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Aura generation Violet: Self-healing abilities and resurrection, and can produce empowering mental effects that can give her previous body's consciousness control of their shared body. Indigo: Tractor beam. Blue: Hologram generation. Green: Produce halting stasis beams to stop and manipulate enemies. Yellow: Light generation; Orange: Concussive ...
Fictional characters with death or rebirth abilities (4 C, 125 P) Fictional characters with density control abilities (1 C, 11 P) Fictional characters with superhuman durability or invulnerability (4 C, 62 P)
A major reason for it is that the queer superhero is one of the few comic characters who was explicitly portrayed as a s*x symbol, in a good way. "[6] Benjamin Riley of Special Broadcasting Service described Noh-Varr was one of the "queer superheroes who changed the face of comics," asserting, "This one’s cheating a bit—Marvel Boy’s ...
All characters in this category have the power to control other characters' bodies or minds. This includes possessing bodies to directly control a victim, the use of telepathic hypnosis and brainwashing to alter behavior, manipulation of their emotions, removing or modifying memories, or distorting someone's senses and perceptions through illusions and hallucinations.
Rohan Pendurkar of Sportskeeda ranked Aurora 3rd in their "5 fastest characters in comic history" list. [37] CBR.com ranked Aurora 9th in their "Marvel: The 20 Fastest Speedsters" list, [38] 9th in their "10 Most Powerful Members of Canada’s Avengers" list, [33] and 19th in their "25 Fastest Characters In The Marvel Universe" list. [39]
Superboy (also known as Kon-El or Conner Kent) is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.A modern variation on the original Superboy, the character first appeared as Superboy in The Adventures of Superman #500 (June 1993), and was created by writer Karl Kesel and artist Tom Grummett.
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The Flash is one of DC Comics' most popular characters and has been integral to the publisher's many reality-changing "crisis" storylines over the years. The original meeting of the Golden Age Flash Jay Garrick and Silver Age Flash Barry Allen in " Flash of Two Worlds " (1961) introduced the Multiverse storytelling concept to DC readers, which ...