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The Fearless Defenders #2 (March 2013) — Warrior Woman: Hippolyta The Fearless Defenders #3 (April 2013) — Clea — The Fearless Defenders #7 (July 2013) — Elsa Bloodstone — The Fearless Defenders #8 (August 2013) — Ren Kimura — The Fearless Defenders #10 (October 2013) — Nova: Frankie Raye The Fearless Defenders #12 (December ...
The origin of the Defenders lies in two crossover story arcs by Roy Thomas prior to the official founding of the team. The first, in Doctor Strange #183 (November 1969), Sub-Mariner #22 (February 1970), and The Incredible Hulk #126 (April 1970) occurred due to the Dr. Strange series being canceled in the middle of a story arc, leaving Thomas no choice but to resolve the storyline in other ...
Manslaughter is a mutant or mutate supervillain, a killer and assassin by trade and a psychopath by nature.He was assigned by a drug czar to assassinate the Defenders.He invaded their Rocky Mountain headquarters, and stalked and nearly killed them. [2]
Andromeda was introduced in The Defenders #143 (March 1985) and added to the titular supergroup's lineup a few issues later. Writer Peter B. Gillis later revealed, "My long-term plan was to populate The Defenders with my own crew of characters, characters who nonetheless had ties to interesting parts of the Marvel Universe.
Bluntly: The topic of this article is the team referred to in Marvel's comics as "The Defenders" and/or the publications titled The Defenders published by Marvel, which would be August 1972 - February 1986 (vol 1), March 2001 - February 2002 (vol 2), and September 2005 - January 2006 (vol 3). Dressing it up with extra 'boxes steps outside of ...
The Valkyrie first appeared as a guise of the Enchantress in The Avengers #83 (December 1970) and was created by Roy Thomas and John Buscema. [4] Thomas used another iteration of the character when the Valkyrie persona was placed into a mortal woman named Samantha Parrington as an adversary for the Hulk in The Incredible Hulk vol. 2 #142 (August 1971).
Craig Shaw Gardner (born July 2, 1949) is an American author, best known for producing fantasy parodies similar to those of Terry Pratchett.. He was also a member of the Swordsmen and Sorcerers' Guild of America (SAGA), a loose-knit group of Heroic Fantasy authors founded in the 1960s, some of whose works were anthologized in Lin Carter's Flashing Swords! anthologies.
Shou-Lao is a Chinese dragon who was previously killed by K'un-L'un citizen Quan-St'ar and had its heart removed. Enraged at this, Yu-Ti banishes Quan-St'ar, resurrects Shou-Lao, and places it in a sacred cavern.