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The Living Laser (Arthur Parks) is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by Stan Lee and Don Heck, the character made his first appearance in The Avengers #34 (November 1966). [2] He would become a recurring enemy of Iron Man and plays a key role in the "Iron Man: The Inevitable" miniseries.
An official press release by New York Comic Con via Comic Book Resources called Agrusso "a genuine Internet superstar." [5] In July 2008, q4music.com ranked one of the channel's videos as one of the top ten YouTube videos of the month. [6] The channel primarily discusses comic book films from the two major comic book companies (Marvel and DC ...
Initially, many comics were stand alone, "done in one" stories with a beginning and end taking place within the confines of a single comic issue, often structured in chapters as are most novels. Over time, the comics companies realised the lucrative potential of the crossover comic, whereby other characters from a company's shared universe ...
The Archie comics feature characters who do not age, despite references to various time periods over the course of the series. [7] Similarly, Hergé's Tintin comics take place from the 1920s to the 1970s, while Tintin and the other characters do not age. Many long-established comic characters exist in a floating timeline.
In August 2009, Time listed Ego as one of the "Top 10 Oddest Marvel Characters". [52] In the 2015 book Marvel Comics in the 1960s, Pierre Comtois stated that, "With the creation of Ego [Lee and Kirby], unbelievably, managed to equal if not top their introduction of Galactus only a few months before. Not just a living planet, but a living "bio ...
Ebony Maw was a member of Thanos' Black Order.He is not a fighter, but a dangerous thinker of the Black Order. [2] When Thanos targeted Earth as the next planet he would raze during the Infinity storyline, Ebony Maw was dispatched to deal with Doctor Strange.
The Miracle Man (Joshua Ayers) is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character was created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby as one of the first enemies of the Fantastic Four. He was originally depicted as a stage magician with megalomaniacal desires, capable of convincing others through hypnosis that he ...
Hit-Monkey debuted in the digital comic on Marvel Digital Comics Unlimited Hit-Monkey #1 (April 2010), created by writer Daniel Way and artist Dalibor Talajić. [2] [3] The one-shot was released in print format a week later and, starting in the same month, he was featured in a three-issue story arc in Deadpool #19-21. [4]