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Dragon Age II, the second main video game in BioWare's Dragon Age series, features an ensemble cast of characters. Several returning characters from its antecedent Dragon Age: Origins may appear in a major or minor capacity, including Flemeth, Anders, Merrill, Isabela, Alistair, Zevran, Leliana, Marethari, Bodahn and Sandal Feddic. [1]
Fenris (Andrea von Strucker and Andreas von Strucker) are two supervillain characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. They are the German twin children of supervillain Baron Strucker of HYDRA and the half-siblings of Werner von Strucker. The two characters appear in The Gifted.
Chillin' in Another World with Level 2 Super Cheat Powers (Japanese: Lv2からチートだった元勇者候補のまったり異世界ライフ, Hepburn: Lv2 kara Chīto datta Moto Yūsha Kōho no Mattari Isekai Raifu) is a Japanese light novel series written by Miya Kinojo and illustrated by Katagiri.
Fictional characters with death or rebirth (reincarnation or resurrection) abilities. See also the categories Fictional characters with accelerated healing , Fictional superhuman healers , and Fictional immortals
A member of the Resistance and leader of a combat squad who is arrogant and reckless. He is one of the Awakened, with the power to create electrical discharges, super strength and super speed. He derides Yūya when the level of his abilities prove unmeasurable by science, leading the Resistance to initially believe he has no superpowers like them.
Fenrir has been depicted in the artwork Odin and Fenris (1909) and The Binding of Fenris (around 1900) by Dorothy Hardy, Odin und Fenriswolf and Fesselung des Fenriswolfe (1901) by Emil Doepler, and is the subject of the metal sculpture Fenrir by Arne Vinje Gunnerud located on the island of Askøy, Norway. [4]
It has the power to conduct electricity with its head bulb. Building Demon: Appears in episodes 6, 7, and 8. It has the power to phase through matter, burrow, spawn decoys, and fire a purple energy beam from its top. Great Tree of Fenrir: Appears in episodes 11, 12, and 13. Powers include large destructive vines, size growth, regeneration, and ...
Death, on the cover of The Death of Captain Marvel (1982). Art by Jim Starlin. Death is an abstract entity, embodiment of life ending in the Marvel Universe, and the opposite of Eternity, embodiment of the universe. [14] Death is predominantly depicted as a skeleton cloaked in a black or purple robe, and at times appears as a Caucasian human ...