List of Marvel Comics characters: G

(Redirected from Carter Ghazikhanian)

G-Type

edit
G-Type
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceNew X-Men vol. 1 #124
Created byGrant Morrison, Igor Kordey
In-story information
Team affiliationsImperial Guard
AbilitiesTelepathy

G-Type is a fictional character from Marvel Comics.

G-Type is one of the Shi'ar's Imperial Guard, and is also an alien. He was engineered in the stellar nurseries of Hodinn and was composed of a living solar plasma, with a constant surface temperature of 6000 kelvins (about 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit or 5,700 degrees Celsius). Because of this G-Type wears a specially-constructed suit of armour which assists him in retaining a humanoid form, and containing the incredible heat he generates. G-Type can focus the intense energies that his body generates through a pair of wrist-mounted flamethrowers. G-Type is also a telepath, although the nature and extent of his telepathy are unknown. Similar to the other Imperial Guard members, he is based on DC Comics' Legion of Super-Heroes, sharing traits with Wildfire and Saturn Girl.

His mind, like the minds of many other Shi'ar soldiers, was overtaken by the telepath Cassandra Nova.[volume & issue needed] He was defeated by Cyclops and the entity known as Xorn, whom he was planning to fire into the Earth's atmosphere.[volume & issue needed]

Gaea

edit

Gaea is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

Gaea is one of the Elder Gods of Earth.

Gaia

edit

Gaia, also known as the Guardian of the Universal Amalgamator, is a fictional superhero, depicted as possibly being a mutant or extraterrestrial. Created by Larry Hama, she first appeared in Generation X #37.

Not much is known about Gaia's origin besides her having spent thousands of years chained to the Universal Amalgamator at the end of Time, a device that would be used to merge all sentient consciousnesses into one being.[1] Gaia was apparently the safeguard that was supposed to prevent the Amalgamator from being activated by malicious people. She even claimed that her entire galaxy was wiped out at one point for her refusing to activate the Amalgamator.[2]

However, when M-Plate, the synthesis of Emplate and M, tried to have Synch use his power to tap into Gaia's and activate the Amalgamator, Everett refused.[2] The Citadel of the Universal Amalgamator began to crumble around them and Generation X wanted to leave, but Synch went back, along with Penance, to save Gaia. Banshee thought him lost but Gaia knew of a secret portal that was hidden underneath the altar that she had been chained to and—coincidentally—led back near the academy. With the Amalagamator destroyed, Gaia was freed from her responsibility and ran off to live a life that was now her own.[3]

When she was seen next, she had gotten into an accident with a sports car and had pink hair.[4] The policeman who came to the wreck knew of the academy, and suggested that she be put into their hands.[4] She lost some of her abilities to the Shadow King's telepathic shockwave, and stayed with Gen X, hoping to sort out that difficulty with their help.[5]

Gaia formally enrolled in the Xavier's School for Gifted Youngsters,[6] but left after a short time, saying that she wanted to experience Earth, not just learn about it.[7]

It is unknown if Gaia was one of the 90–95% of mutants who lost their mutant powers on M-Day.[8]

Gaia has been shown to have a degree of superhuman strength, limited invulnerability, telepathy,[4] psychokinesis,[9] and the ability to draw on an extra-dimensional source of matter and energy to create or reshape anything according to her will.[4] She is capable of warping reality to a limited degree, although she is largely inexperienced with this power and its use requires great concentration.[10] Gaia also appears to be either extremely long lived or completely immortal as she stated that she visited Earth 600 years ago and still has the appearance of a teenage girl.

Michele Gonzales

edit

Michele Gonzales is a supporting character of Spider-Man in Marvel Comics' main shared universe. She is a criminal defense lawyer and the hot-tempered sister of Vin Gonzales, Peter Parker's roommate. She temporarily is Peter's roommate while Vin serves time for his involvement in the Spider-Tracer Killings frame-up. When Michele attempts to kick Peter out (who is actually the Chameleon in disguise) she is instead seduced by him and becomes infatuated with him.[11] She is almost constantly angry, but is also a helpful and kind person, by trying hard to help her clients get their lives back on track. After pestering and bothering Peter tirelessly, she returned to her previous home in Chicago shortly after Vin's release.[volume & issue needed]

Galacta

edit

Galacta is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. She is the daughter of Galactus.[volume & issue needed]

Galacta in other media

edit

Galactus

edit

Galactypus

edit

Galactypus is an anthropomorphic platypus and animal version of Galactus.

Galaxy Master

edit

Gambit

edit

Gamesmaster

edit
Gamesmaster
 
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceThe Uncanny X-Men #283 (1991)
Created byWhilce Portacio
In-story information
SpeciesHuman Mutant
Team affiliationsUpstarts
Notable aliasesHarold Smith
AbilitiesOmnipathic awareness places him in constant contact with every mind on the planet by way of the astral plane

Gamesmaster is a fictional mutant character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. He first appeared in The Uncanny X-Men #283 (1991).

Fictional character biography

edit

Gamesmaster is a mutant with the ability to have omnipathy. In his life before becoming the Gamesmaster, he led a regular life with a wife and child; however, years of omnipathic exposure to other people's minds drove him to a point where he eventually forgot his own real name. At some point, Gamesmaster was contacted by the immortal sorceress Selene and then-Black Queen of the Hellfire Club. Together, they organized the Upstarts, a competition for wealthy and powerful individuals with the sole purpose of killing mutants for points in a twisted game. He agreed only to provide a distraction from the constant chatter in his mind. By focusing on the ambitious and powerful thoughts of the Upstarts, Gamesmaster was able to drown out the rest of the world.[15]

In his capacity as the referee of the Upstarts' games, Gamesmaster oversaw the Upstarts' activities, which included confrontations with the team of adolescent mutants known as the Hellions and the team of superhuman mutant adventurers known as the X-Men. After Selene was removed from the game by the Upstart Trevor Fitzroy, Gamesmaster continued to monitor the competition.[16] After the Upstarts captured several former young members of the mutant trainee team, the New Mutants, and took them to Gamesmaster's base in the Swiss Alps, their teammates in X-Force and the New Warriors attempted to rescue them. Gamesmaster would have defeated them if it were not for the intervention of Paige Guthrie, the mutant sister of X-Force's Cannonball, who argued that a greater game would be to compete with Professor X, the telepathic founder of the X-Men, and others like him who hoped to find and guide the next generation of mutants. Gamesmaster agreed and disbanded the Upstarts after allowing the heroes to leave.[17]

Later, Gamesmaster captured both Doctor Weisman of the Weisman Institute for the Criminally Insane and one of the patients, a young boy named Jeremy Stevens. The Institute had a history of involvement with Xavier, who sensed something was amiss and sent Siryn, the mutant daughter of former X-Man Banshee, to investigate. On arrival, Gamesmaster clouded Siryn's memories, but she was rescued by her ally, the mercenary known as Deadpool. Unbeknownst to Siryn, Deadpool had been captured, but she eventually became aware of his predicament and, with the help of her X-Force teammate Shatterstar, came to his rescue.[18]

Gamesmaster later forced Shatterstar to return to the institute. Shatterstar's life had become intertwined with that of one of the institute's patients, Benjamin Russell, and Shatterstar merged with the body of Russell to live. As all of this occurred under the watchful eye of Gamesmaster, the full implications of these events are yet to be revealed.[19] Soon after, Gamesmaster attempted to control the minds of members of the X-Men by trapping them in a world of his own design to hide the fact that he had kidnapped the telepathic Jean Grey. However, the X-Men learned of Gamesmaster's deception and confronted him. Gamesmaster subsequently revealed that it was part of a game he was playing with the X-Men to see how they would react to their perfect world, where mutants were no longer feared. He took Grey prisoner, as she was the only telepath among the X-Men who could challenge him. However, Gamesmaster had underestimated the X-Man Joseph, who was unknowingly a clone of the self-styled master of magnetism, Magneto. This error allowed Grey to break free and defeat Gamesmaster.[20]

Years later, Gamesmaster resurfaced, still in possession of his mutant powers following the events of M-Day. He showed a strong interest in the mutant X-23 and promised to watch her closely, even against her will.[21]

The Games Master is an omnipath, a superhuman telepath able to hear the thoughts of every being on the planet. However, he cannot block the thoughts out, and thus his mind is constantly filled with seven billion voices, unless he is able to intensely concentrate on a distraction. Gamesmaster also possesses the ability to manipulate the thoughts of others and has suggested that, in addition to controlling minds en masse (as he once did with Salem Center in New York),[22] he can manipulate the thoughts of the entire population of Earth simultaneously (though Jean Grey determined this to be a fallacy while in combat with him). To a lesser extent, Gamesmaster is also able to control the actions of other sentient beings. He was also shown to be capable of keeping other superhuman abilities in check, as he once did with the X-Man Rogue. So far, only three people have proven to be immune to his powers: Jean Grey, Husk (although Husk was only able to resist his telepathy by "husking" into a certain form), and Speedball.

Gamesmaster in other media

edit
  • Gamesmaster makes cameo appearances in the X-Men: The Animated Series episodes "Time Fugitives" and the five-part episode "Beyond Good and Evil".

Gammenon the Gatherer

edit

Gamora

edit

Ganymede

edit

Ganymede is a fictional extraterrestrial superhero in the Marvel Comics Universe. Her first appearance was Silver Surfer (vol. 3) #80 (May 1993).

Ganymede is the last surviving member of a race of warrior women known as the Spinsterhood, a group which was formed with the sole purpose of destroying the cosmic being known as Tyrant. After a centuries long cryogenic sleep, she awakened to find Tyrant's servants kidnapping powerful cosmic entities to drain their powers for their master's own ends. Mistaking Silver Surfer for a minion of Tyrant, Ganymede attacked him and the two fought until Tyrant's minions ambushed and kidnapped them both.

Ganymede, along with Tyrant's other hostages, Silver Surfer, Terrax, Morg, Beta Ray Bill, Gladiator and Jack of Hearts escaped their imprisonment and attacked Tyrant together, only to fail miserably. Galactus arrived and ended the battle. After that, those involved went their separate ways except for Ganymede, who decided to stay with Jack of Hearts to help nurse him back to health after his selfless sacrifice that freed his fellow captives. Ganymede and Jack of Hearts had a few adventures together, wherein they struck up a romantic relationship.

Gardener

edit

Gargantua

edit

Gargouille

edit

Gargouille (Lavinia LeBlanc) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character was created by John Ostrander, Joe Edkin and Ivan Reis, and first appeared in Quicksilver #9 (May 1998). She is a diminutive mutant who has razor-sharp claws and horns, and bat-like wings with which she could fly.[23][24][25][26][27]

Gargouille in other media

edit

Gargouille makes a non-speaking cameo appearance in the X-Men '97 episode "Remember It" as a resident of Genosha.

Gargoyle

edit

Garko the Man-Frog

edit

Garko the Man-Frog is a one off villain in Marvel Comics. The character was created by Steve Gerber and Frank Brunner and solely appeared in Giant-Size Man-Thing #4 (February 1975).

Garko was an ordinary human who somehow possessed a vial of chemicals that transformed him into a humanoid frog. He runs into Howard the Duck, who had just landed in Cleveland, Ohio and was helped out by a couple of kids. The two of them battle, but during the fight, Garko further mutates into a mindless normal frog before being crushed by a police cruiser.

Garko the Man-Frog in other media

edit

Garko appears in the Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur episode "Skip This Ad..olescence", voiced by Gary Anthony Williams.

Garokk

edit

Jeffrey Garrett

edit

John Garrett

edit

Gatecrasher

edit

Gateway

edit

Kulan Gath

edit

Gauntlet

edit

Gauntlet is the name of two different characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

Inhuman

edit

Gauntlet is a member of the Dark Riders, employed by Apocalypse, and is one of the Inhumans. He is fitted with a cybernetic gauntlet, high-powered weapons, and wears a mechanical device over one eye used for tracking and scoping out prey.

Gauntlet first appeared in X-Factor #65, and was created by Jim Lee, Chris Claremont and Whilce Portacio.

Joseph Green

edit

Gauntlet in other media

edit

The Inhuman incarnation of Gauntlet appears in the X-Men: Evolution episode "Target X", voiced by Mark Gibbon.

Gavel

edit

Blackie Gaxton

edit

Blackie Gaxton is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character was created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko, and first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man #11 (January 1964). He was a gangster to whom Bennett Brant owed a large gambling debt. He blackmailed Brant into getting his sister Betty Brant to contact Doctor Octopus when he was released from prison to spring Gaxton from prison himself. When Spider-Man caught up with Gaxton and Doctor Octopus on his getaway ship, Gaxton accidentally shot Bennett during a struggle with Spider-Man. He was arrested again and supposedly returned to prison.[28]

Blackie Gaxton in other media

edit

Blackie Gaxton appears in The Spectacular Spider-Man, voiced by Steve Blum.[29] This version is the manager of the Big Sky Lounge and was one of the men responsible for turning Mark Allan into Molten Man.

Gazelle

edit

Geiger

edit

Geist

edit

Geist (Nikolaus Geist) was a supervillain in Marvel Comics. He was created by Archie Goodwin, and first appeared in Wolverine (vol. 2) #17 (November 1989).

Geist had been an adviser for Adolf Hitler during World War II, and gave Hitler ideas on how to run the concentration camps. To escape war crime punishment, he used German rocket scientists to help the OSS. He later participated in questionable CIA operations. During Wolverine (vol. 2) #17 and later issues, however, he was an adviser to President Caridad, of the fictional South American country Tierra Verde. Caridad wanted Geist to create a superhero and champion for Tierra Verde, much like Captain America. He was experimenting on humans with a special crop of cocaine, which drove the victims mad. His main guinea pig was Roughouse. Wolverine learned of this, and even though Roughouse had been his enemy, he helped him escape.

Wolverine cut off Geist's metal shell, leaving him to die.[30] However, Tierra Verde allowed CIA agents to bring Geist out of the country allowing subsequent repairs. Soon after that, Magneto caught up with him and brought him into an abandoned house, exacting revenge for the death of Magneto's wife and supposedly killing him off-panel.

Geist was a cyborg, but had no superpowers. Due to his advanced age he was encased in a metal shell simply to survive.

Geldoff

edit

Gemini

edit
edit

Android

edit

Ecliptic Gemini

edit

Thanos' Gemini

edit

Genesis

edit

Genis-Vell

edit

Gentle

edit

Ghan

edit

Ghaur

edit

Annie Ghazikhanian

edit

Annie Ghazikhanian is a fictional nurse who worked with the X-Men. She first appeared in The Uncanny X-Men #411, and was created by Chuck Austen and Ron Garney.

When the X-Man Havok is found in a comatose state, she is assigned to his care. Despite Havok's only real reaction being an energetic appreciation of the sunlight, she develops romantic feelings towards him. When the X-Men discover he is still alive (as he was presumed dead), Cyclops, Alex's brother, comes to collect him. Annie and her son soon move in.

While Annie is a normal human, her son, Carter Ghazikhanian, is a mutant. Annie has some anti-mutant prejudices, but she tries getting over them. She developed a personal friendship with the X-Man Northstar, and kept secret his romantic feelings for Iceman. She is seen many times administering to wounded X-Men.

When Havok wakes from his coma he pursues a relationship with Annie, even after becoming engaged to Polaris. Havok later leaves Polaris at the wedding altar, further damaging the woman's already-shaky mental state. He and Annie have a romantic relationship (despite her occasional flirts with Iceman) until she leaves the mansion. She fears for her son's safety because of supervillain attacks upon the mansion.

Carter Ghazikhanian

edit

Carter Ghazikhanian is a fictional mutant character in the Marvel Comics Universe. His first appearance was in The Uncanny X-Men #411, created by Chuck Austen and Ron Garney.

Carter is the son of Annie Ghazikhanian, the former nurse at the Xavier Institute. Since their move to the school, Carter struck up a friendship with the young aquatic mutant Sammy, alias the Squidboy. When Carter tries to help Alex Summers, the X-Man known as Havok, from his coma, something strange occurs which rendered Carter unconscious. His consciousness became ensnared by the essence of the evil counterpart of Havok from the Mutant X universe, but Carter and the real Alex were rescued by Professor X. After the rescue, the Professor indicates he wants to talk to Annie about Carter's father, whose identity has yet to be revealed.

Annie later took him away from the Xavier Institute when she found it a too dangerous place for him. During their exit from the facilities, the new Brotherhood of Evil Mutants led by the ex-Acolyte Exodus, attack the institute. One of the Brotherhood's many victims is Sammy. Carter telepathically detects Sammy's brutal death.

Also, while they leave, the astral projection of an undetermined person is shown next to Carter's face. Annie seems unaware of this projection. Carter's dialogue and expression at this time hint that he is under the control of this individual. The projection was later revealed by Austen as the intended return of Cassandra Nova, but on his departure from the books, the storyline was dropped.[citation needed]

Carter Ghazikhanian is a mutant who possesses both telepathic and telekinetic abilities. The full extent of Carter's powers, however, are still undetermined.

Other versions of Carter Ghazikhanian

edit

In X-Men: The End, Carter is depicted as a deeply traumatized child, possibly as a result of the deaths of both his mother and Havok. His powers have evolved to the point of being able to create solid psionic constructs, as he is seen playing in a castle he created. He is killed, along with most of the student body, when Skrulls invade the mansion.

Ghost

edit

Ghost Girl

edit

Ghost Girl is an alias used by multiple superheroes in the Marvel Universe.

Wendy Hunt

edit

Wendy Hunt is a fictional superhero in the Marvel Universe. She first appeared in The Invaders #14 (March 1977) and was created by Roy Thomas and Frank Robbins as an homage to DC Comics' Phantom Lady.[citation needed] She is a member of the Crusaders, and possesses a belt which enables her to generate a holographic double of herself.

Lili Stephens

edit

Lili Stephens is a fictional mutant superhero in the Marvel Universe. She was created by Steve Seagle & Scott Clark, and first appeared in Alpha Flight (vol. 2) #2.

Ghost Girl is a former member of the superhero team Alpha Flight. Department H call her a "Legacy" case, but it is never explained what that means.[volume & issue needed]

She possesses the ability to "phase" or pass through solid matter by passing her atoms through the spaces between the atoms of the object through which she is moving.[volume & issue needed] While intangible, she is invulnerable to physical attacks. She can also use her intangible body to create gateways through solid objects for others to use, which she finds ticklish.[volume & issue needed]

Ghost Rider

edit

Johnny Blaze

edit

Danny Ketch

edit

Alejandra Jones

edit

Robbie Reyes

edit

Ghost Rider 2099

edit

Ghoul

edit

G'iah

edit

G'iah is a character appearing in comic books for Marvel Comics. The character, created by Robbie Thompson and Niko Henrichon, first appeared in Meet the Skrulls #1 (March 2019). She is a Skrull who is a general that operated on Earth as Gloria Warner alongside her own family posing as an ordinary American family.

Giant-Man

edit

Hank Pym

edit

Bill Foster

edit

Raz Malhotra

edit

Giant-Woman

edit

Gibbon

edit

Gibbon is the name of two fictional characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

Martin Blank

edit

Martin Blank is a man who was seemingly born a mutant with an ape-like build and agility. Gibbon later joins a circus where he does well as an acrobat. Martin Blank begins his career as a friend of Spider-Man's while wearing a gibbon suit. He even wants to be his partner, but Spider-Man laughs at him.[31] Sick of being seen as a freak, Martin cannot take further ridicule and lashes out. He then catches the eye of Kraven the Hunter, who enhances the Gibbon's powers with a herb broth, also giving him a great animal rage. Gibbon was defeated by Spider-Man.[32]

Gibbon was one of the inmates at Ryker's Island.[33] Gibbon sought revenge on Spider-Man, trying to prove himself as good as his foe. He is caught in the middle of a fight with Spider-Man and Beetle. Eventually, Gibbon helps Spider-Man by punching out the Beetle.[34] Gibbon later joins up with other has-beens: Kangaroo, Grizzly, and Spot to form the Legion of Losers.[35]

This team falls apart when Spider-Man carted Spot and Kangaroo to jail for bank robbery.[36] He and Grizzly would later attempt to go hero, helping Spider-Man thwart a bank robbery by White Rabbit and eventually getting an action figure deal.[37][38]

The Gibbon has been shown as retaining his physical mutation following M-Day, but showed no sign of his former mutant abilities.[volume & issue needed]

Gibbon is seen as a client for the law offices that employ She-Hulk. He steals her tuna melt lunch out of the fridge.[39]

Following the "Civil War" storyline, the Gibbon is a self-confessed loser at the wake of Stilt-Man that is held at the Bar With No Name. Almost all of the supervillains at the wake are the victims of murder/attempted murder. Disguised as a barman, Punisher poisons drinks and then blows up the bar.[40] It is later mentioned that "they all had to get their stomachs pumped and be treated for third-degree burns".[41]

Martin is being considered as a "potential recruit" for the Initiative program.[42]

Martin, nearly hairless, has spent his time since the bar attack plotting vengeance on the Punisher against the wishes of Martin's wife Princess Python (who was apparently blinded in the explosion). When Martin finds the Punisher, however, he decides his revenge is not worth throwing away his life, and hands his gun over to the Punisher, returning home.[43]

Gibbon returns as the lead character in the Marvel Apes storyline.[44]

The Gibbon wasn’t the perfect choice just because he’s a mainstream Marvel character who can easily "pass" in an ape-filled monkeyverse, but because he’s such a lovable loser. Nothing ever goes right for him—he never gets a break, the girl, or the glory—and suddenly he finds the fate of an entire universe in his hands. In some ways, Marvel Apes is a sprawling epic like Lord of the Rings, and the Gibbon is our Frodo— one small person dwarfed by the overwhelming forces that stand between him and his goal. He even has his own Samwise— a spunky gal-scientist (human) named Fiona Fitzhugh who literally gets sucked into this adventure along with him.

Gibbon, apparently restored to his simian appearance with the related abilities, is left with his personal life in shambles. His attempts to side with the heroes are frustrated by his ineptitude, and even Princess Python, previously a caring and loving wife, has now become fed up with the meek loser Gibbon is reverting to. Out of boredom and depression, he replies to an ad posted on the Daily Bugle by Fiona Fitzhugh, a spunky and cheery young scientist hoping to study the nature of superpowered individuals. Her experiments fling both of them into a reality populated by simian version of the Marvel Heroes, and destroy the machines that could have been used to bring Gibbon back. Fiona supposes, due to Gibbon having his powers since birth, instead of gaining them in puberty as the majority of the mutants (thus making Gibbon more similar to mutants like Multiple Man and Nightcrawler), and being "drawn" to that particular reality, that Gibbon may be connected somehow to the Simian World.[45] While Fiona asks for help from the simian version of the Fantastic Four, Gibbon is inducted by Spider-Monkey into the Ape-Vengers. Despite their friendly facade, the Ape-Vengers are far more ruthless and bestial than their human counterparts. The Gibbon sets out to discover the truth, with the help of a cadre of dissident simian heroes: the Ape-Vengers are under the thrall of Baron Blood, who in this reality stole the appearance and the powers of Captain America, using his influence to prey over villains' and dissidents' blood at his leisure.[46] Along with Speedball and Wolverine, despite being now pursued by Baron Blood and his followers, Gibbon manages to free Captain America from the iceberg in which he was entombed since the 1940s, gaining his help in battling the impersonator.[47] Eventually, he and Fiona make their way back home.[48]

Later while now resembling a man-sized Gibbon, he travels with Gorilla Girl, Fiona, and several other allies as Norman Osborn seeks to exploit the potential of the now somewhat-accessible 'ape' universe.[volume & issue needed] Fiona works to provide the Gibbon with various means of disguise to hide his simian nature.[49]

During the "Hunted" storyline, Gibbon is among the animal-themed superhumans that were captured by Taskmaster and Black Ant for Kraven the Hunter's Great Hunt that is sponsored by Arcade and his company Arcade Industries.[50]Vulture spoke to Gibbon telling him not to ally with Spider-Man. Vulture turned against Gibbon as the Hunter-Bots move in on Gibbon.[51] Gibbon was mortally wounded by a Hunter-Bot. As he laid dying, he reflected on his life while also coming to the conclusion that Princess Python never loved him. Spider-Man showed up and showed him some comfort by seeing to it that Gibbon did not die alone.[52] Vulture lied to the other animal-themed characters that Gibbon sacrificed his life for them until Spider-Man showed up and mentioned what really happened to Gibbon.[53]

Unnamed criminal

edit

Martin Blank later sold his costume to Roderick Kingsley who gave it to an unnamed criminal. Gibbon was present with Hobgoblin (who was actually Roderick Kingsley's butler Claude) when he led his forces into fighting the Goblin King's Goblin Nation. After Hobgoblin was killed by Goblin King, Gibbon was among the villains that defected to the Goblin Nation.[54]

Gibbon was seen with the other former Hobgoblin minions at the Bar with No Name where they encounter Electro.[55]

Gibbon later appears as a member of the Hateful Hexad alongside Bearboarguy, Ox, Squid, Swarm, and White Rabbit. During the Hateful Hexad's disastrous fight against Spider-Man and Deadpool, the battle is crashed by Itsy Bitsy who stabs Gibbon.[56]

Gibborim

edit

Gideon

edit

Giganto

edit

Gigantus

edit

Rose Gilberti

edit

Gilded Lily

edit

Gilded Lily (Lillian von Loont) was featured in the series Alpha Flight, first appearing in Alpha Flight volume 1 issue 20. She was an alchemist of great talent and a student of Diablo. Lily was initially seen to be a woman in a golden mask, golden gloves, and a fur coat that covered her slender body to her feet. She had lived for an inordinate length of time, her makeup (on her mask) and hair were very much in the style of the 1920s, particularly that of Louise Brooks.

Gladiator

edit

Gladiator is the name of two fictional characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

Melvin Potter

edit

Kallark

edit

Gladiatrix

edit

Corvus Glaive

edit

Glamour

edit

Glamour is a character created by Chris Claremont and Aaron Lopresti, first appearing in Excalibur vol.3 #1 (May 2004).[57] She is a mutant with the power of trichokinesis, who joins Unus' Gang after the massacre of Genosha. She would later be depowered after M-Day.[58]

Heather Glenn

edit

Heather Glenn is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. She is a brief love interest to Daredevil (Matt Murdock). The character, created by Marv Wolfman and William Robert Brown, first appeared in Daredevil #126 (July 1975).

Heather first appeared when she barged into the apartment of Matt Murdock, thinking it was her ex-boyfriend Frankie. Not realizing that he moved out and that Matt had just bought the place, she was surprised, but not angered, admitting that Frankie was a "creep" and that she thought Matt was handsome. Due to still having spare keys to the apartment, Heather began to invite herself over and openly starts to flirt with Matt, revealing that her ex, whom she absent-mindedly starts calling "Freddy", is now married and happily begins to make out with Matt against his will.[59] Since then, she became something of a tagalong for Matt and Foggy Nelson, even becoming their new secretary. She starts off as a nuisance for Matt,[60] but she calms down before revealing that her father is Maxwell Glenn, CEO of Glenn Industries, and helps finance his and Foggy's storefront.[61]

Maxwell later became a suspect in embezzled funds, but Heather refused to believe the accusations.[62] Eventually, the embezzler turned out to be his assistant Mr. Stone, relieving Heather.[63] Despite this, her father is once again placed under investigation and arrested.[64] Matt continued to treat Heather like a child due to her scatterbrained behavior and she left their storefront, but Matt managed to bring her back. Unbeknownst to Heather, Maxwell is revealed to have been under the influence of Purple Man. Soon after, Heather is hit with two major bombs: her father committed suicide in prison, and Matt is Daredevil. Angered over the truth, Heather breaks up with Matt.[65]

Purple Man would later lure Daredevil into a trap, using Heather as bait, and pit him against his rogues. Eventually, Daredevil was victorious and took Heather home.[66] Heather since came back to Matt, slightly more accepting of his double life as a crime fighter.[67] Though they would continue to have an on-again/off-again relationship,[68] with Heather finding herself in the middle of Daredevil's adventures.[69] She resumed running Glenn Industries, but could not help, but feel ignored by Matt.[70] He would later propose to Heather and while she accepts, she is unhappy with his intent for her to quit her position at Glenn Industries, especially when she discovers a conspiracy within the company.[71] To save both Matt and Heather's careers, Foggy and Black Widow forge letters to both of them, causing the two to break up.[72]

Heather fell back into alcoholism and resumed her socialite lifestyle. She briefly dated Tony Stark, before moving on to computer expert and Mayor's aid Tarkington Brown.[73] While under the influence, Heather accidentally revealed that Matt is Daredevil to him. She rushes to warn Matt, though the two of them are still some slight animosity between them. Nevertheless, Matt rescues Heather from Tarkington.[74] Ultimately, Heather could not pull herself out of her alcoholism and depression. She calls Matt to come and see her and while he talks with her, he leaves to stop a mugging. Believing that he was leaving her for good, Heather hangs herself, shattering Matt.[75]

Heather Glenn in other media

edit
  • Heather Glenn makes a cameo appearance in Daredevil, portrayed by an uncredited actress. She leaves a message on Matt's phone, announcing that she is breaking up with Murdock due to the latter's enigmatic behavior.
  • Heather Glenn will appear in Daredevil: Born Again, portrayed by Margarita Levieva.[76][77]

Glob

edit

Joseph "Joe" Timms

edit

Sumner Samuel Beckwith

edit

Glob Herman

edit
Glob Herman
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceNew X-Men #117
Created byGrant Morrison
Ethan Van Sciver
In-story information
Alter egoRobert Herman
SpeciesHuman Mutant
Team affiliationsThe 198
Xavier Institute
Omega Gang
Jean Grey School Students
Hellfire Academy
X-Men in training
X-Men
Abilities

Glob Herman (Robert Herman) is a fictional mutant character, a supervillain and later superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. His first appearance was in New X-Men #117. Glob was created by Grant Morrison and Ethan Van Sciver.[citation needed]

The young mutant called Glob Herman has skin that is completely transparent and made up of bio-paraffin, or "living wax". Though he lives among other mutants, Glob Herman easily stands out. Herman is friends with Kid Omega, one of Professor X's top students.[volume & issue needed]

Glob Herman enrolled into the Xavier Institute for Higher Learning after Professor X was publicly revealed to be a mutant. Herman joins the unsanctioned, teenage Omega Gang, led by Kid Omega, as they secretly take a hard line stance for mutant rights. With the Omega Gang, Herman attacks the humans who they thought had murdered Jumbo Carnation.[78] He later participates in the slaughter of a group of U-Men.[79] When the Omega Gang instigate a riot at the Xavier Institute, Herman has Redneck light him on fire. He then pursues a bus full of human civilians, chasing it at full speed down the highway. Cyclops, Xorn and Beast pursue. Beast saves the lives of two men in a sports car who cross Herman's way, which he turns into scrap metal without slowing down. When the chase nears a gas station with a cement mixer, the X-Men manage to surround Herman. They use the mixer to cover him with cement and the Beast uses water bottles from the station himself to put out Herman's fire. At that point, much of Herman's covering of bio-paraffin has burned away, and he is reduced to a skeleton with only a relative thin layer of wax. Later, Herman is seen, still covered in cement, being ferried back to the X-Mansion on a specialized truck.[80] For his crimes, the X-Men send him to help the needy in Africa.

During the event of Schism, Glob Herman chose to join Wolverine and became a student at the Jean Grey School.[volume & issue needed] During an expedition with some other students and Wolverine in the Savage Land, Glob Herman was upset by the teaching methods of Wolverine, and he was proposed by Sauron to leave the X-Men. This plan was interrupted by the time-traveling villain 'Dog Logan', Wolverine's brother, who tormented the students Glob had been in the Savage Land with. He left them behind to seemingly face death at the hands of Dog, instead they defeated the villain.[81] Glob agreed to join the Hellfire Club and becomes a recruit of the new Club's School: the Hellfire Academy.[volume & issue needed]

Glob is back on friendly terms with his X-Academy teammates. He is allowed to rejoin as a student. As part of a remedial class he travels to New York with Spider-Man. There he is turned into a dinosaur and recovers. The entire class is kidnapped by Mojo, an inter dimensional villain.[82] He is seen socializing with Kid Gladiator, Broo and Idie at a black-tie affair party.[83] As part of the self-proclaimed 'special class', Glob Herman now goes on weekly crime fighting patrols with Spider-Man.[84]

Herman is later seen volunteering to assist mutants and their family members in need at the school.[85] Glob graduates to official X-Men status during his efforts to fight off a demonic invasion threatening innocent civilians.[86] As part of the X-Men, he is on a squad sent after six hundred mutant embryos. This team and the embryos themselves are sent into the far future, in a world dominated by the villain Apocalypse. Glob, Anole, Ernst and No-Girl become lost in this far-future and as a four-some travel for a full year among many dangers before other X-Men show up to bring them home.[87]

On an alternate universe, Glob, Beak and Quentin Quire were part of a villainous trio. As most of the heroes had been killed, villains ran rampant. Glob talked about his enjoyment of burning people before his entire group was taken down by that world's Nighthawk.[88]

Glob Herman in other media

edit

Glorian

edit

Glowworm

edit

Glowworm is the name of two unrelated fictional characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Though created only a few months apart, they have little in common except the name.

William Blake

edit
Glow Worm
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearancePower Man/Iron Fist #123 (May 1986)
Created byJim Owsley
Mark Bright
Jerry Acerno
In-story information
Alter egoWilliam Blake
SpeciesHuman mutate
Notable aliasesRace Killer, White Devil
Abilities

First appeared in Power Man and Iron Fist #123 (May 1986). This version was William Blake, a former soldier who had volunteered for experiments to re-create the Super-Soldier Serum. After leaving the Marine Corps, one night he transformed into a huge, glowing white creature who began screaming racial slurs and attacking black people in Power Man's neighborhood. When news got out that a "white mutant" was attacking blacks, it nearly sparked a race riot, but once Cage defeated the creature, it reverted to human form, revealing that he was a black man himself.[volume & issue needed] Blake had grown up in the Deep South, at a time when rampant racism led him to believe that blacks were inferior to whites, resulting in his own hatred of himself and his own race.[90]

It has been revealed that Glowworm has remained in custody since his initial capture.[91]

Second version

edit
Glow Worm
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceX-Factor #7 (August 1986)
Created byLouise Jones
Jackson Guise
In-story information
SpeciesHuman Mutant
Team affiliationsMorlocks
Abilities
  • Volatile constructs

The second Glowworm first appeared in X-Factor #7 (August 1986). This version is a mutant with a humanoid torso, and a worm-like tail instead of legs. He is the partner of Bulk, a mutant with enormous size and strength.

Bulk and Glowworm were outcasts, not just for their mutant status or unusual appearance, but because both continually gave off toxic levels of hard radiation that proved to be a problem for the Morlocks. The two sought shelter in a toxic waste dump in New Jersey, but upon hearing about the group X-Factor (who at that time were posing as mutant hunters), the pair decided to attack them to "protect mutants". After a short battle, the members of X-Factor explained their true nature as mutants themselves. The two returned to their isolation.[volume & issue needed]

In The New Mutants Annual #4, Bulk and Glowworm seemingly sacrificed their lives to save Danielle Moonstar.[92]

Glowworm in other media

edit

The second version of Glowworm appears in X-Men: The Animated Series as a member of the Morlocks.

Glyph

edit

Glyph (Nadeen Hassan) is a teenager that became a beacon that summoned ancient Egyptian spirits. She was ultimately recruited into the Howling Commandos.

Ma Gnucci

edit

Goblin King

edit

Goblin King is the name of different characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

Norman Osborn

edit

Norman Osborn is the first character to use the Goblin King alias. When the children that work for the Vulture are discussing what to do after the Superior Spider-Man (Otto Octavius's mind in Spider-Man's body) brutally defeats the Vulture, he approaches the children and tells the group that he will be the one that crushes Superior Spider-Man.[93] He is later shown having gathered a new gang of followers together in the sewers formed from discarded members of other villains' gangs like the Vulture, the Owl and the third White Dragon's gangs; these henchmen escaped their organizations unharmed because Superior Spider-Man is more focused on the larger threats (where the original Spider-Man would focus on individuals).

While building an army to attack the Superior Spider-Man, he acts as the Goblin King.[94] The Hand ninjas who evaded capture arrive at the sewers and join up with the Goblin Nation. The group revels in the news that, thanks to Superior Spider-Man's assault, the Goblin King now owns over half of New York's organized crime. He claims he now owns New York City as the Goblin Kingpin of Crime.[95] With the help of Menace, the Goblin King later releases Phil Urich from a prison transport and upgrades the latter's Goblin armor and weapons, asking in return only that his enforcer's only identity from here on shall be Goblin Knight.[96] The Goblin King trains the Goblin Knight, anxious to confront the Superior Spider-Man.[97] The Goblin King later poses as the Hobgoblin and is sighted by some of the Spiderlings.[98]

Upon Carlie Cooper being brought to the Goblin King's lair by Menace, he receives Carlie's journal from Menace which reveals to him that Octavius's mind is in his nemesis's body.[99] The Goblin King douses Carlie with the Goblin formula, causing the woman to mutate into the new superhuman villain Monster. He demands to know Spider-Man's identity, but Monster first asks the Goblin King to reveal his own identity. The Goblin King assures Monster that he is Osborn, but refuses to remove his mask until Carlie has proven a loyal follower and dispatches Monster and Menace on a mission.[100] The Goblin King battles and kills the Hobgoblin, although the Goblin Knight discovers that it was the butler Claude with Roderick Kingsley still in hiding abroad.[101]

Having staged a coup of New York after spreading his resources by exploiting the Superior Spider-Man's reliance on technology, the Goblin King directly confronts the Superior Spider-Man, angry that he was cheated out of the opportunity to defeat his nemesis, but offering the Superior Spider-Man the chance to join him and the former rejects the offer. With the Superior Spider-Man unable to win against Goblin King's resources, having had various allies abandoned, and with faith in his own abilities gone, Octavius sacrifices himself to restore the original Spider-Man's mind and save Anna Maria Marconi.[102] Spider-Man arrives for the final confrontation to which the Goblin King quickly realizes that the original Spider-Man is back when responding to his nemesis' taunts with his own wisecracks.[103] In the duel that follows, Spider-Man unmasks the Goblin King, learning that he has undergone plastic surgery to change his appearance, acting as Alchemax's CEO and intending to re-establish himself as businessman Mason Banks, now that Osborn has become too publicly known as a supervillain. Spider-Man defeats and strips the villain of his powers with a serum devised by Octavius, but Osborn manages to escape through Liz Allan's discreet aid. In hiding once again, he reflects that the various heroes will be unprepared for him when he returns with his new identity and approach as a businessman, seemingly no longer afflicted by the mental illness associated with the Goblin formula.[104]

Phil Urich

edit

Philip "Phil" Urich is the second character to use the Goblin King alias. Following the conclusion of The Superior Spider-Man storyline where the true Spider-Man returns, he now leads the Goblin Nation's remnants as the self-proclaimed Goblin King. He meets with Mister Negative where they wait for Eel to show up to divide the criminal underground following his predecessor's defeat. The meeting is crashed by the Black Cat and Electro. Black Cat mentions to the Goblin King and Mister Negative that Spider-Man had outed them and wants a share in their plans.[105]

During the "AXIS" storyline, the Goblin King attempts to rescue Lily Hollister from a police transport; this mission goes awry and Lily is rendered amnesiac.[106] When the Goblin King confronts Kingsley in the latter's headquarters, the Queen Cat comes to the defense. The Goblin King recognizes Hollister as the Queen Cat, but Lily does not recognize him. Following the attack, Missile Mate is convinced by the Goblin King that the Hobgoblin would soon abandon the heroes that were trained. Missile Mate goes to the Goblin Nation's headquarters and asks the Goblin King to join and be a supervillain. The Goblin King is reluctant, but Missile Mate shows him that he has also gathered all the supervillains that the Hobgoblin had "abandoned" (consisting of 8-Ball III, Killer Shrike II, Melter III, Tiger Shark II, and Unicorn IV) after becoming a good guy.[107] While the celebration of Hobgoblin Day is being held with a parade in Kingsley's honor, Missile Mate betrays the Hobgoblin and attempts to murder in the Goblin King's name. Kingsley, however, had already expected the betrayal and had been using a hologram decoy which took Missile Mate's blow. As soon as Kinglsey confronts Missile Mate, the Goblin King appears with his Goblin Nation and attacks the celebration. The Hobgoblin bests the Goblin King in combat and delivers him and the Goblin Nation members with him to the authorities.[108]

Having escaped prison under undisclosed circumstances during the "Go Down Swinging" storyline, the Goblin King raids an old gentlemen's club to acquire the Goblin weaponry stored there, but Norman Osborn- currently wielding the Carnage symbiote's power- apparently kills Urich by tearing his heart out.[109]

Goblin King in other media

edit

GoGo Tomago

edit

Goblyn

edit

Goblyn (Goblyn Dean) is a fictional mutant character in the Marvel Comics universe. She first appeared in Alpha Flight #48 (July 1987), and was created by Bill Mantlo and Terry Shoemaker.

Goblyn is one of a pair of fraternal twins. Before birth, it was revealed that Goblyn was a mutant and would be of monstrous appearance. Her parents decided that for her own good she would be aborted. Sensing the danger, her sister Laura (later known as Pathway) used her own mutant ability to send Goblyn to another dimension where she would be safe. Later Laura would return her to Earth, where they would both become involved with Alpha Flight.[volume & issue needed]

Goddess

edit

Godzilla

edit
Gog
 
Cover of The Amazing Spider-Man #103, the first appearance of Gog. Art by Gil Kane.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceThe Amazing Spider-Man #103 (December 1971)
Created byRoy Thomas (writer)
Gil Kane (artist)
In-story information
SpeciesTsilin
Team affiliationsSinister Six
AbilitiesSuperhuman strength
Interdimensional teleportation via bracelets

Gog is a fictional supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character has appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man and X-Men. Created by writer Roy Thomas and Gil Kane, the character first appears in The Amazing Spider-Man #103.

While traveling through the Savage Land, Kraven the Hunter finds a crashed spaceship in quicksand and ventures inside. There, he finds the juvenile Gog and another member of his species, who died during the crash landing of the spaceship. Deciding to save the young Gog from his sinking ship, Kraven takes him with him and decides to raise him as a pet; much to Kraven's surprise, Gog rapidly grows to a gigantic size only days after being found.[113] Kraven, realizing how useful Gog can be, decides to use him in a plot to conquer the Savage Land. After kidnapping the visiting Gwen Stacy from a camp in the Savage Land, Kraven and Gog battle the heroes Ka-Zar and Spider-Man.[114] While Ka-Zar deals with Kraven, Spider-Man defeats Gog by luring him into a patch of quicksand, which he then sinks to the bottom of.[113] Gog would later be saved from dying in the quicksand by the Plunderer. Having Gog (who created a device that allowed him to speak English) act as his servant, the Plunderer uses him in a plot to try to steal the super-soldier serum in New York City. Followed to New York by Ka-Zar, Gog and the Plunderer battle him before Gog, using his teleportation bracelets, escapes, first to the Statue of Liberty, then the World Trade Center and finally, to another dimension.[115]

Gog is later found by Doctor Octopus and the Sinister Six, who induct the creature into their group as the sixth and final member.[116] Whilst engaged in battle with several heroes, Gog is beaten in combat by the hero Solo and shrunken by Mister Fantastic, who sends him back to the dimension the Sinister Six found him in.[117]

Gog later appeared on Monster Isle when Shadowcat and Magik appeared to look for a mutant girl named Bo. Gog was among the monsters that attacked the three until Magik teleported herself, Shadowcat, and Bo to the Jean Grey School for Higher Learning.[118]

Gog reappeared in The Amazing Spider-Man with underwriter Nick Spencer detailing his new origin as an alien pet and voyage to Earth as Kraven's bodyguard.[119]

Gog in other media

edit

Gog was considered to appear in a spin-off film to the 2012 film The Amazing Spider-Man featuring the Sinister Six, with Drew Goddard attached to write and direct.[120][121]

Goldbug

edit

Goldbug is the name of different characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

Matthew Gilden

edit

Matthew Gilden is a gold-obsessed, technologically powered professional thief. In his first appearance, Goldbug, using the false identity of "Jack Smith", hired Power Man to prevent a shipment of gold from being stolen by the Goldbug. "Smith" then donned the Goldbug costume, stole the gold, and attempted to pin the crime on Cage and Thunderbolt.[122] Cage and Thunderbolt recovered the gold and cleared their names, but Goldbug escaped.[123]

Later, the Goldbug was revealed to be an unwitting pawn of They Who Wield Power, including the Hulk's foe Tyrannus, and set out to capture the Hulk.[124] Goldbug kidnapped the Hulk to power his technology and set out to find the city of El Dorado, the legendary "city of gold." The Hulk broke free and escaped, causing the Bugship to crash.[125] They nevertheless arrived in El Dorado, with the Hulk dragging the unconscious Goldbug to El Dorado.[126] There, Goldbug planned to kill the Hulk, but one of the members of They Who Wield Power revealed himself to be Tyrannus, who killed the other two members of They. Goldbug learned that he was Tyrannus's pawn, and Goldbug and the Hulk both turned on Tyrannus but were captured.[127] Goldbug freed the Hulk from captivity to battle Tyrannus, and they used El Dorado's technology against him. Tyrannus was teleported into space.[128] The Hulk and Goldbug were teleported to New York, where Goldbug was apprehended by the Heroes for Hire: Luke Cage and Iron Fist.[129]

Goldbug was next hired by the Maggia to steal some gold from an Empire State University laboratory. He did so, not realizing that the gold had been exposed to radiation during experiments at the university, and that he had thereby contracted radiation poisoning. He battled Spider-Man, but when Spider-Man revealed the gold's radioactivity, the Maggia turned on Goldbug, who fell into the river and disappeared.[130]

Goldbug next appeared undergoing treatments for his radiation poisoning. He appeared with a submarine version of his ship, seeking out the sunken remains of an office building that had been transformed into solid gold by the Beyonder during Secret Wars II. He was thwarted by Namor the Sub-Mariner, but managed to escape capture.[131]

Goldbug reappeared during the aftermath of the Secret War that had been organized by Nick Fury against Latveria. Goldbug was among the supervillains who had been supplied with enhanced technology and powered armor by Latverian dictator Lucia von Bardas and sent to attack the heroes who had been involved in Fury's Secret War.[132] The villains' technologies were then hijacked by von Bardas, supplying her with power, potentially at the cost of the villains' lives,[133] but the assembled heroes defeated von Bardas and apprehended Goldbug and the others.[134] Goldbug later attended the auction in which the Venom symbiote was sold.[135]

Later, when the Superhuman Registration Act was announced during the Civil War event, Goldbug wanted to leave the country. He contacted Vienna to make him a new fake identity, but he did not know Vienna was secretly working for the new Heroes for Hire, who later apprehended Goldbug and several other super-villains.[136] When Goldbug and the Plunderer were brought to Captain America's Secret Avengers by Diamondback, the Punisher shot both of them dead, saying that they were "thieves and killers".[137][138]

Second version

edit

A second version of Goldbug, equipped with the original's Secret War-era armor, appears as one of the villains being extorted by Lady Caterpillar.[139]

As part of the All-New, All-Different Marvel event, Goldbug hatches a scheme with White Rabbit and Walrus to tamper with New York City's water supply, but the three are defeated by Spider-Woman, and placed in a new supervillain prison called the Cellar.[140]

Third version

edit

Roderick Kingsley sold one of Goldbug's old costumes to an unnamed criminal. This version had his encounter with Spider-Woman during one of his criminal activities and was defeated by her.[141]

During the "Gang War" storyline, Goldbug is among the villains that Hobgoblin hired to guard his hideout and ended up fighting Scorpion, Shift, and Starling.[142] After Goldbug used his Gold Gun on Starling's wings, Scorpion persuaded Goldbug and the other villains to turn against Hobgoblin.[143]

Golddigger

edit

Golden Archer

edit

Golden Archer (Wyatt McDonald) is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character was created by Roy Thomas and John Buscema and first appeared in The Avengers #85 (February 1971). He is a member of the Squadron Supreme. He has also gone by the codenames Hawkeye and Black Archer.

Wyatt McDonald, an Australian cab driver in his civilian guise, was a master archer with a large selection of specialized trick arrows. He originally began his career as a masked superhero under the identity of Hawkeye. He developed a relationship with Linda Lewis (a.k.a. Lady Lark), a former vocalist whose vocal cords had been altered by the criminal mastermind Dr. Decibel. Together they fought crime in the city of New Babylon, eventually gaining enough fame to draw the attention of the superhero group Squadron Supreme, who invited them to join.

The character first appeared when Avengers Vision, Scarlet Witch, Quicksilver, and Goliath (Clint Barton) end up in the Squadron Supreme's universe and briefly battle them.[144]

Alongside the Squadron, he falls under the influence of the Serpent Cartel. The team travels to the mainstream Marvel Universe and battles the Avengers. As there is already a Hawkeye in that universe, McDonald changes his name to the Golden Archer to "avoid confusion", picking a name that the Avenger Hawkeye had once used as an alias.[145][146] The Avengers eventually convince the Squadron that the Serpent Cartel is evil, and the team denounces them.[147]

Alongside the Squadron, he is mind-controlled by the Overmind. The team is freed by the Defenders, and the two teams battle the Overmind and Null, the Living Darkness.[148] To repair the global chaos wrought by the Overmind, the Golden Archer joins in the Squadron's decision to take control of the United States to implement the Utopia Program, and with the rest of the team publicly reveals his secret identity.[149] Wyatt was captured, and nearly executed by vigilantes.[150]

McDonald's relationship with Lady Lark becomes strained as she develops romantic feelings for fellow Squadron member Blue Eagle. McDonald proposes to Linda, but she rejects him. Desperate to maintain their relationship, he uses a behavior-modifying machine (created to reform criminals) to make her love him, completely changing her personality in the process.[151]

He is soon captured by the Squadron's enemies, the Institute of Evil.[volume & issue needed] The Institute tortures the Archer into revealing the location of the Squadron's new base of operations, and attack and capture the Squadron. They use the behavior modification device on the heroes to make them be on their side, but it is revealed that after the Archer had used the machine on Lady Lark, the machine had been modified so it could not affect other Squadron members.[152] The Golden Archer later admits what he did to Lady Lark, and the team votes to expel him.[153] He later changes his name to the Black Archer and joins the Redeemers, a team founded by Nighthawk to oppose the Squadron's domination of the planet.[154] The teams eventually battle each other, and Black Archer is killed by a blow from Blue Eagle.[155]

The Golden Archer has no superhuman powers, but he is a superb archer. He uses a customized double-recurve bow, with both conventional arrows and a wide variety of "trick arrows". He is a good hand-to-hand combatant, trained by Nighthawk.[volume & issue needed] He also wore a protective force field belt, as a Squadron member, designed by Tom Thumb.

Supreme Power Golden Archer

edit

An African-American superhero called Black Archer appears in the Supreme Power: Hyperion miniseries, set in a possible future of the Supreme Power universe.

Heroes Reborn Golden Archer

edit

In the 2021 "Heroes Reborn" reality, Golden Archer is a member of the Secret Squadron. During the fight with Siege Society, Golden Archer had a duel with Hawkeye before being stepped on by an enlarged Fire Ant. Following the fight with the Siege Society, Tom Thumb, Nighthawk, and Blur mourn the deaths of Amphibian, Arcanna Jones, Blue Eagle, and Golden Archer.[156]

Hawkeye Hawkeye uses the alias when Steve Rogers gives up the Captain America persona to try and make Steve realize he can't give up being a hero; it works and Steve takes up the Nomad persona[157]

Golden Girl

edit

Golden Girl is the name of two fictional characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

Betsy Ross

edit

Gwenny Lou Sabuki

edit

Gwendolyne "Gwenny" Lou Sabuki was the second Golden Girl introduced by Marvel. She made her first appearance in 1978, but her World War II-era character predates the post-war Golden Girl, Betsy Ross. Created by writer Roy Thomas and penciller Frank Robbins in the Retcon series The Invaders #26 (March 1978), she had appeared, sans power, as Gwenny Lou. She gained her powers in the following issue, #27 (April 1978), and went on to appear as the Golden Girl in #28 (May 1978) and #38 (March 1979). A flashback story featuring her as one of the Kid Commandos is in All-New Invaders #6–7.

During World War II, teenaged Gwenny Lou Sabuki, daughter of Japanese American scientist Sam Sabuki, was present at a stateside battle in which sidekicks Bucky and Toro of the Invaders superhero team fought the supervillain Agent Axis. One of Dr. Sabuki's inventions accidentally gave Gwenny Lou and her friend David "Davey" Mitchell superhuman powers. Gwenny Lou gained the power to generate light and energy and the ability to project golden force beams from her hands. Mitchell gained the ability to spin at superhuman speeds. She became Golden Girl, and he became the Human Top.[158] The four youthful heroes defeated Agent Axis and later formed the Kid Commandos, who were allied with the adult Invaders.[volume & issue needed]

In one incident, the Kid Commandos also fought the Invaders because they disagreed with the military's use of a Tsunami Bomb, which would have caused too much collateral damage. The bomb was never used because the Invaders saw the testing site was populated with civilians.[159]

Gwenny Lou later helped found the post-war organization known as the V-Battalion. Gwenny eventually changed her superhero name to Golden Woman before she died in 1961. Her son and her granddaughter became the superheroes Golden Sun and Goldfire, respectively, although Golden Sun died when his own daughter was five years old.[160] Another of Gwenny Lou's granddaughters eventually became the Japanese heroine, Radiance.[161]

Whoopie Goldfish

edit

Whoopie Goldfish is an anthropomorphic goldfish and animal version of Whoopi Goldberg.

Golem

edit

Goliath

edit

Bill Foster

edit

Tom Foster

edit

Vin Gonzales

edit

Goom

edit

Goose Rider

edit

Goose Rider is an anthropomorphic goose and animal version of Ghost Rider.

Gordon

edit

Gordon is a fictional character that originated in the Marvel Cinematic Universe before appearing in Marvel Comics. The character, created by Jeffrey Bell, Jed Whedon and Maurissa Tancharoen, first appeared in "What They Become" of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. (December 9, 2014) and is portrayed by Jamie Harris.

Gordon made his comic book debut in Uncanny Inhumans #0 (June 2015) from Ryan Stegman and Ryan Lee. Gordon was imprisoned in another dimension with the monstrous Inhuman named Snarkle. Both were exiled by the Great King Kalden 2,000 years ago for unknown reasons. In modern-day New Attilan, two young Inhumans named Flint and Iso activate a portal to this other dimension. Snarkle enters their dimension with the intent of having their revenge, but Gordon chooses to stay declaring "Goodbye Snarkle. I never liked you", leaving Snarkle to be comically defeated by the younger Inhumans.

Gorgeous George

edit

Gorgeous George (George Blair) is a fictional mutant in the Marvel Comics Universe. He was created by Peter David and Larry Stroman, and his first appearance was in X-Factor #75.

Very little is known about Gorgeous George, but it is known that he was a member of the Nasty Boys, a group of young mutants whose first and only missions were against the government sponsored X-Factor.[volume & issue needed] The Nasty Boys were lackeys of the super-villain Mister Sinister. The goal of the group was to gain influence and power in the legislative areas of Washington D.C..

Gorgeous George is Australian. He is able to do many things with his tar-like body and he once attempted to choke Strong Guy by entering his lungs.[volume & issue needed] It is unknown if Gorgeous George retained his mutant powers after M-Day.

Gorgeous George in other media

edit

Gorgeous George appears in X-Men: The Animated Series, voiced by Rod Wilson.[162]

Gorgilla

edit

Gorgolla

edit

Gorgon

edit

Gorgon is the name of two different characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

Inhuman

edit

Tomi Shishido

edit

Delphyne Gorgon

edit

Gorilla Girl

edit

Gorilla-Man

edit

Ken Hale

edit

Dr. Arthur Nagan

edit

Franz Radzik

edit

Gorr the God Butcher

edit

Gorr the Golden Gorilla

edit
Gorr the Golden Gorilla
 
Gorr makes his first appearance battling the Fantastic Four atop the Baxter Building as seen in Fantastic Four #171.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceFantastic Four #171
(June 1976)
Created byRoy Thomas
George Pérez
In-story information
SpeciesEvolved golden gorilla
Team affiliationsNew Men
Abilities

Gorr the Golden Gorilla is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by writer Roy Thomas and artist George Pérez, Gorr debuted in Fantastic Four #171–175 (June–October 1976). He appeared in Marvel Two-in-One #63 (May 1980), Quasar #14–16 (September–November 1990), and Deadpool: Badder Blood (2023).[163] He is an extraterrestrial evolved gorilla,[164] who is a genetically engineered gold-colored with human-like intellect and immense physical attributes, as well as resistance to fire.[165] The character has faced the superhero team the Fantastic Four.[166][167]

Fictional character biography

edit
 
Gorr from Fantastic Four #171. Pencils by George Pérez.

Gorr is a golden gorilla given human intelligence and greatly increased strength by the High Evolutionary.[168]

Fearing that Galactus was about to destroy his creation Counter-Earth, the High Evolutionary created Gorr and sent him to Earth to seek the aid of the Fantastic Four.[169] However, when he arrived on Earth, Gorr became inexplicably mutated into a King Kong-sized monstrosity and went on a rampage through Manhattan, climbing to the top of the Chrysler Building.[170] When the Fantastic Four intervened, Gorr duped them into coming aboard his ship and transported them to Counter-Earth. The Fantastic Four, High Evolutionary, and Gorr were unable to convince Galactus not to destroy Counter-Earth, though Galactus challenged them to find a replacement within 48 hours. Gorr and the Human Torch found an Earth-like planet, which turned out to be inhabited by Skrulls. The Skrulls abandoned the planet after an altercation with Gorr, leaving the planet uninhabited and thus worthless to Galactus. Ultimately, the Impossible Man convinced Galactus to devour his own planet of Poppup instead. Gorr remained with the High Evolutionary as a "valet."[169]

Much later, Gorr became a prisoner/research project of the Stranger, held captive on his laboratory world alongside Stranger's other prisoners.[171] When the Overmind attacked the Stranger, he freed the Stranger's captives including Gorr who escaped.[172]

Gosamyr

edit

Gosamyr is a supervillain turned superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character first appeared in The New Mutants #66 (August 1988), and was created by Louise Simonson and Bret Blevins.

Simonson said she was considering having Gosamyr reform and join the New Mutants, depending on how much Simonson liked her.[173] Gosamyr was written out of the series with The New Mutants #74.

Gosamyr is a member of a rare, ancient race of alien beings. In line with her heritage, Gosamyr is a very beautiful and delicate humanoid creature in her early stage. Once they reach adulthood, members of her race cocoon themselves for several thousand years before finally emerging as large powerful monstrosities. If released too early they can be powerful enough to destroy planets, even solar systems.[174] The females of the species also have empathic powers which, even without intent, can cause conflict between even the closest of friends to the point of destruction. Provoking such conflict has evolved into the cultural norm for the species as a means of vying for dominance.[175] As part of this, Gosamyr used her beauty to seduce male humans. She even tries to chat up eight-year-old Jack Power, who resents her approaches.[176]

Through some bad business dealings by her brother, Gosamyr and her family are forfeited to the evil alien businessman Spyder. Spyder keeps most of Gosamyr's family imprisoned while she herself is kept at the end of a leash as a pet.[177]

Through similar arrangements, Spyder had also acquired "property rights" over Lila Cheney. Lila is kidnapped by Spyder's men in spite of the efforts of her friends from the New Mutants. While in Earth's orbit, Gosamyr gives Spyder the slip, steals a space yacht and goes to Earth to find the New Mutants and ask for their help to save both her family and Lila.[177]

Gosamyr and the New Mutants follow Spyder to a planet where greed and the search for profit is the norm. On their space voyage, Gosamyr manipulates the New Mutants and causes conflict between them to establish herself as the alpha female of the group. Only Warlock, being a Technarch, is immune to her manipulations and suspects that Gosamyr is a threat before it is too late, and her manipulations have exposed Rahne's repressed feelings for Lila's boyfriend Cannonball, caused Magik to lose control of her demonic essence, and brought the New Mutants to blows with each other. Magik breaks the spell by striking Gosamyr with her Soulsword. Now with Gosamyr as their prisoner, the New Mutants break into Spyder's palace to rescue Lila, but are captured by Spyder, who has been monitoring their progress and using Gosamyr's nature to lead them into a trap.[178]

Gosamyr frees the New Mutants by using a trick which makes her invisible. They then discover that Gosamyr's family are in their cocoon stage and Spyder intends to force them out and kill them to use their bodies to make valuable textiles. Exiting their cocoons long before their time, the creatures grow with every passing minute and threaten to destroy the planet and its solar system. To prevent this, Lila apparently teleports them and herself into the Sun. Now orphaned, Gosamyr nonetheless accepts that Lila's killing her family was necessary.[174]

Magik then uses her own teleportation powers to get the New Mutants and Gosamyr away from the planet and into Limbo, only to find themselves trapped there. Gosamyr remains on the fringes, using her emphatic power to keep the demons away from her. She no longer actively manipulates her companions, and though Warlock remains suspicious of her,[179] New Mutants co-leader Mirage has forgiven her earlier misdeeds.[180]

Gosamyr helps out clearing the damage after a demonic invasion of Manhattan. She uses her powers to help relieve the pain of male patients in a local hospital.[volume & issue needed] More controversially, she helps the kids from Power Pack reconcile with their parents who, in the course of fighting an enemy, discovered that their children had super-powers which they had kept secret from them. The parents suffered a nervous breakdown as a result, but Gosamyr convinces them that their children are still normal.[176] (This "cover-up" was highly criticized in the readers' letters column.[citation needed])

Gosamyr and her companions decide to take up residence in the spacecraft Ship, the ally and mobile headquarters of X-Factor. Upon scanning Gosamyr, Ship recognizes her species and tries to kill her. Though the New Mutants fight Ship to a standstill in her defense, the incident convinces Gosamyr that her nature makes her too much of a danger to the New Mutants and their friends. Ship informs her of a planet of mystics who might be able to teach her to curb her nature and provides her with a spacecraft with which to go there. Resolved to not cause any more harm to her friends, Gosamyr takes Ship's suggestion and leaves Earth.[181]

While in the larval stage, Gosamyr possesses wings that allow her to glide over short distances. She can also become invisible once she wraps herself in them. She also possesses some empathic control over males, which she mostly uses to seduce or bring about conflict.

The pupal stage of Gosamyr's species lasts for millennia, during which they become exceptionally mature of spirit and gain great size and strength, enough to destroy a whole solar system. In adult form they are gentle and solitary.[174]

Grand Director

edit

Grandmaster

edit

Glory Grant

edit

Grasshopper

edit

Mort Graves

edit

Graviton

edit

Gravity

edit

Graymalkin

edit

Great Gambonnos

edit

Ernesto and Luigi Gambonno were born in Milan, Italy. They are acrobats and aerialists working for the criminal organization, the Circus of Crime. They are identical twins and though they perceive themselves as the "Kings of the High Trapeze", they are defeated pretty easily by Spider-Man and Daredevil who prove to be superior acrobats to the both of them.[182]

Great Gambannos in other media

edit

The Great Gambonnos appear in the Avengers Assemble episode "Crime and Circuses", both voiced by Roger Craig Smith.[183][184]

Green Gobbler

edit

Green Gobbler is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

Green Gobbler is an anthropomorphic wild turkey from Earth-8311 named Norman Osbird who is a counterpart of Green Goblin and an enemy of Spider-Ham.[185]

Green Gobbler appeared as a member of a Multiversal group called the Sinister Squadron where they attacked the Spider-Society before it can be formed.[186]

Green Goblin

edit

Norman Osborn

edit

Harry Osborn

edit

Dr. Bart Hamilton

edit

Phil Urich

edit

Construct

edit

Green Gopher

edit

Green Gopher is an anthropomorphic gopher from Earth-8311.

Grendel

edit

Grendel, also known as the Symbiote Dragon, is a character appearing in American comic books for Marvel Comics. The character first appeared in Venom vol. 4 #1 (May 2018), and was created by Donny Cates and Ryan Stegman.

Symbiote Dragon

edit

Grendel is a symbiote created by Knull billions of years in the past, sent out into the cosmos alongside its brethren to destroy and devour everything they came across. Arriving on Earth in the 6th century, it was subdued by Thor and imprisoned in a glacier, where it is exhumed by S.H.I.E.L.D. centuries later. Lying dormant for several decades, Grendel is indwelled by Knull and rampaged through New York, but is ultimately defeated by Eddie Brock / Venom.[187][188]

Tyrannosaurus

edit

Dark Carnage

edit

Dark Carnage, also simply known as Carnage, is another offshoot of the Grendel symbiote. It initially bonded with the damaged form of Cletus Kasady / Carnage due a cult worshiping symbiote using Grendel's remnants which was stolen from the Maker.[189] He consumed the various symbiotes for his own cult,[190][191][192] such as Lee Price / Maniac which is the Mania symbiote's host.[193] His form as Dark Carnage is a thirteen-foot-tall skeletal monster with Knull's spiral on its forehead and a white dragon/spider emblem on his chest, and effectively is a demigod possessing power far beyond what a regular symbiote bestows its host, due to his connections to Chthon through the curse of the Darkhold and Knull through Grendel.[194] Dark Carnage fights Peter Parker / Spider-Man and Brock, but is surprised by the Hulk.[195][196] Caught off-guard by Parker's various allies, Dark Carnage tried to use Dylan Brock and Normie Osborn as hostages before Brock cut Kasady's corpse in half which also reawakened Knull in the process.[197] One of the splintered versions bonded to Miles Morales / Spider-Man as a unique six-armed symbiote.[198]

Afterwards, Devil Carnage assimilated Venom while tormenting Eddie and Dylan before being separated and defeated yet bonding to a great white shark to escape.[199]

Carnage bonded to a great white shark to escape from the Isla de Huesos, and prowled the ocean for several months as the "red king of darkness". Eventually it stumbled upon a boat full of whalers and seizing the opportunity, Carnage catches one of the whalers and bonds to him, climbs aboard and prepares to slaughter the crew, intent on taking its place as the Red Right Hand of the King in Black, however, Knull is killed by Brock which causes the symbiote dome encasing Earth to shatter into countless symbiotes. Through the symbiote hive-mind, Venom is the new god of the symbiotes and calls out to Carnage who snarls to get out of his head. As symbiotes rain from the sky onto the ship and into the ocean, they bond to the crew of the ship and state that they are Venom, leaving Carnage shocked and incredulous. Manifesting an arm-blade, Carnage snarls as Venom states that Knull is dead. As Carnage sinks back into the ocean, Eddie says Carnage is not welcome in the reformed Hive and sentences to execution. Countless symbiote-controlled sharks began swarming Carnage and devouring in a feeding frenzy until the symbiote completely disappears in the darkness of the ocean.[200]

Following the confrontation with the new King in Black, a piece of the symbiote survived and chooses a fish for a host and then attacks a shark. It eventually moves up the food chain and arrives on a fishing boat and begins again a killing spree. Inspired by what Eddie had done, Carnage formulated a new plan to make a comeback using the power Knull had bequeathed it to create a rival Hive with itself as its nexus. Carnage slowly made its way back to New York – restoring itself by devouring everyone it came across en route. Once back in Manhattan, Carnage bonded to Senator Arthur Krane to run a campaign to get Earth rid of aliens, both the good and bad type, and is working with Alchemax and the Friends of Humanity. Carnage also began to infect many symbiotes, such as Phage, Lasher, Riot and Agony.[201] Once all his soldiers were in place, Carnage killed on live television at one of his rallies and directed his Hive to slaughter as many attending civilians as possible, but was opposed by Flash Thompson, Silence, Toxin and Sleeper. Carnage assimilated Extrembiote – a symbiote-dragon mutated by Extremis – while abandoning Krane, transforming into a symbiote-dragon and flying away.[202]

Grendel in other media

edit
  • An original incarnation of Dark Carnage appears in the Guardians of the Galaxy episodes "Back in the New York Groove" and "Drive My Carnage".[203] This version is utilized by Thanos.
  • An original incarnation of Grendel appears in the Spider-Man series finale "Maximum Venom".[204][205] This version, also known as the Klyntar Dragon and World-Killer, was created from the remnants of All-Black the Necrosword following their death and possesses the additional ability to fire red energy beams from its mouth. It attacks New York City and attempts to destroy the world, but is killed when Spider-Man and Max Modell destroy the Symbiote Seed that was empowering it.
  • Dark Carnage appears as an alternate skin for Cletus Kasady / Carnage in Marvel: Future Fight.

Grey Gargoyle

edit

Gray Goblin

edit

Gray Goblin is the name of different characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

Gabriel Stacy

edit

Gabriel Stacy, the twin brother of Sarah Stacy and son of Norman Osborn and Gwen Stacy, appeared as the first Gray Goblin in The Amazing Spider-Man #514. He also appeared in The Spectacular Spider-Man and Amazing Spider-Man presents: American Son. His outfit is a gray-recolored version of Green Goblin's outfit.

Lily Hollister

edit

Lily Hollister, Harry Osborn's ex-fiancé, first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man #545 and had her first appearance as Menace (also known as the second Gray Goblin) in The Amazing Spider-Man #549.

Gray Goblin in other media

edit

The Lily Hollister incarnation of Gray Goblin appears in the Nintendo DS version of Spider-Man: Edge of Time, voiced by Tara Strong.[206]

Jean Grey

edit

John Grey

edit
Further reading

John Grey is a history professor and member of the extended "Grey Family" in the Marvel Universe. The character, created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, first appeared in X-Men #5 (May 1964).

Within the context of the stories, John Grey is the father of Jean Grey and Sara Grey as well as husband of Elaine Grey. He was portrayed as a history professor employed at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York.[volume & issue needed]

After Sara's death, he and Elaine take in and care for their grandchildren, Gailyn and Joey Bailey.[volume & issue needed]

During the "End of Greys" story arc, Grey is killed by the Shi'ar Death Commandos.[207]

Other versions of John Grey

edit
  • In the Ultimate Marvel continuity, Professor Grey appears in various issues of Ultimate X-Men and in Ultimate War #2. Within this continuity, he and his wife place Jean into a mental institution at a young age as his daughter's telepathy manifests. It is stated that he can recognize the feeling of telepathic scanning.[208]
  • X-Men: The End features an alternate future of the X-Men in which Doctor Grey is still alive.

John Grey in other media

edit

Greystone

edit

Devlin Greystone is a fictional Māori character in the Marvel Universe, who was part of the second incarnation of X-Factor. He was created by Howard Mackie, and first appeared in X-Factor #140 (December, 1997).

Greystone is from the same alternate future as Bishop, Archer, Fixx, and Shard. He is a member of the Xavier Underground Enforcers (XUE), a rogue branch of the Xavier's Security Enforcers (XSE) who wanted to travel back in time and change their future.

When he was a child, Greystone lived with his mother in a type of mutant concentration camp. As part of their punishment, each prisoner was required to have an "M" branded over their right eye to outwardly signify their status as a mutant. During his branding process by an evil man named Micah, Greystone panicked and – due to the large amount of stress – manifested his mutant power years before the traditional onset at puberty. This resulted in him breaking the machine (leaving him with only a partial brand), and trying to break out with his mother. Micah shot and killed her and was about to kill Greystone too if not for the incitement of the Summers Rebellion which ultimately led to mutant freedom. However, this was not as grand as it seemed, for Greystone became an orphan and a street urchin outside the confines of the camp.

Upon discovering that Shard was in the present, the X.U.E. managed to travel back in time due to the psionic link Fixx created between the members of the X.U.E. which Shard was also a member of, and inhabited the bodies of three recently deceased people. Greystone inhabited the body of the adolescent teen Brian Young.

While looking in the newspaper one day, Greystone happens to see the picture of a young boy named Micah. He immediately recognizes him as the same Micah who murdered his mother and concocts a plan to murder the child, thus averting his future and his mother's death. He, along with Fixx and Archer, track down the boy and Greystone tries to kill him. Archer and Fixx convince him that it is unethical to condemn the child for crimes he has not yet committed and the trio leaves. They had tried to change the future but instead ended up joining X-Factor.

Greystone slowly developed temporal insanity, believing that his mission was accomplished, and he could go home to a better world and be reunited with his mother, who might theoretically be alive. In an attempt to return to his own time, Greystone built a flying time machine, but due to shoddy craftmanship and unsound theories, the craft exploded, seemingly killing Greystone and Havok, who was attempting to stop him.

Greystone can increase his body mass, density, durability, stamina and strength exponentially but at a price: the bigger he gets, the more deformed and horrific-looking he becomes. Greystone can appear as his host body or in his original body—humorously a small, white child—also carrying the memories from both bodies.

Griffin

edit

David Griffith

edit

Grim Hunter

edit

Grim Reaper

edit

Grinder

edit

Grinder is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character first appeared in Spider-Woman #26 (May 1980).[209]

Brute Bashby was a criminal given special bladed weaponry and the identity of the Grinder who was defeated by Spider-Woman.

Grindhouse

edit

Grizzly

edit

Grog

edit

Groot

edit

Grotesk

edit

Grotesk is a fictional character in the Marvel Universe. He first appeared in X-Men #41–42 (February–March 1968), and was created by Roy Thomas and Don Heck.[210] The character was inspired by the Captain Marvel villain King Kull[211]

The character subsequently appears in Ms. Marvel #6 (June 1977) and #8 (August 1977), The Avengers Annual #20 (1991), Avengers West Coast Annual #6 (1991), Iron Man Annual #12 (1991), and Thor #481 (December 1994).

Prince Gor-Tok, also known as Grotesk, is the former prince of a warlike, civilized race of Gortokian Subterraneans with human intelligence and virtually human appearance. Underground atomic explosions created by surface humans led to the extinction of the entire race except for Grotesk, who, his mind and body first distorted by radiation, vows to destroy the entire surface world.

Grotesk encounters the heroic mutants the X-Men on his first foray to the surface world.[212] He fights them, and kills the Changeling (who, at the time was posing as Professor X to the X-Men).[213]

Grotesk later encounters Ms. Marvel.[volume & issue needed] He also sides with the Mole Man and Tyrannus in their war against the surface world and the Avengers.[volume & issue needed]

Grotto

edit
Further reading

Grotto is a fictional character appearing in Marvel comics. He was created by Frank Miller and first appeared in Daredevil #168.

Grotto is a small-time criminal and the frequent partner of Turk Barrett. Like Turk, he works for Eric Slaughter and the Kingpin, resulting in frequent encounters with Daredevil and at one point encountered Elektra.[214] Although generally regarded as unintelligent, Grotto often tries to act as a voice of reason to Turk's aggressive and overconfident behavior such as refusing to escape prison so that they can fill out their time and return to the streets without problem.[215] When the Kingpin returned to San Francisco, Grotto was rehired as one of his elite members.[216]

Grotto in other media

edit

Grotto, legal name Elliot Grote, appears in the second season of Daredevil, portrayed by McCaleb Burnett. This version is a low-ranking member of the Kitchen Irish mob, serving as a driver and occasional assassin for their leader Nesbitt.[217][218][219][220]

Growing Man

edit
The Growing Man
 
The Growing Man on the cover of Thor #140 (May 1967).
Art by Jack Kirby and Vince Colletta.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceThor #140 (May 1967)
Created byStan Lee (Writer)
Jack Kirby (Artist)
In-story information
SpeciesRobot
Team affiliationsHYDRA
Abilities

The Growing Man is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character, first appearing in Thor #140 (May 1967);[221] and reappearing in Avengers #69 (October 1969), was created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby.[222] After an appearance in Iron Man #108 (March 1978), the Growing Man is not seen in Marvel continuity until The Avengers #268 (June 1986), and then The Avengers #300 (February 1989). After being found and used by new masters HYDRA in Thunderbolts #5 (August 1997), the android appeared in Young Avengers #3 (June 2005) and in upgraded form in Sentinel Squad O*N*E #2 (April 2006). The Growing Man later appeared in Avengers vs. Atlas #1 (January 2010).

The Growing Man is an android built by an enslaved alien race on the time-traveling villain Kang the Conqueror's behalf. First appearing on Earth as an inert doll-sized figure, the android is found by New York police, reactivating and causing havoc until coming into conflict with the Thunder God Thor. The Growing Man is then deactivated and recovered by Kang who is in turn defeated by Thor.[223] Kang also uses the Growing Man to abduct Tony Stark (the alter-ego of Iron Man) from a hospital. The superhero Avengers team (including Thor) attack the Growing Man and follow the android into the future, where they're involved in a competition between Kang and the Elder of the Universe known as the Grandmaster.[224] The alien colonizers of Rigel eventually find the Growing Man in one of Kang's abandoned vessels and send it back to Earth to use it against Iron Man who defeats the android by overloading its circuitry.[225] The Growing Man reappears in the dimension of Limbo and attacks the Avenger Hercules who hit it so hard that it collapses as its cells are overtaxed.[226] Eventually, it finds its way to Earth, where temporary member Mister Fantastic devises a means of reversing the growing process, causing the android to shrink from sight.[227]

The Growing Man is found and reactivated by the subversive organization HYDRA. HYDRA's leader Baron Strucker orders the android to attack New York as part of a ploy to destroy the Thunderbolts team. The heroes manage to defeat the android by forcing it to grow large enough that the team could hack its circuitry and shut it down. However, this also activate a beacon in its circuitry that will warn the ancestors of the original aliens of Kang's coming.[228] Kang uses another variation of the android when attempting to track his younger self, with this version splitting into several smaller versions once hit with sufficient force, but they all withdraw once the young Kang identifies himself.[229] An upgraded form is sent by HYDRA to disrupt a political rally, but is stopped when its powers are overloaded.[230]

Growing Man in other media

edit

Guardian

edit

Guardsman

edit

Kevin O'Brien

edit

Michael O'Brien

edit

Others

edit

Guillotine

edit

Guillotine or Jeannine Sauvage is a fictional mystic character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Guillotine has no superpowers but is an expert swordswoman and wields the mystic La Fleur du Mal, a sword with dark supernatural powers (the sword name means literally "The Flower of Evil" in French). Born of a mixed French-Algerian heritage, she is the latest in her bloodline to inherit the sword. The character was conceived by writer Al Ewing and the full design was developed by Kabam art director Gabriel Frizzera and artist Paco Medina.[232][233] She first appeared in the second volume of Contest of Champions released October 7, 2015 (cover dated December 2015).[234] Shortly after, she made her debut in the game Marvel: Contest of Champions.[235] In 2017, Guillotine was briefly featured in the title U.S.Avengers.

In 1793, an ancestor of Sauvage, Jean Desmarais, found the mythical Fleur du Mal sword in the Paris catacombs when escaping the authorities for being a revolutionary. Since then, it was passed on to his descendants with the most recent one being Jeannine Sauvage.[236] Jeannine discovered the sword at age twelve by being lured to a room that was usually locked by a voice. While inspecting the sword, she slit her finger with its edge, and the blood dripped into the sword. This caused Jeannine to become cursed to wield this sword like her ancestors before her. During the Secret Empire storyline, Guillotine appears as a member of the Champions of Europe alongside Ares, Captain Britain, Excalibur, Outlaw, and Peregrine. With help from Squirrel Girl and Enigma, the team manages to liberate Paris, France from Hydra occupation.[237]

Guillotine in other media

edit

Guillotine appears as a playable character in Marvel: Contest of Champions.[235]

Elizabeth Guthrie

edit

Elizabeth Guthrie is the sister of X-Men members Sam (Cannonball) and Paige (Husk) as well as Josh (Icarus) and Melody (Aero). The character, created by writer Chris Claremont and artist Jackson Guice, first appeared in New Mutants #42 (April 1986).

In the Age of Apocalypse reality, Elizabeth has the mutant ability to alter her size and operates under the alias Amazon as part of Apocalypse's forces. This version was created by John Francis Moore and Steve Epting, first appearing in Factor X #6 (January 1995).

Jebediah Guthrie

edit

Jebediah Guthrie is the brother of X-Men members Sam (Cannonball) and Paige (Husk) as well as Josh (Icarus) and Melody (Aero). The character, created by writer Bill Mantlo and artist William Johnson, first appeared in Rom Annual #2 (September 1984).

Jebediah was a mutant like his siblings, with the power of producing blasts of electrical plasma out of his eyes. Unlike his siblings, he never associated with the X-Men and was depowered on M-Day.

Melody Guthrie

edit

Melody Guthrie is the younger sister of Cannonball, Husk, and Icarus. Her father dies early in her life due to black lung. Melody is seen in multiple issues of the New Mutants, living at their Kentucky farm, as her brother Cannonball is a featured character in that series. Many stories focus on his home life.

Melody sees her siblings develop powers one by one. Her brother Sam is the first, followed by Paige (aka Husk). Husk comes to the attention of the alien entities known as the Phalanx; they come to the farm, endangering the lives of the entire family, kidnapping Paige, and destroying the family home. Much later Josh/Icarus manifests his wings during a music festival; the resulting chaos draws all the Guthries into a brutal feud with another family. Melody then develops the ability to produce an aura that allows her to fly. After this manifestation, she becomes known as Aero. She then joins Xavier's team as a student during a time when Cannonball is one of the supporting staff. At one point he rebukes her for showing off in front of a helicopter news crew.

Due to the effects of Scarlet Witch going insane in the Marvel crossover event "Decimation", a majority of Earth's mutants lose their powers. Aero and her brother Jeb both lost their powers following the events of M-Day. She doesn't quite understand how this affects her. In an attempt to prove to one of her teachers, Emma Frost, that she still has her powers, she leaps off of a roof; another teacher, Hank McCoy, managed to save her from injury.

Melody moves back home with her mother, Lucinda, and her other siblings. She later appears as an astral projection caused by Emma Frost during a confrontation with Ms. Marvel. She and her mother later receive a call from Emma Frost concerning the death of Melody's brother, Joshua, who was killed in an attack on Xavier's.[238]

Melody was allowed to live in the newly created mutant-only nation of Krakoa because she was a former mutant and a member of the Guthrie family, known for their strong X-Gene. There, she became the first to undergo a novel ritual called the Crucible, a trial of combat against Apocalypse to earn the right to die and be resurrected by the Five, to regain her lost powers. In front of a large ensemble of mutants, she was brutalized by Apocalypse, who urged her to give up and ask to heal instead of persisting in the fight. Melody refused and was ultimately killed by Apocalypse, passing the trial of Crucible. She later claimed her prize when she was resurrected by the Five, with her former powers returned to her.[239]

Henry Peter Gyrich

edit

Gwenpool

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Generation X #37
  2. ^ a b Generation X #38
  3. ^ Generation X #39
  4. ^ a b c d Generation X #42
  5. ^ Generation X #43
  6. ^ Generation X #45
  7. ^ Generation X #51
  8. ^ "Endangered Species: Chapter 11", X-Factor (vol. 2) #23
  9. ^ Generation X #46
  10. ^ Generation X #50
  11. ^ Argula, Steven (2014). "The amazing Spider-Man 2". ACM SIGGRAPH 2014 Computer Animation Festival. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press. p. 1. doi:10.1145/2633956.2633995. ISBN 9781450330541. S2CID 8707771.
  12. ^ "MARVEL SNAP - Dominate the Marvel Multiverse in High-Speed Card Battling Action". www.marvelsnap.com. Retrieved 2024-12-05.
  13. ^ Hargrave, Sam (March 28, 2024). "First Look at Galactus' Daughter In Marvel Rivals Revealed". The Direct. Retrieved August 22, 2024.
  14. ^ Lee Morris, Cassandra [@SoCassandra] (July 26, 2024). "Beyond thrilled to announce the role of a lifetime. I'm the voice of Galacta in @MarvelRivals 💜 I've been at SDCC all day with the Marvel team celebrating. Can't wait for you to meet her!!" (Tweet). Retrieved November 23, 2024 – via Twitter.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  15. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #283 (Dec. 1991)
  16. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #301 (June 1993)
  17. ^ X-Force #32–33 (March–April, 1994)
  18. ^ X-Force #56 (July 1996)
  19. ^ X-Force #61 (Dec. 1996)
  20. ^ X-Men Annual 1997
  21. ^ X-23 #1 (Sept. 2010)
  22. ^ X-Men Annual 1997
  23. ^ Quicksilver #9
  24. ^ Quicksilver #11
  25. ^ Heroes for Hire #16
  26. ^ Heroes for Hire / Quicksilver '98
  27. ^ Quicksilver #12
  28. ^ The Amazing Spider-Man #11
  29. ^ "Blackie Gaxton Voice - The Spectacular Spider-Man (TV Show)". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved August 21, 2024. A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information.
  30. ^ Wolverine (vol. 2) #23
  31. ^ The Amazing Spider-Man #110. Marvel Comics.
  32. ^ The Amazing Spider-Man #111. Marvel Comics.
  33. ^ Spider-Man's Tangled Web #4-5. Marvel Comics.
  34. ^ Peter Parker: The Spectacular Spider-Man #59-60 (1981)
  35. ^ The Spectacular Spider-Man vol. 2 #245. Marvel Comics.
  36. ^ The Spectacular Spider-Man vol. 2 #246. Marvel Comics.
  37. ^ The Spectacular Spider-Man vol. 2 #253. Marvel Comics.
  38. ^ The Spectacular Spider-Man vol. 2 #256. Marvel Comics.
  39. ^ She-Hulk vol. 2 #6. Marvel Comics.
  40. ^ The Punisher War Journal vol. 2 #4 (2007). Marvel Comics.
  41. ^ She-Hulk vol. 2 #17. Marvel Comics.
  42. ^ Anthony Flamini & Ronald Byrd (w), Scott Kolins (p), Scott Kolins (i). Civil War: Battle Damage Report, no. 1 (March 2007). Marvel Comics.
  43. ^ The Punisher War Journal vol. 2 #16 (2007). Marvel Comics.
  44. ^ "NYCC '08: Marvel Apes". Newsarama. April 20, 2008.[permanent dead link]
  45. ^ Marvel Apes #1. Marvel Comics.
  46. ^ Marvel Apes #2. Marvel Comics.
  47. ^ Marvel Apes #3. Marvel Comics.
  48. ^ Marvel Apes #4. Marvel Comics.
  49. ^ Marvel Zombies: Evil Evolution #1. Marvel Comics.
  50. ^ The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 5 #17. Marvel Comics.
  51. ^ The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 5 #18. Marvel Comics.
  52. ^ The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 5 #18.HU. Marvel Comics.
  53. ^ The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 5 #19. Marvel Comics.
  54. ^ Superior Spider-Man #26. Marvel Comics.
  55. ^ The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 3 #1. Marvel Comics.
  56. ^ Spider-Man/Deadpool #9. Marvel Comics.
  57. ^ Excalibur vol.3 #1. Marvel Comics.
  58. ^ New Avengers #18. Marvel Comics.
  59. ^ Daredevil #126-127 (July, November 1975). Marvel Comics.
  60. ^ Daredevil #128-130 (December 1975-February 1976). Marvel Comics.
  61. ^ Daredevil #131-132 (March–April 1976). Marvel Comics.
  62. ^ Daredevil #141 (January 1977). Marvel Comics.
  63. ^ Daredevil #143 (March 1977). Marvel Comics.
  64. ^ Daredevil #147 (August 1977). Marvel Comics.
  65. ^ Daredevil #148-151 (September–November 1977). Marvel Comics.
  66. ^ Daredevil #154 (September 1978). Marvel Comics.
  67. ^ Daredevil #157 (March 1979). Marvel Comics.
  68. ^ Daredevil #160, 163 (September 1979-March 1980). Marvel Comics.
  69. ^ Daredevil #165-167 (July–November 1980). Marvel Comics.
  70. ^ Daredevil #182 (May 1982). Marvel Comics.
  71. ^ Daredevil #183-186 (June–September 1982). Marvel Comics.
  72. ^ Daredevil #188-189 (November–December 1982). Marvel Comics.
  73. ^ Iron Man #171 (June 1983). Marvel Comics.
  74. ^ Daredevil #195 (June 1983). Marvel Comics.
  75. ^ Daredevil #220 (July 1985). Marvel Comics.
  76. ^ Dick, Jeremy (October 7, 2023). "Daredevil: Born Again Gets Frustrating Release Update". Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on October 8, 2023. Retrieved October 7, 2023.
  77. ^ Andreeva, Nellie (January 23, 2024). "'Daredevil: Born Again' – Wilson Bethel Returns As Bullseye In Marvel Series On Disney+". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on January 24, 2024. Retrieved January 23, 2024.
  78. ^ New X-Men #135: "Riot's at Xavier, Part 1: Teaching Children About Fractals" (February 2003)
  79. ^ New X-Men #136: "Riot's at Xavier, Part 2: When X is Not X" (March 2003)
  80. ^ New X-Men #138: "The Prime of Miss Emma Frost" (May 2003)
  81. ^ Wolverine and the X-Men #28 (2013)
  82. ^ Spider-Man & the X-Men #1–3 (February–April 2015)
  83. ^ Wolverine and the X-Men (vol. 2) #12 (April 2015)
  84. ^ Spider-Man and the X-Men #6 (April 2015)
  85. ^ Extraordinary X-Men #1 (October 2015)
  86. ^ Extraordinary X-Men #4–5 (December–January 2015–2016)
  87. ^ Extraordinary X-Men #9-11 (2016)
  88. ^ Exiles: Days of Then and Now #1 (2008)
  89. ^ Erdmann, Kevin (April 10, 2024). "All 20 Marvel Easter Eggs & References In X-Men '97 Episode 5". ScreenRant. Retrieved September 7, 2024.
  90. ^ "Glowworm (Cage/Power Man foe)".
  91. ^ Avengers: Most Wanted Files
  92. ^ Glow Worm at The Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe
  93. ^ Dan Slott (w), Giuseppe Camuncoli (p), John Deli (i). "The Superior Spider-Man" The Superior Spider-Man, no. 4 (February 2013). Marvel Comics.
  94. ^ Dan Slott (w), Ryan Stegman (p), Ryan Stegman, Cam Smith (i). "The Superior Spider-Man" The Superior Spider-Man, no. 10 (May 2013). Marvel Comics.
  95. ^ Dan Slott (w), Humberto Ramos (p), Victor Olazaba (i). "The Superior Spider-Man" The Superior Spider-Man, no. 14 (July 2013). Marvel Comics.
  96. ^ Dan Slott (w), Humberto Ramos (p), Victor Olazaba (i). "The Superior Spider-Man" The Superior Spider-Man, no. 16 (August 2013). Marvel Comics.
  97. ^ Dan Slott (w), Ryan Stegman (p), John Livesay (i). "The Superior Spider-Man" The Superior Spider-Man, no. 17 (September 2013). Marvel Comics.
  98. ^ Dan Slott (w), Ryan Stegman (p), John Livesay (i). "The Superior Spider-Man" The Superior Spider-Man, no. 18 (November 2013). Marvel Comics.
  99. ^ Dan Slott (w), Giuseppe Camuncoli (p), John Deli (i). "The Superior Spider-Man" The Superior Spider-Man, no. 21 (February 2013). Marvel Comics.
  100. ^ Dan Slott, Christos Gage (w), Humberto Ramos (p), Victor Olazaba (i). "The Superior Spider-Man" The Superior Spider-Man, no. 25 (January 2014). Marvel Comics.
  101. ^ Dan Slott (w), Humberto Ramos, Javier Rodriguez, Marcos Martin (p), Victor Olazaba, Alvaro Lopez, Marcos Martin (i). "The Superior Spider-Man" The Superior Spider-Man, no. 26 (January 2014). Marvel Comics.
  102. ^ Dan Slott, Christos Gage (w), Giuseppe Camuncoli (p), John Dell, Terry Pallot (i). "The Superior Spider-Man" The Superior Spider-Man, no. 30 (March 2014). Marvel Comics.
  103. ^ "Spider-Man India: Comic Books and the Translating/Transcreating of American Cultural Narratives", Transnational Perspectives on Graphic Narratives : Comics at the Crossroads, Bloomsbury Academic, 2013, doi:10.5040/9781472544124.ch-008, ISBN 9781441185754
  104. ^ Superior Spider-Man #31. Marvel Comics.
  105. ^ Amazing Spider-Man vol. 3 #5. Marvel Comics.
  106. ^ AXIS: Hobgoblin #1. Marvel Comics.
  107. ^ AXIS: Hobgoblin #2. Marvel Comics.
  108. ^ AXIS: Hobgoblin #3. Marvel Comics.
  109. ^ Amazing Spider-Man #797. Marvel Comics.
  110. ^ "Nightmare on Christmas". Ultimate Spider-Man. Season 3. Episode 22. December 3, 2014. Disney XD.
  111. ^ "Goblin King Voice - Spider-Man (2017) (TV Show)". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved December 24, 2024. A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information.
  112. ^ "Goblin War Pt. 2". Spider-Man. Season 2. Episode 24. November 17, 2019. Disney XD.
  113. ^ a b Roy Thomas (w), Gil Kane (p), Frank Giacoia (i). "The Beauty And The Brute" The Amazing Spider-Man, vol. 1, no. 104 (January 1972). Marvel Comics.
  114. ^ Roy Thomas Penciller = Gil Kane (w), Frank Giacoia and Tony Mortellaro (i). "Walk The Savage Land! and Gog" The Amazing Spider-Man, vol. 1, no. 103 (December 1971). Marvel Comics.
  115. ^ Astonishing Tales #17–18
  116. ^ Erik Larsen (w), Erik Larsen (p), Erik Larsen (i). "The Sixth Member" Spider-Man, vol. 1, no. 22 (December 1992). Marvel Comics.
  117. ^ Erik Larsen (w), Erik Larsen (p), Erik Larsen (i). "Confrontation" Spider-Man, vol. 1, no. 23 (June 1992). Marvel Comics.
  118. ^ The Uncanny X-Men vol. 3 #33
  119. ^ "A Minor Spider-Man Villain Basically Became Marvel's Kite-Man". March 28, 2020.
  120. ^ "New leaked details about Sony's Sinister Six include fighting dinosaurs and...Matt Damon?". Archived from the original on July 4, 2020. Retrieved July 4, 2020.
  121. ^ "Venom, and Dinosaurs, and Gog, Oh My! 'Sinister Six' Was Going to be Bonkers!". April 22, 2015.
  122. ^ Luke Cage, Power Man #41
  123. ^ Luke Cage, Power Man #42
  124. ^ Incredible Hulk #238
  125. ^ Incredible Hulk #239
  126. ^ Incredible Hulk #240
  127. ^ Incredible Hulk #241
  128. ^ Incredible Hulk #242
  129. ^ Incredible Hulk #243
  130. ^ Spectacular Spider-Man #62
  131. ^ Solo Avengers #17
  132. ^ Secret War #3-5
  133. ^ Secret War #4
  134. ^ Secret War #5
  135. ^ Marvel Knights Spider-Man #6
  136. ^ Heroes for Hire vol. 2 #1
  137. ^ Civil War #6, Volume 1
  138. ^ Punisher War Journal vol. 2 #2
  139. ^ Dennis Hopeless (w), Javier Rodriguez (p), Alvaro Lopez (i), Javier Rodriguez (col), Travis Lanham (let), Nick Lowe (ed). Spider-Woman, vol. 5, no. 6 (8 April 2015). United States: Marvel Comics.
  140. ^ Dennis Hopeless (w), Javier Rodriguez (p), Alvaro Lopez (i), Javier Rodriguez (col), VC's Travis Lanham (let), Nick Lowe (ed). "What to Expect" The Amazing Spider-Man, vol. 4, no. 1 (7 October 2015). United States: Marvel Comics.
  141. ^ Spider-Woman Vol. 5 #6
  142. ^ Miles Morales: Spider-Man Vol. 2 #15
  143. ^ Miles Morales: Spider-Man Vol. 2 #16. Marvel Comics.
  144. ^ The Avengers #85
  145. ^ The Avengers #141
  146. ^ Captain America #179
  147. ^ The Avengers #141–142, 144, 147–149
  148. ^ The Defenders #113–115
  149. ^ Squadron Supreme #1
  150. ^ Squadron Supreme #3
  151. ^ Squadron Supreme #4
  152. ^ Squadron Supreme #5
  153. ^ Squadron Supreme #6
  154. ^ Squadron Supreme #10–11
  155. ^ Squadron Supreme #12
  156. ^ Heroes Reborn: Siege Society #1
  157. ^ "Captain America" (180). December 1974. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  158. ^ The Invaders #27 (April 1978)
  159. ^ All-New Invaders #6–7
  160. ^ Citizen V and the V-Battalion #2 (July 2001)
  161. ^ Guerrero, Tony 'G-Man' (28 March 2014). "Exclusive: James Robinson Talks ALL-NEW INVADERS, Original Sin, and New Characters". ComicVine.com. Retrieved 29 December 2014.
  162. ^ Houston, Larry [@xmendirector] (March 30, 2022). "I very much dislike "blanket credits" as they are called in the industry. It is the lazy post-production option. I prefer upfront individual credits per show. This list I found in my storage unit will help those fans who always wanted to know who did what voice back then. Cheers!" (Tweet). Retrieved June 7, 2024 – via Twitter.
  163. ^ Buxton, Marc (August 9, 2015). "The Fantastic Four Comics: Where Do You Start?". Den of Geek. Retrieved 2024-04-09.
  164. ^ "Gorr the Golden Gorilla (Fantastic Four character)". www.marvunapp.com. January 6, 2004. Retrieved 2024-04-09.
  165. ^ Marvel Encyclopedia: Fantastic Four (November 2004). Marvel Comics.
  166. ^ Brown, Michael (November 24, 2016). "The Fantastic Four at 55: Talking With Artist Jon Morris". ComicBook.com. Retrieved 2024-04-09.
  167. ^ Adams, Timothy (May 5, 2023). "Deadpool Creator Rob Liefeld on Mixing Fun and Violence in Deadpool: Badder Blood (Exclusive)". ComicBook.com. Retrieved 2024-04-09.
  168. ^ Fantastic Four #172. Marvel Comics.
  169. ^ a b Fantastic Four #171–175. Marvel Comics.
  170. ^ Sanderson, Peter (2007). The Marvel Comics Guide to New York City. New York City: Pocket Books. pp. 49–51. ISBN 978-1-4165-3141-8.
  171. ^ Quasar #14–15. Marvel Comics.
  172. ^ Quasar #16. Marvel Comics.
  173. ^ "Marvel A to Z". Marvel Age Annual. No. #4. Marvel Comics. 1988. pp. 6–18.
  174. ^ a b c The New Mutants #70 (December 1988)
  175. ^ The New Mutants #69 (November 1988)
  176. ^ a b Power Pack #44 (March 1989)
  177. ^ a b The New Mutants #67 (September 1988)
  178. ^ The New Mutants #68–69 (October–November 1988)
  179. ^ The New Mutants #71 (January 1989)
  180. ^ The New Mutants #73 (March 1989)
  181. ^ The New Mutants #74 (September 1988)
  182. ^ The Amazing Spider-Man #16 (September 1964)
  183. ^ "Luigi Gambonno Voice - Avengers Assemble (TV Show)". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved August 22, 2024. A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information.
  184. ^ "Ernesto Gambonno Voice - Avengers Assemble (TV Show)". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved August 22, 2024. A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information.
  185. ^ Spider-Ham 25th Anniversary Special #1. Marvel Comics.
  186. ^ Spider-Society #1. Marvel Comics.
  187. ^ Venom vol. 4 #1–4
  188. ^ Venom vol. 4 #6
  189. ^ Venom #8. Marvel Comics
  190. ^ Web of Venom Carnage Born #1. Marvel Comics
  191. ^ Web of Venom Unleashed #1. Marvel Comics
  192. ^ Web of Venom Cult of Carnage #1. Marvel Comics
  193. ^ Spider-Man/Venom Free Comic Book Day #1. Marvel Comics
  194. ^ Absolute Carnage: Weapon Plus #1
  195. ^ Absolute Carnage #3
  196. ^ Absolute Carnage #4
  197. ^ Absolute Carnage #5
  198. ^ Absolute Carnage: Scream vol. 1 #2
  199. ^ Venom vol. 4 #21–25
  200. ^ Carnage: Black, White & Blood #2
  201. ^ Extreme Carnage: Alpha #1
  202. ^ Extreme Carnage Omega vol. 1 #1
  203. ^ "Back in the New York Groove". Guardians of the Galaxy. Season 3. Episode 2. March 18, 2018. Disney XD.
  204. ^ Skonce, Joe (October 27, 2020). "Five Thoughts on Marvel's Spider-Man: Maximum Venom's "Maximum Venom"". Multiversity Comics. Retrieved September 7, 2024.
  205. ^ "Maximum Venom". Spider-Man. Season 3. Episode 6. October 25, 2020. Disney XD.
  206. ^ "Menace Voice - Spider-Man: Edge of Time (Video Game)". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved August 22, 2024. A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information.
  207. ^ Chris Claremont (w), Chris Bachalo (p). "...24 Seconds" The Uncanny X-Men, no. 467 (February 2006). Marvel Comics.
  208. ^ Mark Millar (w), Chris Bachalo (p). Ultimate War, no. 2 (February 2003). Marvel Comics.
  209. ^ Rovin, Jeff (1987). The Encyclopedia of Super-Villains. New York: Facts on File. pp. 150–151. ISBN 0-8160-1356-X.[1]
  210. ^ Wells, John (2014). American Comic Book Chronicles: 1965–1969. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 201. ISBN 978-1605490557.
  211. ^ Thomas, Roy (September 2013). "Alter Ego" (120): 2. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  212. ^ Thomas, Roy (w), Heck, Don (p), Tuska, George, Verpoorten, Johnny (i), Lee, Stan (ed). "Now Strikes the Sub-Human" X-Men, no. 41 (February 1968). New York, NY: Marvel Comics.
  213. ^ X-Men #42
  214. ^ Daredevil #168
  215. ^ Daredevil #182
  216. ^ Civil War II: Kingpin #1–2
  217. ^ Abraham, Phil (director); Douglas Petrie and Marco Ramirez (writer) (March 18, 2016). "Bang". Marvel's Daredevil. Season 2. Episode 1. Netflix.
  218. ^ Abraham, Phil (director); Douglas Petrie and Marco Ramirez (writer) (March 18, 2016). "Dogs to a Gunfight". Marvel's Daredevil. Season 2. Episode 2. Netflix.
  219. ^ Jobst, Marc (director); Mark Verheiden (writer) (March 18, 2016). "New York's Finest". Marvel's Daredevil. Season 2. Episode 3. Netflix.
  220. ^ Hoar, Peter (director); John C. Kelley (writer) (March 18, 2016). "Penny and Dime". Marvel's Daredevil. Season 2. Episode 4. Netflix.
  221. ^ Brevoort, Tom; DeFalco, Tom; Manning, Matthew K.; Sanderson, Peter; Wiacek, Win (2017). Marvel Year By Year: A Visual History. DK Publishing. p. 122. ISBN 978-1465455505.
  222. ^ Wells, John (2014). American Comic Book Chronicles: 1965–1969. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 184. ISBN 978-1605490557.
  223. ^ Thor #140 (May 1967)
  224. ^ The Avengers #69–71 (October–December 1969)
  225. ^ Iron Man #108 (March 1978)
  226. ^ The Avengers #268 (June 1986)
  227. ^ The Avengers #300 (February 1989)
  228. ^ Thunderbolts #5 (August 1997)
  229. ^ Young Avengers #3 (June 2005)
  230. ^ Sentinel Squad O*N*E #2 (April 2006)
  231. ^ "Growing Man Voice - Avengers Assemble (TV Show)". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved August 21, 2024. A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information.
  232. ^ Brown, Luke (2015-10-22). "The Best of Both Worlds: Creating a New Character for Marvel's Contest of Champions[Interview]". Comics Alliance. Archived from the original on 2017-07-23.
  233. ^ Richards, Dave (2015-12-07). "Ewing Escalates the Marvel Universe-Changing "Contest of Champions"". CBR.
  234. ^ Zawisza, Doug (2015-10-08). "Contest of Champions #1". CBR.
  235. ^ a b Chabala, Ben (2015-10-22). "Entering Marvel Contest of Champions: Guillotine". Marvel.com. Archived from the original on 2017-11-07.
  236. ^ Contest of Champions (vol. 2) #1 (December 2015)
  237. ^ U.S.Avengers #7–9
  238. ^ Craig Kyle & Christopher Yost (w), Paco Medina (p), Juan Vlasco (i). "Nimrod Part 1" New X-Men vol. 2, no. 28 (September 2006). Marvel Comics.
  239. ^ X-Men vol. 5 #7