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Black Panther and Iron Man investigate reports of an intruder in a vibranium processing facility, and Adi analyzes the cameras to find footage of Klaw. Black Panther pursues him, and though Klaw at first has the upper hand, Chloe and Iron Man arrive to help defeat him. Black Panther thanks them and promises an alliance between the Avengers and ...
Black Panther is an American motion comic [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] and television series by Marvel Knights Animation, based on the Marvel Comics superhero of the same name ...
The Crew is a comic book series published by Marvel Comics featuring teams of superheroes primarily of African descent banding together in New York City to fight injustice.. The first series was published in 2003 and ran for seven issues.
Marvel Anime (Japanese: マーベルアニメ, Hepburn: Māberuanime) is a 2010 Japanese superhero anime television series by Madhouse and is based on the Marvel Comics universe. It is an anthology collection consisting of four twelve-episode animated series and two direct-to-video films.
Black Panther banishes Man-Ape from Wakanda on order of execution if he returns. [ 9 ] Man-Ape later joins a new Lethal Legion (consisting of the Grim Reaper, Black Talon , Goliath (Erik Josten's latest alias), Nekra , and Ultron -12) and battles Tigra , [ 10 ] but abandons the Grim Reaper alongside Black Talon when the Reaper's racism became ...
Okoye is a character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.Created by writer Christopher Priest and artist Mark Texeira, the character first appeared in Black Panther (vol. 3) #1 (November 1998). [1]
The Dora Milaje first appeared in Black Panther, vol. 3 #1 (November 1998), created by writer Christopher Priest and artist Mark Texeira. [1] Priest, however, claimed that credit for their creation really should go to his Marvel Knights editors Jimmy Palmiotti and Joe Quesada, "who thought it would be great if the Panther had female bodyguards."
Black Panther is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.Created by writer-editor Stan Lee and artist-coplotter Jack Kirby, the character first appeared in Fantastic Four #52, published in July 1966.