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Epsilon Red (Ivanov, a Russian Super-Soldier, is a genetically-engineered cosmonaut with psychic abilities. He restored Wolverine's memories.) Fantasma (Member of the People's Protectorate) Gregor Smerdyakov (a mutant who becomes a sentient tree) Gremlin (Kondrati Topolov, formerly of the Soviet Super-Soldiers, deceased)
All Quality Comics characters have lapsed into public domain. It should be noted that this pertains only to the characters as they were originally depicted when they appeared in titles published by Quality Comics. The versions of the characters that include retconned history are assumed to be separate characters that belong to DC Comics.
The Blue Tracer is the name of Bill Dunn's super-vehicle, which can become a tank, airplane, or submarine. [13] The Blue Tracer appeared in issues #1 through #16 of Military Comics. [14] The characters were acquired by DC, along with the rest of Quality Comics' properties in the 1950s. However, these characters had lapsed into public domain ...
qualities considered dark traits, usually belonging to villains, (amorality, greed, violent tendencies, etc.) [3] that may be tempered with more human, identifiable traits that blur the moral lines between the protagonist and antagonist. [4]
What the connection is between the villain and the terrorists remains to be seen. In 2011, he appeared in stories in Barry Reese's "Lazarus Gray" volume 1, set in the 1930s. In 2012, he was featured as the main villain in Jack Leventreur's Teen Trickster's Adult Adventures Volume 3: The Claw Reborn. Another public domain villain, MLJ's Ah Ku ...
Crash Comics was replaced by Cat-Man Comics in May 1941, although, like its predecessor, this new title was a superhero and adventure anthology merely headlined by the titular character. [6] In 1942, Holyoke Publishing acquired the character, and continued publishing Cat-Man Comics .
A team of federal agents which was established as a superhero team directly accountable to the US government. The team was formed from former members of the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants's second incarnation, but almost immediately began taking on new recruits, including Spiral, Spider-Woman, Stonewall, Crimson Commando, and Super Sabre.
The James Bond arch-villain Ernst Stavro Blofeld (whose scenes often show him sitting on an armchair stroking his cat, his face unseen) has influenced supervillain tropes in popular cinema, including parodies like Dr. Claw and M.A.D. Cat from the Inspector Gadget animated series, Dr. Evil and Mr. Bigglesworth from the Austin Powers film series ...