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An element made up by Fender, who claims to be built out of said metal. Fender says it is yellow and tastes like chicken. Antidermis Bionicle: Greenish-black gas; forms the essence of the Makuta, the main villains of the series. They usually keep the antidermis inside suits of armor. Aquelium, terrelium, and plutulium The Goddess of Atvatabar
Bromine is a chemical element; it has symbol Br and atomic number 35. It is a volatile red-brown liquid at room temperature that evaporates readily to form a similarly coloured vapour. Its properties are intermediate between those of chlorine and iodine .
The following is a list of lists of villains, supervillains, enemies, and henchmen. Lists of villains. By adversary. List of Aquaman enemies; List of Avengers enemies ...
Desmond, originally Mister Element, as appeared in The Flash #216 (June 1972). Art by Dick Dillin (pencils) and Dick Giordano (inks). Albert Desmond is a lowly chemist who suffers from dissociative identity disorder. Desmond has two distinct personalities: one major driving personality and another criminally inclined one. [3]
A space pirate who previously massacred the Trommites when they refused to use their ability to transmute elements to avast a fortune. The sole survivor, Jan Arrah, joins the Legion of Super-Heroes as Element Lad. Saturn Queen (Eve Aries) Superman #147 (August 1961) A Titanian and founding member of the Legion of Super-Villains. School for ...
Razer is a villain who was a mercenary for hire who wears a suit coated completely with lubrilon, an experimental near-frictionless chemical polymer. He nearly destroyed a mall, though the Flash got almost everyone out. Razer later escaped and began working for Data Highways, Inc. Inertia: Impulse #50 (July 1999) Inertia was a clone of Bart Allen.
One of the many names of Kang the Conqueror, an Avengers villain and Reed Richard's descendant. Molecule Man: Owen Reece Fantastic Four No. 20 (November 1963) Stan Lee Jack Kirby A villain or a reluctant hero with the power of molecular manipulation. Originally could only control inorganic matter, but can now control organic matter as well.
Grey Gargoyle is a villain who invents a chemical that lets him turn objects to stone by touching them. [4] He is first introduced as a Thor villain. [36] Grey Gargoyle comes into conflict with Iron Man after he is empowered and mind controlled by Mokk during the "Fear Itself" storyline. [37] Guardsman [38] [39] Kevin O'Brien [40]