws | *Dig *Wall Climbing *Activate Claw Switches *Agility |
DC | The Batman Episode 3 (September 5, 2004) | 300,000 Studs | ||
N/A |
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Marvel | 350,000 Studs (each variation) | |||||
Kalibak | Beta Club |
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DC | New Gods #1 (March, 1971) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Kanjar Ro | Kanjar Ro is an extraterrestrial conqueror and enemy to the Justice League. Dictator of the planet Dhor in the Antares star system, he is constantly at war with his three neighboring planets. This includes Alstair ruled by the plant-queen Hyathis, Mosteel ruled by the metal-skinned Kromm, and Llarr ruled by the lizard-emperor Sayyar. His other signature weapon is the Gamma Gong. | The Sceptor |
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DC | Justice League of America #3 (March, 1961) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Kanto (Iluthin) |
Once a student of Granny Goodness named Iluthin, Kanto was accused of stealing weaponry from Darkseid's then-master assassin Kanto 13. Against the request of Kanto 13, young Iluthin was exiled from Apokolips to Earth during the Renaissance period. There, he trained under Italian teachers, and fell in love with a woman named Claudia. But Kanto 13 tracked him to Earth, and at the wedding altar, Kanto-13 attacked them, and killed his bride Claudia. Iluthin and Kanto 13 battled, and in the end Darkseid's assassin was defeated. Darkseid himself came to Earth and destroyed Kanto-13 for failure, and Iluthin returned to Apokolips as Darkseid's new assassin. | Rapier |
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DC | Mister Miracle #7 (April, 1972) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Karen Page | Karen Page was born and raised in Fagan Corners, Vermont. As a little girl in grade school, Karen gained notoriety for competing in spelling bees. In high school her bright streak continued, earning all As and being a cheerleader, eventually captaining the squad in her senior year. She graduated summa cum laude from the University of Vermont with a GPA of 3.8. Following her graduation she looked for work in New York City. Although it was assured Karen would inherit her family's wealth, she sought work to make a name and living for herself. Karen was hired to work as a secretary for Matt Murdock and Foggy Nelson when they opened their law firm together. She was at first concerned about Matt being a blind man in the big city. | N/A | N/A | Marvel | Daredevil #1 (April, 1964) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Karnak Mander-Azur | N/A |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #45 (December, 1965) | 300,000 Studs | |||
The Key | Originally a chemist in Intergang, the man who would be known as the Key developed mind-expanding "psycho-chemicals" that activate his ten senses and help him plan crimes mere humans can never hope to understand. Armed with these plans, a series of henchmen known as the "Key-Men", and a "key blaster", the Key has had several failed run-ins with the JLA. | Key Gun |
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DC | All-Star Comics #57 (April, 1951) (Key alias with unnamed criminal); Justice League of America #41 (December, 1965) |
300,000 Studs | ||
KGBeast (Anatoli Knyazev) |
Prosthetic Gun |
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DC | Batman #147 (March, 1988) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Kilg%re | Kilg%re was an electro-mechano-organic intelligence that needed electro-life to survive. It consumed its entire home planet in the Pleides sector, and then moved on into space. It was attacked by something known as Meta#sker and placed into a vibrational limbo. Somehow, it found its way to the flats near Salt Lake City on Earth. It could only be seen by people traveling at high speeds, such as an F-15 pilot or the Flash. The Flash unknowingly released it from limbo, and it followed him to S.T.A.R. Labs and took over its electrical systems. Kilg%re found the number of machines on Earth ideal for its survival, but the humans it deemed distractions and planned to destroy. | N/A |
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DC | Flash Vol. 2 #3 (August, 1987) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Killer Frost (Louise Lincoln) |
Dr. Louise Lincoln was a colleague and friend of Crystal Frost, the villainess known as Killer Frost. After Frost died, she decided to repeat the experiment as a last respect to her former mentor, and became the new Killer Frost. She became just as ruthless as her predecessor and began her own personal vendetta against Firestorm, who she blamed for Frost's death. | N/A |
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DC | Firestorm Vol. 2 #21 (March, 1984) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Killer Frost (Caitlin Snow) |
N/A |
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DC | Fury of Firestorm: The Nuclear Men #19 (June, 2013) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Kilowog | Green Lantern Power Ring |
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DC | Green Lantern Corps #201 (June, 1986) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Kingsley “King” Faraday | King Faraday was named by his father as a joke, a play on the phrase "King For A Day." An ex-soldier, King Faraday took a position as a counter-espionage agent for the U.S. government and engaged in a variety of standard spy-type capers. Faraday has since been incorporated full-bore into the DC Universe as a member of the Central Bureau of Intelligence. | Gun |
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DC | Danger Trail #1 (August, 1950) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Kingpin (Wilson Grant Fisk) |
Disintegrator Cane |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #50 (July, 1967) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Kite-Man (Charles “Chuck” Brown) |
Charles "Chuck" Brown was a man who armed himself with kite weapons and used them to commit crimes. While he was a small boy, Charles Brown was fascinated with kites causing him to adopt and use kites as part of his guise as a costumed villain, Kite Man. He used a big kite strapped to him to glide around and also a barrage of kites to overwhelm his enemies. | N/A |
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DC | Batman #133 (August, 1960) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Klarion Bleak the Witch Boy | N/A |
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DC | Demon #7 (March, 1973) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Ulysses S. Klaw | Sound Converter |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #53 (August, 1966) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Krona | Krona is a renegade and former member of the Guardians of the Universe and an enemy of Green Lantern. As a scientist, Krona was obsessed with finding the origins of the universe in which his search consequently led to the birth of evil itself throughout the universe, and the creation of the multiverse. | N/A |
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DC | Green Lantern Vol. 2 #40 (October, 1965) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Kurse (Algrim) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Thor #347 (September, 1984) | 350,000 Studs | |||
L-Ron H-bb-rd | L-Ron is a robot servant constructed by Lord Manga Khan. He was traded to the Justice League International for Despero in fetus form. He acted as an assistant to Maxwell Lord during this time. | N/A |
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DC | Justice League International #14 (July, 1988) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Lady Deathstrike (Yuriko Oyama) |
Claws |
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Marvel | Daredevil #197 (August, 1983) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Lady Shiva (Sandra Wu-San) |
Lady Shiva is one of the world's greatest martial artists and an antagonist to Richard Dragon, Black Canary, Question, and Batman. Having dedicated her life to the study of combat, she is a human weapon living for the thrill of a good fight. Her daughter is the vigilante Cassandra Cain, who she conceived with assassin David Cain as the perfect warrior. In addition, she was also mentor to the Question. | N/A |
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DC | Richard Dragon, Kung-Fu Fighter #5 (January, 1976) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Lagoon Boy | Lagoon Boy appeared in Atlantis when the King decreed that outsider sea people be allowed into Atlantis despite the protests of many elitist Atlanteans. This is due to an attempt by Aquaman to make Atlantis more open to citizens living outside the city, by granting them citizenship. Lagoon Boy comes to the citizenship ceremony on the day of King Orin and Queen Mera's marriage. While there he befriends Blubber, a humanoid whale with a genius IQ and his assistant, Sheeva the Mermaid. | N/A |
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DC | Aquaman Vol. 5 #50 (December, 1998) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Larfleeze | Orange Lantern Power Ring |
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DC | DC Universe #0 (June, 2008) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Andrew Garner was a neurologist and forensic psychologist who specialized in working with the gifted individuals from the Index. During his career within S.H.I.E.L.D., he met and married Agent Melinda May, though they eventually got divorced. Garner later returned to S.H.I.E.L.D. to do a profile on Skye, who had recently developed superpowers from undergoing Terrigenesis. Garner's own latent Inhuman genes were activated when he accidentally broke the Terrigen Crystal hidden in a ledger originally belonging to Jiaying, and he was transformed into the monstrous Lash. |
N/A |
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Marvel | 350,000 Studs (each variation) | ||||
Lashina | Lashina is one of the evil New Gods of Apokolips and a servant to Darkseid. She is a member of his elite assassin group the Female Furies, and became their leader after Big Barda quit. Her weapon of choice is charged energy whips, and she was trained in their use by Granny Goodness. | Steel Charged Whips |
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DC | Mister Miracle #6 (February, 1972) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Lead | Lead is a liquid metal robot made of Lead with almost limitless shape shifting abilities. He was designed by Dr. William Magnus a brilliant robotic expert along with along with five other robots Platinum, Mercury, Gold, Tin and Iron. These robots were known as the Metal Men. Together, Lead and the Metal Men embarked on a variety of adventures, their specialty fighting monsters spawned from weird science. Though the Metal Men were repeatedly destroyed, Magnus was always able to rebuild them. Lead is the workhorse of the Metal Men, slow witted but invariably the first of the team to step up to the plate. Lead often work with Iron and combines into various structures and shapes to protect the team. | N/A |
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DC | Showcase #37 (April, 1962) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Leader (Samuel Sterns) |
Blaster |
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Marvel | Tales to Astonish #62 (December, 1964) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Leopold “Leo” James Fitz | Leo is a socially awkward S.H.I.E.L.D. tech specialist. But despite his awkwardness, he got along remarkably well with his research partner, Jemma Simmons. The two of them were stated to be similar to inseparable siblings. He was recruited by Agent Phil Coulson to be a part of his new team along with Simmons. | N/A |
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Marvel | Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Episode 1 (September 24, 2013) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Leslie Maurin Thompkins | Leslie Thompkins was a close friend of Thomas and Martha Wayne. She took it upon herself to look after their orphaned son, Bruce, after the two of them were gunned down in Park Row. She often acted with the family butler, Alfred Pennyworth, as a parental figure and guardian; trying to teach Bruce how to deal with his grief. During that time, Leslie was concerned with Bruce's behavior as he grew increasingly antisocial. She was even more perturbed when she discovered that, in his adult years, Bruce spent his nights fighting the criminal elements of Gotham as the Batman. Doctor Thompkins ran a clinic for criminals and drug addicts in Gotham City. While the majority of her patients were repeat offenders, she continued to do her job with great perseverance and determination. | N/A | N/A | DC | Detective Comics #457 (March, 1976) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Libra (Justin Ballantine) |
Libra was born Justin Ballantine, who lost his mother at the age of eight due to an alcoholic pharmacist mismeasuring medicine his mother needed. Soon after his father turned to alcoholism himself and brutally abused Justin regularly. Justin would later use all the money he had to buy a telescope so that he could stargaze and imagine a better life among the stars. His father threatened to beat him with his telescope one night but he lost his balance and fell to his death, which led Justin to see the importance of balance in the universe. While attending university, his physics professor was Ted Knight (Starman). | Spear of Libra |
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DC | Justice League of America #111 (June, 1974) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Livewire (Leslie Willis) |
N/A |
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DC | Superman Adventures #5 (March, 1997) | 350,000 Studs | |||
The Living Brain | The Living Brain, soon after its creation, was brought to Midtown High School by its creator, Dr. Petty, as a part of a demonstration of its ability to solve any problem. After the Living Brain's demonstration, two workmen hired to transport it overheard the Living Brain's ability to answer anything, and decided to steal it in order to use its abilities for gambling purposes. Caught in the middle of stealing the Living Brain by Dr. Petty, the two workmen got into a scuffle with him, which ended with one of them being knocked into the control panel on the Living Brain's chest, which caused the Living Brain to malfunction. Going on a rampage through Midtown High, the Living Brain was eventually shut down by Spider-Man, who destroyed its control panel in a brief fight. It would soon be brought back online to cause trouble again. | N/A |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #8 (January, 1964) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Living Laser (Arthur Parks) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Avengers #34 (November, 1966) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Lobo (real name unpronounceable) |
|
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DC | Omega Men #3 (June, 1983) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Lockjaw | The massive dog known as Lockjaw is the loyal pet of the Royal Family of the Inhumans, an offshoot of humanity that was genetically altered by the Kree centuries ago whose isolation in the hidden city of Attilan resulted in the development of a high technological society with a focus on genetics. He was born from the Inhumans' experimentation on canines, and shares a particular bond with Black Bolt, the most recurring ruler of the Inhumans, and Crystal. He is regularly used as transportation to traverse between time and space. | Claws |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #45 (December, 1965) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Lois Joanne Lane | Lois Lane is a Pulitzer-prize winning investigative journalist employed at the Daily Planet, alongside fellow reporter Clark Kent, photographer Jimmy Olsen and the Daily Planet editor-in-chief Perry White. Raised in the military as daughter of General Sam Lane, she is more than capable of handling herself in almost any situation. Her sister is flight attendant and later military officer Lucy Lane. She is the long-time romantic interest to and eventually wife of Superman. | N/A | N/A | DC | Action Comics #1 (June, 1938) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Lucifer Morningstar (Samael) |
N/A |
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DC | Sandman Vol. 2 #4 (April, 1989) | 500,000 Studs | |||
Lucius Fox | Lucius Fox is a brilliant business manager and corporate executive at Wayne Enterprises. He is a close friend and confidante to Bruce Wayne, frequently acting as his financial liaison. In addition, his actions are responsible for many of the resources that go towards developing Batman's equipment. | N/A | N/A | DC | Batman #307 (January, 1979) | 250,000 Studs | ||
N/A |
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Marvel | 350,000 Studs (each variation) | |||||
Lyssa Drak | Lyssa Drak is a member of the Sinestro Corps and the keeper of the book of Parallax, which is chained to her wrist. She maintains the horror stories and exploits of the members of the Sinestro Corps. When new recruits are brought to Qward, Lyssa oversees their entry into the Fear Lodge, and chronicles the new recruit's success or failure. | Yellow Lantern Power Ring |
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DC | Green Lantern Vol. 4 #18 (May, 2007) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Mad Harriet | Mad Harriet was raised in Granny Goodness' orphanage and was noticed by Granny for adoring the feeling of torture and pain. One of the first members of the Female Furies, Mad Harriet served Darkseid despite her insanity. | Energy Claws |
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DC | Mister Miracle #6 (February, 1972) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Mad Hatter (Jervis Etch) |
Gas gun |
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DC | Batman #49 (October, 1948) | 250,000 Studs | |||
Madame Masque (Giuletta Kristina Nefaria) |
Gun |
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Marvel | Tales of Suspense #97 (January, 1968) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Madame Rouge (Laura De Mille) |
Laura De Mille was originally a French stage actress. After an automobile accident, she developed a dual good/evil split personality. At this point, she attracted the notice of The Brain and his associate, Monsieur Mallah. With Mallah's help, the Brain performed surgery on De Mille that was, from his perspective, successful, sublimating her good personality and allowing her evil personality to remain dominant. As Madame Rouge, De Mille became the only female member of the Brotherhood of Evil, and assisted the Brotherhood in its continuing conflicts against the Doom Patrol. At first, Madame Rouge was simply a master of disguise; subsequent surgery by the Brain eventually gave her the ability to alter her appearance and stretch her limbs. | N/A |
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DC | Doom Patrol #88 (March, 1964) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Magik (Illyana Nikolievna Rasputina) |
Soulsword |
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Marvel | Giant-Size X-Men #1 (May, 1975) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Magenta (Frances “Francine” Kane) |
Frances Kane met Wally West when he was seven. They grew up friends, but when she reached adulthood, she started to exhibit strange magnetic powers. Wally tried teaching her how to use them properly, and they fell in love. As for her powers, she never really wanted them, wanting just to lead a normal life. | N/A |
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DC | New Teen Titans #17 (March, 1982) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Magneto (Max Eisenhardt (Erik Magnus Lehnsherr)) |
N/A |
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Marvel | X-Men #1 (September, 1963) | 500,000 Studs | |||
Magpie (Margaret Pye) |
Growing up, Margaret Pye loved shiny things and wanted them all for herself. She was ridiculed for her obsession, and nicknamed Magpie. This obsession just got stronger as she grew up, and she took a job as curator of the Gotham City Museum of Antiquities to be surrounded by the valuables she loved. This love became compulsive jealousy when she realized she would never possess the antiques around her. Her mind snapped, and she started a crime-wave as Magpie. She made booby-trapped duplicates of famous museum pieces, and put them in place of the genuine articles. She felt she was taking what was rightfully hers, not stealing. She also recruited a small gang of thugs to ensure that she was never caught. She was a harsh employer, killing any goon that failed her expectations. | N/A |
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DC | The Man of Steel #3 (November, 1986) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Major Force (Clifford Zmeck) |
Major Force is a nuclear-powered supervillain and evil counterpart to Captain Atom. In the U.S. Air Force he was given a life sentence for murder, but agreed to dangerous genetic experimentation in exchange for a pardon. This was granted by Wade Eiling, who created him as part of Project Atom. | N/A |
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DC | Captain Atom #12 (February, 1988) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Malekith the Accursed | N/A |
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DC | Thor #334 (June, 1984) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Mallen | Mallen's parents were killed in a shootout with the FBI over weapons violations. He grew up bitter, aligning himself with a small cell of domestic terrorists. They were given the Extremis virus by Dr. Maya Hansen. Mallen took it and emerged as a superhuman threat after the incubation period. | Claws |
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Marvel | Iron Man Vol. 4 #1 (January, 2005) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Mammoth (Baran Flinders) |
Mammoth is one of the founding members of the Fearsome Five, and became enemy of the Teen Titans, Superman, and the Outsiders. He is highly devoted to his sister Selinda (a.k.a. Shimmer), also a founding member of the Fearsome Five. A towering hulk of a man with immense physical strength and durability, Mammoth is intellectually and emotionally underdeveloped, and he lacks skill as a hand-to-hand combatant. | N/A |
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DC | New Teen Titans #3 (January, 1981) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Man-Ape (M’Baku) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Avengers #62 (March, 1969) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Man-Thing (Theodore “Ted” Sallis) |
Claws |
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Marvel | Savage Tales #1 (May, 1971) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Man-Wolf (John Jonah Jameson III) |
John Jonah Jameson III was born in New York City. He is the son of J. Jonah Jameson, the irascible, gruff publisher of the Daily Bugle. Jonah is immensely proud of his son, whom he sees as a true hero. Initially an astronaut, he was first seen being saved by Spider-Man when his craft malfunctioned on re-entry, something that did nothing to endear the wall-crawler to his father, who resents Spider-Man's form of heroism. While he was on the moon, Jameson found the mystical Godstone, an other-dimensional ruby. The jewel grafted itself to his throat and extended tendrils through his body. Moonlight activated the gem, which transformed him into the lycanthropic Man-Wolf. |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #1 (March, 1963) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Mandroid | The Mandroids were originally designed by Tony Stark and built for use by S.H.I.E.L.D. The concept was to provide the wearer with extensive offensive options so they could respond to various threats, including those from superpowered humans. | N/A |
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Marvel | Avengers #94 (December, 1971) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Manhunter | The Manhunters were the first attempt of the Guardians of the Universe to create an interstellar police force that would combat evil all over the galaxy. Their name and much of their code of behavior was modelled by the Guardians of the Universe on the Manhunters of Ma'aleca'andra (Mars). For thousands of years, they served the Guardians well. However, the Manhunters became obsessed with the act of hunting criminals. Their code, "No Man Escapes The Manhunters", became more important to them than seeing justice done. | Power Baton |
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DC | Adventure Comics #58 (January, 1941) (Manhunter name as descriptor for Paul Kirk); 1st Issue Special #5 (August, 1975) (Manhunter androids) |
350,000 Studs | ||
Mantis | Mantis is the leader of a colony of humanoid insects that migrated from New Genesis. In return for his fealty Darkseid gifted him with great power. He typically spent time in a power pod recharging his energies but he could also absorb energies sent at him by an opponent such as Green Lantern. Mantis has at times served as Darkseid's lackey and, like many of the denizens of Apokolips, has occasionally risen up against his master. | N/A |
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DC | Forever People #2 (May, 1971) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Mantis (last name Brandt) |
N/A | *Agility *Mind Control *Healing Factor *Erupt vines from ground to pull objects |
Marvel | Avengers #112 (June, 1973) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Maria Hill | Maria Hill was born in Chicago, Illinois. While still in the hospital, Maria's mother died, and her father Ed blamed it on her. The abuse Maria endured from her father turned her into cold and troubled person. After finally falling out with her father, Maria joined the Marine Corps. After serving with the Marines, and while still being fairly young, Maria joined S.H.I.E.L.D.. One of her earliest missions involved rescuing Agents Bradley and Reynolds, whose mission of infiltrating the ranks of the terrorist organization Hydra became compromised. Even though Reynolds was a senior agent, Hill decided to follow S.H.I.E.L.D.'s rules and relieve him, deeming him mentally unfit to take command. Reynolds refused to listen to Hill, and the skirmish resulted in Reynolds being caught in enemy fire. Reynold's partner, Agent Bradley, accused Hill of field misconduct, but a tribunal found her innocent. Maria's conviction caught the attention of Director Nick Fury, who presented Hill with the chance to be promoted. As it turned out, both Bradley and Reynolds were in reality triple agents, and Fury asked Maria to carry out the kill order against Agent Bradley. Hill accomplished the mission, and was subsequently promoted to the rank of Colonel. The assignment and the precursory incident left Hill haunted by images of Reynolds and Bradley's families, and the feeling that she had betrayed her beliefs and didn't deserve to continue living. Because of this, Fury gave her a pill to induce amnesia and forget the episode. Before taking the pill, Maria put a hit on herself that would only trigger as soon as she retired. | Guns |
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Marvel | New Avengers #4 (April, 2005) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Mark Moornider | Mark Moonrider is one of the good New Gods of New Genesis lead by Highfather. He is also a member of the Forever People, a group of young adventurers who oppose Darkseid on Earth with the help of Infinity Man. His special power is the explosive Megaton Touch which can deal tremendous damage. | N/A |
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DC | Forever People #1 (March, 1971) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Martin Stein | The creation of the Hudson power plant was the brainchild of Nobel Prize winning physicist, Dr. Martin Stein. Before committing himself to the field of atomic research, Stein was a physics professor at Hudson University. Stein eventually came to develop the layout for the Hudson Nuclear Power Plant, the country's first completely safe atomic testing center. Coalition leader, Eddie Earhart raided the reactor core room and confronted Martin Stein. Taking him by surprise, he easily overcame the older man knocking him out cold. By this point, Ronnie Raymond realized that there was a lot more to the Coalition's aims than he previously believed. Ronnie attempted to stop Eddie, but the terrorist punched the high school student in the jaw, knocking him out as well. When Ronnie came to, he discovered that the Coalition had wired several pounds worth of TNT to explode inside the reactor. He grabbed the unconscious Stein and attempted to drag him out of the building. They were nearly out the front door when the TNT exploded. Both men were consumed by the brilliant burst of radiation. The excess power fused Ronnie Raymond and Martin Stein into a single composite being – Firestorm. | N/A | N/A | DC | Firestorm #1 (March, 1978) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Mary Jane Watson | N/A | N/A | Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #25 (June, 1965) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Mary Marvel (Mary Batson) |
N/A |
|
DC | Captain Marvel Adventures #18 (December, 1942) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Maverick (Christoph “Christopher” Nord (David North)) |
Born in the former East Germany, Christoph Nord was an idealist who fought against the communist regime as a freedom fighter for the West German Cell Six. Nord's brother Andreas fought for the East Germans, and when the two met in battle, Nord was forced to kill his brother. Later, after an encounter with the assassin the Confessor, Nord was recovering in a German hospital where he fell in love with nurse Ginetta Barsalini. The two married, and she soon became pregnant, but he later learned that she was a double agent and was forced to kill her after she attacked him. Guilt and pain drove him further into his mercenary work, and he eventually accepted an offer to join the CIA's Weapon X Program. Nord joined the Program's covert operations unit Team X, changed his name to David North, and took the codename Maverick. | Rifle |
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Marvel | X-Men Vol. 2 #5 (February, 1992) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Maximus Boltagon the Mad | Sonic gun | *Computer Hacking *Mind Control *Shatter glass with sonic gun |
Marvel | Fantastic Four #47 (February, 1966) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Maxwell Lord IV | Gun |
|
DC | Justice League #1 (May, 1987) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Melinda Qiaolian May | Melinda May is a field agent for S.H.I.E.L.D., and is highly skilled at her job. She became a colleague of Agent Phil Coulson. She also married Dr. Andrew Garner, a S.H.I.E.L.D. psychologist. | I.C.E.R.s |
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DC | Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Episode 1 (September 24, 2013) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Melter (Bruno Horgan) |
Bruno Horgan was driven into bankruptcy when a government safety inspection team proved that he was using inferior materials, with the defense contracts awarded to his competitor Tony Stark (the alter ego of hero Iron Man). Discovering that one of his faulty devices is capable of generating a beam capable of "melting" anything composed of iron, Horgan redesigned the device so that it can be strapped to his chest, and after donning a costume adopts the alias the Melter. He has since upgraded his technology to melt any other substances as a specialized pistol, before going with the belt harness he currently uses. | Melting Ray |
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Marvel | Tales of Suspense #47 (November, 1963) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Mento (Steven Dayton) |
Steve Dayton, one of the world's richest men, built a helmet to enhance his mental abilities and called himself Mento. This was an attempt on Dayton's part to impress Elasti-Girl (a.k.a. Rita Farr) of the Doom Patrol. Although his arrogant manner annoyed the male field members of the team, he was successful, Mento and Elasti-Girl were married. They soon adopted Beast Boy (a.k.a. Garfield Logan). | Mento Helmet |
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DC | Doom Patrol #91 (November, 1964) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Mephisto | N/A |
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Marvel | Silver Surfer #3 (December, 1968) | 500,000 Studs | |||
Mera | N/A |
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DC | Aquaman #11 (October, 1963) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Mercury | Mercury is a liquid metal robot made of Mercury with almost limitless shape shifting abilities. He was designed by Dr. William Magnus a brilliant robotic expert along with along with five other robots Platinum, Gold, Iron, Tin and Lead. These robots were known as the Metal Men. Together, Mercury and the Metal Men embarked on a variety of adventures, their specialty fighting monsters spawned from weird science. Though the Metal Men were repeatedly destroyed, Magnus was always able to rebuild them. Mercury is the hothead of the group, he is confrontational and regularly gets into scraps with the rest of the group especially Platinum. He feels his talents are not truly recognized and think that he should be leader of the Metal Men. | N/A |
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DC | Showcase #37 (April, 1962) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Mercy Graves | Mercy Graves was born in poverty and ran with the wrong crowd. Recognizing a lot of himself in her, Lex Luthor took her under his wing. She became his bodyguard, confidante, enforcer and "hench-wench." Despite his treatment of her, Mercy genuinely cared about Luthor. | Gun |
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DC | Superman: The Animated Series Episode 6 (September 14, 1996) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Bow |
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DC | Justice League of America #94 (November, 1971) Arrow Episode 4 (October 31, 2012) |
300,000 Studs (each variation) | ||||
Mettle (Ken Mack) |
One day while Ken Mack was surfing, another surfer accidentally crashed into him, ramming Ken's face with his surf board. Instead of killing him, the impact trauma accelerated a transformation already taking place under his skin. His skin peeled off, revealing a red iridium skull beneath. At the time of the accident, Ken was unaware of the transformation because the iridium has no nerve endings. He was then taken to Norman Osbourne on a plane. Norman then amplified his transformation, making his whole body iridium. Ken is then recruited to join the newly formed Avengers Academy alongside other young potential heroes, where he formed a relationship with Hazmat. | N/A |
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Marvel | Avengers Academy #1 (August, 2010) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Miklho | Miklho, a gorilla, was one of Ivan Kragoff's original Super-Apes which also included Peotor (an orangutan), and Igor (a baboon). These apes were trained to be obedient and follow the verbal commands of Kragoff. When Ivan sought to replicate the accident that gave the Fantastic Four their powers, he brought the apes along with him aboard his ship. As per his specifications they were bombarded with even more Cosmic Rays than the Fantastic Four and were endowed with enhanced abilities. Miklho became superhumanly durable. | N/A |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #13 (April, 1963) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Mindless One | Created by Plokta as a way of slowing the expanding empires of rivals, the Mindless Ones were virtually unstoppable engines of destruction; when a rival was deemed to be becoming too powerful, Plokta would let the Mindless Ones loose in the rival's realm, tying up the rival's resources trying to contain them. When Dormammu was expanding his Dark Dimension by breaking down barriers between it and other realms, one of his new acquisitions contained Mindless Ones, who rampaged through the Dark Dimension until Dormammu managed to drive them back into a small region which he then enclosed with a magical shield to keep them out of his domain and fighting among themselves. | N/A |
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Marvel | Strange Tales #127 (December, 1964) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Mirror Master (Samuel "Sam" Joseph Scudder) |
Mirror Gun |
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DC | The Flash #105 (March, 1959) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Ms. America (America Chavez) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Marvel Mystery Comics #49 (November, 1943) (Ms. America alias with Madeline Joyce); Vengeance #1 (September, 2011) (America Chavez) |
350,000 Studs | |||
Miss Martian (M’gann M’orzz) |
N/A |
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DC | Teen Titans Vol. 3 #37 (August, 2006) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Ms. Marvel (Kamala Khan) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Captain Marvel Vol. 7 #14 (September, 2013) (Unnamed) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Mister Bones | Mister Bones is a supervillain, beginning his career as a member of Helix. He would go on to reform and work for the government as Director Bones in charge of the DEO. His powers come from genetic experimentation while in the womb. This made his skin transparent, and lethal to the touch. | N/A |
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DC | Infinity Inc. #16 (July, 1985) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Mr. Fear (Lawrence “Larry” Cranston) |
Cranston was staying in a hotel room across the hall from Zoltan Drago, the original Mister Fear. His hatred for Matt Murdock stemmed from being defeated by him in a mock trial in Law School, and he had suspected Matt of being Daredevil for awhile when Starr Saxon died (though Saxon’s death didn’t last). Using his law savvy, he pretended to be a relative of Saxon to gain access to the Mister Fear costume and equipment. | Fear Gas Gun | N/A | Marvel | Daredevil #6 (February, 1965) (Mr. Fear alias with Zoltan Drago); Daredevil #88 (June, 1972) (Larry Cranston) |
300,000 Studs | ||
Dr. Calvin Zabo was a morally abject but brilliant medical researcher who was fascinated by the effect of hormones on human physiology. One of his favorite stories was Robert Louis Stevenson's 1886 classic, Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. He was convinced that the experiment in the story could actually be performed and obsessed with the idea of unleashing his full bestial nature in a superhuman form. However, he needed money to do this so he robbed his various employers systematically. Though too intelligent to be caught, the medical community was suspicious of his tendency to always be employed by organizations which were subsequently robbed. He sought work as a surgeon in a hospital where Dr. Donald Blake was a directing physician, yet Blake would not allow him a job due to his history. Zabo was enraged that Blake would not give him the position, even though he did indeed intend to rob the organization. He swore revenge on Blake. Zabo was eventually successful in creating the Hyde Formula, and turned into a huge, Hulk-like creature he called "Mister Hyde", named after the Mr. Hyde in the book. In this new form he found he had vast superhuman strength, enabling him to crush cars and tear through steel as though it were made of cardboard. Doctor Calvin L. Johnson, better known as Calvin "Cal" Zabo, is a physician of ambiguous morality and the former member of Doctors Without Borders. After being violently separated from his wife Jiaying and baby daughter Daisy by HYDRA and S.H.I.E.L.D., he started a quest to avenge his wife's "death" and find his daughter, committing numerous crimes that have caused others to consider him to be a monster. During this time, Zabo developed a formula that gave him enhanced strength. However, the side effects of the unstable formula gave Zabo an erratic personality and severe issues controlling his emotions, particularly anger. |
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Marvel | Journey into Mystery #99 (December, 1963) Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Episode 22 (May 13, 2014) |
|||||
Mister Mind (real name unpronounceable) |
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N/A | DC | Captain Marvel Adventures #26 (August, 1943) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Mister Miracle (Scott Free) |
Scott Free is the world's greatest escape artist and one of the New Gods. He is the son of Highfather, ruler of New Genesis. At a young age when their planet was at war with Apokolips, Scott was bargained to their ruler Darkseid in exchange for his son Orion as part of a truce agreement. He was raised in the terrible orphanage of Granny Goodness, where he learned how to survive. He eventually fell in love with Big Barda of the Female Furies. They escaped together from the planet and traveled to Earth where he took on the identity of Mister Miracle from a professional escape artist named Thaddeus Brown. Brown was killed by Intergang and Free inherited his legacy and his assistant Oberon. | N/A |
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DC | Mister Miracle #1 (April, 1971) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Mister Sinister (Nathaniel Essex) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Uncanny X-Men #221 (September, 1987) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Mr. Terrific (Michael Holt) |
T-Spheres |
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DC | Sensation Comics #1 (January, 1942) (Mr. Terrific alias with Terry Sloane); Spectre Vol. 3 #54 (June, 1997) (Michael Holt) |
300,000 Studs | |||
Mister Toad | Mister Toad is a member of the Circus of Strange and an enemy to Batman. He is an anthropomorphic toad with a cockney accent who works under Professor Pyg. His appearance is a homage to the character Mr. Toad in the novel The Wind in the Willows. | Cane |
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DC | Batman and Robin #1 (August, 2009) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Mister Twister (Bromwell “Brom” Stikk) |
Brom Stikk was born in the small town of Hatton Corners. His ancestry can be traced back to Colonial times where his ancestor Jacob Stikk leased the town to the Colonists for the price of a feather from a passenger pigeon. Each year, the town elders gave the pigeon feather to the Stikk family as payment. Now in present day, Bromwell Stikk leaves the town to live in exile on Goat Island. While there, he discovers a Native American cave and an old Shaman's medicine staff. When Bromwell dips the staff in a special brew, he discovers that he can control the forces of nature. With his new powers, Bromwell becomes Mister Twister and returns to Hatton Corners to take revenge on the people that spurned him. | Staff |
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DC | Action Comics #96 (May, 1946) (Mr. Twister alias with Dan Judd); Brave and the Bold #54 (July, 1964) (Brom Stikk) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Mr. Victor Zsasz | Knife |
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DC | Batman: Shadow of the Bat #1 (June, 1992) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Mercedes “Misty” Knight | Gun |
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Marvel | Marvel Team-Up #1 (March, 1972) (Unnamed) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Mitchell “Mitch” Carson | Agent Mitchell "Mitch" Carson was a high ranked S.H.I.E.L.D. security agent. He had killed his father when he was fifteen years old and many more after that. He had however never been caught and managed to find work with S.H.I.E.L.D. Agent Carson was supposed to become the wearer of the newest Ant-Man's Suit, made for S.H.I.E.L.D. by Dr. Henry Pym. The suit was thought to be stolen, but actually disappeared by accident when Agent Chris McCarthy tried it on. Chris was however killed during a Hydra attack on the Helicarrier. It was then that Eric O'Grady took the suit for himself. | Gun |
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Marvel | Marvel Team-Up Vol. 3 #21 (August, 2006) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Mockingbird (Barbara “Bobbi” Morse) |
[[[File:Lesser Known But Awesome Heroes Mockingbird|thumb|left|190 px]] Barbara "Bobbi" Morse is a former S.H.I.E.L.D. agent. Despite the heavy casualties S.H.I.E.L.D. took during HYDRA's attack on it, she stayed loyal to her oath and continued her service in the remains of S.H.I.E.L.D. under Robert Gonzales. However, as another faction of S.H.I.E.L.D. led by Phil Coulson emerged, she was sent to infiltrate it. Assigned by Coulson, she spent some time on an undercover mission in HYDRA Laboratories posing as the Chief of Security under Sunil Bakshi but eventually broke her cover to save another undercover agent, Jemma Simmons. After rejoining Coulson's S.H.I.E.L.D. she continued with her original mission. Loyal only to Gonzales, she recommended the attack on Coulson's base, which marked the beginning of the open war between the two S.H.I.E.L.D.s. However, when the two factions managed to put aside their differences to work together against HYDRA, she accepted the position in the council of advisors under Coulson as director of the reunified organization. |
Battle Staves |
|
Marvel | Astonishing Tales #6 (June, 1971) (Unnamed) Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Episode 27 (October 21, 2014) |
300,000 Studs (each variation) | ||
Moira Ann Kinross-MacTaggert | Born Moira Kinross to Scottish parents, Moira MacTaggert was one of the world's leading authorities on genetic mutation, earning her a Nobel Prize for her work. She was the longest running human associate of the X-Men and was Professor Charles Xavier's colleague, confidante, and also once his fiancée, having met and fallen in love with him while they were postgraduates at Oxford University. She ended their engagement for unknown reasons and returned to Scotland. She was married to her old flame, the late politician Joseph MacTaggert which caused delays with her former engagement to Xavier. Joe proved to be an abusive husband; Moira separated from him after he beat her into a week long coma and, as it is implied, raped her, leaving her pregnant. She kept her son's existence a secret, and when Joe refused her a divorce she allowed people to believe she was widowed. She eventually created a Mutant Research Center on Muir Island, off the coast of Scotland. Moira was forced to contain and imprison her son Kevin, later called Proteus, when he developed reality warping abilities and severe psychosis. One of Moira's goals was to understand human/mutant genetics, in order to cure her son. Moira's connection to the X-Men began long before the team formed. The silent partner in the founding of Xavier's School for Gifted Youngsters and co-creator of Cerebro, Moira assisted Xavier in helping the young Jean Grey recover after the traumatic triggering of her mutant abilities. | N/A | N/A | Marvel | X-Men #96 (December, 1975) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Mole Man (Harvey Rupert Elder) |
Stave |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #1 (November, 1961) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Molecule Man (Owen Reece) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #20 (November, 1963) | 500,000 Studs | |||
Molten Man (Mark Raxton) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #28 (September, 1965) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Mon-El (Lar Gand) |
N/A |
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DC | Superboy #89 (June, 1961) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Mongul the Elder | N/A |
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DC | DC Comics Presents #27 (November, 1980) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Monocle (Jonathan Cheval) |
Jonathan Cheval was an honest businessman skilled in the field of grinding and polishing lenses. Financial trouble ruined his business, and Cheval became a criminal using lens based weapons. Cheval became an adversary of Hawkman and the Justice Society of America. | N/A |
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DC | Flash Comics #64 (April, 1945) | 270,000 Studs | ||
Montana (Jackson W. Brice) |
Jackson Brice was born in Bozeman, Montana. Along with Fancy Dan and the original Ox, he was a founding member of the Enforcers. He has great proficiency with the lariat. | Lariat |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #10 (March, 1964) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Moon Girl (Lunula Louise Lafayette) |
|
|
Marvel | Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur #1 (January, 2016) | 250,000 Studs | |||
Moon Knight (Marc Spector) |
|
|
Marvel | Werewolf by Night #32 (August, 1975) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Moon-Boy | Moon-Boy was born into a tribe of hominids known as the Small-Folk, who made their home in the Valley of the Flame, a region of numerous active volcanoes in a dinosaur dimension. Moon-Boy’s connection with Devil Dinosaur began on the day he came across a female Devil Beast being attacked by a rival tribe known as the Killer-Folk. The female was killed, as well as two of her three young. The third did not die; however, but was transformed when the Killer-Folk attempted to burn him to death with their torches. The fire permanently scorched the young Devil Beast's skin bright red. Moon-Boy cared for the orphaned creature after its ordeal and named him Devil. Ostracized from his tribe because of his association with Devil, Moon-Boy, and his companion became wanderers. Devil and Moon-Boy's early adventures on their home world include encounters with extraterrestrials and a brief teleportation to modern day Earth. During their adventures, they ended up in the main Marvel universe and is currently living in the Savage Lands. | N/A |
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Marvel | Devil Dinosaur #1 (April, 1978) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Moondragon (Heather Douglas) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Iron Man #54 (January, 1973) | 300,000 Studs | |||
N/A |
|
Marvel | 350,000 Studs (each variation) | |||||
Michael Morbius, the Living Vampire | Claws |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #101 (October, 1971) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Mordru | Appearing mysteriously on Zerox, the Sorcerer's planet, Mordru joined their ranks and rose in power quickly until, in a coup, seized absolute power over the planet, stealing the power of the other leading sorcerers for himself. One who escaped his grasp there was an apprentice of his, White Witch. Armed with this mystical might, he embarked on a series of conquests of nearby worlds, with his magic, and built a space empire using the technological might of the worlds he conquered combined with his sorcery (for example, just before a space battle every weapon in the enemy fleets would jam). This combination proved unstoppable, and he conquered over half the galaxy in short order, establishing a tyrannical grip. In these days he also came to be called the "Dark Lord." The worlds which remained outside his grasp lived in fear. Then at some point, it seemed his power, which had scaled upwards astronomically, wavered. He no longer conquered worlds wholesale, but instead picked and chose carefully, "as if selecting baubles from a jewelers tray." One of the key worlds outside his grasp was earth. | N/A |
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DC | Adventure Comics #369 (June, 1968) | 500,000 Studs | ||
Morgan Edge | Morgan Edge (born Morris Edelstein) was the president of the Galaxy Broadcasting System, (owners of television station WGBS), the media corporation which eventually once bought the Daily Planet. Edge was in many ways a stereotype of a ruthless capitalist, intervening in the Planet's homey atmosphere and challenging the authority of the somewhat older Perry White, but he was a decent man who had moments of good-heartedness and maintained reasonably friendly relationships with most of his employees, including Clark Kent. Following the takeover of the Planet, Edge promoted Kent to news anchorman on WGBS, a move which added several TV co-workers to the Superman supporting cast, including fretful producer Josh Coyle, sports broadcaster Steve Lombard, weather forecaster Oscar Asherman, and co-anchor Lana Lang (who had been one of Clark's childhood friends in Smallville). As one of the wealthiest men in Metropolis, Edge was a major political figure in the city and frequently encountered Superman, the subject of many of his network's news stories, whom he, like most others, failed to realize was also Clark Kent. | N/A | N/A | Marvel | Superman’s Pal, Jimmy Olsen #133 (October, 1970) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Murmur (Michael Christian Amar) |
Surgical Blades | N/A | DC | Supergirl Vol. 4 #44 (June, 1999) (Murmur alias with demon of same name); Flash: Iron Heights (August, 2001) (Michael Amar) |
300,000 Studs | |||
Mystique (Raven Darkholme) |
Guns |
|
Marvel | Ms. Marvel #16 (April, 1978) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Nebula |
|
Marvel | 300,000 Studs (each variation) | |||||
Nekron | Black Lantern Power Battery-implanted Scythe |
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DC | Tales of the Green Lantern Corps #2 (June, 1981) | 450,000 Studs | |||
Neutron (Nathaniel Tryon) |
Nathaniel Tryon was originally a member of a gang of saboteurs known as the TNT Trio. While on a mission for their employer Lex Luthor, Tryon was trapped under lead debris at a nuclear power plant as a meltdown occurred. Abandoned by his two comrades and unspotted by Superman, whose X-ray vision was incapable of penetrating lead, Tryon was mutated by the leaking radiation. Using every iota of his strength to save himself and make his way back to Luthor's headquarters, Tryon was subsequently given week-long radiation treatments by Luthor in order to transform him into a super-powered pawn against Superman. However, this scheme never came to be, and Tryon gradually found himself reduced to an energy being contained within a suit of Luthor's construction. As the villain Neutron, Tryon blamed Superman for his mutation and battled him several times. | N/A |
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DC | Action Comics #525 (November, 1981) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Nightcrawler (Kurt Wagner) |
Sword |
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Marvel | Giant Size X-Men #1 (May, 1975) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Nightmare | N/A |
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Marvel | Strange Tales #110 (July, 1963) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Nightshade (Eve Eden) |
Eve Eden is Nightshade, a superhero with the ability to manipulate darkness. This includes the ability to become a living shadow, and the ability to open portals anywhere by traveling through a shadow dimension. Her powers are mystical in nature, tied to an otherworldly realm where she was born a princess. In addition to this, she is an extremely skilled martial artist. | N/A |
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DC | World's Finest #6 (June, 1942) (Nightshade alias with Ramulus); Captain Atom (Charlton) #82 (September, 1966) (Eve Eden) |
350,000 Studs | ||
Nitro (Robert L. Hunter) |
Robert Hunter was born in Scranton, Pennsylvania. He was an electrical engineer. Due to genetic alteration carried out on him by the Kree Lunatic Legion, Robert gained the ability to explode and reform himself at will and became a professional criminal. Some time later, he exposed Captain Marvel to a carcinogenic nerve gas; this encounter ultimately caused Captain Marvel's fatal cancer. Since then he has clashed with Earth's superhumans, who have found creative ways to defeat him, including using the "fractioning (separation) of his exploded mass" against him (essentially, if he can't reform himself after an explosion, he can't explode again). | N/A |
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Marvel | Captain Marvel #34 (September, 1966) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Non | Non was one of the most dangerous criminals on the planet Krypton, serving mostly as a strongman lackey for General Zod due to his lack of intelligence. He along with Ursa joined with Zod in an attempt to take over Krypton, only to be defeated and sentenced by the Council to eternal imprisonment in the Phantom Zone, where they would no longer be a threat to anyone. As the gateway to the Phantom Zone swallowed the three criminals into that world, Non pounded uselessly against the gateway in order to escape. | N/A |
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DC | Superman (December 10, 1978) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Nova (Richard Rider) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Nova #1 (September, 1976) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Nova (Samuel “Sam” Alexander) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Point One #1 (January, 2012) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Nuke (Frank Charles Simpson) |
Frank Simpson was a test subject of the Weapon Plus program, the supersoldier program that had created Captain America and would later have their Weapon X facility transform Wolverine into a killing machine. The enhancing and conditioning process went awry, leaving Nuke seriously deranged. | Submachine Gun |
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Marvel | Daredevil #232 (July, 1986) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Obsidian (Todd James Rice) |
N/A |
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DC | All-Star Squadron #25 (September, 1983) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Odin Borson | Gungnir |
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Marvel | Journey into Mystery #85 (October, 1962) | 500,000 Studs | |||
OMAC (One-Man Army Corps) (Buddy Blank) |
Buddy Blank was once a factory worker for a company named Pseudo-People, Inc. The Global Peace Agency selected him as a candidate for a program known as Project OMAC. The Global Peace Agency selected Buddy because of his ties to Pseudo-People, Inc., whom they suspected were carrying on illegal affairs. Doctor Myron Forest performed electronic surgery on Buddy, using computerized hormones that enabled Buddy to interface with the orbiting space satellite Brother Eye. The process imbued Buddy with great power, and he became the One-Man-Army-Corps known as OMAC. | N/A |
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DC | OMAC #1 (October, 1974) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Omega Red (Arkady Gregorivich Rossovich) |
Carbonadium Tenatcles |
|
Marvel | X-Men Vol. 2 #4 (January, 1992) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Onomatopoeia |
|
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DC | Green Arrow Vol. 3 #12 (March, 2002) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Orion | N/A |
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DC | New Gods #1 (March, 1971) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Overdrive | Overdrive had always wanted to be a superhero and despite a talent as a motorist, specifically race cars, he tried many different methods to become a superhero. When they all failed he tried to to start a normal life as a race car driver. After a horrible accident he was approached by Mr. Negative to become a member of his organization. He became a petty crook and a member of the Inner Demons who is able to transform and transmutate ordinary vehicles via special nanites. He would have a relatively successful heist when he adapted a motorcycle helmet to his costume just as he was fleeing Hercules, with the helmet on the demigod did not recognize him. Overdrive has worn this helmet and others like it as part of his costume ever since. | Blaster | Changes vehicle appearances to his motif via “nano-bacteria” | Marvel | Free Comic Book Day Vol. 2007 Spider-Man (July, 2007) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Owl (Leland Owlsley) |
Claw Gauntlets |
|
Marvel | Daredevil #3 (August, 1964) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Ox (Raymond Bloch) |
Raymond Bloch aka the Ox was a member of the criminal gang known as the Enforcers. Although he was very, strong he was never particularly bright. | N/A |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #10 (March, 1964) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Paladin | Paladin is a mercenary and private investigator, whose past is largely unrevealed. When first seen, he sought Daredevil while engaged in an assignment to track down the Purple Man, and battled Daredevil. He clashed with Daredevil a second time after the crime fighter inadvertently interfered with Paladin's search for the Purple Man. Paladin allied with Daredevil in battle against the Cobra, the Jester, and Mister Hyde, who were under control of the Purple Man. | Stun-Gun |
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Marvel | Daredevil #150 (January, 1978) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Parademon | Parademons are the personal shock troops of Darkseid of Apokolips. They are genetically created in Apokolips' laboratories and serve as his loyal army. Some Parademons are bred from human stock, culled from the lowly Hunger Dogs that reside in the Armagetto district of Apokolips. When Apokolips decides to mount an interplanetary invasion (usually Earth), he sends in waves of Parademons as the advance force. The Parademons have engaged in combat with several of Earth's super-heroes, notably the Justice League of America. | Blaster |
|
DC | New Gods #1 (March, 1971) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Patriot (Jeffrey Solomon Mace) |
Jeffrey Mace grew up on Yancy Street. He later became a reporter and correspondent for the New York Daily Bugle. When the United States entered World War II, inspired by Captain America and fervently patriotic, Mace began fighting crime and Nazi espionage under the costumed identity of the Patriot. | N/A |
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Marvel | Human Torch Comics #4 (March, 1941) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Patriot (Elijah “Eli” Bradley) |
|
|
DC | Young Avengers #1 (April, 2005) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Margaret “Peggy” Carter | Gun |
|
Marvel | Tales of Suspense #75 (March, 1966) (unidentified; obscure memory image) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Peotor | Peotor, an orangutan, was one of Ivan Kragoff's original Super-Apes which also included the gorilla Miklho, and the baboon Igor. These apes were trained to be obedient and follow the verbal commands of Kragoff. When Ivan sought to replicate the accident that gave the Fantastic Four their powers, he brought the apes along with him aboard his ship. As per his specifications, they were bombarded with even more Cosmic Rays than the Fantastic Four and were endowed with enhanced abilities. Peotor gained the power over magnetism. | N/A |
|
Marvel | Fantastic Four #13 (April, 1963) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Per Degaton | Per Degaton is a time-traveling supervillain and an enemy to the Justice Society. Having worked as a scientist during World War II, he learned the secrets of time travel, through the robot from the future, Mekanique. This ability allows him to exist independent to the Timestream. In addition to his powers he is also a highly skilled combatant, and a master strategist. | Pistol |
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DC | All-Star Comics #35 (June, 1947) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Perry White | Perry was born in Metropolis's Suicide Slum area, growing up with a father missing after heading off to war overseas. He became a copy boy at the Daily Planet, beginning a lifetime career that would take him up the newspaper's career ladder. Perry met Lex Luthor when they were children (Luthor also grew up in Suicide Slum) and they were actually friends then (Perry once admitted the he was really the only friend Lex had as a child). At some point when Perry was a young reporter, he went to a small southern town called Melonville to investigate a string of vicious racial related deaths. It was here Perry first met Franklin Stern, a young man about to head off for Harvard Business school, who had several missing family members in the region. Perry and Franklin got off to a rocky start, but soon joined together after Perry saved Franklin from a beating at the hands of the local Aryan Brotherhood. The two investigated the Brotherhood and rumors of genetic experimentation, which lead them to a hidden lair where the Brotherhood had kidnapped and murdered several dozen black men as part of a eugenics program to create a master race of super-men. For helping to expose the plot, Perry won his (first?) Pulitzer Prize in journalism. Ironically enough, the title of the article was "Superman Plot Foiled." Perry and Franklin were often on opposite sides of the political spectrum, but would remain friends, even after Stern bought the Daily Planet years later. | N/A | N/A | DC | Superman #7 (November, 1940) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Phantom Rider (Carter Slade) |
Pistols |
|
Marvel | Ghost Rider #1 (February, 1967) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Phantom Stranger | N/A |
|
DC | Phantom Stranger #1 (August, 1952) | 500,000 Studs | |||
Philip "Phil" J. Coulson | Destroyer Cannon |
|
Marvel | Iron Man (April 30, 2008) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Pied Piper (Hartley Rathaway) |
Flute |
|
DC | The Flash #106 (May, 1959) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Piledriver (Brian Philip Calusky) |
Brian Philip Calusky, though born in Brooklyn, NY, was raised on a farm and eventually became a farmhand. Life on the farm was too slow for Calusky and he decided to enter a life of crime for excitement. His criminal activities eventually landed him in prison, where he met and became cellmates with Dirk Garthwaite, who was known as the Wrecker. Garthwaite, together with Calusky and two other inmates at Ryker's Island Prison, Dr. Eliot Franklin and Henry Camp, made a successful jailbreak and managed to locate his crowbar. Willing to share his power with his allies, the Wrecker had the three other convicts join him in holding onto the crowbar outside during an electrical storm. Lightning struck the crowbar, magically distributing the enchanted strength bestowed upon the Wrecker among the four of them. The Wrecker's three allies then adopted costumes and aliases as well: Franklin became Thunderball, Camp became Bulldozer, and Brian Philip Calusky became Piledriver. As a result of his new-found powers, his hands became over-sized in proportion to his body. Together the four superhumanly strong criminals became known as the Wrecking Crew, who were led by the Wrecker himself. | N/A |
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Marvel | Defenders #17 (November, 1974) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Plasmus (Otto von Furth) |
Otto von Furth was a German miner when a cave-in trapped him and his fellow miners for several days. They had been mining highly radioactive radium, and everyone but Otto succumbed to radiation poisoning. Otto was rescued and taken to a local hospital, but he was soon kidnapped by ex-Nazi General Zahl. Zahl performed experiments on Otto's radioactive body, resulting in Otto being mutated into a barely sentient being of protoplasm. | N/A |
|
DC | New Teen Titans #14 (December, 1981) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Plastique (Bette Sans Souci) |
Plastique was a Canadian political activist and terrorist with the ability to generate explosive blasts. This made her an enemy to heroes like Captain Atom and Firestorm, but she has also worked on the side of heroes at times. | N/A |
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DC | Firestorm Vol. 2 #7 (December, 1982) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Platinum | Platinum is a liquid metal robot made of platinum with almost limitless shape shifting abilities. She was designed by Dr. William Magnus a brilliant robotic expert along with along with five other robots: Gold, Mercury, Iron, Tin and Lead. These robots were known as the Metal Men. Together, Platinum and the Metal Men embarked on a variety of adventures, their specialty fighting monsters spawned from weird science. Though the Metal Men were repeatedly destroyed, Magnus was always able to rebuild them. Platinum was often referred to as "Tina" and was infatuated with Dr. Magnus, who never reciprocated her affections. Dr. Magnus tells her she has a faulty Responsometer which he believes makes her act like a real human woman. Her personality is very fiery and tempestuous and she gets very jealous whenever Doc has a date and will happily try to split them up and get his attention back to her. She has a personality clash with Mercury, the other hot head of the Metal Men. | N/A |
|
DC | Showcase #37 (April, 1962) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Polka Dot Man (Abner Krill) |
Abner Krill decided, for reasons unknown, to launch a crime wave based on spots and dots in Gotham City, where he inevitably came into conflict with Batman and Robin, the city's masked protectors. | Dots |
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DC | Detective Comics #300 (February, 1962) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Praying Mantis Man (Hunter Mann) |
Dr. Hunter Mann is an entomologist whose skin turned green from prolonged exposure to chlorophyll compounds, gained the power to fly, an invulnerable exoskeleton, and the power to paralyze people with his stare, along with the power to control enlarged deadly creatures. | N/A |
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DC | Blue Beetle (Charlton) Vol. 2 #4 (January, 1965) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Professor Ivo (Anthony Ives (Anthony Ivo)) |
Professor Ivo is a mad scientist and an enemy to the Justice League. His obsession with prolonging life lead to a career in cybernetics, and he achieved immortality through a special serum. This had the unfortunate side effect of giving him a monstrous appearance, because he used turtle DNA. The most famous robots he created include Amazo and Tomorrow Woman. | N/A |
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DC | Brave and the Bold #30 (July, 1960) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Professor Pyg (Lazlo Valentin) |
Scalpel | N/A | DC | Batman #666 (July, 2007) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Prysm (Audrey Spears) |
An alien race known as the H'San Natall initiated a plan to seed the planet Earth with super-powered sleeper agents. To this end, they inseminated human women with alien DNA to genetically breed a child who would develop superhuman powers, but also be able to coexist with humanity. While most of these subjects were left on Earth to be raised by their parents, Audrey was instead raised on the moon of Titan. The H'San Natall enslaved a group of Psion scientists to monitor Audrey's progress. From infancy, she was placed inside of a sensory deprivation suit and secured in a containment tube. Her conscious mind was developed through a virtual reality simulation based upon Earth fairy tales and a bevy of 1950s American sitcoms such as Leave It to Beaver and Father Knows Best. In this environment she was known solely as "Princess". | N/A |
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DC | Teen Titans Vol. 2 #1 (October, 1996) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Psimon (Simon Jones) |
Dr. Simon Jones, alias Psimon was working on experiments in contacting other dimensions when he was contacted in turn by the demon Trigon the Terrible, the father of Teen Titan Raven. Trigon used his abilities to transform Jones into a powerful psychic with telepathic and telekinetic powers, and told him to destroy the Earth. | N/A |
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DC | New Teen Titans #3 (January, 1986) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Psylocke (Elizabeth “Betsy” Braddock) |
Telekinetic Blade |
|
Marvel | Captain Britain #8 (December, 1976) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Puck (Eugene Milton Judd) |
Born in 1914, Eugene Milton Judd was both a giant of a man and an incredible athlete. He became a mercenary seeking the Black Blade of Baghdad. Upon claiming it, he was attacked by the being known as Black Raazer that possessed the blade. The spirit of Black Raazer lengthened Judd's lifespan, but also caused him great pain and to become much shorter. udd continued to travel the world. It is known that he met the author Ernest Hemingway in Spain. He is also very familiar with Wolverine and the Black Widow (Natasha Romanoff). He met Modred the Mystic while battling the Brass Bishop. Years later, Guardian had him released from jail and offered membership in Alpha Flight. He agreed and took the name of Puck. | N/A |
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Marvel | Alpha Flight #1 (August, 1983) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Punisher (Frank G. Castle) |
Rifle |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #129 (February, 1974) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Purple Man (Zebediah Killgrave) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Daredevil #4 (October, 1964) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Pyro (St. John Allerdyce) |
Flamethrower Gauntlets |
|
Marvel | X-Men #141 (January, 1981) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Quake (Daisy Louise Johnson) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Secret War #2 (July, 2004) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Quasar (Wendell Elvis Vaughn) |
Quantum Bands |
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Marvel | Captain America #217 (January, 1978) (as Marvel Boy) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Quasar (Phyla-Vell) |
After Genis-Vell, then known as Captain Marvel, once destroyed and recreated the universe, the "new" version was subtly altered with Phyla-Vell's existence being one of the changes. Phyla-Vell was the second artificially created offspring of Captain Mar-Vell who was created by her mother Elysius in the "new" universe because her first attempt (Genis-Vell) had been so successful. During Annihilation, Phyla had been visiting her father's grave with Moondragon when the pair were attacked by Thanos who ripped off Moondragon's ear and gave it to Phyla, telling her to go to Drax the Destroyer and how his actions would determine Moondragon's fate, shortly before teleporting away with Moondragon. Drax indicated he would not stop his pursuit of Thanos. Phyla then went with Nova and Star-Lord to lead a final battle against Annihilus, being saved at the last second by a massive energy wave caused by the just freed Galactus, which left only the three heroes and Annihilus as survivors. Ultimately in the battle, Phyla managed to steal away the Quantum Bands that Annihilus took from Quasar, weakening him and allowing Nova to finally bring an end to the Annihilation Wave. She was then seen reunited with Moondragon, and deciding it was up to her to become the new Quasar. | Quantum Bands |
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Marvel | Captain Marvel Vol. 5 #5 (January, 2004) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Queen Bee (Zazzala) |
The leader of the hive-world Korll, Zazzala lives only for the interstellar expansion of her species. She clashed frequently with the Justice League of America during their early adventures. | Stinger Gun Gauntlet |
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DC | Action Comics #42 (November, 1941) (Queen Bee alias with Lissa Raven); Justice League of America #23 (November, 1963) (Zazzala) |
350,000 Studs | ||
Question (Charles "Charlie" Victor Szasz) |
N/A |
|
DC | Blue Beetle (Charlton) Vol. 5 #1 (June, 1967) (real name Vic Sage); Blue Beetle (DC) #4 (September, 1986) (modern incarnation) |
300,000 Studs | |||
Question (Renee Maria Montoya) |
N/A |
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DC | Batman #475 (March, 1992) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Rachel "Ray" Anne Summers | Rachel Anne Summers is the mutant daughter of Scott Summers and Phoenix (Jean Grey-Summers) in the Days of Future Past timeline. According to Rachel, Jean Grey from her reality mirrored the modern era Jean Grey, but when this Jean was captured by Sentinels and piloted a spacecraft back to Earth, the Phoenix Force bonded with her, instead of placing her in a cocoon and replacing her. Another notable difference was when Jean/Phoenix returned to the home of her parents and, driven by Dark Phoenix's rage, demonstrated her powers in front of them, her father realized that, as a telepath, Jean could feel the subconscious fear that her parents and sister felt in her presence and, realizing that this was causing her pain that she could not block out, chose not to cast her out, as he did in the modern era. As a result, Phoenix did not commit suicide after the Shi'ar duel of honor (as she had in the modern era). Instead, Jean married Scott and had a single child, whom they named Rachel Anne Summers. Being born from the Phoenix Force merging with Jean, Rachel inherited both her mother's potential for telepathic and telekinetic powers and the ability to tap into the limitless power of the Phoenix Force. | N/A |
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Marvel | X-Men #141 (January, 1981) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Radioactive Man (Chen Lu) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Journey into Mystery #93 (June, 1963) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Rag Doll (Peter Merkel, Jr.) |
The son of the original Ragdoll, Peter Merkel, Sr., not much is known about Peter Merkel, Jr.'s early life, but given that his father was a sociopath and a cult leader, his was probably not the most conventional of families. He indicates that his father was abusive due to disappointment at his not being born double-jointed. He has a sister, an extremely brutal (and insane) crime lord who goes by the name Junior. It appears that their relationship was incestuous. At some point he began thinking about having his bones altered to mimic double-jointedness. When Peter reached adulthood, he began having his joints replaced one by one with fully-rotating, self-lubricating prosthetics. After twelve years and hundreds of surgeries, he achieved a level of flexibility that his father could only dream about. Needless to say, the original Ragdoll didn't like the competition. | N/A |
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DC | Flash Comics #36 (December, 1942) (Rag Doll alias with Peter Merkel, Sr.); Villains United #1 (July, 2005) (Peter Merkel, Jr.) |
300,000 Studs | ||
Ragman (Rory Regan) |
N/A |
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DC | Ragman #1 (September, 1976) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Ragnarok | ”Mjolnir” |
|
DC | Civil War #3 (September, 2006) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Rattler (Gustav Krueger) |
Hailing from Poland, Gustav Krueger was given a bionic tail which he uses to create shock waves and vibrations. The details and motivations of this are unclear. | Bionic tail |
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Marvel | Captain America #310 (October, 1985) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Raven | N/A |
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DC | DC Comics Presents #26 (October, 1980) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Razer | A soldier on his homeworld, Razer was part of a band of militiamen seeking to oust the corrupt warlords who periodically raided their villages. One day, Razer returned home from battle to discover his beloved Ilana had been murdered while he'd been away. Overcome with grief and self-loathing, Razer could not resist the power of the Red Power Ring that found him and was inducted into the Red Lantern Corps. Razer rose quickly, some might say too quickly, through the ranks of the Red Lanterns and soon held a place of honor at Atrocitus' side alongside Bleez and Zilius Zox. | Red Lantern Power Ring |
|
DC | Green Lantern: The Animated Series Episode 1 (November 11, 2011) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Roy Harper is a superhero who has gone by the names Speedy, Arsenal and Red Arrow. He is a highly trained weapons expert and martial artist, specializing in archery. Roy grew up on a Navajo reservation where he learned to shoot, after his father died in an accident. Originally he was the sidekick of Green Arrow, but quit over personal issues, and had a long struggle against a heroin addiction. Later on he would become a government agent for many years, although as an adult he would return to being a superhero. His brief relationship with the supervillain Cheshire made him the father of a young girl named Lian Harper. | Bow |
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DC | More Fun Comics #73 (November, 1941) Kingdom Come #2 (August, 1996); |
300,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
Red Ghost (Ivan Kragoff) |
Ivan Kragoff was born in Leningrad, in what was at the time the Soviet Union. Before becoming the Red Ghost, Ivan was a Soviet scientist bent on beating the Americans to the moon and claiming it for the Communist empire. He assembled a crew of three trained primates — Miklho the gorilla, Igor the baboon, and Peotor the orangutan — which he subjected to specialized training regimens of his own design, then took off on his lunar rocket trip on behalf of the USSR, while at the same time, the Fantastic Four were aiming their own rocket for the same destination. Kragoff knew enough of the Fantastic Four's history, and he purposefully designed his rocket in such a way that he and his crew would be heavily exposed to the cosmic rays that would, he expected, give them superpowers. This was successful: Kragoff gained the ability to become as intangible and invisible as a "ghost", Miklho became superhumanly strong and durable, Igor gained the ability to shapeshift and could transform into nearly anything, and Peotor magnetokinesis. | N/A | *Pass through grates *Computer Hacking |
Marvel | Fantastic Four #13 (April, 1963) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Red Hulk (Thaddeus "Thunderbolt" E. Ross) |
Pistol (mini fig) |
|
Marvel | Incredible Hulk #1 (May, 1962) | 400,000 Studs | |||
N/A |
Marvel | Incredible Hulk #1 (May, 1962) | ||||||
Red Tornado (Abigail "Ma" Mathilda Hunkel) |
Ma Hunkel is the original Red Tornado, a Golden Age female superhero. Inspired by her son's admiration of Green Lantern Alan Scott, the working-class mother turned to crime-fighting in New York City with a make-shift costume. The bucket worn over her head helps conceal her identity and make most criminals think she's a man, due to her surprising strength. Her sidekicks were the Cyclone Kids, and her granddaughter went on to become Cyclone. She has been an honorary member of the Justice Society, and in her later years became their caretaker. | N/A | N/A | DC | All-American Comics #3 (June, 1939) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Richard "Rick" Flag, Jr. (Anthony Miller) |
Rifle |
|
DC | Brave and the Bold #25 (September, 1959) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Laser Gun | N/A | DC | Showcase #20 (June, 1959) (as Ripley Hunter) Legends of Tomorrow Episode 1 (January 21, 2016) |
300,000 Studs (each variation) | ||||
Risk (Cody Driscoll) |
Risk is Cody Driscoll, a superhero and member of the Teen Titans. He was part of the team of Titans lead by the Atom (Ray Palmer) who were all manipulated by the aliens known as the H'San Natall, also including Argent, Prysm, and Hot Spot. His powers include increased strength, reflexes, speed, and durability. | N/A |
|
DC | Teen Titans Vol. 2 #1 (October, 1996) | 350,000 Studs | ||
The Rival (Edward Clariss) |
Edward Clariss was a metahuman speedster, during both the "Flashpoint" timeline and the current timeline. Named by the public as the Rival, he acted as the archenemy of the Flash (Wally West) in the Flashpoint timeline and was ultimately defeated thanks to the joint efforts of Barry Allen, Wally West and Joe West, guided by the other members of Team Flash. In the current timeline, Clariss, having flashbacks to the Flashpoint timeline, met with Alchemy, who gave him the same powerset and costume he wore in that timeline, sending him to kill Barry. |
N/A | DC | 400,000 Studs (each variation) | ||||
Robin (Damian Wayne) |
N/A | Birdarangs |
|
DC | Batman: Son of the Demon (September, 1987) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Rocket (Raquel Ervin) |
Inertia Belt |
|
DC | Icon #1 (May, 1993) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Rogue (Anna Marie) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Avengers Annual #10 (October, 1981) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Romat-Ru | Romat-Ru is the most vile serial killer in Xudar's history, responsible for the deaths of thousands of children. He was sentenced to life in prison, but during the transport to jail, he was recruited by a Yellow Lantern Power Ring and joined the Sinestro Corps. | Yellow Lantern Power Ring |
|
DC | Green Lantern: Sinestro Corps Special (August, 2007) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Ronan the Accuser | Universal Weapon |
|
Marvel | |||||
Saint Walker (Bro'Dee Walker) |
Blue Lantern Power Ring |
|
DC | Green Lantern Vol. 4 #25 (January, 2008) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Salaak | Salakk, later changed to the spelling Salaak, is an alien super-hero known as Green Lantern and a member of the Green Lantern Corps. The Guardians of the Universe gave them a power ring fueled by willpower to protect Space Sector 0. His home planet is Slyggia. He is known for being a pedantic bureaucrat and oversees many of the administrative duties on the Green Lantern homeworld Oa. | Green Lantern Power Ring |
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DC | Green Lantern Vol. 2 #149 (February, 1982) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Sandman (Wesley Bernard Dodds) |
Gas Gun |
|
DC | New York World's Fair Comics #1 (April, 1939) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Sasquatch (Walter Langkowski) |
N/A |
|
DC | X-Men #120 (April, 1979) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Satana Hellstrom | Satana Hellstrom was born a couple years after her brother Daimon. When she was still a child, her mother Victoria Hellstrom discovered her husband and Satana performing a black magic ritual in the basement of their New England mansion. Victoria went mad upon witnessing her husband's transformation and died soon afterward. Daimon was placed in an orphanage, and Satana was taken to "Hell" to be trained in the use of her demonic powers. Satana was possessed by a powerful demon called the Basilisk. Satana remained in full control of her mind and body, however, and the Basilisk had to do her bidding when she released it from her body. However, she became aware that the more she used the Basilisk to serve her ends, the stronger it grew, and that it might one day turn against her. Satana was sent to Earth, where she continually needed to feed on souls. | N/A |
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DC | Vampire Tales #2 (October, 1973) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Savitar | N/A | DC | 400,000 Studs (each variation) | |||||
Scandal Savage | Scandal Savage is the daughter of immortal villain Vandal Savage and an unknown Brazilian woman, who apparently raised the child in her home country. | Lamentation Blades |
|
DC | Villains United #1 (July, 2005) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Scarecrow (Ebenezer Laughton) |
Born in Rhineback, New York, Ebenezer Laughton was raised by an alcoholic mother who beat him viciously and would be rewarded afterwards when his mother's guilt drove her to give him presents. Learning that rewards followed punishment, Ebenezer began deliberately misbehaving to receive beatings. Laughton was a naturally flexible, lithe, double-jointed youth who saw a "rubber man" perform at a traveling carnival and became obsessed with emulating him. Training himself almost incessantly, Laughton learned to twist and bend his body into numerous unusual positions and perform various acrobatic stunts. Growing into a socially stunted young man, the abnormally flexible and agile Ebenezer worked as sideshow "rubberman" Umberto the Uncanny. A brief audition of his abilities gained him a job at a live variety show. During one of his performances, Iron Man entered the theater in pursuit of a criminal whom he observed robbing the ticket vendor outside. Seeking publicity, Laughton stopped the thief with a simple acrobatic move. As Iron Man carried the criminal away, Laughton realized the criminal potential of his abilities. Laughton stole a flock of trained birds from a fellow performer to assist him in his new costumed criminal guise as the Scarecrow. It was revealed in Iron Man: Enter the Mandarin that Laughton was motivated in part to become a supervillain by agents of the Mandarin who supplied him with his first costume and trained crows. He was allured by the idea of standing out in the growing field of industrial espionage. | Pitchfork |
|
Marvel | Tales of Suspense #51 (March, 1964) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Scarlet Spider (Ben Reilly) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #149 (October, 1975) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Scavenger (Peter Mortimer) |
Peter Mortimer was a deep-sea diver and pirate who called himself the Scavenger. Dressed in a specially-designed diving suit, he plundered the ocean waves, scavenging for valuables from sunken ships. He operated out of an advanced submersible vessel called the Scorpion-Ship. At some point in Mortimer's past, he had an alliance, possibly even a partnership with the Ocean Master, but the nature of this relationship has never been expanded upon, save to say that neither man had any real loyalty to the other. | Blaster |
|
DC | Aquaman #37 (January, 1968) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Sebastian Hiram Shaw | Sebastian Shaw's powers first manifested shortly after he was accepted to engineering school and his father died, when he was beaten by some rednecks in a bar. Shaw devoted himself to his studies and created Shaw Industries, becoming a billionaire by the age of 40. Shaw fell in love with a woman named Lourdes Chantel, and was soon initiated into the Hellfire Club along with Warren Worthington Jr., Howard Stark and John Braddock. Soon, Shaw rose to the position of Black King, and gathered mutant associates to his side, including Emma Frost and Tessa. Unfortunately, Chantel was soon killed by Sentinels in a battle. Upon discovering that Ned Buckman, the White King of the Inner Circle, was supporting Stephen Lang's Project: Armageddon and its Sentinels, Shaw executed a coup, using Emma's telepathy to make Buckman kill his own White Queen and then himself. Shaw then appointed himself Black King, and his associate Frost as White Queen of the Hellfire Club. As the leader of the Inner Circle of the Hellfire Club, Shaw started plans to dominate the world through force, money and power. His connections to top officials of corporations and government, acquired via the club and through his position as CEO of Shaw Industries, made him a powerful enemy. Ironically, Shaw was for years a major supporter and builder of Sentinels, figuring that it was better to be in control of them than not. This activity brought him into frequent contact with Senator Robert Kelly and Henry Gyrich, to whom he appeared to be an anti-mutant human bigot. | N/A |
|
Marvel | X-Men #129 (January, 1980) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Selene Gallio | Considered to secretly be the very first human mutant or at least the oldest living by those-in-the-know, Selene's millennia-long life is attributed to the fact that she is a 'psychic vampire,' able to drain lives of others in order to extend her own. Her name derives from the ancient lunar deity Selene, daughter of the Titans Hyperion and Theia. Claiming to have already been old when modern mankind was just emerging, Selene was born over 17,000 years ago somewhere in what is now Central Europe, "after the Oceans swallowed Atlantis and before the rise of the Aryas". Her tribe's elders recognized her for what she was and commanded the entire tribe, including her own mother, to sacrifice their lives to feed her. In modern times, Selene would eventually become an enemy to the X-Men, even joining the Hellfire Club's Inner Circle as the Black Queen. | N/A |
|
Marvel | New Mutants #9 (November, 1983) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Senator Robert Edward Kelly | As member of the U.S. Senate, Robert Kelly long regarded the growing number of mutants as a threat to national security. To cope with this supposed danger, he promoted legislation such as the Mutant Registration Act, requiring those with powers of genetic origin to disclose their abilities to the government. This proposal prompted the second Brotherhood to attempt to assassinate Kelly in Washington, D.C. The Brotherhood did not succeed, thanks to the intervention of the X-Men. The failed assassination attempt fueled the Senator's resolve to pass the Registration Act. | N/A | N/A | Marvel | X-Men #133 (May, 1980) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Sentinel | In 1973, Mystique assassinated Bolivar Trask but is captured by William Stryker soon after. Trask then became a martyr as development of the Sentinels was implemented. Using Mystique and Rogue's DNA, the Sentinels evolved to adapt and counter any mutant ability. Fifty years later, the world had become dystopian, laid to ruin by the Sentinels who oppress mutants as well as humans who harbor the genes that lead to mutant offspring. The "worst of the worst" of humanity rules the world, while mutants are either imprisoned or killed along with the humans who sided with them. |
N/A |
|
Marvel | 400,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
Sentry | N/A |
|
Marvel | Sentry #1 (September, 2000) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Serifan | Serifan is one of the good New Gods of New Genesis lead by Highfather. He is also a member of the Forever People, a group of young adventurers who oppose Darkseid on Earth with the help of Infinity Man. His special power is limited telepathy, and he also carries "cosmic cartridges" that serve a variety of purposes. His attire is based on his love for the American "old west". | Pistol |
|
DC | Forever People #1 (March, 1971) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Shade (Richard "Dickie" Swift) |
Cane-Sword |
|
DC | Flash Comics #33 (September, 1942) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Shadow Thief (Carl Sands) |
While growing up in Japan, American Carl Sands learned ninjutsu techniques and became a rather undistinguished industrial saboteur, accepting unremarkable sums to hinder and eliminate his clients' rivals. He then became a career criminal who was conducting experiments on shadow projection while in jail. Because his shadow betrayed him to a policeman while he was robbing the safe in a store at night, he was trying to make his shadow work for him. The experiments allowed him to make contact with an alien explorer named Thar Dan from the Xarapion dimension. In return for saving the creature's life, Sands was given a device known as a Dimensiometer and a pair of ebony gloves that allows him to hold objects while in shadow form. | N/A |
|
DC | Brave and the Bold #36 (July, 1961) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Shadowcat (Katherine "Kitty" Anne Pryde) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | X-Men #129 (January, 1980) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Shang-Chi | N/A |
|
Marvel | Special Marvel Edition #15 (December, 1973) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Shark (Gunther Hardwicke) |
Gunther Hardwicke along with two of his colleagues, Warren Lawford and Armand Lydecker, banded together and formed the criminal group known as the Terrible Trio. Each of them wore business suits accompanied by masks suggestive of their personality and/or specified talents. Hardwicke became the Shark, for his special abilities and knowledge about underwater operations. | *Pistol *Crowbar |
N/A | DC | Detective Comics #253 (March, 1958) | 250,000 Studs | ||
The Shark | The explosion of an experimental atomic pile bombarded a prowling tiger shark with radiation. Millions of years of evolution occurred in a matter of minutes. The Shark now possessed incredible mental powers, including matter manipulation and powerful energy bolts. With his mind reading ability he absorbed vast knowledge from the people around him. He found he could project fear in anyone he chose. The Shark was still motivated by one driving force, to seek prey. | Claws |
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DC | Green Lantern Vol. 2 #24 (October, 1963) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Sharon Carter is the daughter of Harrison and Amanda Carter, two wealthy Virginians, and the niece of Margaret "Peggy" Carter, a heroic freedom fighter during World War II who had shared many adventures with the great hero Captain America before his supposed death at the end of the war. When Peggy returned home in need of hospitalization from traumatic shell-shock, she told her niece many stories about Captain America. Inspired by these tales and her own aunt's exploits, Sharon decided to become an agent of S.H.I.E.L.D., the international espionage agency. On her first major assignment, Sharon Carter, codenamed Agent 13, was chosen to pick up a cylinder containing the powerful explosive called Inferno-42 from a S.H.I.E.L.D. agent who had stolen it from THEM, the governing body of the subversive organization Hydra. By coincidence, Captain America, in his secret identity of Steve Rogers, saw Carter on her way to receive the cylinder and was struck by her close resemblance to her aunt Peggy. However, Rogers had no idea who Sharon Carter was, having known Peggy only by her cover identity. | Gun | Marvel | Tales of Suspense #75 (March, 1966) Captain America: The Winter Soldier (March 26, 2014) |
300,000 Studs (each variation) | ||||
Shazam, Jr. (Frederick "Freddy" Christopher Freeman) |
N/A |
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DC | Whiz Comics #25 (December, 1941) | 400,000 Studs | |||
S.H.I.E.L.D. Agent | The guys who provide security and ground forces for the world's foremost peacekeeping force. | Gun |
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Marvel | Strange Tales #135 (August, 1965) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Shimmer (Selinda Flinders) |
Selinda Flinders and her brother Baran Flinders are natives of Australia. They were teased by their fellow classmates for being different. As children, they both used their powers to fight their tormentors. Because of this, they were driven out of town by the angry and frightened parents. Selinda and Baran's parents sent them off to the country of Markovia, where they were put in the care of scientist Dr. Helga Jace. While Dr. Jace tried to teach the young mutants a sense of morality, the two instead turned to a life of crime. As Shimmer, Selinda was one of the founding members of the Fearsome Five, which she joined after answering an advert placed in the Underworld Star by Doctor Light. Shimmer is a metahuman with ability to transmute any element or compound into any other. | N/A |
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DC | New Teen Titans #3 (January, 1981) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Shining Knight (Justin Arthur) |
Sir Justin, alias the Shining Knight's career as a hero began in the 6th Century when he rode to Camelot, hoping to become a Knight of the Round Table. On the way there, he happened to rescue an old man from peril. The old man turned out to be Merlin, the famed court magician to King Arthur, and in gratitude, the old wizard enchanted Sir Justin's equipment, enabling his sword to cut through almost any kind of matter, rendering his armor nearly impervious to any kind of damage, and bestowing wings upon his horse, Victory. With these advantages, Sir Justin easily gained a place at the Round Table and served quite well, up until he was sent northward to fight an ogre. During that ill-fated battle, both Justin and the ogre fell into an icy crevasse. Unable to escape, Sir Justin was frozen for over 1300 years. He was eventually thawed, and continued to carry out his duties as a hero. | Enchanted Sword |
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DC | Adventure Comics #66 (September, 1941) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Shocker (Herman Schultz) |
Vibro-Shock Gauntlets |
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Marvel | Miss America Magazine #2 (November, 1944) (Shocker alias with Dalt Kendall); Amazing Spider-Man #46 (March, 1967) (Herman Schultz) |
300,000 Studs | |||
Shockwave (Lancaster Sneed) |
Lancaster Sneed was born in Newcastle, United Kingdom. He was the nephew of Sir Denis Nayland Smith and became an agent for MI6. During a mission in Africa, he suffered severe injuries to his face. Instead of utilizing plastic surgery, Sneed had himself rebuilt using metal plates. However, the doctors at MI-6 considered him mentally unfit to resume service and he was discharged. He studied martial arts and became a circus performer, calling himself Shockwave. | N/A |
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Marvel | Master of Kung Fu #42 (July, 1976) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Sidewinder (Seth Voelker) |
Voelker was born in Kenosha, Wisconsin and grew up to become an economics professor. He failed to make tenure and was hired by the Roxxon Oil Company as an economic analyst. He discovered their criminal schemes and they permitted him to join, and outfitted him with a cloak that had teleportation powers as part of their Serpent Squad. | N/A |
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Marvel | Marvel Two-In-One #64 (June, 1980) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Sif |
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Marvel | Journey into Mystery #102 (March, 1964) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Silk (Cindy Moon) |
Claws |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man Vol 3 #1 (June, 2014) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Silver Banshee (Siobhan McDougal) |
Siobhan McDougal was the first-born child of Garrett McDougal, the patriarch of an old Gaelic clan that has occupied an island midway between Scotland and Ireland for a thousand generations. On that island is Castle Broen, where first-born McDougals undergo a ritual to prove themselves worthy to lead the clan. When Siobhan was young, she traveled the world, only returning to Castle Broen when she heard of her father's death. Her uncle Seamus determined that no woman would lead the clan and intended her brother Bevan to become the new patriarch. She went ahead with the family ritual by herself, which involved calling on supernatural forces for power. She was interrupted by Bevan, and the distraction proved disastrous as she was dragged away into an infernal netherworld. An entity called "the Crone" granted her powers and the ability to return to Earth as the Silver Banshee, but demanded payment in the form of an occult book that belonged to her father. She found that her father's book collection had been shipped off for sale in the United States. | N/A |
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DC | Action Comics #595 (December, 1987) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Silver Samurai (Keniuchio Harada) |
Kenuichio Harada is the illegitimate son of Shingen Yashida. He is a Japanese mutant who uses his powers to charge his katana. His powers and his samurai-style armor made of a silvery metal led to the moniker Silver Samurai. He has had a fierce rivalry with the mutant superhero Wolverine. | Muramasa Blade |
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Marvel | Daredevil #111 (July, 1974) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Silver Surfer (Norrin Radd) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #48 (March, 1966) | 450,000 Studs | |||
Sin (Sinthea Schmidt) |
Sinthea "Sin" Schmidt is the daughter of the Red Skull. Seeking a male heir, the Red Skull fathered a daughter with a washerwoman. The woman died in childbirth, and the Red Skull almost killed the child, angry that it was a girl and not the boy he expected. One of his followers, Susan Scarbo, convinced him not to, telling him she would raise the girl herself as her nanny. The Skull agreed and left the girl (now named Sinthea) to be raised by Scarbo, who indoctrinated her with the Skull's views as she grew up. The Skull returned when Sinthea was a child and put her in a special machine that accelerated her aging process until she was an adult. | Gun |
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Marvel | Captain America #290 (February, 1984) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Skaar | Broadsword |
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Marvel | World War Hulk #5 (January, 2008) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Solovar | King Solovar is the benevolent simian monarch of Gorilla City, and an ally to the Flash Family. He is the leader to a race of super-intelligent gorillas, and also an expert combatant. His greatest nemesis is the diabolical Gorilla Grodd, who frequently struggles with him for control over their people. | N/A |
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DC | The Flash #106 (May, 1959) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Sonar (Bito Wladon) |
Nestled in the mountains of south eastern Europe lies the tiny Balkan nation of Modora. With a population of four hundred, Modora was relatively unknown to the rest of the world, whose only product was the wool of a peculiar brown sheep found only in that small area. It was not even a member of the United Nations. Modora was sealed off from the rest of the world by Fando the Mad, a leader who believed Modora should be frozen in its past. He burned bridges and barricaded roads to the outside world while making all decisions for his countrymen. One man, Bito Wladon, was determined to change that. Wladon's parents were deaf, which was a mark of Satan to the superstitious Modorans. By Modoran beliefs, they were not to be hurt or killed, they were to be shunned. Young Bito was a pariah as well, even though he could hear, he was the son of deaf parents. The cruel actions of his community built resentment towards his parents and the outside world. Bito Wladon would hide from the rest of the world in a barn, in which he one day discovered a cache of books, hidden by his peddler grandfather against the orders of Fando. Bito Wladon became an apprentice to a clockmaker, while he secretly embarked on a brilliant career working on the mastery of sound. By using an invention of his, the "nucleo sonic motor" which could use any sound source to power it, Wladon discovered he could nullify gravity or concentrate sound as a destructive force. As talented as he was, Wladon used sound as a means to an end. His fanatic patriotism to Modora had made him a dangerous man. Believing the greatest nations on Earth were also the most powerful, Wladon chose to make Modora great by supplying it with the "nucleo-sonic bomb," a weapon based on supersonic energy. He hoped to make Mordora the most powerful country in the world. Unfortunately, his homeland was not technologically advanced enough to support his efforts. Wladon was slipped out of Modora for the United States. Many of the items he needed were classified equipment. Wladon would lead a life of crime to get the resources for his sonic weapons. Wladon designed a regal, military costume to befit the future of Modora. When he appeared in the United States, the media dubbed him "Sonar" because of his mastery of sound. | Sonigun |
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DC | Green Lantern Vol. 2 #14 (July, 1962) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Melissa Gold was a troubled runaway from an alcoholic father and incarcerated mother. In order to survive on the streets, Melissa developed a hard edge to her personality, referring to herself as "Mimi." She eventually found work as a costumed professional wrestler, taking the stage name Screaming Mimi, and joined the wrestling team known as the Grapplers. The Grapplers became renowned for their colorful personalities and ringside antics, but the wrestling federation denied them the opportunity to make the same amount of money their male counterparts made. Thundra was pitted against the Grapplers including Screaming Mimi, all of whom, except Titania, she managed to defeat easily. The group agreed to earn supplementary income by performing a covert operation for the Roxxon Oil Company and were given special paraphernalia to assist them in their mission. The mission failed due to the hero Quasar, and the Grapplers were tried and jailed for their misdeeds. Songbird was the alias that Screaming Mimi used to pose as a heroic member of the Thunderbolts (actually the Masters of Evil in disguise) and get the trust of the government and people. Instead of her original screaming powers, Songbird got an implant based on Ulysses Klaw's sound converter, to create solid sound constructs. After they were exposed, Songbird was one of those who remained heroic. | N/A |
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Marvel | Marvel Two-In-One #54 (August, 1979) Incredible Hulk #449 (January,1997) |
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Spectre (Aztar) |
N/A |
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DC | More Fun Comics #52 (February, 1940) Day of Judgement #5 (November, 1999) |
1,000,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
Speed (Thomas Shepherd) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Young Avengers #10 (March, 2006) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Speed Demon (James Sanders) |
James Sanders first appears as the Whizzer as part of the Squadron Sinister reated by the cosmic entity the Grandmaster to battle the champions of the time-traveling Kang – the Avengers. After a few more escapades with the team, the Whizzer disassociates himself from the Squadron Sinister and adopts a new costume and alias, Speed Demon, becoming a recurring foe of Spider-Man. | N/A |
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Marvel | Avengers #69 (October, 1969) (as Whizzer) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Spider-Girl (May "Mayday" Parker) |
N/A |
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Marvel | What If? Vol. 2 #105 (February, 1998) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Spider-Gwen (Gwendolyne "Gwen" Maxine Stacy) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #31 (December, 1965) (original Gwen Stacy); Edge of Spider-Verse #2 (November, 2014) (Spider-Gwen) |
350,000 Studs | |||
Spider-Man (Miles Morales) |
N/A |
|
Marvel | Ultimate Comics Fallout #4 (October, 2011) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Spider-Woman (Jessica Miriam Drew) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Marvel Spotlight #32 (February, 1977) (as Arachne) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Spider-Woman (Julia Eugenia Cornwall Carpenter) |
A secretive government group called The Commission decided to create their own superhero. Val Cooper met college friend Julia Carpenter in Julia's hometown of Denver, and convinced her to be part of an "athletic study". She was unknowingly a test subject in their experiments. During the experiment, they "accidentally" injected Julia with a mix of spider venom and exotic plant extracts, which gave Julia powers very similar to those of Spider-Man. | N/A |
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Marvel | Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars #6 (October, 1984) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Spoiler (Stephanie Brown) |
Batarangs |
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DC | Detective Comics #647 (August, 1992) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Spot (Johnathon "Johnny" Ohnn) |
As a scientist working for the Kingpin, Dr. Jonathan Ohnn was assigned to reproduce the radiation levels of the superhero Cloak to find a way to artificially mimic his powers. Working late one night, he succeeded creating a solid black circular portal. In doing so however, the drain on the city's power became so great, a blackout washed over the city, causing the portal to shimmer and destabilize. Fearful of losing a once in a lifetime opportunity, Ohnn stepped into it. The shock of the transition caused him to pass out. He awoke floating weightlessly in a dimension which he initially assumed was Cloak's dark dimension. He soon realized however that the power shortage caused the portal to send him to a different dimension, a place of half darkness and half light. A seemingly infinite number of portals surrounded him in this place. Making swimming motions, he managed to find the original portal that brought him there and slipped back through it. When Ohnn emerged back into his lab, his body had undergone a radical transformation. The portals from the other dimension had adhered to his skin, covering him with black spots from head to toe. Realizing the spots were portable space warps, he started to think he might be able to use them to defeat anyone in battle. When Spider-Man and Black Cat arrived to confront Kingpin, he appeared before them and announced himself as the Spot. Spider-Man collapsed on the roof, laughing at the name. The Spot ended up winning that first confrontation and warned the heroes to leave the Kingpin alone. He later lost a second battle against Spider-Man because he was tricked into throwing too many of his spots as weapons and not keeping enough to defend himself with. | N/A |
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Marvel | Peter Parker, The Spectacular Spider-Man #98 (January, 1985) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Spy Smasher (Alan Armstrong) |
In early winter of 1940, Alan Armstrong met a young woman named Eve Corby. Alan and Eve fell in love and were quickly engaged, although they didn't marry until after WWII was over. Eve's father was an Admiral in the intelligence division of the United States Navy and often conferred with the civilian playboy concerning matters of national defense. One evening, Admiral Corby told Alan about a suspected ring of saboteurs operating in the area. Inspired by the notion of taking aim against enemy agents, Alan began putting together a new identity for himself. He designed a multifunctional vehicle known as a Gyrosub--which was capable of traversing nearly any level of terrain be it land, sea or air. He also fashioned a brown costume and aviator goggles for himself and took the name Spy Smasher. | Pistol |
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DC | Whiz Comics #2 (February, 1940) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Spymaster | Blaster |
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Marvel | Iron Man #33 (January, 1971) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Squirrel Girl (Doreen Allene Green) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Marvel Super-Heroes Vol. 2 #8 (December, 1991) | 350,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
Stan Lee | Stan Lee (born Stanley Martin Lieber /ˈliːbər/) is an American comic-book writer, editor, film executive producer, actor and publisher. He was formerly editor-in-chief of Marvel Comics, and later its publisher and chairman before leaving the company to become its chairman emeritus, as well as a member of the editorial board. In collaboration with several artists, including Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko, he co-created fictional characters including Spider-Man, the Hulk, Doctor Strange, the Fantastic Four, Daredevil, Black Panther, the X-Men, and, with the addition of co-writer Larry Lieber, the characters Ant-Man, Iron Man and Thor. In addition, he challenged the comics industry's censorship organization, the Comics Code Authority, indirectly leading to it updating its policies. Lee subsequently led the expansion of Marvel Comics from a small division of a publishing house to a large multimedia corporation. He was inducted into the comic book industry's Will Eisner Award Hall of Fame in 1994 and the Jack Kirby Hall of Fame in 1995. Lee received a National Medal of Arts in 2008. | N/A |
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N/A | December 28, 1922 | 1,000,000 Studs | ||
Starfire (Koriand'r) |
Starfire is an alien superhero with powers of flight and energy projection. Born a princess on the planet Tamaran, she escaped execution at the hands of her older sister Blackfire and traveled to Earth. Meeting the Teen Titans, she became a charter member and stayed with the team for most of her career. Her culture's different standards of intimacy cause her to be extremely open and sexually liberated by human standards. | N/A |
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DC | Teen Titans #18 (December, 1968) (Starfire alias with Leonid Kovar); DC Comics Presents #26 (October, 1980) (Koriand'r) |
400,000 Studs | ||
Stargirl (Courtney Elizabeth Whitmore) |
Stargirl is Courtney Whitmore, a teenage girl living in Blue Valley who becomes a superhero. Courtney began as the second Star-Spangled Kid when she discovered the gear of retired hero Sylvester Pemberton. Her stepfather Pat Dugan, originally known as Stripsey and later S.T.R.I.P.E., was Pemberton's adult sidekick. Jack Knight later gave Courtney his Cosmic Staff, and she took the name "Stargirl" to honor the Starman legacy. | Cosmic Staff |
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DC | Stars and S.T.R.I.P.E. #0 (July, 1999) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Starman (Theodore "Ted" Henry Knight) |
Ted Knight was, in his beginnings, an immensely wealthy heir, whose wealth nearly matched his boredom at the insipid life he lived as a playboy in his native Opal City, so he rarely showed up at parties or the like, preferring to devote his time to his true passion; science. He spent vast amounts of money scouring the heavens, and ultimately found the stars themselves routinely bombarded Earth with great amounts of energy, which, unfortunately, he had no means of harnessing. Knight's cousin Sandra spoke to him about Professor Abraham Davis, a man who had built her a weapon against crime, the Black Light Ray, which she used to become invisible. Inspired to visit Davis to talk about the energy source, Knight and the Professor created a device they called the Gravity Rod, a piece of technology far ahead of its time. The rod could be used for flight, energy projection, and several other applications. As for the power source, both convened in using the stellar energy Knight had discovered. Sandra's prior adventures as the crime fighter Phantom Lady inspired Ted to take on the identity of Starman, and use the gravity rod to fight crime. As Starman, he became the defender of Opal City and a frequent ally of the FBI. | Gravity Rod |
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DC | Adventure Comics #61 (April, 1941) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Starman (Mikaal Tomas) |
Mikaal Tomas was a warrior from the planet Talok III, whose people wanted nothing more than to conquer other planets. His lover, Lyysa, was killed when she showed sympathy and tried to warn the next planet set for conquest, Earth. Mikaal was soon sent to Earth to set in motion the plans for its capture. Disillusioned by Lyysa's death, Mikaal quickly abandoned his race's plans. He decided to stay and defend the people of Earth from any future invasions as Starman. | N/A |
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DC | 1st Issue Special #12 (March, 1976) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Starro | Starro is an alien supervillain who intends to take over the universe. Its physical appearance is that of a gigantic starfish, containing millions of similar drones that latch onto a host and control its mind. This ability to dominate an entire populace with ease makes him an incredibly dangerous threat, and one of the earliest and greatest enemies of the Justice League of America. | N/A |
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DC | Brave and the Bold #28 (March, 1960) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Static (Virgil Ovid Hawkins) |
N/A |
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DC | Static #1 (June, 1993) | 350,000 Studs | |||
N/A
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Marvel | |||||||
Steel (John Henry Irons) |
The most widely known Steel is a weapons engineer named John Henry Irons who became a superhero to emulate Superman, fighting crime as a member of Team Superman. Designing an advanced exo-skeleton, he wields a number of technological gadgets including a Kinetic Hammer. His niece Natasha Irons has also taken up the identity. | Kinetic Hammer |
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DC | Adventures of Superman #500 (June, 1993) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Steppenwolf | Electro-Axe | DC | New Gods #7 (March, 1972) | 400,000 Studs (each variation) | ||||
Stephen "Steve" Rockwell Trevor | Steve Trevor is a USAF pilot, and romantic interest to Wonder Woman. During a mission, he crash-landed and accidentally discovered the island of Paradise Island, home of the Amazons. | Pistols |
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DC | All-Star Comics #8 (December, 1941) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Stompa | Stompa is one of the evil New Gods of Apokolips and a servant to Darkseid. She is a member of the elite assassin group known as the Female Furies trained by Granny Goodness. Her weapon of choice is Anti-Matter Boots and she mostly fights with her feet. | N/A |
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DC | Mister Miracle #6 (February, 1972) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Striker (Brandon Sharpe) |
Born to a mother seeking fame and a father who was an adulterous politician cheating on his wife, Brandon Sharpe's life was anything but normal. Thrust into the spotlight as an actor at a young age as his mother sought to live off his fame, Brandon grew to become uncomfortable with this fame, growing distanced from his mother, a distance that grew as she refused to listen to his complaints about Rick, his manager, who attempted to take advantage of him. During one of these attempts, Brandon's powers first manifested, frying the limo he was in and severely injuring his manager. With his new-found powers and taking the name Striker, Brandon sought to become a superhero...but found stopping crime to be more difficult than it appeared. Turning to performing, he became a fixture at monster truck shows, showing his power off to paying audiences. When Norman Osborn grew aware of this, he brought Striker in and lavished him with money and women, something Striker quickly grew bored with. After Osborn's fall, Striker was brought into the Avengers Academy, along with several young superheroes who had been held and tortured by Osborn. Not letting on that he had received better treatment, Striker led the others in finding out the connection they all had to Osborn, and grew the belief that the Academy staff feared the teens would become villains. | N/A |
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Marvel | Avengers Academy #1 (August, 2010) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Sunfire (Shiro Yoshida) |
Shiro Yoshida was born to a mother who suffered radiation poisoning due to exposure to the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan. As a result, he was born in Agarashima, Japan, a mutant possessing solar radiation powers. Shiro's mother died when he was young and Shiro grew to hate the United States, despite the influence of his father, an ambassador to the United Nations more tolerant of the US. His greedy uncle Tomo inspires Shiro to take the identity of Sunfire and engage in a one-man battle against the U.S. As Sunfire, he attacks the United States Capitol and battles the X-Men. Later, he sees his father killed by Tomo. Distraught, Sunfire kills Tomo and surrenders to the authorities. Months later, Professor X recruits Sunfire to a new team of X-Men to rescue the originals from Krakoa the Living Island. However, afterward he denies that his assisting Professor X in this way constitutes his becoming a member of the X-Men. | N/A |
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Marvel | X-Men #64 (January, 1970) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Super-Adaptoid | The original model (simply known as the Adaptoid) was created by scientific organization A.I.M. (Advanced Idea Mechanics). An android containing a shard of the Cosmic Cube artifact, the Adaptoid is programmed to defeat the hero Captain America, infiltrating the Avengers' Headquarters while impersonating various characters (such as Edwin Jarvis and Bucky Barnes), and then copies the standout fighting abilities and respective traits of several Avengers (Goliath, Hawkeye, and Wasp) as the "Super-Adaptoid." After a long battle, the android flees after incorrectly believing that Captain America had been killed. |
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Marvel | Tales of Suspense #82 (October, 1966) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Super-Skrull (Kl'rt) |
The Super-Skrull is from the Skrull world of Tarnax IV (in the Tarnax system of the Andromeda Galaxy), which has been destroyed by Galactus. Skrull emperor Dorrek VII devised a way to strike back against the Fantastic Four, who thwarted the Empire's invasion of Earth. Dorrek chose the warrior Kl'rt, who was given the combined abilities of the Fantastic Four. Kl'rt was stronger than the Thing; had superior flight and greater pyrokinetic ability than the Human Torch; had better control of invisibility and telekinesis than the Invisible Woman, and could stretch further than Mr. Fantastic. The Super-Skrull retained his shape-shifting and hypnotic abilities, and was sent to Earth to defeat the Fantastic Four and pave the way for a Skrull Empire invasion. | N/A |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #18 (September, 1963) | 370,000 Studs | ||
Superboy (Kon-El (Conner Kent)) |
Conner Kent is the second Superboy. Developed by Project Cadmus as a clone, he has the DNA of the world's greatest hero Superman and his nemesis Lex Luthor. Originally he appeared during the Reign of the Supermen! storyline alongside three other "fake" Supermen, including Cyborg Superman, the Eradicator, and Steel. His longest romantic relationship is with love interest Wonder Girl. | N/A |
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DC | Adventures of Superman #500 (June, 1993) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Superboy (Jonathan "Jon" Samuel Kent) |
Jonathan "Jon" Kent is the firstborn son of Kryptonian superhero Superman and news reporter Lois Lane. He was born of the New Earth versions of the characters whilst trapped on Telos during Convergence. Following the Rebirth of the Universe, his parents merged with their Prime Earth versions, folding their histories and Jon's into one. To all those around him, Jon now always had been a denizen of Prime Earth. | N/A |
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DC | Convergence: Superman #2 (July, 2015) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Superboy-Prime (Kal-El (Clark Joseph Kent)) |
N/A |
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DC | DC Comics Presents #87 (November, 1985) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Surtur | Twilight Sword |
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Marvel | Journey into Mystery #97 (October, 1963) | 450,000 Studs | |||
Swordsman (Jacques Duquesne) |
Jacques Duquesne was a performer at various circuses and carnivals. His act demonstrated his mastery of knives, swords, and other bladed weapons. At one carnival he met a young Clint Barton. Seeing great potential in him, Swordsman and Trickshot trained the boy in blades and archery respectively, with Clint often being a secondary performer in the Swordsman's act. Swordsman's gambling problem left him heavily in debt. One day the carnival paymaster was robbed, and Barton later found Swordsman with the money. Barton ran from him and climbed the high wire. Swordsman cut it by hurling his sword. Barton fell to the ground and the Swordsman left thinking he was dead. Barton survived and grew up to become Hawkeye (It is presumed that he and Barton reconciled years later). The Swordsman would become a career costumed criminal, attempting to join the Avengers for one reason or another, until a romance with the superhero Mantis caused him to reform completely and join the Avengers for real. |
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Marvel | Avengers #19 (September, 1963) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Swordsman (Andreas von Strucker) |
Andreas von Strucker and his twin sister Andrea were the children of Nazi supremacist Baron Wolfgang von Strucker, who saw great potential in their future. While still in-utero, the children were bio-engineered by Dr. Arnim Zola to have superpowers, using the X-Gene with each gaining the ability to fly and fire beams of concentrated plasma as long as they were in physical contact, usually accomplished by holding hands. They fight Citizen V (John Watkins III), however, Andrea discovers that Citizen V is actually Helmut Zemo's mind transferred into the real Citizen V's body by Techno after being decapitated by Nomad under Henry Peter Gyrich's orders. Zemo quickly kills Andrea to keep her from telling anyone the truth. After Andrea's death, Zemo has the Purple Man brainwash Andreas into taking the "Swordsman" alias. Purple Man has him flay the skin from Andrea's corpse to incorporate the resulting leather into his sword's hilt, allowing him to channel their shared powers through his sword. Andreas breaks free of Purple Man's control and joins the Thunderbolts. | Sword |
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Marvel | Uncanny X-Men #194 (June, 1985) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Sydren | Sydren is an extraterrestrial from the planet Drenx. He is recruited into S.W.O.R.D., a division of S.H.I.E.L.D. which specializes in protecting the Earth against extraterrestrial threats. He is skilled in alien technology and able to hack most computer systems. Sydren is a relativly powerful telepath, able to sense things from great distances and with high accuracy. He has a habit of speaking obvious things that he learned with his sensory abilities, which usually earns him a snappy remark from Agent Brand, his superior officer. | N/A |
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Marvel | Astonishing X-Men Vol. 3 #10 (May, 2005) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Talon (William Cobb) |
William Cobb is the Talon assassin sent by the Court of Owls to murder Bruce Wayne, prior to the Night of the Owls. Born on October 10, 1901, William Cobb was the son of an ironworker and textile worker who lost his life while working on a bridge. This event robbed young William of his childhood, as he and mother struggled to survive afterwards. After an encounter with a man named Nathaniel, Cobb joined a circus, mastering the art of throwing knives and earning fame. Cobb met and fell in love with Amelia Crowe, the daughter of Burton Crowe, which resulted in Amelia's pregnancy, but Burton disapproved and arranged for her to marry a second cousin. Through Nathaniel's efforts, Cobb joined the Court of Owls and became a Talon in order to make a difference in society. Cobb kidnapped his infant son and gave the boy to Nathaniel, urging Nathaniel to release the child in secret and prepare him for the legacy as the Gray Son of Gotham. After failed attempts to defeat Batman, Batman discovers that Cobb is Dick Grayson's great-grandfather. Cobb is disappointed to learn that Grayson, as Nightwing, is an ally of Batman, and faces his grandson in combat, in which Grayson is victorious. | Throwing knives |
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DC | Batman Vol. 2 #2 (December, 2011) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Tar Pit (Joseph "Joey" Monteleone) |
Joey Monteleone's older brother, Jack, was a drug kingpin in Keystone City and tried to give Joey work in trafficking. Joey never took his job seriously and soon ended up in Iron Heights Penitentiary. When it finally occurred to him that his brother couldn't get him out of this mess Joey took to meditation to relax. He discovered he had the mutant ability to project his astral form into inanimate objects and animate them. He spent his nights animating objects outside of prison and causing havoc. One day his astral self got stuck in an animated vat of tar, but Joey didn't mind. Naming himself Tar Pit he forgot about his old body that had fallen into a coma in Iron Heights. | N/A |
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DC | Flash Vol. 2 #174 (July, 2001) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Technovore | Technovore is a technological parasite created by a scientist which kills everyone inside an orbital space station. Iron Man investigates and confronts the nanotech monstrosity. Entering the station, Iron Man finds that the space crew members are now techno-organic creatures and they attempt to consume him as part of their quest for completion. Iron Man renovates his armor arsenal using the station stores, but after destroying the creatures they reform themselves into a single being. | N/A |
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Marvel | Iron Man #294 (July, 1993) | 370,000 Studs | ||
Terra (Tara Markov) |
N/A |
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DC | New Teen Titans #26 (December, 1982) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Terrax the Tamer (Tyros) |
The character first appears as a Birjan named Tyros, the ruler of the city-state of Lanlak on the planetoid Birj. The cosmic entity Galactus selects Tyros as his next Herald, but first wishes for the superhero team the Fantastic Four to humble him. In return the cosmic entity agrees to travel to Earth to aid the heroes against a new threat, the villain Sphinx. Tyros is defeated, and brought before Galactus, who changes the petty tyrant into Terrax the Tamer. His minor control over stone was augmented to an incalculable degree. Now, he could affect all matter of rock and stone on nearly a planetary scale. His body was changed so that it would withstand the vacuum of space. Finally, Galactus gave Terrax a weapon called the cosmic axe capable of generating waves of cosmic force. Terrax travels with Galactus to Earth, and while his new master battles the Sphinx, attacks the Fantastic Four—still resenting the heroes for their role in his transformation. Terrax, however, is tricked and defeated by the Human Torch, and leaves with a victorious Galactus. | Cosmic Axe |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #211 (October, 1979) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Thanos | N/A |
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Marvel | Iron Man #55 (February, 1973) | 370,000 Studs | |||
Thinker (Clifford DeVoe) |
N/A | DC | All-Flash #12 (September, 1943) | |||||
Thor (Jane Foster) |
For many years, Foster was a nurse employed by Dr. Donald Blake, Thor's first mortal host, before becoming a doctor herself. While Thor was away fighting Gorr the God Butcher, Jane was diagnosed with breast cancer. She later accepted Thor's invitation to represent Midgard (Earth) in the Congress of Worlds on Asgard while she underwent therapy, but refused magical treatments. The hammer remained unattended on the Moon, from where it telepathically sought Jane out. Jane eventually gave in to the hammer's call, and requested Heimdall to take her to the hammer's location. Once there, Jane picked up Mjolnir, gaining Thor's powers and transforming and improving her physique. Since she had watched Thor use his hammer, Jane slowly learned how to use Mjolnir by example. | Mjolnir |
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Marvel | Journey into Mystery #84 (September, 1962) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Thunderball (Eliot Franklin) |
Dr. Eliot Franklin was a brilliant physicist whose greatest claim to fame was inventing a miniature gamma-ray bomb, something that Dr. Robert Bruce Banner (better known as The Hulk) was unable to do at that time. Dr. Franklin was often called "the Black Bruce Banner" because of his genius level intellect and his scientific knowledge in the field of gamma radiation. To fund his research, Dr. Franklin would often commit robberies, which eventually landed him in prison. It was there that he met up and became cellmates with Dirk Garthwaite, also known as the Wrecker. One night during a thunderstorm, Garthwaite broke out of prison, along with his cellmates Henry Camp, Brian Philip Calusky, and Franklin. He recovered his magical crowbar and held it aloft, all four men placing their hands upon it. Lightning struck the crowbar, not only reactivating the enchantment but empowering the other three men as well. The four felons dubbed themselves the Wrecking Crew; Camp became Bulldozer, Calusky became Piledriver, and Franklin became Thunderball. Soon after, Thunderball took an ordinary wrecking ball for an offensive weapon which was energized by The Wrecker's crowbar, making it almost indestructible. | Enchanted Wrecking Ball |
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Marvel | Defenders #17 (November, 1974) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Tigra (Greer Grant-Nelson) |
Greer Grant persuaded scientist Joanne Tumulo to let her undergo experimental treatment as she did not trust the chosen test subject Malcolm Donalbain. When the treatment gave Grant enchanced physical and mental capabilities, Donalbain destroyed the lab with dynamite, resulted in Grant taking on the persona of "The Cat" to foil his scheme. Donalbain eventually committed suicide when The Cat wrecked his headquarters. Later, Grant learned that Tumulo was one of the few remaining members of a race known as the "Cat People" who were banished by sorcerers years ago, save for the first two. When Greer was fatally injured by HYDRA agents, Tumulo summoned a group of Cat People to perform a ritual to heal Greer and in the process, Greer was transformed into a humanoid tigress known as Tigra. Tigra gained the powers of an actual tiger from the transformation and continued her career as a heroine and eventually joined the Avengers. | Claws |
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Marvel | The Cat #1 (November, 1972) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Tin | Tin is a liquid metal robot made of Tin with almost limitless shape shifting abilities. He was designed by Dr. William Magnus a brilliant robotic expert along with along with Platinum, Mercury, Iron, Gold and Lead. They fight together as the Metal Men. Together, Tin and the Metal Men embarked on a variety of adventures, their specialty fighting monsters spawned from weird science. Though the Metal Men were repeatedly destroyed, Magnus was always able to rebuild them. Tin is the kind and caring member of the group, but unfortunately holds terribly low self esteem and believes that he is not worthy of being part of the Metal Men. He is however very brave and is happy to put his life on the line for his comrades. Tin suffers from a stammer bought on by his insecurity. | N/A |
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DC | Showcase #37 (April, 1962) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Tinkerer (Phineas T. Mason) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #2 (May, 1963) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Titania (Mary MacPherran-Creel) |
Mary MacPherran was born prematurely in a suburb of Denver, Colorado. Mary was often overlooked as the smallest of her siblings and would immerse herself in fantasy books. She grew little over the years, remaining short and scrawny compared to her peers; a popular girl at school named Vanessa Ashwood gave Mary the nickname "Skeeter" (a slang word for mosquito) because of this. Her only real friend was Marsha Rosenberg, who was similarly unpopular (in her case for being awkward and overweight). Consistently mocked and humiliated since childhood by the wealthy Vanessa and her social clique, Mary (and Marsha) had to take menial jobs to survive. Mary grew bitter over her hard life, and fantasized about something improbable in her favor such as winning the lottery. These fantasies soon turned to gaining superpowers to be admired, and to exact revenge on her tormentors. When the second Spider-Woman Julia Carpenter began to make appearances in Denver, Rosenberg remarked that her hair was the same color as Mary's. Mary falsely confided in her friend that she was secretly Spider-Woman, and when Rosenberg spread the rumor, Mary saw her popularity grow and was invited to a party by Vanessa and her clique. In the midst of the party, however, their suburb of Denver was ripped from Earth and used by the alien Beyonder to create the makeshift planet Battleworld. When the real Spider-Woman arrived on the scene and saved the guests from falling debris, Vanessa and her friends realized they'd been duped and chased MacPherran and Rosenberg into the forests of Battleworld. Frightened and exhausted, the two young women were found by the villain Doctor Doom, who was looking for recruits for his army of supervillains; he offered the girls the chance of gaining superhuman powers, which they accepted Doom's offer. After the war, Titania would become romanticaly involved with the Absorbing Man and become husband and wife. | N/A |
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Marvel | Marvel Two-In-One #54 (August, 1979) (Titania alias with Davida DeVito); Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars #3 (July, 1984) (Mary MacPherran) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Titanium Man (Boris Bullski) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Tales of Suspense #69 (September, 1965) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Titano the Super-Ape (Toto) |
Titano was once a normal, though extremely intelligent, chimpanzee named Toto. Daily Planet reporter Lois Lane befriended Toto at a charity bazaar when she cleaned some misplaced pie from his face, accidentally thrown at him by a slapstick comic. Toto was then selected to participate in an experimental space rocket mission scheduled to span an entire week. While in space, a Kryptonite meteor collided with a passing Uranium meteor and the radiation from the combined elements washed across the space capsule, altering Toto's genetic structure. The space capsule returned to Earth, and Toto was seemingly unaffected by the radiation. Moments after exiting the capsule however, his size and strength grew to epic proportions. Lois Lane was present, covering the story of the space capsule landing, and Toto recognized her. As an act of affection, Toto scooped Lois into his paw and took off with her. It was at this point that Lois gave him the name of Titano. | N/A |
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DC | Superman #127 (February, 1959) | 350,000 Studs | ||
T.O. Morrow (Tomek Ovadya Morah (Thomas Oscar Morrow)) |
By his own admission, T.O. Morrow was inspired by his name to devote himself to studying the future. After years of work he invented a device with which he could view the world 100 years into the future. Inspired, he developed a "Fourth-Dimensional Grapple Beam" which allowed him to transport future technology to him. One of those inventions he stole was a super-computer which could predict the future. The computer advised him to use a "humaniztron" to create the Red Tornado and destroy the Justice Society of America. The attempt failed when Red Tornado asserted his own independence, something the computer did not predict and Morrow went to prison. | N/A |
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DC | Adventure Comics #86 (June, 1943) (T.O. Morrow alias); The Flash #143 (March, 1964) (Tomek Ovadya Morah) |
250,000 Studs | ||
Toad (Mortimer Toynbee) |
N/A |
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Marvel | X-Men #4 (March, 1964) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Tobias Whale | Tobias Whale is an African American albino, who worked his way up from the rackets to head the Metropolis branch of The 100. When school teacher Jefferson Pierce spoke out against the 100's drug trafficking, Whale decided to make an example of one of his students. Seeking to avenge his murdered pupil, Pierce became a vigilante, calling himself "Black Lightning". | N/A | N/A | DC | Black Lightning #1 (April, 1977) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Tomar-Re | Tomar-Re is an alien superhero known as Green Lantern and a member of the Green Lantern Corps. The Guardians of the Universe gave them a power ring fueled by willpower to protect Space Sector 2813. His home planet is Xudar, where he was an accomplished scientist. He was a close friend of Hal Jordan and also Hal Jordan's predecessor, Abin Sur. | Green Lantern Power Ring |
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DC | Green Lantern Vol. 2 #6 (June, 1961) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Tombstone (Lonnie Thompson Lincoln) |
Tommy gun |
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Marvel | Web of Spider-Man #36 (March, 1988) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Top (Roscoe Neyle Dillon) |
As a boy, Roscoe Dillon found an old top in an attic. He became fascinated with it, preferring to play with it rather than playing sports with other children. He became obsessed with the spinning and visited a neighborhood toy factory everyday while growing up. As an adult, Dillon fell into a life of crime. He had limited success and was imprisoned twice. During his second sentence, he decided to use his love of tops to better his criminal career. Upon his release, he studied the scientific principals of tops, building a wide array of top-inspired weapons and learning to spin himself like a top, which had the added advantage of increasing his brain power. He became the costumed villain the Top. | Explosive tops |
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DC | The Flash #122 (August, 1961) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Toyman (Winslow Percival Schott) |
Blaster |
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DC | Action Comics #64 (September, 1943) | 300,000 Studs | |||
Trapster (Peter Petruski) |
Peter Petruski was born in Gary, Indiana. Originally calling himself Paste-Pot Pete, the villain and professional criminal clashed with the Human Torch during his efforts to sell a new American missile to the Soviets. However he escaped by using his paste to catch the wing of a plane, then diving into the sea. Paste-Pot Pete made another attempt to get revenge against the Human Torch. This scheme was interrupted by another novice hero, the amazing Spider-Man, who upon hearing the name "Paste-Pot Pete" burst into hysterics until he realized the Torch had passed through the area and left a thoroughly embarrassed Pete behind. Paste-Pot Pete reinvented himself with a new name, the Trapster, in an attempt to sound more menacing. But he would never live down his original choice of name for the rest of his career. | Paste-Gun |
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Marvel | Strange Tales #104 (January, 1963) | 300,000 Studs | ||
The Trench | When Atlan destroyed Atlantis, it plunged the seven kingdoms of Atlantis into the ocean. The survivors initially believed four of the kingdoms were destroyed, and the other three survived and adapted to their new conditions with 90% of the Atlanteans dying from the event. The Trench were one of the three surviving kingdoms along with the Xebelians and Atlantians. The Trench adapted to living in a trench near the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and developed an alternate language. They have a King and Queen who differ physically in form from the worker class of Trench. The Trench follow the wielder of the Dead King's Scepter. The Trench are drawn to the leader of Atlantis and Aquaman believes the scepter doesn't hold mystical control over the Trench, but instead the Trench believe the wielder of this scepter is their leader. | Claws |
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DC | Aquaman Vol. 7 #1 (November, 2011) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Trickster (Axel Walker) |
While the first Trickster was working for the FBI, teenager Axel Walker stole all of James Jesse's gadgets and shoes and became the new Trickster. He was also given new "toys" in addition to James' originals. | Rubber duck |
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DC | The Flash #113 (July, 1960) (Trickster alias with Giovanni Giuseppe (a.k.a. James Jesse)); The Flash Vol. 2 #183 (April, 2002) (Axel Walker) |
300,000 Studs | ||
Trigon | N/A |
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DC | New Teen Titans #5 (March, 1981) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Triton | Triton is a member of the Inhumans' Royal Family, son of Mander and Azur, brother to Karnak, and cousin to Gorgon, Black Bolt, Maximus, Medusa, and Crystal. Triton was born on the island of Attilan and was exposed to the Terrigen Mist as an infant. The mists altered his body, turning his skin green and giving him the ability to breathe underwater, as well as surviving the cold temperatures and incredible pressures of the deep. An unfortunate side effect was the loss of the ability to survive in a non-aquatic environment. As a result, he lived in a specifically designed area of the Inhumans' city-state of Attilan, requiring a special breathing apparatus to leave the water. The apparatus, cumbersome at first, was eventually reduced in size by fellow Inhuman, Maximus the Mad. Triton's mutation after Terrigenesis was so severe that his parents disallowed his brother Karnak from going through it. | Trident |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #45 (December, 1965) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Donna Troy is an Amazon superhero who began her career as the second Wonder Girl, but has also used several other names including Troia and Wonder Woman. Terry Long was her first husband with whom she had a child named Robert, and she also had a relationship with Kyle Rayner. She is a founding member of the Teen Titans. |
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DC | Brave and the Bold #60 (July, 1955) | 400,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
The Turtle | The Turtle was one of Jay Garrick's old enemies during the 1940s. His main weapon was slow, deliberate planning. | N/A | N/A | DC | Star-Spangled Comics #17 (February, 1943) (Turtle alias); All-Flash #21 (December, 1945) (current Turtle) |
250,000 Studs | ||
Two-Face (Harvey Dent) |
The Gotham City district attorney, Harvey Dent was hailed as the city's "White Knight;" he is getting more and more successful in rounding up all the criminals that plague Gotham City. A horrrible scarring at the hands of the Joker turned him into Two-Face. With a darker side in him awakened, he extended his crusade to include corrupt cops and officials. |
N/A | DC | Detective Comics #66 (August, 1942) (as Harvey Kent); The Dark Knight (July 18, 2008) |
300,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
Uatu the Watcher | The Watchers are among the oldest and most advanced beings in the cosmos. Eons ago, they sought to spread their knowledge to benefit the lesser races of the Universe. Their first attempt, on the planet Prosilicus, included sharing nuclear technology. When the Watchers returned to Prosilicus, they found the natives had all but destroyed themselves in a nuclear war. The Watchers blamed themselves for the catastrophe and vowed to never again meddle in the affairs of other races. Instead, they passively observe and record events for those who will come after the universe ends. Uatu is the Watcher assigned to watch over Earth from his home in the Blue Area of the Moon. He is an altruist and has bent or violated his oath on numerous occasions in order to aid humanity. | N/A |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #13 (April, 1963) | 450,000 Studs | ||
Ultimate Spider-Slayer (Alistaire Alphonso Smythe) |
Alistaire Smythe was the son of Spencer Smythe, inventor of the Spider-Slayers - a series of robots designed to destroy Spider-Man. The initial generation of Spider-Slayers were created by Alistaire's father and commissioned by J. Jonah Jameson. After Spencer failed to kill Spider-Man - and ended up getting destroyed as a result - Alistaire inherited the legacy from his father and gained a new-found hatred toward Spider-Man. He initially worked for the Kingpin but left in disagreement over how to deal with Spider-Man and went solo. After being confined in an asylum, Alistair released himself and took several other inmates with him in order to construct a new series of Spider-Slayers that tracked Spider-Man across the city. His plan of revenge forced the inmates to assist in the machines' construction. After sending a series of slayers after Spider-Man, Alistair lured Spider-Man to his residence for one final battle. In order to defeat Spider-Man on his own, Alistair enhanced himself by encasing his entire body in a biorganic carapace that not only served as a full body armor, but increased his strength and gave him the ability to walk again by interconnecting with his spine. The physical structure of the carapace gave Alistair bird-like talons for feet, a long, curved blade-like weapon jutting from each shoulder that could fire lasers, a pair of smaller jagged blade weapons on each forearm, and a specially made web-shooter that fired from the forearm area. Eventually, Spider-Man defeated Alistair and made sure he and the surviving asylum inmates were taken to custody. | Claws |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man Annual #19 (November, 1985) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Unicorn (Milos Masaryk) |
Milos Masaryk was a Soviet intelligence agent assigned to security duty at the private laboratory of inventor Anton Vanko. Vanko was engaged in the development of advanced technological weaponry and armament. His first completed project was a full body suit of armor which he himself would later wear as the Soviet operative code-named the Crimson Dynamo. His second finished project was a helmet and harness into which offensive radiation-beam weaponry called a "power horn" was integrated. Vanko offered this invention to Masaryk, and with government approval, began to instruct the Soviet agent on its use. Some time after Professor Vanko defected to America, the Soviet government dispatched Masaryk to avenge the disgrace caused by the inventor. Masaryk was given a special, heavily insulated costume and codenamed the Unicorn because of the head-mounted discharge cone of the weapons system he wore. | N/A |
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Marvel | Tales of Suspense #56 (August, 1964) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Union Jack (James Montgomery Falsworth) |
Lord Montgomery Falsworth was a British nobleman who became a secret costumed operative for the British government during World War I. Clad in a costume resembling the British flag, the Union Jack personified the fighting spirit of Great Britain even as Captain America would symbolize America's ideals and fighting spirit during World War II. As the British government intended, the mysterious masked figure of Union Jack also struck terror into the minds of the Germans, who came to dread his one-man commando-style actions against them. In the later days of World War I, Union Jack often operated as a member of a team of costumed operatives from America, Britain and France, known as Freedom's Five, who battled the Germans. | Guns |
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Marvel | Invaders #7 (July, 1976) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Ursa | Ursa is a Kryptonian supervillain who works with General Zod and Non. They were banished to the Phantom Zone for war crimes, allowing them to survive the destruction of Krypton. Eventually they escaped from their prison and tried to enslave humanity, making them enemies to Superman. | N/A |
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DC | Superman (December 10, 1978) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Ursa Major (Mikhail Uriokovitch Ursus) |
Russian mutants were deemed as a threat and were to be killed as soon as their mutation was discovered. However, Professor Pieter Phobos was able to convince the Soviet government to allow him to train them as potential agents loyal to the government. His real motive, however, was to use them to gain power for himself. Ursa Major was one of the first trainees along with Darkstar and Vanguard. The three would later become founding members of the Winter Guard. | N/A |
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Marvel | Incredible Hulk #258 (April, 1981) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Vapor (Ann Darnell) |
Vapor's history prior to being recruited as a technical specialist for her space mission by Simon Utrecht has yet to be revealed. She, along with her brother James, was among the small group led by Utrecht to simulate the crash that gave the Fantastic Four their powers, and has remained with the U-Foes ever since. | N/A |
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Marvel | Incredible Hulk #254 (December, 1980) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Vector (Simon Utrecht) |
Simon Utrecht was a wealthy but unscrupulous businessman who was obsessed with gaining power. Convincing three others, Mike Steel, Ann Darnell and James Darnell, to go up into space in his privately-funded spacecraft to mimic the power and abilities of the Fantastic Four, who had gained their powers from cosmic rays. Utrecht and his crew passed through a cosmic radiation field, but were interrupted by the Hulk before they finished their experiment. They soon crashed back to Earth, much like the Fantastic Four themselves did. Upon seeing themselves after the crash, the quartet viewed themselves as freaks and monsters. Utrecht in particular blamed The Hulk because he believed with further exposure to the cosmic rays, they could have become "gods." The newly-christened U-Foes attacked The Hulk, which began years of hostilities between them. | N/A |
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Marvel | Incredible Hulk #254 (December, 1980) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Ventriloquist (Arnold Wesker) |
Scarface Puppet w/ tommy gun | N/A | DC | Detective Comics #583 (February, 1988) | 250,000 Studs | |||
Vibe is a Latino vigilante with vibrational abilities. Prior to becoming a superhero, he was the metahuman leader of a Detroit street gang called Los Lobos. Francisco "Cisco" Ramon, nicknamed Vibe by Barry Allen, is a mechanical engineering genius and a meta-human at S.T.A.R. Labs, also formerly serving as the prison guard to their makeshift prison. He came from a rather poor Puerto Rican family, and provides much-needed comic relief around his stiff workplace. Cisco is also a member of Team Flash. He was also friends with Harrison Wells before learning his true identity as Eobard Thawne, though Eobard looked at Cisco as a surrogate son before and after his reveal. He also developed a rivalry with Hartley Rathaway and a friendly relationship with Ray Palmer. It was later revealed Cisco was also affected by the particle accelerator, causing him to become a meta-human with the ability to see through vibrations and the ability to retain memories of alternate timelines of himself before they were altered. |
N/A |
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DC | |||||
Victoria "Vicki" Elizabeth Vale | Vicki Vale was a renowned reporter and photographer in Gotham City, whose job was to report on the Batman. This complicated things further for her as she was also romantically linked to billionaire playboy Bruce Wayne. Vicki would regularly have her suspicions about Batman and Bruce Wayne's identities, but Bruce is usually able to fool her into at least reasonable doubt. | N/A | N/A | DC | Batman #49 (October, 1948) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Vigilante (Gregory "Greg" Saunders) |
Greg Sanders was born in Wyoming near the end of the first World War, the son of a noted lawman. Choosing to become a singer and songwriter (the "Prairie Troubadour") rather than follow in his father's footsteps, Greg nevertheless learned to handle a gun and a lasso as well as Sheriff Sanders ever had, and when his father was killed by bandits he had been trying to apprehend, Greg took up his guns and avenged him. He swore a vow on his father's grave to dedicate himself to the path of justice, and donned a mask, and put his skills to active use battling other criminals in a similar manner, adopting the Western-themed identity of "the Vigilante". | Pistols |
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DC | Action Comics #42 (November, 1941) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Vigilante (Adrian Allen Chase) |
As an indefatigable Manhattan District Attorney, Adrian Chase worked doggedly within the system to dismantle the city's Mafia infrastructure. He even frequently worked with the city's resident superhero team, the New Teen Titans. But when Chase's wife Doris, son Adam, and daughter Drew were killed by a bomb planted by the Scarapelli mob family, Chase sought his own justice as the Vigilante. He underwent an extremely vigorous training program taught by a number of mystical spirits seeking revenge, and came back to the city perfectly synchronized between mind and body. As the Vigilante, he dispensed justice harshly, and although he inspired many heroes to attempt to make tougher choices, his career was also riddled with many defeats. | Pistol |
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DC | New Teen Titans #23 (September, 1982) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Viper (Jordan Dixon) |
Jordan Stryke was the brother of Leopold Stryke, who became the notorious costumed criminal known as the original Eel. When Jordan Stryke went into the advertising business, he legally changed his last name to Dixon so as to avoid association with his brother's criminal reputation. Dixon spent years in planning advertising campaigns for children's toys and other products, and eventually he and a man named Quentin Harderman became partners in an advertising agency. Dixon believed that through his marketing abilities he was making fortunes for his clients, while he himself labored in relative obscurity for far less financial gain. Moreover, Dixon believed that through his advertising projects he was perpetrating lies on behalf of his clients and subverting the nation's moral values. Dixon even took a perverse pleasure in such activities. He prided himself on selling products he regarded as worthless so successfully to the public, and he regarded the American public with contempt, believing them willing to believe any lie spread through the mass media, if it was crafted convincingly enough. Harderman and Dixon were apparently both involved in corrupt activities over the years. It is not known when Dixon decided to emulate his brother in becoming a costumed criminal, but he spent years in developing the venoms he intended to use as his weapons while he continued his advertising work. Finally, Dixon assumed the costumed identity of the original Viper. | Throwing darts |
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Marvel | Captain America #157 (January, 1973) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Virman Vundabar | A resident of Apokolips, Virman is a minion of Granny Goodness, having grown up in her orphanages like many of Darkseid's soldiers. He models his personality and schemes on Prussian military appearance and precision partly because of the Earth-based name assigned to him by Granny. Like many of his associates, he is a nemesis of Mister Miracle. Virman has involved himself with many schemes to gain power, often involving many of Darkseid's lieutenants, such as Doctor Bedlam, Steppenwolf, and Kanto. | N/A |
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DC | Mister Miracle #5 (December, 1971) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Vixen (Mari Jiwe McCabe) |
Claws |
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DC | Action Comics #521 (July, 1981) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Volstagg the Voluminous | Volstagg's origin beyond being a member of the Asgardian race and a friend of Thor has not been revealed. He first met Thor when the Warriors Three joined Thor's expedition to restore the Odinsword that had become cracked. Volstagg was fairly advanced in age for an Asgardian, and it has been alluded to that he was a highly respected and feared warrior in his prime. He allegedly was named Volstagg the Staggeringly Perfect. | Sword | *Super Strength (pick-ups, pulls, pushes, throws, vehicle pick-ups) **Break Open Special Walls *Hazard Protection *Healing Factor *Agility |
Marvel | Journey into Mystery #119 (August, 1965) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Volthoom | Volthoom was born in the far future of Earth 15, and by the year 3079 his world was about to be destroyed. As a result of the impending doom surrounding his planet and his way of life, Volthoom and his mother (both being scientists) discovered the Emotional Electromagnetic Spectrum together and invented a device known as Travel Lantern, which was an "experimental device for infinite exploration". In order to find a way to save their planet, Volthoom used Travel Lantern hopping from universe to universe to universe, finally arriving in Earth 0 10 billion years in the past, and landed in the lab of Krona in the wake of the Maltusians' experiment to see the beginning of all existence. Due to them both being of a scientific mindset, Volthoom and the Maltusians worked together for some time, and in order to further their development, the Maltusians forsook their emotions casting them into a device of their own creation, The Great Heart. As a result of the influx of power and energy a ring was created, the very first Power Ring. Volthoom would claim this ring for himself becoming the "First Lantern." He worked with the Maltusians to bring about peace in the Universe for some time, and to further enhance his powers and directly connect him to the Emotional Electromagnetic Spectrum, the Maltusians implanted the Great Heart directly into his body. Due to this direct connection to the Emotional Spectrum Volthoom began to become more powerful yet mentally unstable. In order to secure their inventions, the Maltusians destroyed Travel Lantern thus trapping Volthoom in Prime Earth. After killing thousands of Maltusians as a form of revenge, Volthoom was defeated by the seven "Proto-Green Lanterns," the Great Heart ripped from his chest and the first Power Ring taken away. Soon after, the Guardians imprisoned Volthoom in an unbreakable chamber (known as the Chamber of Shadows) and wrote him out of their history. A number of Maltusians (now named 'Guardians') remained behind to ensure that the First Lantern was kept imprisoned and became known as The Hidden Ones. | N/A | *Flight
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DC | Green Lantern Annual Vol. 5 #1 (October, 2012) | 500,000 Studs | ||
Vulture (Armand Lydecker) |
Armand Lydecker along with two of his colleagues, Warren Lawford and Gunther Hardwicke, banded together and formed the criminal group known as the Terrible Trio. Each of them wore business suits accompanied by masks suggestive of their personality and/or specified talents. Lydecker became the Vulture, for his special abilities and knowledge about birds and air maneuvers. | Pistol | N/A | DC | Detective Comics #253 (March, 1958) | 250,000 Studs | ||
Vykin the Black | Vykin the Black is one of the good New Gods of New Genesis lead by Highfather. He is also a member of the Forever People, a group of young adventurers who oppose Darkseid on Earth with the help of Infinity Man. His specialty is "magno-power," an ability that allows him to control magnetic fields. | N/A |
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DC | Forever People #1 (March, 1971) (as just Vykin); Infinity Man and the Forever People #1 (August, 2014) (as Vykin Baldaur) |
350,000 Studs | ||
Wade Eiling is The General, an officer in the U.S. Army with an intense dislike of superheroes. riginally he worked on Project Atom with Heinrich Megala, becoming responsible for the creation of Captain Atom and Major Force. | N/A
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DC | Captain Atom #1 (March, 1987) | |||||
Weather Wizard (Mark Mardon) |
A two-bit criminal who had a little bit of luck, Mark Mardon stumbled upon a scientific device developed his scientist brother Clyde, a wand that could localize weather, creating hail, lightning, and other destructive forms of weather. He used the wand countless times against the Flash as Weather Wizard, a member of the Rogues tabber. | Weather Wand |
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DC | The Flash #110 (January, 1960) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Wendigo (Paul Cartier) |
The Wendigo curse is regional to the woods of Northern Canada and takes place, under the right conditions, when a person in the forests of Canada feeds on human flesh. This "Curse of the Wendigo" was created by the Northern Gods (also known as "the Inua") in an effort to deter human cannibalism. The cannibal transforms into a superhumanly strong, nearly indestructible, fur-covered monster: the Wendigo. He or she then roams the woods eating human beings. The Wendigo frequently fights the Hulk, Wolverine, and Alpha Flight. Paul Cartier transformed into the Wendigo, battled the Hulk, and escaped. | N/A |
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Marvel | Incredible Hulk #162 (April, 1973) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Werewolf by Night (Jack Russell) |
Claws |
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Marvel | Marvel Spotlight #2 (February, 1972) | 350,000 Studs | |||
Whiplash (Ivan Antonovich Vanko) |
Ivan Vanko is the son of a Russian physicist who had helped Howard Stark design the Arc Reactor, but who had been subsequently deported from the United States when it became clear that he was working for the money rather than for the benefit of humanity. Ivan's father fell into alcoholism and proceeded to abuse the young boy for many years. At some point he was caught selling Soviet grade plutonium to Pakistan and served 15 years in prison. Over the years, Ivan became highly knowledgeable in the fields of physics and mechanical sciences, while adopting his father's hatred for the Stark family. After his father died in misery Vanko vowed to avenge him and constructed an exoskeleton, powered by a miniature arc reactor, to use against Tony Stark in an effort to discredit him and live out his father's revenge. | Plasma Whips |
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Marvel | Tales of Suspense #97 (January, 1968) (Whiplash alias with Marco Scarlotti); Iron Man 2 (April 28, 2010) (Ivan Vanko) |
300,000 Studs | ||
White Dragon (William "Billy" James Heller) |
William James Heller grew up rich. As a child, he was acquainted with (one wouldn't really call them friends) Floyd Lawton aka Deadshot. An only child, he grew up as a spoiled loner. One day, his family took a wrong turn and ended up in the middle of a race riot, his parents were both killed. Heller went to live with his grandfather, who had supported the Nazis during World War Two. Under his grandfather, the boy went from conservative to flat out racist. When his grandfather died, he left all of his wealth to Billy, who used it fund several Neo-Nazi and white supremacist groups. He later founded his own white supremacist group called the Aryan Empire. To further his goals, he adopted the name William Hell and became a masked vigilante. He would turn over black, Latino, or Asian criminals to the police while sending white ones to the nearest Aryan Empire headquarters. Black Orchid did surveillance on the man and the Suicide Squad was sent to bring him down. Deadshot posed as William Hell at a Aryan Empire meeting. Taking the podium, Deadshot gave a positive non-racial speech to both the Aryan Empire members and black protesters. Heller showed up in costume, declaring himself to be the real William Hell. To determine who the real one was, they both took turns trying to shoot an apple off Captain Boomerang's head. Deadshot hit his mark, but the squad used Chronos' time machine to change the course of Heller's shot, causing it to miss. Deadshot then unmasked Heller, ruining his reputation. Later, Heller appeared wearing a suit of armor and going by the name White Dragon. | N/A |
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DC | Suicide Squad #4 (August, 1987) | 350,000 Studs | ||
White Tiger (Ava Ayala) |
Ava, the fifth White Tiger, is the sister of Hector Ayala and a student enrolled in the Avengers Academy. She inherited the White Tiger amulet from her brother following the death of him and his family members at the hands of Gideon Mace. Upon her introduction, Ava states the White Tiger is a family legacy that she intends to honor. She also criticizes classmate Reptil for not being more active in the Hispanic community. She has been living with her sister Awilda's family since the death of her parents. | N/A |
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Marvel | Deadly Hands of Kung-Fu #19 (December, 1975) (White Tiger alias with Hector Ayala); Avengers Academy #20 (December, 2011) (Ava Ayala) |
300,000 Studs | ||
White Wolf (Hunter) |
After his parents died in a plane crash in Wakanda, Hunter was adopted by its king T'Chaka. Because he was a foreigner and White, Hunter was viewed with suspicion and even contempt by the cautious Wakandans. Nevertheless, he developed a true love for Wakanda and became one of his adopted home's stauchest patriots. After the birth of T'Challa, Hunter knew he wouldn't be the one to rise to the throne. Feeling cheated he developed a deep jealousy for his adopted brother. In an attempt to upstage T'Challa, Hunter drove himself to be the best Wakandan possible. It was this fervor that led to T'Chaka appointing Hunter as leader of the Wakanda's secret police, Hatut Zeraze. Hunter from that point was known as the White Wolf. When T'Challa became king following T'Chaka's assassination, he disbanded the Hatut Zeraze because of their brutality. Hunter, with his men, left Wakanda and became mercenaries. Though resentful of this effective exile, Hunter still loved Wakanda and thus tempered his resentment of T'Challa to aid his country when needed. | Rifle |
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Marvel | Black Panther Vol. 3 #4 (February, 1999) | 300,000 Studs | ||
William Stryker | William Stryker is a religious fanatic, with a military history which may have involved the Weapon X project (the same project that results in Wolverine being given the adamantium skeleton). Stryker is characterized by his unequivocal hatred of mutants. So strong is this hatred that Stryker goes so far as to kill his own wife and mutant son Jason Stryker immediately after his son's birth in Nevada. Crazed and outraged, Stryker then makes a failed suicide attempt. As time passes, he is convinced that Satan has a plot to destroy humankind by corrupting prenatal souls, the result of this corruption being mutants. Additionally, Stryker eventually comes to see the birth of his mutant son as a sign from God, directing him to his true calling: ensuring the eradication of all mutants. Driven by this newfound conviction, Stryker then becomes a popular but controversial preacher and televangelist. | Gun | N/A | Marvel | Marvel Graphic Novel #5 (January, 1983) | 250,000 Studs | ||
James Buchanan "Bucky" Barnes was an ally to Steve Rogers and assisted him in various missions as a member of the Howling Commandos. During one mission he was seemingly killed in action by falling off a train on the side of a mountain. However, he survived and was frozen. He was revived and received a metal arm, but lost his memory. He was trained to be an assassin, given the code name Winter Soldier, and sent on many missions. He fought with Steve who managed to restore Bucky's memories. |
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Marvel | Captain America Comics #1 (March, 1941) (as Bucky); Captain America: The First Avenger (July 19, 2011) (Bucky Barnes); |
to be added to be added Found in Legends Never Die to be added |
300,000 Studs (each variation) | |||
Wizard (William Asmodeus Zard) |
William Zard, alias the Wizard was a professional criminal from an early age. He trained under a Lama in Tibet in order to learn the ways of magic before becoming a supervillain. | Magic Wand |
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DC | All-Star Comics #34 (April, 1947) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Wizard (Carter) |
The scientist Professor Hamill had an assistant by the name of Carter, who was secretly the masked criminal known as the Wizard. He had created a lair in a deep-dark down cave accessible only by submarine. Professor Hamill had invented a remote-control machine, which could control any motor-vehicle within 50 miles. The Wizard stole this remote-control machine, using it to commit crimes. The Wizard also acquired an invisibility device, which he used to commit crimes personally. | N/A |
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DC | Batman Takes Over (1949) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Wizard (Bentley Wittman) |
Dr. Bentley Wittman grew up possessing near-superhuman levels of genius and, as an adult, became an inventor of great renown, selling his futuristic inventions to the wealthy and becoming quite rich. He also gained fame from his great intellect which he used to become a chess champion and renowned escape artists. He became known as "The Wizard" by legally assuming this stage name and using his advanced scientific inventions to perform feats of "magic". Following the birth of the super-hero group known as the Fantastic Four, the exploits of this team of adventurers -- particularly those of their youngest member the Human Torch -- became the center of the media's attention. Growing bitter from the loss of attention to himself, the Wizard became determined to prove himself superior to the Human Torch and began plotting to defeat the young hero. To this end, the Wizard made it appear that he was trapped while trying to drill a hole to the center of the Earth. When the Human Torch came to his rescue, Wittman invited the boy back to his futuristic home. There the Wizard incapacitated the Torch, and using various technological devices posed as the youth. While posing as the Torch the Wizard went on a crime spree which the Human Torch was blamed for. With the help of his sister the Invisible Girl, the Torch managed to free himself and recover the evidence clearing his name, ending in the Wizard's arrest and incarceration. He would escape and continue to cause trouble. | N/A |
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Marvel | Strange Tales #102 (November, 1962) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Wonder Girl (Cassandra "Cassie" Elizabeth Sandsmark) |
Cassie Sandsmark is the third super-hero to use the name Wonder Girl, succeeding Donna Troy as the side-kick to Wonder Woman. The daughter of an archaeologist named Helena Sandsmark and the Greek god Zeus, she has enhanced powers of strength, speed and invulnerability. Her magic lasso was given to her by Ares, and is affected by her level of anger. Her longest relationship is with fellow Titan Superboy, Conner Kent. | Lasso of Lightning |
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DC | Wonder Woman Vol. 2 #105 (January, 1996) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Wong | Wong is the descendant and look-alike of Kan, a Chinese monk who lived roughly one thousand years ago and was a student of the occult. Kan was also a teacher and a healer, and though his order of monks was devoted to the ways of peace, he was also a skillful warrior who would fight when necessary. the firstborn males of Wong's family have carried on the tradition of serving the forces of good. For the ten generations preceding Wong's, the first-born males have served the Ancient One, the former sorcerer supreme of the Earth dimension. The last of the members of Wong's family to serve the Ancient One was Wong's own father, Hamir the Hermit, who remained with the Ancient One up to the time of the latter's death. Wong was born in Kamar-Taj, the first-born son of Hamir, and thus his life was dedicated to the Ancient One from earliest childhood. When Wong was four years old, Hamir presented him to the Ancient One. Subsequently, Wong was sent to a remote monastery to become a student of the martial and mystic arts of Kamar-Taj, and receive training in how to serve a master sorcerer. Wong's relatives were allowed to visit him on occasions. Shortly before Wong's tenth birthday, Hamir brought a young couple to the monastery to visit Wong and made a marriage pact with them, betrothing Wong to their as yet unborn daughter. During his training at the monastery, Wong mastered certain Oriental martial arts. He remains highly adept in the martial arts, although since actually becoming a servant he no longer practices them as much as he once did. When Wong reached adulthood, the Ancient One sent him to the United States to become a servant of his disciple, Doctor Stephen Strange. Wong was the first member of his family to come to America. Wong has now served Strange loyally and well for many years. During that time Strange has succeeded the Ancient One as sorcerer supreme of the Earth dimension. | N/A |
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Marvel | Strange Tales #110 (July, 1963) | 300,000 Studs | ||
Wotan | Ages ago, a prehistorical woman who lived in a cold, dark wasteland. After being beaten to the brink of death, the woman was determined to discover the reasons, if any, for human existence and the suffering it entails. Escaping her tormentors, she found refuge with an aged shaman who taught her the mystical arts. The future Wotan grew to become a powerful sorceress that was worshiped as a goddess. Seeking to escape death, she learned how to extend her life by transferring her soul into another body, and finally to direct her own reincarnation into other bodies (or controlled rebirth, as Wotan named it). After thousands of incarnations, becoming both male and female, the sorceress eventually became the male sorcerer Wotan, named after the ruler of the gods in Norse and Germanic mythology. Wotan sought ultimate power, continuing to amass knowledge, both science and mysticism, and built his occult powers to great levels, often by absorbing the souls of other great mystics into himself. Wotan's ruthless pursuit for power brought him into conflict with the Lord of Order Nabu, and thus Doctor Fate. | N/A |
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DC | More Fun Comics #55 (May, 1940) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Wrecker (Dirk Garthwaite) |
Dirk Garthwaite is a former manual laborer in a demolitions crew who is fired for his violent and anti-social tendencies. Garthwaite creates a costume for himself and adopting the alias the Wrecker, commits a series of robberies, demolishing looted locations and leaving a crowbar at the scene of the crime. The Wrecker enters a hotel room that, unknown to him, is occupied by Asgardian god Loki, the adopted brother and arch-foe of the Thunder god Thor. He knocks the depowered Loki out and puts on his helmet. The Wrecker accidentally receives an enchantment - meant for Loki - from Loki's ally, Norn Queen Karnilla, and courtesy of his now indestructible crowbar is granted superhuman strength and stamina. The Wrecker was imprisoned, but he paid people to keep track of the whereabouts of his crowbar, into which he believed his enchanted power had fled after being driven from his body upon his defeat. Together with three other inmates at Ryker's Island Prison, Dr. Eliot Franklin, Henry Camp, and Brian Calusky, the Wrecker made a successful jailbreak and managed to locate his crowbar. Willing to share his power with his allies, the Wrecker had the three other convicts join him in holding onto the crowbar outside during an electrical storm. Lightning struck the crowbar, magically distributing the enchanted strength bestowed upon the Wrecker among the four of them. The Wrecker's three allies then adopted costumes and aliases as well: Franklin became Thunderball, Camp became Bulldozer, and Calusky became Piledriver. Together the four superhuman strong criminals became known as the Wrecking Crew, who were led by the Wrecker himself. | Enchanted Crowbar |
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Marvel | Thor #148 (January, 1968) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Claws |
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Marvel | 400,000 Studs (each variation) | |||||
X-Man (Nathaniel "Nate" Grey) |
X-Man is an alternate universe version of Cable, hailing from the "Age of Apocalypse" reality. He is the biological son of his dimension’s Scott Summers and Jean Grey, born of genetic tampering by Mister Sinister. His first name is derived from his creator; Mr. Sinister's real name: Nathaniel Essex, and his last name from his genetic mother Jean Grey. Due to not being infected by a techno-organic virus as Cable was, Nate achieved vast telepathic and telekinetic powers (reflecting those that Cable would have had without the virus) and was one of the most powerful mutants in existence during his lifetime. | N/A |
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Marvel | X-Man #1 (March, 1995) | 450,000 Studs | ||
X-Ray (James "Jimmy" Darnell) |
Jimmy Darnell was part of a team organized by Simon Utrecht a millionaire, public official, and industrialist who wanted to simulate the crash that led to the powers of the Fantastic Four. He promised each member of the team superpowers due to exposure (although intentional, not accidental) to cosmic radiation. During this launch, Dr. Bruce Banner (known as the Hulk) was on hand at the base, and believing the ship to be having problems, guided it back to Earth. The now-changed humans called themselves the U-Foes (possible in connection with Utrecht's last name) and blamed Banner for cutting short their radiation exposure. | N/A |
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Marvel | Incredible Hulk #254 (December, 1980) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Yellowjacket (Darren Agonistes Cross) |
Darren Cross was a self made millionaire, creating and heading his company of Cross Technological Enterprises. He was diagnosed with a rare heart condition and created an experimental nucleorganic pacemaker, causing his body to mutate. Another side effect was to have regular heart transplants thanks to quick over use and burnout. This drove Cross to kidnap heart surgeon Dr. Erica Sondheim to fix the problem. At the same time, Ant-Man (Scott Lang) was searching for Dr. Songheim to save his daughter, Cassie, and was forced to rescue her. After the battle, Cross eventually created an armored suit with Pym Particle technology to become a new Yellowjacket. | N/A |
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Marvel | Marvel Premiere #47 (April, 1979) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Ymir | Ymir came to being on Niffleheim, he is oldest and most powerful of the Ice Giants, an otherdimensional race of enormous humanoid creatures. The huge size, durability, and colossal strength of the Ice Giants made them formidable foes to the gods of Asgard over the millennia. Except for the fire demon Surtur, Ymir was the oldest known being in the Nine Worlds. Ymir was the progenitor of the entire race of Ice Giants as well as the all the Giants of Jotunheim (among them Storm Giants, Mountain Giants and Rime Giants) and most notably the Frost Giants. Although he differed considerably in appearance. Ymir and many of the first members of his race were also known as Ice Giants. Like the other Ice Giants, Ymir was covered with snow and ice, and constantly generated intense coldness from his body. | Ice Club |
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Marvel | Journey into Mystery #97 (October, 1963) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Yondu Udonta | Yaka Arrow | N/A | Marvel | Marvel Super-Heroes #18 (January, 1969) (original Yondu); Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy Prequel Infinite Comic #1 (April, 2014) (modern incarnation) |
270,000 Studs | |||
Zatanna Zatara | Magic Wand |
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DC | Hawkman #4 (November, 1964) | 400,000 Studs | |||
Giovanni "John" Zatara | On his fifteenth birthday, Zatara's grandfather, the famous stage magician Luigi Zatara, gave him a box of the tricks from his magic act. The boy showed an aptitude for stage magic and began to pursue the craft professionally at only nineteen. His early attempts at performing professionally were unsuccessful until he discovered the notebooks of his reputed ancestor, Leonardo da Vinci. While reading the notebooks, which Leonardo wrote in backwards spelling as a security precaution, Zatara learned that he had the gift of true magic. With this new knowledge, Zatara developed a successful stage show. During his premiere performance, a fire broke out on stage, forcing Zatara to use true magic to put it out. While the audience mistook the incident as part of the act, Zatara realized the true value of his power, and he resolved to use it help others. | Magic Wand |
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DC | Action Comics #1 (June, 1938) | 350,000 Studs | ||
Zilius Zox | Zilius Zox was one of those to receive a Red Lantern Ring when Atrocitus of the Five Inversions sent them out to form the Red Lantern Corps. Like the others, the ring attached itself to him, spoiling his blood, stopping his heart, and blinding him with rage. | Red Lantern Power Ring |
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DC | Final Crisis: Rage of the Red Lanterns (December, 2008) | 400,000 Studs | ||
Hunter Zolomon is Zoom, a speedster supervillain and enemy to the Flash who became the third Reverse-Flash. Originally working as a metahuman profiler for the KCPD, he was crippled by Gorilla Grodd and gained powers through an accident with the Cosmic Treadmill. Zolomon lost his mind and dedicated his life to making former friend Wally West a better hero through tragedy. Hunter Zolomon was a metahuman speedster from Earth-2. Years after witnessing his father murder his mother when he was a child, Hunter became a serial killer. Following the S.T.A.R. Labs particle accelerator explosion, Hunter was affected during electroshock therapy by the dark matter emitted, giving him superhuman speed and various other abilities derived from it. Following this, he escaped and began acting as a supervillain known as Zoom, stylized as the Speed Demon. Later, using Velocity serums, Hunter managed to artificially increase his speed to the point where he could break the dimensional barrier. Having gotten tired of being the villain, Hunter decided to become "the hero" as Jay Garrick/The Flash, stylized as the Crimson Comet, borrowing the name from the speedster he found on another Earth and kept as a prisoner. He created the charade in order to instill false hope - hope that would be ripped away. Discovering the existence of Barry Allen on Earth-1, Hunter traveled to the other Earth and acted as a friend and mentor, apparently training to fight Zoom, but actually planning to increase Barry's speed to eventually take it for himself. Hunter eventually killed a time remnant of himself to give Barry a reason to avenge "Jay" and increase his speed even further, only for his true identity to be discovered by Team Flash soon after. Shortly after, intending to break Barry emotionally, he murders Henry Allen, thus being indirectly responsible for Barry's timeline change. After losing a race to Barry and attempting to destroy the multiverse, Time Wraiths appeared and imprisoned Hunter in the Speed Force, while reducing him to a decayed spectre-like form known as Black Flash, similar to that of the Time Wraiths. |
N/A |
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DC | Flash Secret Files and Origins #3 (November, 2001) The Flash (2014 TV Series) Episode 24 (October 6, 2015) as Jay Garrick/the Flash |
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Zzzax | Zzzax was the product of an accident that occurred at a Consolidated Edison nuclear power plant when a group of heavily armed terrorists attempted to shut down the power for New York City. The explosion that their stray gunfire caused started a chain reaction in the atomic reactor, creating a psionically charged electromagnetic field of humanoid form. As the electromagnetic form grew, it incinerated those people who stood in its way, absorbing the electro-psionic fields generated by their brains, and thus acquired a human intelligence. As it began to think and become aware of its surroundings, it developed rudimentary speech and named itself Zzzax in imitation of the electrostatic "crackle" it made when it moved. As it killed more human beings, it grew more intelligent; consequently it began a campaign of murder and destruction in order to increase its intelligence further. | N/A |
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Marvel | Incredible Hulk #166 (August, 1973) | 350,000 Studs |
Downloadable Content[]
Alias | Image | Origin | Weapon | Abilities | Franchise | Debut |
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8-Ball (Jeff Hagees) |
N/A | Cue stick
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Marvel | Sleepwalker #2 (July, 1991) | ||
Antoine Triplett | Antoine Triplett joined S.H.I.E.L.D. as a specialist with medical training and eventually gained Level 6 clearance. As the grandson of a member of the Howling Commandos, Triplett was expected to do great things. Not wanting to be treated differently because of his heritage, Triplett decided to keep it to himself. | Gun |
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Marvel | Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Episode 14 (March 4, 2014) | |
Arcade | Cane |
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Marvel | Marvel Team-Up #65 (January, 1978) | ||
Araña (Anya Sofia Corazón) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Amazing Fantasy Vol. 2 #1 (August, 2004) | ||
Armadillo (Antonio Rodriguez) |
Antonio Rodriguez was born in San Antonio, Texas. He was given superhuman strength and durability by Dr. Karl Malus. This process involved having his human genes combined with the genetic material of an armadillo which gave him the appearance of a humanoid armadillo. The Armadillo's original motivation during his criminal career was to get enough money to be able to pay a doctor to discover a way to cure his girlfriend Maria of an unspecified terminal illness. When she was cured from her treatment, Maria abandoned him because of his appearance. Since that time, his motive has been to secure enough money to pay the Power Broker or some other scientist to reverse the process which transformed him. | Claws |
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Marvel | Captain America #308 (August, 1985) | |
Arrowette (Suzanne “Cissie” King-Jones) |
N/A |
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DC | World’s Finest #113 (November, 1960) (Arrowette alias with Bonnie King); Impulse #28 (August, 1997) (Cissie King-Jones) | ||
Aurora (Jeanne-Marie Beaubier) |
Born in Canada, Jeanne-Marie and her twin brother, Jean-Paul, were separated in infancy after their parents died in a car accident which caused them both to grow up without knowledge of the other. She was raised at Madame Dupont's School for Girls, a hyper-religious school in Quebec. Extremely nervous and introverted to the point of suicide, she soon discovered her mutant powers of flight, believing them to be a divine gift due to her strict religious upbringing. Telling her story to Soeur Anne, Jeanne-Marie was severely and inhumanly disciplined for "blasphemy." This incident began the dissociative identity disorder she would suffer for the rest of her life - her primary personality of a prim and proper, repressed woman, and a secondary personality of an uninhibited extrovert. As with most disorders of this type she could not remember what she did when reverting back to Jeanne-Marie. Because her problem wasn't understood or really looked at it caused her to be punished even more severely. Soon she buried the personality as well as the knowledge of her powers deep within her mind. At one time she even contemplated jumping off the roof of the school to see if her powers would save her. Instead she finished school and began teaching. Both personalities strongly disliked the other, and would switch in fear, despair, or severe stress. Leaving school and learning of her acceptance as a schoolteacher, Beaubier's uninhibited personality exerted herself to revel in joy. She was attacked by muggers, however, and used her powers to defend herself. She used her powers to defend herself against one of them when Wolverine, who was nearby at the time, noticed the commotion and stopped the second mugger. He told Jeanne-Marie that she should seek James Hudson in Ottawa. Noting her strong resemblance to Jean-Paul Beaubier, Hudson contacted him when she arrived. The two reunited and joined Alpha Flight as Aurora and Northstar. The extroverted Beaubier personality revealed in the superhero aspect of her life, adventuring with Alpha Flight and having many affairs, including a long romantic relationship with fellow teammate Walter Langkowski (aka Sasquatch). Langkowski, at Beaubier's request, performed an experiment that would negate the twin's need for contact with each other to release their powers. | N/A |
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Marvel | X-Men #120 (April, 1979) | |
Awesome Android | The Awesome Android was based on the work of the Fantastic Four's leader Mr. Fantastic and built by the Mad Thinker when he briefly took over the Fantastic Four's headquarters within the Baxter Building. When the Fantastic Four fought through their own security systems, the Awesome Android was used to fight them as well but was easily incapacitated by the heroes when Richards disabled the him through a nerve under its arm. The Mad Thinker was defeated shortly thereafter the Awesome Android was defeated. | N/A |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #15 (June, 1963) | |
Batgirl (Cassandra Cain) |
Batarangs |
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DC | Batman #567 (July, 1999) | ||
Beta Ray Bill | Stormbreaker |
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Marvel | Thor #337 (August, 1983) | ||
Big Sir (Dufus P. Ratchet) |
Born Dufus P. Ratchet, he has a malformed brain gland that caused him to grow to incredible proportions but left him mentally retarded. He was later abducted from his mental hospital home by the Rogues who equipped him with a high-tech suit of armor created by the Monitor. This suit was heavily armored, and included a powerful flying energy mace. However it also telepathically made him susceptible to suggestion. Big Sir had been used as a henchman or minion by all manner of supervillains throughout his career, notably by the Injustice League. | Flail |
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DC | The Flash #338 (October, 1984) | |
Black Alice (Lori Zechlin) |
One day, overwhelmed by shame, Mrs. Zechlin committed suicide by overdosing and drowning herself in her pool. Lori discovered the body when she comes home from school. Lori also discovered, later that same night, that she has a mystical ability: she could "borrow" the magical powers of other superheroes or supervillains. She did not have the same control over the powers as their owners and had little control over when she could take them or how long she could use them. Despite this, Lori (taking the name Black Alice) formulated a plan to avenge her mother's death and punish the prescription drug traffickers whom she saw as above the law. Lori's father, shattered and slipping into depression, became a recluse. He tried to pretend for Lori's sake that nothing was wrong. Her mother's death also distressed Lori, but she was aware of the change in her father and assigned herself the role of caregiver. Her grades began to slip, and she became alienated from her peers. Her primary social group, a Wiccan circle, expelled her because she was emitting "black energy" after her mother's death (in actuality, the circle's leader - Lori's best friend, Dawn - was jealous of Lori's real and growing powers). | N/A |
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DC | Birds of Prey #76 (January, 2005) | |
Black Dwarf |
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Marvel | New Avengers Vol. 3 #8 (July, 2013) | ||
Black Tarantula (Carlos LaMuerto) |
Knives |
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Marvel | Amazing Spider-Man #419 (January, 1997) | ||
Bluebird (Harper Row) |
Bluebird Rifle |
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DC | Batman Vol. 2 #1 (September 21, 2011) | ||
Brothers Grimm | Percy and Barton Grimes were "adult" film theatre owners living in Los Angeles. They acquired a run-down theater where the original Brothers Grimm had confronted Spider-Woman. Discovering the full-sized mannequins of the Brothers Grimm, Percy and Barton Grimes felt compelled to try on the Brother Grimm costumes. In doing so, they discovered they possessed the same powers of prestidigitation as the original Brothers Grimm mannequins. They used these powers to take revenge on a business rival, and were opposed by Iron Man (James Rhodes). Percy and Barton Grimes were taken into police custody for their crimes. They soon escaped and became professional criminals. | N/A |
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Marvel | Spider-Woman #3 (June, 1978) (Brothers Grimm alias with Nathan Dolly); Iron Man #187 (July, 1984) (Percy & Barton Grimes) | |
Bushido (Ryuku Orsono) |
Ryuku Orsono is a Japanese teenager who became a bushidōka upon his mother's death, which fulfills a long family line of honorary heroes. He first encountered the Teen Titans when they came to Japan in order to free their team member Beast Boy from the possession of the demon Tengu. Bushido uses his mystical sword to sever the head of Beast Boy; the magical sword drives out Tengu without harming Logan. Bushido never forgot his encounter with the Titans, and later traveled to Los Angeles for an impromptu Titans Los Angeles recruitment drive. |
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DC | Titans Annual #1 (August, 2000) | |
Cavalier (Mortimer Drake) |
Rapier |
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DC | Detective Comics #81 (November, 1943) | ||
Circe | N/A |
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DC | Wonder Woman #37 (September, 1949) | ||
Corvus Glaive | Glaive |
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Marvel | Free Comic Book Day Vol. 2013 #Infinity (May, 2013) | ||
Cottonmouth (Cornell Stokes) |
N/A | N/A | Marvel | Power Man #19 (June, 1974) | ||
Danny Chase was the grandson of Franklin Chase, an American intelligence agent assigned to the Manhattan Project during World War II. There, an accident resulted in Franklin being bombarded with radiation which, years later, caused Danny to be born with telekinetic powers. Danny's parents were international spies, working for the Central Bureau of Intelligence, who trained their son in espionage. When his parents were captured by the mercenary Godiva for their knowledge of a European defense satellite, Danny demanded help from CBI agent King Faraday. When Faraday was refused permission by a superior to save the Chases, Danny turned to the Teen Titans. Together, Danny and the Titans foiled Godiva's plot. After saving his parents, Danny became a member of the Titans. | N/A |
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DC | New Teen Titans Annual Vol. 2 #3 (November, 1987) | ||
Darkhawk (Christopher “Chris” Powell) |
Claws |
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Marvel | Darkhawk #1 (March, 1991) | ||
Darkstar (Laynia Sergeievna Petrovna (Krylovna)) |
Laynia Petrovna, known as Darkstar, was a mutant who was part of a Soviet super team recruited to bring the Black Widow back to the USSR. Instead, she switched sides and joined the Black Widow's then-current team, the Champions of Los Angeles, remaining with the team until it's disbanding. Darkstar joined the Soviet Super-Soldiers alongside her over-protective brother, Vanguard. | N/A |
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Marvel | Champions #7 (August, 1976) | |
Deadman (Boston Brand) |
N/A |
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DC | Strange Adventures #205 (October, 1967) | ||
Deathlok (Luther Manning) |
Laser rifle |
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Marvel | Astonishing Tales #25 (August, 1974) | ||
Doc Samson (Leonard Samson) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Incredible Hulk #141 (July, 1971) | ||
Doctor Druid (Anthony Druid) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Amazing Adventures #1 (June, 1961) (as Doctor Droom); Weird Wonder Tales #19 (December, 1976) (as Doctor Druid) | ||
Ebony Maw | N/A |
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Marvel | New Avengers Vol. 3 #8 (July, 2013) | ||
Sword |
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Marvel | ||||
Empress (Anita Fite) |
Anita Fite is the daughter of Donald Fite of the All Purpose Enforcement Squad, one of the Young Justice team's early enemies. She grew up learning Haitian Vodou from her mother and grandmother. Her mother was killed when she was young by the villain Agua Sin Gaaz. Anita became a hero due to the inspiration of Arrowette. Anita had seen Arrowette stop a thief in a mall, and was so impressed that she began to use her natural abilities to fight for good. | Emperor’s Stick |
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DC | Young Justice #16 (January, 2000) | |
Fantomex (Charlie Cluster-7) |
Pistols |
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Marvel | New X-Men #128 (August, 2002) | ||
Flex Mentallo | N/A |
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DC | Doom Patrol Vol. 2 #35 (August, 1990) | ||
Floronic Man (Jason Woodrue) |
N/A |
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DC | The Atom #1 (July, 1962) | ||
Frankenstein |
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DC | Seven Soldiers: Frankenstein #1 (January, 2006) | ||
Ganthet | Ganthet is one of the Guardians of the Universe. However, while most of the Guardians are very unemotional and distanced, Ganthet has a personality that is more human-like, including displays of empathy and concern for an individual, instead of only thinking of the Green Lantern Corps. Ganthet is also part of the Quintessence, a group of near-omnipotent beings who oversee the results of what happens on Earth. | N/A |
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DC | Green Lantern: Guardian’s Tale (November, 1992) | |
Geo-Force (Brion Markov) |
Brion Markov first assumed the role of Geo-Force when his native country, Markovia, was invaded by the forces of the marauder Baron Bedlam. Brion's father, King Viktor, was killed in this conflict, and Brion's older brother, Gregor, ascended the throne of Markovia. In an attempt to save his country, Brion was instilled with his powers by the scientific discoveries of Dr. Helga Jace. Dr. Jace originally intended to give super-powers to both Brion and his older brother, Gregor, but Gregor openly scoffed at Dr. Jace's research. During the invasion, Brion also encountered the costumed adventurers Batman, Metamorpho, Black Lightning, Katana, and Halo. After the invasion was repelled, Brion decided to travel to America to learn how to use his powers under the tutelage of the Batman. together he and the others made up the costumed super-team known as the Outsiders. | N/A |
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DC | The Brave and the Bold #200 (July, 1983) | |
Gorilla-Man (Kenneth “Ken” Hale) |
There are two accounts explaining how Kenneth Hale became the Gorilla Man. The earliest account suggested that Hale was plagued by nightmares of a Gorilla Man in deepest Africa. Becoming obsessed with finding the Gorilla Man, Hale traveled to Africa where he tracked down the mythic beast and fought it to death. In killing the Gorilla Man, Ken Hale himself was transformed into a new Gorilla Man. However, the true account of Ken Hale's transformation into the Gorilla Man is much more detailed. A soldier of fortune, Ken Hale lived for thrills and adventure. Fearing old age and death, he sought immortality on the African continent. He heard talk of a gorilla that stands like a man, and that if he killed it, he would live forever, never aging. He hunted the beast, but when he met it, he could not kill it. Leaving it alive, Hale wandered the jungle, becoming lost and sick. The gorilla found him and forced Ken Hale's hand. Ken killed the beast in self-defense, not knowing that he had just taken the curse of the gorilla man upon himself. He obtained his immortality, but it came along with spending the rest of his immortal life in the body of a gorilla. | Giant rifle |
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Marvel | Men’s Adventures #26 (March, 1954) | |
Graviton (Franklin Hall) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Avengers #158 (April, 1977) | ||
Halo (Gabrielle Doe) |
Violet Harper was a young woman who lived in Arlington, Missouri with her parents, Sam and Margaret Harper. Violet had a photographic memory, but despite this advantage, she was a problem child and in her teenage years, she became even more troublesome. Eventually, she met Mark Denniger and started a relationship with him, although she merely used him for her own convenience. Violet and Mark stole a drug formula from crimelord Tobias Whale, who had his operative Syonide follow them to Europe, where she eventually killed Violet in Markovia. Violet's body was found by the Aurakle, who existed since the dawn of time and was intrigued by organic beings. The Aurakle's energy was somehow transferred to the dead body, giving it new life and powers, but erasing all memories from their previous existence as human and energy. Just moments later, she was found by Batman and learned that she couldn't remember anything, even her own name. Because of her obvious abilities to control light, Batman gave her the codename Halo and he guided her to safety. Batman and Halo later joined the war in Markovia along with other heroes and they managed to defeat Baron Bedlam. Thanks to their combined efforts, Batman decided to create a new team called the Outsiders and Halo was glad to become part of it. | N/A |
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DC | The Brave and the Bold #200 (July, 1983) | |
Hardware (Curtis "Curt" Metcalf) |
N/A |
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DC | Hardware #1 (April, 1993) | ||
Hellfire (James “J.T.” Taylor James) |
James Taylor James, better known as J.T. James, was the descendant of famed western hero Carter Slade better known as the Phantom Rider. He inherited the Hellfire Chain, which imbued him with power to manipulate Hellfire. Before the Skrulls' Secret Invasion started, Nick Fury tasked Daisy Johnson with recruiting select individuals that he had files on for what would become his secret strike force team. She found J.T. working in a convenience store and watched as he took out two thugs with a flaming chain. As a member of the "Secret Warriors," he was excited at having powers and hoped Nick Fury paid well. He was given the code name Hellfire. | Hellfire chains |
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Marvel | Mighty Avengers #13 (July, 2008) | |
Hipployta | Hippolyta is leader of the Amazons and mother to Wonder Woman. Her daughter was born of clay made flesh, blessed by the Gods to create life without man. Following her rape at the hands of Hercules, her people became very isolationist. Ruling her people on Themyscira, she has also entered man's world to use the Wonder Woman alias. | Sword |
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DC | All-Star Comics #8 (January, 1942) | |
Hope van Dyne is the daughter of Hank Pym and Janet van Dyne, and a board member of the company founded by her father, Pym Technologies. When the CEO of Pym Technologies, Darren Cross, attempted to create and sell a new weapon based on her father's Ant-Man Suit, van Dyne reunited with her father and, along with a thief named Scott Lang as the new Ant-Man, was able to stop Cross. |
N/A | Marvel | A-Next #7 (April, 1999) (original incarnation); Free Comic Book Day Vol. 2016 #Civil War II (May 7, 2016) | |||
Inferno (Dante Pertuz) |
Dante was a newly mutated Inhuman due to the release of the Terrigen Bomb that affected New York City after the Inhuman city of Attilan fell into the Hudson River. The mist traveled all around the world which included Dante's home state of Illinois. | N/A |
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Marvel | Inhuman #1 (April, 2014) | |
Jack of Hearts (Jonathan Hart) |
N/A |
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Marvel | Deadly Hands of Kung-Fu #22 (March, 1976) | ||
Jeannette | Jeannette was born centuries ago into a tenuous lineage of Hungarian nobility. Noble but poor, her family sold its belongings so that it could send her at the age of nine to the Castle Csejtein order for her to serve Countess Bathory and learn the ways of the court. What no one outside the castle realized was that Countess Bathory was perhaps the most horrific female serial killer of all time. Jeannette was forced to watch as the Countess and her four assistants horribly tortured, mutilated and killed young girl after young girl. The horror was so great, Jeannette lost the ability to speak. She was told that she was the favorite and would therefore being saved for last. Eventually, the Countess and her assistants were tried and punished. Jeannette managed to have herself remain the Countess' servant to care for the dark lady while she spent the rest of her days locked away in a room, bringing meals and removing the waste. But the truth of it was Jeannette sprinkled tiny quantities of broken glass into every meal. The process took years, but soon Countess Bathory could not experience even a day without pain. Medical attention was denied, and she went mad from the endless torture Jeannette inflicted upon her. Jeannette died by the blade of an executioner's axe for reasons unknown. She paid off the executioner with her mother's necklace, the only piece of jewelry she had left. This was to ensure the executioner would make it quick, but he did not. The first three swings of his axe missed their mark, cracking and breaking her body without killing her. The horrible trauma of this caused her to lose touch with herself and who she had been. She found and became the Banshee. | N/A |
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DC | Secret Six Vol. 3 #3 (January, 2009) | |
Jericho (Joseph “Joey” William Wilson) |
N/A |
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DC | Tales of the Teen Titans #42 (May, 1984) | ||
Jewelee | Jewelee is one half of the married criminal duo known as Punch and Jewelee. The pair are considered a joke, as most people don't take them too seriously, which they soon regret; the pair are amoral individuals who act out of sheer whim or a strict plan, making them as almost as unpredictable as the Joker. Jewelee grew up in Brooklyn with Punch, and the two young lovers worked as puppeteers at Coney Island by day, and as thieves by night. Their lives stayed mostly the same until Clyde Phillips found a container filled with alien weaponry, which they both quickly mastered. They used the alien technology to create a large underground headquarters base in Coney Island. As Jewelee and her husband had always been puppeteers, they decided to adapt the characters of Punch and Judy to themselves. The pair started a brief criminal career along the East Coast. | N/A |
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DC | Captain Atom #85 (March, 1967) | |
John Diggle is an ex-bodyguard, ex-soldier, and a member of Team Arrow. John is the older brother of Andy Diggle, the husband of Lyla Michaels, and the father of John Diggle Jr. As a member of Oliver's team, John is his partner and plays a number of roles including field support, decoy and guidance to Oliver in times of doubt. John was known in the Suicide Squad under the code-name Freelancer. When Curtis Holt accompanied them to rescue Ray Palmer, he was given the designation Spartan by Felicity. | Pistol |
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DC | Arrow Episode 1 (October 10, 2012) | ||
Johnny Sorrow | N/A |
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DC | Secret Origins of Super-Villains 80-Page Giant #1 (December, 1999) | ||
John “Johnny” Thunder | Johnny Thunder was the seventh son of a seventh son, born at 7 a.m. on the seventh day of the seventh month in 1917. This made him a target to be kidnapped and sold to a group of mystics from the country of Badhnisia who had been looking for someone born at this time on this day, because they knew such a child would inherit great powers on his seventh birthday, power that they would use to rule the world. The Badhnisians performed mystic rituals over the infant Johnny, and gave him the magical Zodiac Belt, all in order to gain control over the genie-like Yz, the Thunderbolt. However, when Johnny was five, Badhnisia came under attack from a neighboring country, and Johnny was able to escape Badhnisia and return to the United States, by a sequence of unlikely events, with the Zodiac Belt's protection. When Johnny was seven, he did not come into control of the Thunderbolt (however, only his family was untouched by the worldwide seven days of rain that started on his seventh birthday). After that, he lived an unexceptional life until one day, while washing windows, he inadvertently summoned the Thunderbolt with the magic words "CEI-U" (pronounced "say you"), which he accidentally used to become a successful boxer. As Thunderbolt remained invisible, the innocent Johnny thought that he himself was the cause of the supernatural things that occurred frequently. Eventually, Johnny figured out Thunderbolt's existence and how to summon him on cue, and used this ability to eventually join the Justice Society of America. His naivete and poor control over the awesome powers of his Thunderbolt often made him seem like the comic relief of the group. | N/A |
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DC | Flash Comics #1 (January, 1940) | |
Jolt (Helen "Hallie" Takahama) |
Robert and Jane Takahama moved with their daughter to New York City from Ojai, California, for a chance at a better life. Because of her father's work at the United Nations and her mother's psychiatric practice, Hallie grew up in relative luxury and comfort. That all changed on her 15th birthday, when the menace known as Onslaught killed her parents, razed her home and destroyed her neighborhood during his attempt to take over the world. In the aftermath, the mad geneticist and supervillain Arnim Zola abducted Hallie, along with a number of other children. She was subjected to experiments that made her feel as if she were being torn apart from the inside. The procedures made her faster and stronger, filling her to bursting with energy. At the first opportunity, Hallie used her new powers to escape. She then sought out the Fantastic Four, but found the Thunderbolts instead, since they were now living in Four Freedoms Plaza. Still, they decided to accompany Hallie to rescue the other captives and defeat Zola. Subsequently, Hallie adopted the name Jolt and joined the team. Hallie had no idea the Thunderbolts were really the Masters of Evil masquerading as heroes, scheming to work themselves into a position of trust and power. | N/A |
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Marvel | Thunderbolts #1 (February, 1997) | |
Justice (Vance Astrovik) |
Vance Astrovik was born in Saugerties, New York. Vance's latent mutant telekinesis powers were activated when he encountered his future self, Major Victory of the Guardians of the Galaxy. Major Astro had traveled back in time, and across realities, in an attempt to prevent Vance from becoming an astronaut and ending up in cryogenic suspension for a thousand years. Instead, the Major accidentally triggered Vance's powers early and created an alternate timeline. Shortly after, Vance ran away and joined a circus, where he performed a mind-reading act as "The Amazing Astrovic." Crossing paths with the Thing, the two helped to take down the Taskmaster, who was using the circus as a front to train henchmen for the underworld. As Marvel Boy, Vance attempted to apply for membership to the Avengers. However, he was turned down by his idol, Captain America, on the grounds that he was too young and inexperienced to be a member. Night Thrasher, an armored vigilante who was building his own team, had been paying the hot dog vendor outside Avengers Mansion for information on who was coming in and out of the building. When he heard of Vance's attempt, he approached him and offered him a position on the team. Vance met Firestar when Night Thrasher shanghaied her into joining the team. They started out as just friends, occasionally spending time together. After some time, their relationship became more serious. Vance's father, who as a child had been beaten for his homosexuality, grew up a bitter man. When he found out about Vance's mutant abilities, he turned on him the same way his own father had, calling him a "freak" and abusing him. Eventually, Vance lashed out at his father with a full-on telekinetic assault, accidentally killing him. Vance was found guilty of negligent homicide, and sent to the federal facility for super-humans known as the Vault. Vance served his time in due respect for the law, even helping out the prison Guardsmen during an uprising, and also developed a friendship with one of the Guardsmen. When he came out of prison, he had a new outlook on life, and renamed himself the more mature Justice. | N/A |
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Marvel | Marvel Super-Heroes #18 (January, 1969) (original incarnation as Vance Astro a.k.a. Major Victory); Giant-Size Defenders #5 (July 1975) (Vance Astrovik) | |
Killer Frost (Crystal Frost) |
When Crystal Frost was a student at Hudson University, she fell in love with one of her professors, Martin Stein. Stein however, rejected Frost's affections. Part of this was due to the fact he was married at the time and another part was he felt it was inappropriate for himself to be sexually involved with a student. Crystal was devastated and her low self-esteem eventually developed into a hatred of all men. After college, Frost became a scientist working on the Mohole scientific project in the Arctic. At this time, she was reunited with Stein. During their research, Crystal was accidentally locked inside a thermo frost chamber, and as a result was transformed into a killer with the ability to project waves of freezing cold. From this point forward, she began calling herself Killer Frost. | N/A |
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DC | Firestorm #3 (June, 1978) | |
Knockout | Knockout was a former Female Fury from Apokolips whose hidden identity was that of a super-strong stripper who worked at a club called the BoomBoom Room. Operating in Hawaii around the time Superboy Conner Kent arrived as well, she used her super strength to fight and flirt with Superboy just for the fun of it. | N/A |
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DC | Superboy Vol. 4 #1 (February, 1994) | |
Komodo (Simon Lacroix) |
Simon Lacroix was born into poverty, with determination and intelligence as his only resources. Nevertheless, he ultimately got a position at Queen Industries, where Robert Queen was impressed by the young man's perseverance. To Robert, Simon was everything his own son was not, as Oliver was, at that point, still a shallow, irresponsible teenager. Simon became a part of Robert's expedition to find the fabled Arrow Clan totem, which is said to grant enlightenment to those who wield it. Seeking that enlightenment for himself, Simon betrayed and murdered his mentor. Simon eventually became the public face of Stellmoor International, and adopted Shado's daughter Emiko. After engineering the events the caused Oliver Queen to lose his fortune, Simon took up the mantle of the masked assassin Komodo, framing Green Arrow for murder and besting him in battle. A second confrontation resulted in Komodo losing an eye, but Green Arrow was still unable to gain a decisive victory against his new nemesis. | Bow |
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DC | Kobalt #11 (April, 1995) (Komodo alias with Kobalt enemy); Green Arrow Vol. 5 #17 (April, 2013) (Simon Lacroix) | |
Lightray (Solis) |
N/A |
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DC | New Gods #1 (March, 1971) | ||
Lord Satanus | Lord Satanus is a demon and an antagonist to Superman. He and his sister Blaze are children of the wizard Shazam and an unknown demoness. His alter-ego is Colin Thornton, owner of the newspaper Newstime which competes with the Daily Planet in Metropolis. Becoming one of the major players in Hell, he is frequently engaged in power struggles against other demons for supremacy and rulership. | Hooked staff |
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DC | Adventures of Superman #493 (August, 1992) | |
Machine Man (Z2P45-X-51/Aaron Stack) |
|
Marvel | 2001, A Space Odyssey Vol. 2 #8 (July, 1977) | |||
Machinesmith (Samuel ”Starr” Saxon) |
At the age of fourteen, Samuel Saxon discovered one of Doctor Doom's robots abandoned in a subway tunnel. He took it piece by piece to his father's garage in Queens, where for months he studied its components until mastering its operating principles and building his own robot from scratch. Following his disapproving mother's death in an alleged laboratory accident, he used the insurance money to – over a few years – entertain himself by building a series of increasingly advanced robots and androids. As Saxon's creations became more sophisticated, he was taken under the wing of the Tinkerer, an underworld genius who turned Saxon into a novice at crime. With the Tinkerer's assistance, Saxon obtained a contract from imprisoned gangster Biggie Benson to target Daredevil with a robot assassin, the Plastoid. Saxon also had the robot commit a series of crimes in New York. He discovered Daredevil's secret identity, and kidnapped Karen Page (Daredevil's girlfriend). He blackmailed Daredevil into allowing him to escape. Deciding to confront Daredevil directly, Saxon murdered Zoltan Drago and stole the man's costume and weaponry. As "Mister Fear," he challenged Daredevil to a public duel in New York City. He rigged Daredevil's billy club to release fear gas pellets, and began a crime spree. However, Saxon battled Daredevil and lost, breaking his neck in a fall from a flying hovercraft platform. However, several of Saxon's robots, standing by in case they were needed and programmed to protect his existence at any cost, retrieved him and, unable to treat his injuries, downloaded his consciousness into a primitive robot body. Saxon, now called the Machinesmith, soon transferred his consciousness into a more human-like body, although it bore little resemblance to his original form, and returned to crime, selling android operatives to various parties. | N/A
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Marvel | Daredevil #49 (February, 1969) | ||
Mad Thinker (Julius (surname unknown)) |
The past of the Mad Thinker is a complete mystery. He has claimed to have worked in the private sector over a decade before the modern age. He also has claimed to have a sister and a nephew named David. He had stated that early on in his career he allowed his nephew to observe his experiments. However, when he created a thermoconductor device, it killed his sister and mutated his nephew. The Thinker then had David put in stasis while he tried to find a way to deal with him. A genius, the Mad Thinker became obsessed with probabilities, developing massive computers to determine the outcome of future events. With these machines he began working with various criminal gangs in New York City. He was able to predict precise moments in time where the police could be thwarted while chasing his clients. He was able to predict things like when a hot dog vendor would impede a foot chase, to where pipe mains would burst making a police chase impossible. So skilled was the Mad Thinker, he could even predict something as weirdly specific as a organ-grinder's monkey setting fire to a deserted shack where incriminating evidence was held. Establishing himself in the criminal underworld and earning the trust of many of New York's gangs, the Mad Thinker then set for higher aspirations, namely the conquest of New York and then the world. | N/A |
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Marvel | Fantastic Four #15 (June, 1963) | |
Northstar (Jean-Paul Beaubier) |
Jean-Paul Beaubier is born to a French Canadian family in Montreal, but after his parents die in an automobile accident during his childhood, he and his twin sister, Jeanne-Marie, are separated. Jean-Paul is later adopted, but his adopted parents are killed after only a couple of years. Prior to his debut as a superhero, Beaubier competes as a professional skier. He became an elite level skier during his teenage years, prior to his mutation surfacing. Once he develops his mutant abilities he becomes virtually unbeatable and eventually bores of the sport due to the lack of competition. He becomes an angry and rebellious youth and, as a young adult, joins the Front de libération du Québec, a terrorist separatist movement organized to win independence for Quebec from Canada. However, he soon becomes disgusted with the group's tactics and renounces terrorism. Beaubier then learns of a superhero group financed by the Canadian government called Alpha Flight. He then reunites with his sister Jeanne-Marie, who takes the name Aurora. | N/A |
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Marvel | X-Men #120 (April, 1979) | |
Proxima Midnight | Proxima Midnight is a member of Thanos's Black Order. Thanos chose her for her expert combatant skills. Proxima is the wife of fellow Order member Corvus Glaive. | Spear |
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Marvel | New Avengers Vol. 3 #8 (July, 2013) | |
Punch (Clyde Phillips) |
Clyde Phillips is one half of the married criminal duo known as Punch and Jewelee. The pair are considered a joke, as most people don't take them too seriously, which they soon regret; the pair are amoral individuals who act out of sheer whim or a strict plan, making them as almost as unpredictable as the Joker. Punch grew up in Brooklyn with Jewelee, and the two young lovers worked as puppeteers at Coney Island by day, and as thieves by night. Their lives stayed mostly the same until Clyde Phillips found a container filled with alien weaponry, which they both quickly mastered. They used the alien technology to create a large underground headquarters base in Coney Island. As Clyde and his wife had always been puppeteers, they decided to adapt the characters of Punch and Judy to themselves. The pair started a brief criminal career along the East Coast. | N/A |
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DC | Captain Atom #85 (March, 1967) (as just Punch) | |
Born in Minsk as the son of Russian nuclear physicist Sergei Krylov (later, the Presence), Nikolai Sergeievich Krylenko and his twin sister Laynia Petrovna (Darkstar) were taken from birth by the then-Soviet government to be trained as soldiers after their mutant natures manifested. Joining the KGB-sponsored Soviet Super-Soldiers, Vanguard and the team came into conflict with many American heroes, especially Iron Man. After Darkstar was killed while serving with the X-Corporation in Paris, Vanguard's desire to avenge or restore his sister led to a schism in the Winter Guard. Leading a new group called the Protectorate, Vanguard and his teammates made their way into Limbo, suffering losses and were betrayed by Fantasma, who regained her lost memories and was revealed as a Dire Wraith. Upon returning to normal space, the Protectorate joined forces with the Winter Guard against Fantasma and the Presence, who intended to spawn a new generation of Wraiths. Darkstar was indeed resurrected during this mission, but several members of the Protectorate and Guard were killed or lost in the conflict. Vanguard took up the shield and identity of the Red Guardian in the aftermath, becoming the eighth to use the name. |
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Marvel | Avengers #43 (August, 1967) (Red Guardian alias with Alexi Shostakov); Iron Man #109 (April, 1978) (Nikolai Krylenko); Darkstar and the Winter Guard #3 (August, 2010) (Nikolai as Red Guardian) | |||
Richard “Rick” Sheridan was a college student from New York who became the host for an interdimensional being called the Sleepwalker. |
N/A |
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Marvel | Sleepwalker #1 (June, 1991) | ||
Amahl Farouk was the leader of the underground syndicate located in the "Thieves' Quarter" of Cairo, Egypt. He was a powerful mutant who also operated as a vessel for the Shadow King. |
Marvel | X-Men #117 (January, 1979) | ||||
Supergiant | Supergiant is a member of Thanos's Black Order; she is a mentally unstable omnipath and telepathic parasite who seeks out intellect and devours it. | N/A |
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Marvel | Infinity #1 (August, 2013) |