List of Marvel Comics characters: D#Fred Duncan
{{Short description|none}}
{{A-Z multipage list|List of Marvel Comics characters}}
Emmanuel da Costa
{{expand section|date=October 2024}}
Emmanuel da Costa is a fictional character appearing in American comic book published by Marvel Comics.
Emmanuel da Costa is an Afro-Brazilian businessman and the father of Roberto da Costa.Marvel Graphic Novel #4. Marvel Comics.
Dagger
{{Main|Cloak and Dagger (characters)}}
Dagoth
{{expand section|date=March 2023}}
Daggoth is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Dagoth is a demon who clashes with Doctor Strange.
Daken
{{Main|Daken}}
Dakimh the Enchanter
Dakimh the Enchanter is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Dakimh is described as a wise but eccentric wizard that lived in pre-cataclysmic Atlantis, and who was the pupil of the sorceress Zhered-Na, who was banished from Atlantis by King Kamuu for prophesying that the continent would sink below the ocean. After starting a cult, Zhered-Na takes her favored disciple Dakimh and greatly extends his life span so that he ages at an extremely slow rate. While Zhered-Na perishes, Dakimh survives the cataclysm that sinks Atlantis and escapes, continuing to live for centuries and maintaining the teachings of his mentor as her only surviving disciple.
Dansen Macabre
Dansen Macabre is an exotic dancer and a devoted worshipper of the God Shiva. She first appeared in Marvel Team-Up #93 (May 1980).{{Cite book |last=DeFalco |first=Tom |title=The Marvel Encyclopedia |last2=Sanderson |first2=Peter |last3=Brevoort |first3=Tom |last4=Teitelbaum |first4=Michael |last5=Wallace |first5=Daniel |last6=Darling |first6=Andrew |last7=Forbeck |first7=Matt |last8=Cowsill |first8=Alan |last9=Bray |first9=Adam |date=2019 |publisher=DK Publishing |isbn=978-1-4654-7890-0 |page=98}} She uses her powers to hypnotize Spider-Man into battling the Shroud in an attempt to kill both of them. The pair manage to overcome her dances and defeat her.Marvel Team-Up #93–94 (May–June 1980). Marvel Comics. She briefly appears later as a captive of Locksmith, and is saved by Spider-Woman.Spider-Woman #50 (June 1983). Marvel Comics. Eventually, the Shroud invites her to join the supervillain team Night Shift, which she accepts, later becoming co-leader of the group.Captain America #330–331 (June–July 1987). Marvel Comics. She serves in several missions, mainly facing the Avengers. She takes some time out to work with Superia and the Femizons as they battle Captain America.Captain America #390–391 (August–September 1991). Marvel Comics.
Dansen and the rest of Night Shift are hired by Snapdragon to kill Moon Knight on behalf of Count Nefaria who is operating as the Kingpin of Los Angeles. When they fail and are bailed out of prison by Snapdragon's lawyer, Count Nefaria kills Dansen, Digger, Needle, Tatterdemalion, Tick Tock, and Misfit.Moon Knight (vol. 6) #6. Marvel Comics.
During the "Spider-Geddon" storyline, Dansen and Digger turn up alive as they, Brothers Grimm, Skein, and new member Waxman rob a bus of people, only to be thwarted by Superior Octopus due to his goggles tuning out Dansen's hypnotism. Superior Octopus agrees to spare them more pain in exchange for the Night Shift becoming his paid agents. They agree to his terms and are ordered to return the stolen items. Superior Octopus leaves, advising them never to cross him or they will not live long enough to regret it.The Superior Octopus #1. Marvel Comics.
Dansen has the mystical ability to hypnotize or kill anyone who witnesses her dancing. She can also make herself undetectable to the human senses.
Dar-Benn
{{Main|Dar-Benn}}
Randall Darby
{{Infobox comics character|
image=Randall Darby (Earth-616) from New X Men Vol 1 132 0001.jpg
|caption=
|character_name=Randall Darby
|real_name=Randall Darby
|species=Human mutant
|publisher=Marvel Comics
|debut=Captain America Annual #4 (1977)
|creators=Jack Kirby
|alliances=Brotherhood of Mutants
Mutant Force
Secret Empire
Resistants
|aliases=Shocker, Paralyzer
|powers= Bio-EM generation / manipulation
}}
Paralyzer (Randall Darby), also known as the second Shocker, is a fictional character, a mutant appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
= Publication history =
Shocker II, created by Jack Kirby, first appeared in Captain America Annual #4 (1977). The character subsequently appears in The Defenders #78{{Endash}}80 (Dec 1979{{Snd}}Feb 1980), 83 (May 1980), 87 (Sep 1980), 125{{Endash}}126 (Nov{{Endash}}Dec 1983), and 128–130 (Feb{{Endash}}Apr 1984). The character appears as Paralyzer in Captain America #343 (Jul 1988), 346 (Oct 1988), 368 (Mar 1990), 394 (Nov 1991), Midnight Sons Unlimited #3 (Oct 1993), and Captain America #426 (Apr 1994). The character returns to his Shocker identity, appearing in The New Warriors vol. 2 #6 (Mar 2000), X-Men #132 (Nov 2002), The Uncanny X-Men #442–443 (June 2004), Excalibur vol. 3 #2 (Aug 2004), and The New Avengers #16–19 (Apr–Jul 2006).
Shocker II appears as part of the "Mutant Force" entry in the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe Deluxe Edition #9.
= Fictional character biography =
Randall Darby is discovered and recruited by Magneto to become a member of his Brotherhood of Evil Mutants, taking the code-name Shocker.Captain America Annual #4 After being abandoned by Magneto, Darby and his teammates come to be known as the Mutant Force.The Defenders #78–80 (Dec. 1979-Feb. 1980) Under this name they work for the United States governmentThe Defenders #83 (May 1980) and later the Secret Empire.The Defenders #125
Darby changes his code-name to Paralyzer when the Mutant Force become the Resistants. The Resistants' protest against the United States' Mutant Registration Act is cut short by a clash with John Walker, who is Captain America at that time.Captain America #343Captain America #346 Later, the Resistants revert to their Mutant Force identities and costumes.Captain America #426 Their next clash is with the New Warriors.The New Warriors vol.2 #6 Paralyzer later battles Spider-Man, subduing him with a lucky blow. Spider-Man later teams up with several members of the Midnight Sons who are investigating the activities of a demonic Spidey-doppelganger. While pursuing this creature, the heroes discover and stop Paralyzer's plan to recreate Zzzax.Midnight Sons Umlimited #3 (Oct. 1, 1993)
After the Sentinels destroy Genosha, Paralyzer, again called Shocker, helps Toad and other mutants create a statue of the island's former ruler Magneto. Unus becomes the leader of the group.X-Men #132The Uncanny X-Men #442–443 Shocker is seen during a meeting of Unus' people after Unus is swallowed by Freakshow, one of the other mutants on the island. The group is not sure they will take Unus back if he survives. He does return, prompting Shocker and the others into attacking him to prove he can still defend himself.Excalibur vol. 3 #2
Shocker loses his powers on M-Day and the energies that he used to control are drawn to The Collective.The New Avengers #16–19
= Powers and abilities =
Darby can generate powerful fields of bio-electromagnetic energy from his body. He also has cybernetic claws of unknown origin in lieu of his hands and feet, and can channel his electrical energy through them into shock bolts or high-voltage fields of electromagnetic energy.
= Other versions =
Randall Darby is among the mutants in Magneto's army in House of M. He is punished for wanting to kill an injured enemy.Civil War: House of M #1 (2008) Later, he is killed during the liberation of Genosha, an island that has mutant slaves.Civil War: House of M #2 (2008)
Daredevil
{{Main|Daredevil (Marvel Comics character)}}
Dark Beast
{{Main|Dark Beast (Marvel Comics)}}
Dark-Crawler
The Dark-Crawler, formerly known as the Night-Crawler (unrelated to the X-Men superhero Nightcrawler), which first appeared in Incredible Hulk #126 (1970),{{Cite web |title=GCD :: Issue :: The Incredible Hulk #126 |url=https://www.comics.org/issue/23405/ |access-date=2023-06-27 |website=www.comics.org}} is a large extradimensional humanoid being with a tail. He is originally from a "dark dimension" (not related to Dormammu's dimension). He later becomes master of the Undying Ones' dimension after defeating the Nameless One.
Dark Phoenix
{{Main|Phoenix Force (comics)}}
Darkdevil
{{Main|Darkdevil}}
Darkhawk
{{Main|Darkhawk}}
Darkoth
{{Main|Darkoth}}
Darkstar
{{Main|Darkstar (Marvel Comics)}}
Darter
Darter (Randy Vale) is a minor villain in Marvel Comics. The character, created by Bill Mantlo and Jim Mooney, first appeared in Peter Parker, the Spectacular Spider-Man #29 (April 1979).
= Fictional character biography of Darter =
Randy Vale is an undergraduate at Empire State University. One day, Randy accidentally stumbles across a clone casket that once belonged to Miles Warren. The casket opens to reveal a decayed clone named Carrion. Upon learning of his creator's death, Carrion offers a partnership with Randy to get revenge on Spider-Man. In return Randy is offered power, but it is not specified what exactly the power entails. Randy dons a high tech uniform and goes by the name Darter. As Darter, Randy can glide through the air and fire lasers at his enemies. His first fight is with White Tiger who he manages to knock down. Later, the two fight again in a gymnasium where Spider-Man and Carrion are fighting. When Carrion flees with Spider-Man, Randy realizes that he was betrayed by his master and swears revenge on Carrion. He encounters his master while trying to drain the life from Spider-Man. Randy tries to attack Carrion, but he is hit with the red death causing him to rapidly deteriorate and die.Peter Parker, the Spectacular Spider-Man #29–31
=Darter in other media=
Randy Vale appears in Spider-Man: Homecoming, portrayed by Christopher Berry.{{Cite web |last=Damore |first=Meagan |date=June 23, 2017 |title=Spider-Man: Homecoming: Gwyneth Paltrow & Jennifer Connelly Confirmed |url=https://www.cbr.com/spider-man-homecoming-gwyneth-paltrow-jennifer-connelly/ |access-date=February 22, 2024 |website=CBR |language=en}} This version is an employee of Adrian Toomes' salvaging company who becomes a criminal after the Department of Damage Control's formation causes the company to go out of business.
Darwin
{{Main|Darwin (comics)}}
Spacker Dave
{{Main|Spacker Dave}}
Jefferson Davis
{{Comics character list header
|name = Jefferson Davis
|Marvelwiki =
|CBDBid = 60833
|GCDid = Jefferson+Davis
}}
Jefferson Davis is the father of Miles Morales / Spider-Man. The character was created by Brian Michael Bendis and Sara Pichelli, and first appeared in Ultimate Comics Spider-Man #1 (November 2011) as part of Marvel Comics' Ultimate Marvel line of books set in a universe and continuity separate from the mainstream Marvel Universe.
= Fictional character biography =
Jefferson is an African-American man who is married to the Puerto Rican woman Rio Morales.Sacks, Ethan (June 21, 2015). [http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/marvel-inclusion-biracial-spider-man-article-1.2265591 "EXCLUSIVE: Spider-Man Miles Morales — popular biracial version of the hero — joins main Marvel comics universe this fall"]. Daily News (New York). He does not get along with his criminal brother Aaron Davis. Things get out of control and Jefferson winds up in jail, only to be bailed out by Nick Fury. Impressed with his fighting skills, Fury has Jefferson join gangster Turk Barrett's gang for intel, eventually working his way up to Wilson Fisk's criminal empire. Afterwards, Jefferson is offered a spot in S.H.I.E.L.D. but chooses to live a simple life of being a husband to Rio and father to Miles.Miles Morales: Ultimate Spider-Man #8–9 Jefferson keeps Miles from ever interacting with Aaron and keeps a strict household in an attempt to lead his son on a clean path. Despite his overall dislike of Aaron's criminal activities, Jefferson is saddened by his brother's subsequent death.Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man #12–13
During the events of United We Stand, Jefferson is arrested by S.H.I.E.L.D. only to be attacked by Hydra, who attempt to get Jefferson to join. He instead kills his would-be recruiters and returns home to Rio. He tells his wife what happened and they go looking for Miles, finding their son at Ganke Lee's house.Ultimate Comics Spider-Man (vol. 2) #15Ultimate Comics Spider-Man (vol. 2) #18 Jefferson is later attacked by Conrad Marcus, putting him in the hospital. He is attacked again, but Spider-Man battles and defeats Venom at the cost of Rio's life.Ultimate Comics Spider-Man (vol. 2) #19–22 One year later, Jefferson discovers that Miles is Spider-Man, angering him and blaming his son for the deaths of Aaron and Rio.Cataclysm: Ultimate Spider-Man #2–3 Jefferson apologizes and reveals his own past to his son.Miles Morales: Ultimate Spider-Man #7–9 Jefferson's undercover life impresses both Donald Roxxon and the Green Goblin.Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man (vol. 2) #28. Marvel Comics.Miles Morales: Ultimate Spider-Man #7. Marvel Comics.
After the events of Secret Wars, Molecule Man transfers Miles, Ganke and their families to Earth-616 and resurrects Rio and Aaron.Ultimate End #5Spider-Man (2016) #237 Jefferson later legally changes his name to Jeff Morales to distance himself from his time as a S.H.I.E.L.D. agent and the Confederate president of the same name.Spider-Man: Miles Morales #22 (2019){{Cite web |date=January 6, 2021 |title=Miles Morales' Father Changes His Name From Jefferson Davis |url=https://bleedingcool.com/comics/miles-morales-father-changes-his-name-from-jefferson-davis/ |website=bleedingcool.com}}
=Other versions=
An alternate universe variant of Jefferson Davis from Earth-65 appears in Spider-Gwen. This version is a criminal and member of S.I.L.K.. Additionally, he became the Scorpion via an electrically-charged suit and tie and wields a staff resembling a scorpion tail.Spider-Gwen (vol. 2) #13Spider-Gwen (vol. 2) #16
=Jefferson Davis in other media=
- Jefferson Davis appears in Spider-Man (2017), voiced by Alex Désert.{{Cite web |title=Jefferson Davis Voices (Spider-Man) |url=https://www.behindthevoiceactors.com/characters/Spider-Man/Jefferson-Davis/ |access-date=February 22, 2024 |publisher=Behind The Voice Actors}} A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information. Introduced in the first season, he is initially optimistic and has a healthy relationship with Miles. In the third season, Jefferson's desire to protect his neighborhood leads to him to become Swarm, utilizing mind-controlling mechanical bees.
- Jefferson Davis appears in Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, voiced by Brian Tyree Henry.{{Cite web |last=Bezanidis |first=Michael |title=Sony's Animated Spider-Man Movie Adds Mahershala Ali & Brian Tyree Henry |url=http://heroichollywood.com/animated-spider-man-mahershala-ali-brian-tyree-henry/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170707073646/http://heroichollywood.com/animated-spider-man-mahershala-ali-brian-tyree-henry/ |archive-date=July 7, 2017 |access-date=June 21, 2017 |website=Heroic Hollywood}} This version is a PDNY officer who has a healthy relationship with Miles, but with high expectations of him. Additionally, Jefferson is initially unaware of Aaron Davis's criminal career as the Prowler, but is still not keen on Miles spending time with his brother. After Aaron is killed by the Kingpin, the distraught Jefferson initially believes his brother's killer to be the new Spider-Man. He later reconciles with Miles, unknowingly inspiring him to become the new Spider-Man and avenge Aaron by defeating the Kingpin. Following the Kingpin's defeat and arrest, Jefferson accepts the new Spider-Man's heroic efforts.
- Jefferson appears in Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse, voiced again by Brian Tyree Henry. In between films, he began going by Jeff Morales and tolerates working with Spider-Man while he and his wife Rio struggle to raise Miles due to his work as Spider-Man.
- Jefferson Davis appears in Insomniac Games' Spider-Man series, voiced by Russell Richardson. This version is a NYPD officer.
- Introduced in Spider-Man (2018), Jefferson aids in the original Spider-Man's investigation into the Kingpin's abandoned assets and prevents them from falling into Mister Negative's hands on Captain Yuri Watanabe's behalf. After rescuing Spider-Man and receiving public recognition for it, Jefferson and his family attend Norman Osborn's mayoral reelection rally, where Jefferson is lauded for his heroism until Negative and the Inner Demons launch a terrorist attack, during which Jefferson sacrifices himself to save another officer from a suicide bomber. Miles eventually comes to terms with his father's death with help from Rio and accepts Peter Parker's offer to work part-time at a F.E.A.S.T. Center to further cope with the loss and honor his father's legacy.
- In Spider-Man: Miles Morales, it is revealed that Jefferson had been estranged from his brother Aaron after discovering he was the Prowler. Jefferson agreed not to arrest Aaron, but demanded his brother stay away from his family. The brothers never reconciled before Jefferson's death, leaving Aaron deeply affected and overprotective of Miles. Jefferson also makes vocal cameos in a flashback in the main story and a side mission, in which Miles goes on a scavenger hunt that Jefferson made for his birthday before his death.
- Jeff Morales appears in Spidey and His Amazing Friends, voiced by Eugene Byrd.
Leonardo da Vinci
{{Comics character list header
|debut = Astonishing #54
|debutmo = October
|debutyr = 1956
|creators = Carl Wessler, Bob Forgione
|alias = Aries, D.E.A.T.H. (Da Vinci Elevating Agents To Helm)
|abilities = Genius-level intellect
|teams = Brotherhood of the Shield
|name = Leonardo da Vinci
|CBDBid = 41859
}}
Leonardo da Vinci is a fictional variation of the Italian polymath of the same name. He was created by Carl Wessler and Bob Forgione and first appeared in Astonishing #54.
Leonardo was born in Vinci,S.H.I.E.L.D. (vol. 2) #1. Marvel Comics as the son of Caterina and Piero Fruosino di Antonio da Vinci.Tales of Suspense #49. Marvel Comics He is one of the thinkers spawned by the Renaissance,Marvel Atlas #1. Marvel Comics and becomes one of the most important polymaths of that era. He also works on other projects, including the steam engine.Cable #96. Marvel Comics During this time, he joins the Brotherhood of the Shield, a group of geniuses including Sir Isaac Newton, Imhotep, Zhang Heng, and Galileo Galilei.S.H.I.E.L.D. #1. Marvel Comics This group is the first to defeat the Brood, Galactus,S.H.I.E.L.D. #3. Marvel Comics and the Celestials.S.H.I.E.L.D. #5–6. Marvel Comics After witnessing a dark spot growing on the Sun, Leonardo along with his two assistants build a suit capable of flight and go to deal with these dark spots.S.H.I.E.L.D.: Infinity #1. Marvel Comics
After that, he is approached by a messenger from K'un-L'un to ask Leonardo for help in training Fongji Wu, the next Iron Fist, who becomes the host of the Phoenix Force. He along with Yu-Ti and Lei-Kung are successful in manifesting the Phoenix Force within Fongji.The New Avengers (vol. 2) #26. Marvel Comics They then construct a telescope to watch the arrival of the Phoenix and give Leonardo an opportunity to study it.The New Avengers (vol. 2) #27. Marvel Comics
Leonardo eventually is able to time travel and leaves a robot to impersonate him in his mortal life. He travels to the 1960s, where he is confronted by the new leader of the Shield: Leonid, the son of Isaac Newton and the deviant Morda. Leonid promises that he will rescue all things, but comes to a disagreement with Isaac who had become the undying leader of the group.S.H.I.E.L.D. (vol. 2) #1–4. Marvel Comics
During this time, Leonardo forms the organization known as the Great Wheel of Zodiac, with its members including: Vasili Dassaiev, John Garrett, Shoji Soma, Cornelius van Lunt, Baron Strucker, Dum Dum Dugan, Nick Fury, Jake Fury, Daniel Whitehall, Viktor Uvarov, and Thomas Davidson, with each member being code-named after a sign of the zodiac. However, the organization falls apart, which leads to the creation of S.H.I.E.L.D., Hydra, Leviathan, and the Zodiac Cartel. Leonardo states that the reason for forming the organization was to control its members.Secret Warriors #25. Marvel Comics
Leonardo is then a technical adviser of S.H.I.E.L.D., after the dismantling of H.A.M.M.E.R.,Secret Warriors #28. Marvel Comics and is seen again after the Secret Empire storyline, where he gathers different geniuses to build a new organization to replace S.H.I.E.L.D.Invincible Iron Man #599. Marvel Comics
; Other versions of Leonardo Da Vinci
In What If?: Nick Fury fought World War II in space, the Leonardo da Vinci of this reality not only designed his projects, but actually built them. Thanks to his legacy, the human race is able to reach the stars in the early 1900s.What If? #14. Marvel Comics
During the 2015 Secret Wars, a version of Leonardo appears as a member of the Hel-Rangers,Red Skull (vol. 2) #1. Marvel Comics a team composed of people who have been exiled for their crimes against the Shield.Secret Wars #2. Marvel Comics Leonardo spends most of his time building technology for the Hel-Rangers to use against those who attack the Shield. During the end of the event, Leonardo reveals to the Thing that he had built the Enlightenment Cannon which was fueled by Michelangelo's power. After the death of his friend, Michelangelo, and the discovery about the truth of life, Leonardo commits suicide.Siege (vol. 2) #1–4. Marvel Comics
A version of Leonardo appears attacking Madison Jeffries and Broo during the Science Battle between the Avengers and X-Men.AVX: Vs #6. Marvel Comics
Aliya Dayspring
Aliya Dayspring (also known as Jenskot) is a fictional character that appears in Marvel Comics. The character was created by Fabian Nicieza and Art Thibert, and first appeared in Cable #1 (March 1993). She is the wife of Nathan Summers / Cable and the mother of Genesis in the future Askani Timeline.Cable #1
=Aliya Dayspring in other media=
Daytripper
{{Main|Amanda Sefton}}
Dazzler
{{Main|Dazzler (Marvel Comics)}}
The Deacon
The Deacon is a Ghost Rider villain created by Jason Aaron. He is a zealot who believes he is doing the work of God.Ghost Rider (Vol. 6) #24 He has been blessed with powers and weapons from Heaven. His sole weakness is that he will not destroy any holy object such as the Bible. He believes he was chosen by Zadkiel, but eventually he is captured and put in prison.
When Johnny Blaze learns the truth of his origin, he goes to the prison the Deacon is in to talk to a priest being held there for murder. One of the prison guards lets Deacon out of his cell and gives him two large knives and the stone serum, which gives him super strength. He fights Blaze and is winning until they enter the chapel, where Blaze beats him with a Bible.
Escaping from prison he slaughters the order of nuns that raised Caretaker, known as Sara, and continues to act as an agent of Zadkiel. When the Ghost Riders go to heaven through the gate guarded by the Gun Nuns, the Deacon shows up and slaughters the nuns. Before he can kill the last one, Sara arrives. The two fight and Sara slashes his back, severing his spine and crippling him. He is later seen in a hospital bed with the Orb. At some point, Deacon dies and his soul is sent to Hell, becoming a demon. When Blaze becomes the King of Hell, Deacon is one of the demons who attempts to usurp the Devil's Throne from him.
Dead Girl
{{Main|Dead Girl}}
Deadbolt
Deadbolt is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Deadbolt is a mutant and a member of the second incarnation of the Dark Riders which were banded together by Genesis.Cable Vol.1 #17 Deadbolt appeared to be a living skeleton who could extract his bones and use them as weapons. Deadbolt was decapitated by Wolverine after he rejected the adamantium and regressed to a feral state. His disembodied head was then used to lure Gauntlet into Wolverine's grasp.Wolverine Vol.2 #100 Deadbolt, along with several of his fellow Dark Riders, was resurrected by means of the Transmode Virus to serve as part of Selene's army of deceased mutants. Under the control of Selene and Eli Bard, he took part in the assault on the mutant nation of Utopia.X-Force (3rd Series) #21, January 2010
His skeletal structure is charged with bioenergy and his individual bones can be removed in pieces and used as razor sharp, high-density throwing weapons. He also had telepathy and could attack with psychic bolts.
Deadpool
{{Main|Deadpool}}
Betty Dean
Betty Dean Prentiss is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
A policewoman, she is a supporting character of Namor and Namora in the Golden Age published by Timely Comics. First appearing in Marvel Mystery Comics #3 (January 1940), Betty Dean is one of the earliest recurring characters and romantic interests in Marvel Comics. She often advocates compassion for air breathers to Namor and urges him to help the Allied Forces battle the Nazis. Betty was a key figure in Marvel's first crossover Marvel Mystery Comics #8{{Endash}}10 where she helps Namor and the Human Torch come to terms after battling each other. Midway through World War II, she becomes a reporter whose scoops often lead Namor to adventures. After WWII, she reunites with Namor for several adventures in the 1950s Atlas Comics. Betty eventually marries and becomes Betty Dean Prentiss, after Namor returns to Atlantis. In the Silver Age, at Namor's request, the widowed Betty becomes the guardian for his young cousin, Namorita, during her surface world education. Betty is transformed into a green scaled amphibian by Namor's foe, Dr. Hydro. She is killed by Doctor Dorcas while saving Namor in Marvel Super-Villain Team-Up #2 (October 1975).
Frank and Leslie Dean
{{Main|Pride (comics)#The Dean family}}
Death
Death is the name of different characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Some of them are members of the Horsemen of Apocalypse.
=Personification=
{{Main|Death (Marvel Comics)}}
=Warren Worthington III=
{{Main|Warren Worthington III}}
=Sanjar Javeed=
{{Main|Death (Sanjar Javeed)}}
=Death (First Horseman of Apocalypse)=
{{Infobox comics character
| character_name = Death
| image =
| converted =
| caption =
| publisher = Marvel Comics
| debut = Marvel Comics #1000 (Aug. 2019)
| creators = Jonathan Hickman (writer)
Dustin Weaver (artist)
| alter_ego =
| full_name = Death
| species = Human Mutant
| homeworld =
| alliances = Horsemen of Apocalypse
Swordbearers of Arakko
| partners = Apocalypse (father)
Genesis (mother)
| supports =
| aliases =
| powers = Eyes of Death
Life sense
| cat = super
| subcat = Marvel Comics
| hero =
| villain =
| sortkey = Death
}}
Death was the youngest of four children of Apocalypse and Genesis, born and raised on Okkara. He and his siblings grew up to be the first Horsemen of Apocalypse and fought against the Brood in Ancient Egypt.{{cite comic | writer = Ewing, Al | penciller = Pizzari, Luca, Landini, Stefano, Pimento, Raphael | inker = Pimento, Raphael | colorist = De La Cruz, Ceci | letterer = Lanham, Travis | editor = White, Jordan D. | story = Genesis and Revelations | title = X-Men: Before the Fall - Heralds of Apocalypse | volume = 1 | issue = 1 | date = August 2023 | publisher = Marvel Comics }}{{cite comic | writer = Hickman, Jonathan | artist = Weaver, Dustin | colorist = Strain, Christina | letterer = Klein, Todd | editor =Lowe, Nick | story = The Infernal Resurrection of Leonardo da Vinci | title = S.H.I.E.L.D. | volume = 1 | issue = 1 | date = June 2010 | publisher = Marvel Comics}}{{cite comic | writer = Pepose, David | penciller = Ferreira, Marcelo | inker = Leisten, Jay | colorist = Rosenberg, Rachelle | letterer = Petit, Cory | editor = Brevoort, Tom, Bissa, Annalise, Biro, Martin | story = Memory of a Killer | title = Moon Knight: City of the Dead | volume = 1 | issue = 1 | date = September 2023 | publisher = Marvel Comics}} When the forces of the dimension of Amenth invaded Earth and split Okkara into Krakoa and Arakko, Death, along with his mother, his siblings, all Okkaran mutants, and the newly created island of Arakko, was voluntarily sealed away in Amenth to stop the invasion while his father Apocalypse remained on Earth.{{cite comic | writer = Hickman, Jonathan | artist = Silva, R.B. | colorist = Gracia, Marte | letterer = Cowles, Clayton | editor = White, Jordan D., Bissa, Annalise | story = Something Sinister | title = Powers of X | volume = 1 | issue = 4 | date = November 2019 | publisher = Marvel Comics}} After Genesis became Annihilation's new host, Arakko was subjugated and united with the forces of Amenth.{{cite comic | writer = Hickman, Jonathan | penciller = Asrar, Mahmud, Yu, Leinil Francis | inker = Asrar, Mahmud, Yu, Leinil Francis | colorist = Gho, Sunny | letterer = Cowles, Clayton | editor = White, Jordan D., Bissa, Annalise | story = X of Swords: Chapter 12 | title = X-Men | volume = 5 | issue = 14 | date = January 2021 | publisher = Marvel Comics}} Death and his siblings were sent to Otherworld to destroy the province of Dryador and lay siege to the Starlight Citadel. When Summoner successfully lured Apocalypse to Otherworld, the Horsemen attacked and severely wounded their father. When Saturnyne intervened and arranged the X of Swords tournament,{{cite comic | writer = Hickman, Jonathan, Howard, Tini | penciller = Larraz, Pepe | inker = Larraz, Pepe | colorist = Gracia, Marte | letterer = Cowles, Clayton | editor = White, Jordan D., Bissa, Annalise | story = X of Swords: Chapter 01 | title = X of Swords: Creation | volume = 1 | issue = 1 | date = November 2020 | publisher = Marvel Comics}} Death was chosen as a swordbearer for Arakko and traveled to Amenth with Famine to recruit the White Sword and to retrieve Death's prophesied sword, the Black Bone of Amduat.{{cite comic | writer = Hickman, Jonathan, Howard, Tini | artist = Larraz, Pepe, Asrar, Mahmud | colorist = Gracia, Marte | letterer = Cowles, Clayton | editor = White, Jordan D., Bissa, Annalise | story = X of Swords: Chapter 11 | title = X of Swords: Stasis | volume = 1 | issue = 1 | date = December 2020 | publisher = Marvel Comics}}
At the banquet before the tournament, Death took a liking to Storm, though she rebuffed his advances.{{cite comic | writer = Duggan, Gerry, Benjamin Percy | artist = Stefano Caselli | colorist = Edgar Delgado | letterer = Cory Petit | editor = Jordan D. White, Annalise Bissa | story = X of Swords: Chapter 13 | title = Marauders | volume = 1 | issue = 14 | date = January 2021 | publisher = Marvel Comics}} As the tournament began, Death paid Mad Jim Jaspers to poison Storm and Wolverine with a substance that nullified their powers in order to give Arakko's team an advantage.{{cite comic | writer = Percy, Benjamin, Duggan, Gerry | artist = Cassara, Joshua | colorist = Guru-eFX | letterer = Petit, Cory | editor = Basso, Mark, White, Jordan D., Amaro, Lauren | story = X of Swords: Chapter 16 | title = Wolverine | volume = 7 | issue = 7 | date = January 2021 | publisher = Marvel Comics}} Death participated in three challenges, winning two. His final challenge was a duel with Storm before the vampires of the realm of Sevalith. Storm shattered his blade and reflected Death's powers with her vibranium sword long enough to stun him, impaling him and winning the duel. Craving his blood, the vampire spectators set upon Death.{{cite comic | writer = Percy, Benjamin, Duggan, Gerry | artist = Cassara, Joshua | colorist = Guru-eFX | letterer = Caramagna, Joe | editor = Basso, Mark, White, Jordan D., Amaro, Lauren | story = X of Swords: Chapter 17 | title = X-Force | volume = 6 | issue = 14 | date = January 2021 | publisher = Marvel Comics}} Though he survived, Death was unable to participate in the remainder of the tournament. He was later made a servant of the rulers of Sevalith.{{cite comic | writer = Hickman, Jonathan, Howard, Tini | artist = Larraz, Pepe | colorist = Gracia, Marte | letterer = Cowles, Clayton | editor = White, Jordan D., Bissa, Annalise | story = X of Swords: Chapter 22 | title = X of Swords: Destruction | volume = 1 | issue = 1 | date = January 2021 | publisher = Marvel Comics}}
Death seemed to enjoy his time in Sevalith, declining Captain Britain's offer to free him.{{cite comic | writer = Howard, Tini | artist = To, Marcus | colorist = Arciniega, Erick | letterer = Maher, Ariana | editor = Bissa, Annalise, Brunstad, Sarah, White, Jordan D. | story = By the Pleasure of the Court | title = Excalibur | volume = 4 | issue = 24 | date = December 2021 | publisher = Marvel Comics}} When Merlyn took over Otherworld and established an anti-mutant regime, Death was imprisoned by his Sevalithi masters. He was sought out by the Knights of X and, though he again declined an offer of freedom, helped them on their quest to locate the Siege Perilous.{{cite comic | writer = Howard, Tini | artist = Quinn, Bob | colorist = Arciniega, Erick | letterer = Maher, Ariana | editor = Okoye, Anita, Brunstad, Sarah, White, Jordan D. | story = Part Three: Kill Your Darlings | title = Knights of X | volume = 1 | issue = 3 | date = August 2022 | publisher = Marvel Comics}}
When Genesis, influenced by Annihilation, sought to seize control of Planet Arakko, she led her army into Sevalith to free Death. Bent to his mother's will by the power of Annihilation, Death helped her fight and defeat the White Sword.{{cite comic | writer = Ewing, Al | artist = Camagni, Jacopo | colorist = Blee, Federico | letterer = Maher, Ariana | editor = White, Jordan D., Amaro, Lauren | story = Storm Warning | title = X-Men Red | volume = 2 | issue = 12 | date = August 2023 | publisher = Marvel Comics}} After civil war broke out on Arakko, Death fought on his mother's side.{{cite comic | writer = Ewing, Al | artist = Çınar, Yıldıray | colorist = Blee, Federico | letterer = Maher, Ariana | editor = Amaro, Lauren, White, Jordan D. | story = Nothing and Nobody | title = X-Men Red | volume = 2 | issue = 15 | date = November 2023 | publisher = Marvel Comics}} When he encountered Storm on the battlefield, however, he refused to fight her, having grown fond of her. When Pestilence attempted to kill Storm, Death, enraged, killed his sister in retaliation.{{cite comic | writer = Ewing, Al | artist = Çınar, Yıldıray | colorist = Blee, Federico | letterer = Maher, Ariana | editor = Amaro, Lauren, White, Jordan D. | story = The Fall of Prometheus | title = X-Men Red | volume = 2 | issue = 16 | date = December 2023 | publisher = Marvel Comics}} Subsequently, Death defected to Storm's side of the war, resolved to bring peace to Arakko. After the war's conclusion, Death remained on Arakko.{{cite comic | writer = Ewing, Al | artist = Çınar, Yıldıray | colorist = Blee, Federico | letterer = Maher, Ariana | editor = White, Jordan D. | story = The Mended Land | title = X-Men Red | volume = 2 | issue = 18 | date = February 2024 | publisher = Marvel Comics}}
==Powers and abilities of Death==
Death is an Omega-level mutant with the ability to produce a disintegrating mist in a directed blast from his eyes that reduces living creatures to ash, known as the "Eyes of Death."{{cite comic | writer = Duggan, Gerry, Percy, Benjamin | artist = Caselli, Stefano | colorist = Delgado, Edgar | letterer = Petit, Cory | editor = White, Jordan D., Bissa, Annalise | story = X of Swords: Chapter 14 | title = Marauders | issue = 15 | date = January 2021 | publisher = Marvel Comics}} While he is resistant to his own powers, he is not immune and can be stunned or hurt by them if the mist is reflected back at him with a mirrored surface. He wears a helmet shaped like a jackal's head (evoking the ancient Egyptian god Anubis) that appears to regulate his powers.
Death can also detect the lifeforce of others and is very long-lived, having been alive for thousands of years.
Though he normally uses a scythe in combat, Death wielded the sword known as the Black Bone of Amduat during the X of Swords tournament. It was destroyed in his duel with Storm.
Death Adder
{{Main|Death Adder (comics)}}
=Roland Burroughs=
{{Main|Death Adder (Roland Burroughs)}}
=Theodore Scott=
{{Main|Death Adder (Theodore Scott)}}
Death-Dealer
Death-Dealer (Li Ching-Lin) is a supervillain and an enemy of Shang-Chi appearing in Marvel Comics. Created by Doug Moench and Gene Day, he first appeared in Master of Kung Fu #115 (August 1982).
Li is an MI6 agent known for his extremely brutal methods who is also working as a double agent for the criminal mastermind Zheng Zu, who is Shang-Chi's father. When Shang-Chi and MI6 discover Li's true allegiance, Li flees from them and rendezvouses with Zheng Zu at his secret base in London, where he is given the name Death-Dealer, provided with a masked costume and weapons, and ordered to eliminate Shang-Chi and his allies. Death-Dealer succeeds in capturing Shang-Chi and brings him to Zheng Zu. Despite his weakened state, Shang-Chi escapes capture and defeats Death-Dealer in combat. With their London base destroyed, Death-Dealer and Zheng Zu escape by helicopter to Zheng Zu's fortress in China.Master of Kung Fu #115–117
When Shang-Chi arrives at Zheng Zu's fortress, Death-Dealer is dispatched to take Shang-Chi's blood for Zheng Zu to preserve his longevity. Shang-Chi throws a brazier at him, which burns him to death.Master of Kung Fu #118 Years later, Death-Dealer's son Huo Li confronts Shang-Chi to avenge his father's death but is easily defeated by the Master of Kung Fu.Shang-Chi: Master of Kung Fu (vol. 2) #1
=Death-Dealer in other media=
- Death-Dealer appears in Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, portrayed by Andy Le.{{Cite web |last=Vary |first=Adam B. |date=April 19, 2021 |title=What the 'Shang-Chi' Teaser Reveals About Marvel Studios' Groundbreaking Movie |url=https://variety.com/2021/film/news/shang-chi-teaser-details-mandarin-simu-liu-1234954927/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210419212331/https://variety.com/2021/film/news/shang-chi-teaser-details-mandarin-simu-liu-1234954927/ |archive-date=April 19, 2021 |access-date=April 19, 2021 |website=Variety}}{{Cite Instagram |postid=CSNF6EJpDgv |user=martialclubofficial |title=Who is the man behind the mask? #MartialClub 😏 See you in theaters September 3rd… @shangchi @marvelstudios #shangchi #marvel #deathdealer |date=August 5, 2021 |access-date=August 6, 2021}} This version is a member of the Ten Rings who serves under its leader Wenwu and personally trained Shang-Chi through cruel measures. While accompanying the Ten Rings to Ta-Lo, the Dweller-in-Darkness' minions steal Death-Dealer's soul.
- An alternate universe variant of Death-Dealer will appear in Marvel Zombies.{{Cite web |last=Nolan |first=Liam |date=July 22, 2022 |title=SDCC Live: Marvel Studios Animation Panel Reveals Future of X-Men '97, What If and Marvel Zombies |url=https://www.cbr.com/marvel-studios-animation-x-men-what-if-zombies-sdcc/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220722212921/https://www.cbr.com/marvel-studios-animation-x-men-what-if-zombies-sdcc/ |archive-date=July 22, 2022 |access-date=July 22, 2022 |website=Comic Book Resources}}
Death Metal
{{Infobox comics character
| image = DeathMetal1.png
| imagesize=200
| caption = Death Metal, on the cover of Death Metal #1 (January 1994)
| character_name = Death Metal
| publisher = Marvel UK
| debut = Death³ #1 (September 1993)
| creators = Dan Abnett
Dell Barras
| alter_ego = Death Metal
| full_name =
| species = Robot
| homeworld =
| alliances =
| aliases =
| supports=
| powers = Shape-changing, superstrength, resistance to injury, ability to absorb memories and personalities of others
}}
Death Metal is a fictional robot appearing in Marvel Comics. The character appears in the Marvel UK imprint. He first appeared in Death³ #1 and was created by Dan Abnett and Dell Barras.
Death Metal was created by Doctor Evelyn Necker as part of the Minion project which also produced Death's Head II and Death Wreck. Necker sends Death Wreck through space and time, and he comes back with a magical semi-living metal that she calls "Promethium". Necker uses this metal to create a new cyborg, but she is unaware that the Promethium was created by the evil being called Charnel.{{Cite web |title=Charnel (Death's Head minion foe) |url=http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix/charneld.htm |access-date=2023-06-27 |website=www.marvunapp.com}} Death Metal later steals a time machine and flees to the parallel universe of Charnel.
There he is found by the alternate versions of several mainstream Marvel Universe supervillains, whom he kills, and several alternate versions of several superheroes, whom he tries to kill. However, Death's Head and Death Wreck also arrive in Charnel's universe and end up fighting Death Metal along with the heroes. When that universe's Ghost Rider uses his mystical Penance Stare on Death Metal, it causes him to see his own sins and realize the extent of Charnel's evil. The three cyborgs then team up and defeat Charnel. Death Metal is then thrown through a temporal warp to modern-day Earth. After going on a disoriented violent rampage in Toronto, he encounters a being called Argon, a warrior of pure spirit who has been sent from another dimension to end the threat of Death Metal. He absorbs Argon's mind and spirit, only to find that his purity counteracts Death Metal's violent rage. Now seeing himself as a monster, he begins to seek his own death.
When the superhero team Alpha Flight arrives in response to his rampage, he attempts to escalate the fight so that he might be killed. Unfortunately, this only restores his berserker rage, until Aurora uses her light powers to calm him. Realizing he is still a danger to others, he teleports away (see Death Metal #2 and Death Metal vs Genetix #1). In Death Metal vs. Genetix, Death Metal seeks to create a being that can destroy him. He takes cell samples from Alpha Flight's Madison Jeffries and Genetix's Vesper (both of whom can control technology) and creates an embryo which he surgically implants in empath Krista Marwan. Genetix rescues Krista, who inexplicably vows to have the child.
Death-Stalker
= Fictional character biography =
{{Infobox comics character
|image=
|caption=Death-Stalker, art by Steve Gerber and Bob Brown
|character_name=Death-Stalker
|real_name=Philip Wallace Sterling
|publisher=Marvel Comics
|debut= (as the Exterminator) Daredevil #39 (April 1968)
(as Death-Stalker) Daredevil #113 (September 1974)
|creators= (the Exterminator) Stan Lee, Gene Colan; (Death-Stalker), Steve Gerber, Bob Brown
|alliances=Unholy Three
|aliases= the Exterminator, Death's-Head II
|powers=Interdimensional travel
Death-grip gloves grant ability to kill a person upon contact
}}
Philip Wallace Sterling was born in Riverdale, Bronx, New York. He was a wealthy man prior to embarking on a career as a professional criminal. When he first appears as the Exterminator, he recruits the Unholy Three. He constructs a "time displacer ray" ("t-ray") which can teleport its target into another dimension (possibly the Limbo from which Immortus hails). The Exterminator leads the Unholy Three in a series of criminal activities and battles Daredevil. When Daredevil defeats the Exterminator and his agents, he also destroys the t-ray, bombarding the Exterminator with its energy and seemingly killing him.Daredevil #39–41
Sterling is trapped between dimensions, only able to return to Earth for a few hours at a time. He steals a pair of gloves from A.I.M. that give him a death-grip, and begins calling himself Death-Stalker.Daredevil #113 He tries several times to kill Daredevil and build a new t-ray machine, but most of his battles with Daredevil end in a draw.
Sterling is later killed in battle after partially phasing through a tombstone.Daredevil #158 (May 1979) He is succeeded by an unnamed female villain who is a member of the Villains for Hire.Villains for Hire #1 (February 2012)
=Powers and abilities=
Death-Stalker normally exists in another dimension, where he can observe events without being detected. He can return to Earth for a limited period of time, with his dimensional abilities allowing him to become invisible and intangible and travel vast distances instantaneously.
Death-Stalker also wields a "cybernetic death-grip" gloves that enable him to emit deadly radiation, and is a skilled criminal mastermind and scientist.Daredevil #113–115
Death Wreck
Death Wreck is a fictional cyborg created by Craig Houston and Staz Johnson, first appearing in Death Wreck #1 (January 1994). Death Wreck is a prototype built by A.I.M. scientist Evelyn Necker in 2018 as part of the Minion project. Constructed at short notice and considered entirely expendable, Death Wreck contains the "brain of a wino" housed within a body powered by a car engine.
Death's Head
Death's Head is the name of different characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
=Death's Head I=
{{Infobox comics character
| character_name = Death's Head
Death's Head II
| image = IncompleteDeathsHead5.jpg
| imagesize =
| image_size =
| alt =
| caption = Death's Head (inset) and Death's Head II on the cover of The Incomplete Death's Head #5
| publisher = Marvel Comics
| debut = The Transformers (UK) #113 (May 1987)
| creators = Simon Furman
Geoff Senior
| real_name =
| alter_ego =
| full_name =
| species = Mechanoid
| homeworld =
| alliances =
| affiliations =
| previous_alliances =
| supports =
| aliases =
| powers = Robotic strength, speed, durability, agility, reflexes, and vision
Expert tracker
| partners =
}}
Death's Head is a fictional comic book character, created by writer Simon Furman and artist Geoff Senior. Originally published by Marvel UK, he later appeared in comics produced by their parent company. Death's Head is a robotic bounty hunter (though he prefers the term "freelance peace-keeping agent") and superhero who was introduced as a supporting character in Transformers.
Death's Head's mechanoid body had originally been constructed to host the life energy of the techno-mage Lupex, a psychotic who hunted beings for sport and stole their bodies upon killing them. However a woman named Pyra, who wished to steal Lupex's secrets, ultimately decided to use the mechanoid body against him. She gave it a cold, calculating business-like mind but before it could be used against Lupex the body was stolen by an unknown party, enlarged to the size of the Cybertronians, and catapulted through time. Death's Head was used as a pawn by Pyra, while Lupex had begun to hunt Death's Head with the intention of gaining his body. Driven to his mental limits and nearly killed, Death's Head was eventually able to defeat Lupex and, refusing to be anything like his "father", killed him while declaring he "kill[s] only for profit or survival!".{{cite magazine|publisher=Marvel UK|title=Death's Head|authorlink=Simon Furman|first=Simon|last=Furman|others=Senior, Geoff|magazine=Strip|issue=13–20|date=August–November 1990}}
In 2007, Death's Head attempted to claim the bounty Autobot leader Rodimus Prime had placed on missing Decepticon leader Galvatron. After interrogating his lieutenants Cyclonus and Scourge discovered that Galvatron had used a device to travel back to 1987. He used similar technology to follow his quarry to Earth, destroying the Autobot Bumblebee on his arrival, and later battling the Decepticon Soundwave. Having followed, Rodimus attempts to cancel the contract as he plans to do the job himself; as it is both are outmatched and Death's Head loses an arm to the crazed Galvatron.{{cite comic|publisher=Marvel UK|writer=Simon Furman|artist=(various)|title=The Transformers|issue=113-120|date=16 May - 4 July 1987}} The Decepticons subsequently hired him to kill Rodimus, a job he was happy to take. However the Autobot was eventually able to buy out the contract, and assigned him to destroy Cyclonus and Scourge instead.{{cite comic|publisher=Marvel UK|writer=Simon Furman|artist=(various)|title=The Transformers|issue=133-134|date=3 - 10 October 1987}}
Tracking the pair led him to the planet Junk, where they all fell under the mental control of Unicron. Death's Head tried to resist the control but was manipulated into killing Shockwave, only to eventually help Rodimus Prime seal Unicron within the Matrix. Finally, prevented from escaping the scene by the explosions wracking the area Death's Head forced himself, Cyclonus, and Scourge through Unicron's time portal, vowing to kill them "another time".{{cite comic|publisher=Marvel UK|writer=Simon Furman|artist=(various)|title=The Transformers|issue=146-151|date=2 January - 6 February 1988}}
However, he instead collided with the TARDIS in the timestream. After a confrontation with its pilot, the Time Lord known as the Doctor, he found himself shrank and then tricked into travelling to 8162.{{Cite comic | Writer = Simon Furman | Artist = Geoff Senior | Story = The Crossroads of Time | Title = Doctor Who Magazine | Issue = #135 | Date = April 1988| Publisher = Marvel UK | }} Arriving in the 'Pool, he ended up battling Greater Britain government agents Dragon's Claws, sustaining heavy damage before having a building fall on him.{{Cite comic | Writer = Simon Furman | Artist = Geoff Senior | Story = Death's Head! | Title = Dragon's Claws | Issue = #5 | Date = November 1988| Publisher = Marvel UK | }}
Death's Head was recovered by the Chain Gang and rebuilt (with a redesigned body) by one of their members, Spratt.{{Cite comic | Writer = Simon Furman | Penciller = Bryan Hitch | Inker = Mark Farmer | Story = Death's Head Revisited | Title = Death's Head | Issue = #1 | Date = December 1988| Publisher = Marvel UK | }} In exchange for this rescue, he confronted Dragon's Claws again on the Chain Gang's behalf, defeating and capturing Scavenger. When the Claws came to recover their missing member, Death's Head defeated Dragon but opted not to kill him, instead walking away and stating that his chronometer was "a minute slow" and his contract had therefore expired. The Chain Gang were arrested and Spratt, who had escaped arrest, opted to join Death's Head.{{Cite comic | Writer = Simon Furman | Penciller = Bryan Hitch | Inker = Dave Hine | Story = Contractual Obligations | Title = Death's Head | Issue = #2 | Date = January 1989| Publisher = Marvel UK | }}
Death's Head and Spratt then relocated to the Los Angeles Resettlement, where Death's Head once again went into business as a Freelance Peacekeeping Agent.{{Cite comic | Writer = Simon Furman | Penciller = Bryan Hitch | Inker = Dave Hine | Story = High Stakes | Title = Death's Head | Issue = #3 | Date = February 1989| Publisher = Marvel UK | }} Death's Head was later hired by Dogbolter to capture the Doctor and his TARDIS, which led him to being stuck in the present day, where he confronted the Fantastic Four{{Cite comic | Writer = Simon Furman|title = Death's Head | Issue = #9 | Date= August 1989|artist=Geoff Senior}} and was then sent by Reed Richards to the year 2020 - where he met the Iron Man of that era.{{Cite comic | Writer = Simon Furman|title = Death's Head | Issue = #10 | Date= September 1989|artist=Bryan Hitch}}
=Death's Head II=
Eventually Death's Head was beheaded and his personality "assimilated" into the mind of the cyborg Minion. Minion was a cyborg created by Doctor Evelyn Necker, a long-term pet project created after years of research which included the Xandarian Worldmind being temporarily uploaded into the Minion program's gestalt matrix.{{cite comic|publisher=Marvel Comics|writer=Dan Abnett, Andy Lanning|artist=Wellinton Alves, Geraldo Borges|title=Nova|issue=17|date=June 2008}} By the year 2020, she was an employee of A.I.M. and the final Minion (as well as its prototype, Death Wreck) was designed to protect the organisation from a psychically predicted threat; it killed and assimilated the minds of multiple targets as preparation.{{cite comic|publisher=Marvel UK|writer=Dan Abnett|penciller=Liam Sharp|inker=Andy Lanning|title=Death's Head II|volume=1|issue=1|date=March 1992}}
Death's Head's personality overwhelmed Minion's programming before it could take out its final target - Reed Richards of the Fantastic Four - and they became the gestalt lifeform that called itself Death's Head II.{{cite comic|publisher=Marvel UK|writer=Dan Abnett|penciller=Liam Sharp|inker=Andy Lanning|title=Death's Head II|volume=1|issue=2|date=April 1992}} Death's Head II soon met up with Tuck, an artificial human from the pseudo-medieval planet of Lionheart, where humans had outlawed advanced technology and waged war against androids and cyborgs.{{cite comic|publisher=Marvel UK|writer=Dan Abnett|penciller=Liam Sharp|inker=Andy Lanning|title=Death's Head II|volume=1|issue=3|date=May 1992}} Neo-Nazi black mage Baron Strucker IV magically combined himself with the original Death's Head's corpse to become the supervillain Charnel, a recurring enemy for Death's Head II and the threat AIM had predicted.{{cite comic|publisher=Marvel UK|writer=Dan Abnett|penciller=Liam Sharp|inker=Andy Lanning|title=Death's Head II|volume=1|issue=4|date=June 1992}}
Death's Head II later fought in the Battle of London Bridge, preventing Mys-Tech from sacrificing everyone in Britain to Mephisto. However, when Mys-Tech resurfaced years later he decided to use them to flush out Necker in a time before she meddled in his life, taking an offer from them to capture the hero Captain Britain.{{cite comic|publisher=Marvel Comics|writer=Andy Lanning, Alan Cowsill|artist=Rich Elson|title=Revolutionary War: Alpha|volume=1|issue=#1|date=March 2014}} To undertake the mission he left Tuck behind in the future, and she hired the original Death's Head to track him. The two incarnations of Death's Head were able to battle Necker and Mys-Tech, though the original was captured.{{cite comic|publisher=Marvel Comics|writer=Andy Lanning, Alan Cowsill|artist=Nick Roche|title=Revolutionary War: Death's Head II|volume=1|issue=#1|date=May 2014}} Death's Head II nevertheless helped battle Mys-Tech's second attempt to sacrifice the people of Britain. After the threat was ended, both Death's Heads and Tuck returned to the future.{{cite comic|publisher=Marvel Comics|writer=Andy Lanning, Alan Cowsill|artist=Rich Elson|title=Revolutionary War: Omega|volume=1|issue=#1|date=May 2014}}
=Death's Head 3.0=
{{Infobox comics character
| image =
| imagesize=202
| caption = Cover to Amazing Fantasy vol. 2 #16, featuring Death's Head 3.0, art by Lucio Parillo
| character_name = Death's Head 3.0
| publisher = Marvel Comics
| debut = Amazing Fantasy vol. 2 #16 (December 2005)
| creators = Simon Furman
James Raiz
| alter_ego =
| full_name =
| species =
| homeworld =
| alliances =
| aliases =
| supports=
| powers=
}}
The third version of Death's Head was introduced in 2005, the result of an online poll on the Marvel Comics website.[http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?threadid=50003 Pniccia on Death's Head 3.0 & Amfan Things to Come] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070929134408/http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?threadid=50003 |date=2007-09-29 }}, Newsarama, November 21, 2006 Fans were given the chance to choose between four existing Marvel characters: Death's Head, Woodgod, Wundarr the Aquarian, and the Texas Twister. The winning character was to be revamped and receive their own storyline in Marvel's Amazing Fantasy vol. 2 title. Death's Head won, receiving 49% of the vote. Death's Head creator Simon Furman stated that he contacted Marvel as soon as he became aware of the poll.[http://www.comixfan.com/xfan/forums/showthread.php?t=37077 Simon Furman: Transforming Death's Head Into Annihilation], Comixfan, December 21, 2005 Amazing Fantasy vol. 2 editor Mark Paniccia had already intended to contact Furman to ask him some questions about the character, and their conversation also led to Furman writing the initial Death's Head 3.0 story. The character's look was that of one of the Reaver cyborgs from the Incredible Hulk storyline Planet Hulk.{{Cite web |date=14 November 2011 |title=Interview: Simon Furman, Creator of DEATH'S HEAD |url=https://www.starburstmagazine.com/features/simon-furman-interview-deaths-head/ |website=STARBURST Magazine}} The initial Death's Head 3.0 story also included a number of elements that tied it into previous Amazing Fantasy vol. 2 stories. Death's Head's sentience and power source come from A.I.M.'s attempts to first capture and then replicate the power that created Captain Universe. Issue #16 reveals the scientist that began the project was Monica Rappaccini, the mother of the new Scorpion, on the back of her attempts to capture the Uni-Power in other titles. Varina Goddard is revealed via A.I.M. records to be Monica's granddaughter.Amazing Fantasy vol. 2 #18 Furman says he has "mixed feelings" about the story, as he likes it but feels that this is not Death's Head: "I always thought it strange that poll was to bring back one character and what readers got was another entirely... I'd have much rather done the original." While the Minion project is mentioned as the reason for Death's Head being given his name, no other ties to the previous Death's Heads were included. However, Simon Furman has stated that he would "work in a little retroactive back story to create a kind of unified Death's Head-verse" if the character was revived in the future at some point and it has come out that he had originally intended to imply Death's Head 3.0 was the original, in an early form,{{Cite web |title=Simon Williams on Death's Head |url=http://soulmaninc.blogspot.com/2010/08/deaths-head.html}} which the warlock Lupex would abduct and turn into Death's Head's body. Marvel rejected the idea, however. In Nova #17, Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning did their own version, depicting the Minion project as being originally based on a Death's Head "3.0" cyborg.{{Cite web |title=minion1.jpg (image) |url=http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_QqxEzkl_lrA/SPzAi0bpT_I/AAAAAAAAAes/fbCplGoZS6w/s1600-h/minion1.jpg |website=3.bp.blogspot.com}}
The third version of Death's Head debuted in a five-part storyline within the pages of Marvel's anthology series Amazing Fantasy vol. 2, beginning in #16 (Dec 2005). Written by Death's Head creator Simon Furman and drawn by James Raiz, the story is set 100 years in the future and does not appear to be directly linked to the previous Death's Head stories.
A.I.M. are set to make peace with the UN and become a legitimate non-terrorist organisation. Hardliner A.I.M. Senior Scientist Patricia Goddard has decided to stop the peace treaty and force A.I.M. back underground by assassinating the UN Secretary-General, using a mysterious alien cyborg in A.I.M.'s possession code-named Death's Head. Powered and given intelligence by an artificial variant of the Uni-Power, the cyborg is sent out into the field with preprogrammed objectives, but the clash between its murderous inclinations and an instinctive desire to help people leave it unsure on which side it wants to be.
The final panel of the Death's Head 3.0 story concludes with an image of the cyborg with mouth horns, alluding to the original Death's Head.Amazing Fantasy vol. 2 #20 Comic artist Simon Williams has said that Furman was going to end the story by having the character say "I'm Death's Head, yes?", to establish that Death's Head 3.0 was an early version of the original, but the "yes?" was cut off by the editor by mistake.
Mechanoids with the same design as this incarnation of Death's Head went on to appear on Sakaar, during the Planet Hulk series,Planet Hulk TPB and are used by the Hulk as soldiers during the World War Hulk event.World War Hulk TPB One is used as an A.I.M. courier by Monica Rappaccini in the five-issue miniseries Super-Villain Team-Up: MODOK's 11.Super-Villain Team-Up: MODOK's 11 #1–5 It is shown during Nova{{'s}} Secret Invasion issues that the Hulk's Death's Head units have been handed over to Project P.E.G.A.S.U.S. for study by a Dr. Necker under her "Minion" Project. After Norman Osborn's H.A.M.M.E.R. forces come in to shut the facility down, it is revealed that Dr. Necker is an A.I.M. double agent, explaining how Death's Head was in A.I.M. possession during the Death's Head 3.0 miniseries.
More recently, during the Enigma Force tie-in miniseries of the Incredible Hulks: Dark Son story arc, it is revealed that this model of Death's Head was built in the Microverse during a war with K'ai thousands of years ago. Sometime after the war, some of the warships they were aboard were sucked through the Great Portal of Sakaar, which is said to breach time and space.
=Paxton Page=
Dr. Paxton Page is a character who is a scientist who perfects the cobalt bomb. He later goes mad and fakes his own kidnapping and death so that he can assume the guise of the supervillain Death's-Head. He dresses in a glowing radioactive costume, riding a horse whose flesh is made transparent, and wields fireballs and scimitars of radioactive cobalt. Page's daughter Karen returns to her parents' home to investigate her father's disappearance, and Daredevil follows her. In the ensuing battle between Daredevil and Death's-Head, Death's-Head spills a vat of molten cobalt over Daredevil, but realizes that Karen is endangered. This brings him back to his senses, and he pushes Daredevil and Karen to safety. He appears to die in this act of self-sacrifice when he is covered in the molten cobalt.Daredevil #57. Marvel Comics.
=Death's Head in other media =
- Paxton Page appears in the third season of Daredevil, portrayed by Lee Tergesen. He runs a diner in Fagan Corners, Vermont called "Penny's Place" with his wife Penelope, their daughter Karen, and son Kevin. Karen handles waitressing and bookkeeping, while Kevin and Paxton work the kitchen. Following Penelope's death from cancer, Paxton is left running the diner, but it becomes quickly clear that he is incapable of managing his financial assets, making expensive purchases that they can't afford in spite of Karen's warnings. Stressed out from her job, Karen hooks up with a drug dealer named Todd Neiman and turns to heroin as an escape. It comes to a head when Kevin burns down Todd's trailer one night and Karen is forced to shoot Todd to stop him from beating Kevin to death with a tire iron. As they're driving away, Karen loses control of the car and crashes, killing Kevin. The local sheriff Bernie Cohen, who is a friend of Paxton's, agrees to cover up the incident and falsely report that Kevin was the driver so that Karen won't go to prison for vehicular manslaughter. Consumed by the loss of Kevin, Paxton tells Kevin to leave town. As for "Penny's Place," a sign was placed on it stating "closed until further notice".{{cite episode|title=Aftermath|series=Marvel's Daredevil|credits=Lopez, Alex Garcia (director); Tamara Becher-Wilkinson (writer)|network=Netflix|airdate=October 19, 2018|season=3|number=10}} When Karen calls him up following Dex's massacre of her colleagues at the New York Bulletin, Paxton is relieved that Karen is not among the victims. When she asks if she can come home for a while, Paxton states that the timing is not great and that she can still call him. As Karen states that she was trying to do the right thing that all went wrong, Paxton quoted "That's what you do, Karen" and ended their call by saying goodnight.{{cite episode|title=Aftermath|series=Marvel's Daredevil|credits=Fraser, Toa (director); Sarah Streicher (writer)|network=Netflix|airdate=October 19, 2018|season=3|number=7}}
- Numerous Death's Heads appear in Planet Hulk as minions of the Red King.[citation needed]
- Death's Head makes a cameo appearance in Strider Hiryu's ending in Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3.[citation needed]
Deathbird
{{Main|Deathbird}}
Deathlok
{{Main|Deathlok}}
=Death Locket=
{{Main|Death Locket}}
=Jemma Simmons=
{{Main|Jemma Simmons}}
Deathurge
Deathurge is a character who is a former servant of Maelstrom.
Deathwatch
{{Main|Deathwatch (comics)}}
Debrii
{{Main|Debrii}}
December
December (Winter Frost) is a mutant in X-Nation 2099. In the year 2099, Frost gets a job at a local amusement park. However, it is not a typical park, and has a king and queen who preside over it. One day Queen Perigrine disappears, and they find her body at the bottom of the Tunnel of Love. After that day, King Avian begins to be suspicious of everyone and requires genetic scans of all incoming tourists before they can enter. Anyone with genetic anomalies is imprisoned in an underground labyrinth and subjected to many tests and acts of torture. Frost is discovered to be a mutant and is imprisoned like the others. She is capable of drastically lowering the air temperature surrounding her hands and projecting it outwards to freeze the air around her into arctic gale winds, allowing her to flash freeze or freeze dry objects in her surroundings.
Johnny Dee
{{Infobox comics character
| image = Johnny Dee (Earth-616) from Civil War X-Men Vol 1 3.png
| imagesize = 100
| caption = Johnny Dee
| character_name = Johnny Dee
| real_name = John D.
| species = Human Mutant
| publisher = Marvel Comics
| debut = Son of M #1 (December 2005)
| creators =
| alliances = The 198
| powers = Has a living being on his chest that can produce "voodoo dolls"
}}
Johnny Dee (John D.) is a fictional mutant character who debuts in Son of M #1 (2005). Johnny has an octopus-like creature that protrudes from his chest with several tentacles. The creature has a brain of its own but cannot speak (although, it is suggested in The 198 that the latter could be false{{Volume needed|c=y|date=April 2009}}), and can produce a voodoo doll of a person after Johnny puts a sample of their DNA (like a strand of hair) in its mouth. The creature spits out a clamshell that contains a tiny naked replica of the person, giving him the ability to control the person entirely. Johnny and the creature share the same nervous system, but Johnny cannot feel the creature's pain. This is evidenced in Son of M #1 when one of the creature's tentacles is slashed, leaving them both on the verge of death, but Johnny is oblivious to the actual extent of the injury.
=Fictional character biography=
Johnny is one of the few mutants who keeps his powers after Scarlet Witch's alteration of the world to remove the powers of the world's mutants. Living in Mutant Town, Johnny is about to be killed by mutant-hating thugs.Son of M #1 After being rescued by Spider-Man, Johnny agrees to move to the Xavier Institute.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=April 2013}}
When Magma arrives at the school, they share a conversation about her recent outburst. Magma sees him as a friend, but Johnny begins falling in love with her. Magma admits that Johnny looks cute but is a bit disgusted by his powers. Later, Johnny appears to use his powers to create small duplicates of Magma,X-Men: The 198 #2 and later of Jazz as well. They appear to be voodoo dolls that make the targets come under Johnny's control. Jazz spies on Johnny and finds him making a voodoo doll of Jazz. Johnny later uses the doll against Jazz and kills him.X-Men: The 198 #3
Later, Demetrius Lazer has Johnny kill Mr. M.X-Men: The 198 #5 Johnny continues to be a pawn in General Lazer's agenda, until Lazer is found out by Val Cooper and General Reyes. Lazer and Johnny are incarcerated, but while Lazer is being tortured by Cooper for information to unlock a door trapping most of the 198, he realizes that Johnny touched him, at which point Johnny snaps the neck of a voodoo doll of Lazer, killing him. At this point, Johnny remains behind bars.Civil War: X-Men #2–4
Deerdevil
Deerdevil is an anthropomorphic deer and animal version of Daredevil.
Defender
Defender (Don Stevens) is a superhero who appeared on the cover of the first issue of U.S.A. Comics and in stories from issues #2{{Endash}}4.
Valentina Allegra de Fontaine
{{Main|Valentina Allegra de Fontaine}}
Father Delgado
{{Comics character list header
|name = Father Delgado
|Marvelwiki =
|CBDBid = 1017
|GCDid = Francis+Delgado
}}
Father Francis Xavier Delgado is a fictional priest in Marvel Comics. The character, created by Bill Mantlo and Rick Leonardi, first appeared in Cloak and Dagger #1 (October 1983).
Father Delgado preaches at the Holy Ghost Church, which is located in the slums of Hell's Kitchen. He arrives at his church one day to find Cloak and Dagger, who came seeking sanctuary. After hearing their story, he chooses to honor their wishes of being discreet and feeds and houses them. He even defends them from the police, leading away police detective Brigid O'Reilly.Cloak and Dagger #2–4 Delgado's church acts as their superhero base, and he aids other superheroes like Spider-Man and the New Mutants.Marvel Team-Up Annual #6 Later, Delgado accompanies Cloak and Dagger to visit Dagger's mother, Melissa Bowen. When she turns out to be cruel and uncaring, Dagger blights her and returns to Cloak and Delgado.Cloak and Dagger (vol. 2) #4 Delgado is shown to detest Cloak and Dagger's vigilante efforts, but cannot stand to see them leave, particularly Dagger as he wants to "rescue" her from Cloak's "demonic" life.Cloak and Dagger (vol. 2) #5 The duo, along with the newly transformed Brigid, who has become Mayhem, rescue Delgado from criminals who were posing as a religious group.Cloak and Dagger (vol. 2) #6
While thankful for being rescued, Delgado still fears that Cloak and Dagger's souls were corrupted by demons. Both the congregation and Daimon Hellstrom refuse to perform an exorcism for him, so he attempts to do so himself. He is stopped by Mayhem who ridicules him for his selfishness. Ashamed, Delgado prays.Cloak and Dagger (vol. 2) #7–9 When Dagger returns to the church, Delgado confronts Cloak and forces him to leave with holy water. His action inadvertently awakens the Predator, the demon responsible for Cloak's hunger, and resurrects the spirit of Jack the Ripper. When Dagger learns that Delgado turned Cloak away, she angrily leaves him. Delgado is later taken away to a psychiatric hospital by the congregation.Marvel Graphic Novel No. 34 – Cloak and Dagger: Predator and Prey He is placed in a padded cell and tells Mayhem that he has lost his faith.Strange Tales (vol. 2) #13 Dagger later visits Delgado and learns that he appears to be sane; however, it is quickly revealed that he is under the control of Mister Jip, who is keeping him alive and who he sees as his God. He is visited by Dagger's uncle, Michael Bowen, who has replaced Delgado at the Holy Ghost Church. As the two pray together, Delgado secretly prays to Mister Jip and plots to kill Dagger, who he views as a temptress.Strange Tales (vol. 2) #14–15
He soon leaves the hospital and tells Cloak that he is feeling better now, but in actuality he is working close with Mister Jip and his assistant Night.Cloak and Dagger (vol. 3) #2–3 Delgado begins working for Michael Bowen and once again feigns sanity, even when he encounters a blind Dagger from whom he must restrain himself.Cloak and Dagger (vol. 3) #6 While sweeping the church, Delgado is visited by Ecstasy. Feeling that this is part of a test by Mister Jip, Delgado lets slip where Dagger is. Thinking he has failed, Disciplinarian enters, looking for Ecstasy. Delgado tries to fight him off, but is shot.Cloak and Dagger (vol. 3) #8 He recuperates in the hospital, but is convinced that he has failed the Lord due to Cloak and Dagger being together again. Dagger visits him and as she is thanking him for his bravery in protecting her, he continues to plot to kill her.Cloak and Dagger (vol. 3) #9–10 He is eventually released and reports to Mister Jip about Cloak and Dagger. Mister Jip breaks his promise to Delgado and takes over his body, effectively killing him.Cloak and Dagger (vol. 3) #12
=Father Delgado in other media=
Father Delgado appears in Cloak & Dagger, portrayed by Jaime Zevallos.{{Cite magazine |last=Highfill |first=Samantha |date=April 16, 2018 |title=Marvel's Cloak & Dagger: Jaime Zevallos and Emma Lahana's characters are revealed |url=https://ew.com/tv/2018/04/16/marvels-cloak-dagger-jaime-zevallos-and-emma-lahanas-father-delgado-brigid-oreilly/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180418010514/http://ew.com/tv/2018/04/16/marvels-cloak-dagger-jaime-zevallos-and-emma-lahanas-father-delgado-brigid-oreilly/ |archive-date=April 18, 2018 |access-date=April 16, 2018 |magazine=Entertainment Weekly}} This version is a school counselor and priest at St. Sebastian's School, who assists Tyrone and tries to dissuade him from negative thoughts.
Marco Delgado
{{Main|Marco Delgado (comics)}}
Delilah
{{Main|Delilah (comics)}}
Delphi
{{Main|Delphi (Pantheon)}}
Demiurge
Demiurge is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Demiurge is depicted as a cosmic entity who created the Elder Gods.
Demogoblin
{{Main|Demogoblin}}
Demolition Man
{{Main|Demolition Man (character)}}
Demon Bear
The Demon Bear is a character appearing in The New Mutants and X-Force connected to Danielle Moonstar and the formation of the New Mutants. Its powers include teleportation, shapeshifting, negative emotion empowerment, and corruption of human souls.
The Demon Bear is a demonic bear spirit created when the Adversary kidnapped and transformed Dani's parents, William and Peg. Throughout its appearances, it battles Dani and the New Mutants before Psylocke tames and adopts it.The New Mutants #21. Marvel Comics.The New Mutants #24. Marvel Comics.Uncanny X-Force vol. 2 #4–5. Marvel Comics.Uncanny X-Force vol. 2 6. Marvel Comics.
=Demon Bear in other media=
Demon Bear appears in The New Mutants.{{Cite web |last=Schedeen |first=Jesse |date=July 23, 2020 |title=The New Mutants' Demon Bear and Soulsword Explained: How the Movie Brings Horror to the X-Men Franchise |url=https://www.ign.com/articles/the-new-mutants-demon-bear-soulsword-explained |website=IGN}} This version was manifested by Danielle Moonstar after her mutant powers first activated and subsequently destroyed the reservation that she lived on. In the present, Moonstar summons the Demon Bear again after Cecilia Reyes attempts to kill her. Subsequently, she battles the bear in her mind and dissipates it after confronting her past.
Desak
{{Main|Desak}}
Desert Ghost
Desert Ghost (Xi'an Chi Xan) is a mutant created for the Marvel 2099 imprint. The character was created by John Francis Moore and Ron Lim, and first appeared in X-Men 2099 #1 (October 1993). He is the founder of the 2099 X-Men and has been both the leader and an enemy of the team.
Xi'an was born into a well-respected family. However, when his mutant power to break down the molecular structure of whatever he touches with his left hand manifested, his parents turned him over to a genetics lab to save their own reputation. Before reaching the lab, Xi'an destroyed his restraints and escaped. He spent much of the rest of his youth on the streets, in and out of gangs before joining the Lawless, gaining the nickname "Desert Ghost." After being chased by bounty hunters in Saigon, Xi'an left the Lawless and returned to the US, with a more refined demeanor and a new purpose, to create his own version of the X-Men to help fight for genetic equality.{{cite comic | writer=Moore, John Francis | penciller=Lim, Ron | inker=Candelario, Harry | colorist=Smith, Tom | letterer=Lopez, Ken, Chiang, Janice | editor=Cavalieri, Joey | story=Gauntlet of Pain | title=X-Men 2099 | volume = 1 | issue=22 | date=July 1995| publisher=Marvel Comics}}
The team almost immediately runs into trouble when Xi'an is accused of murdering casino mogul Noah Synge. The team hurries to clear his name, but in the course of things Xi'an is shot. Instead of dying, his body encases itself in a cocoon. He soon emerges from this cocoon fully healed. This trauma also triggers a secondary mutation, giving Xi'an the power to heal with his right hand.{{cite comic | writer=Moore, John Francis | penciller=Lim, Ron | inker=Kubert, Adam | colorist=Smith, Tom | letterer=Lopez, Ken | editor=Cavalieri, Joey | story=The Gathering | title=X-Men 2099 | volume = 1 | issue=1 | date=October 1993| publisher=Marvel Comics}}{{cite comic | writer=Moore, John Francis | penciller=Lim, Ron | inker=Kubert, Adam, Sellers, Mike | colorist=Smith, Tom | letterer=Lopez, Ken | editor=Cavalieri, Joey, Morra, Matthew | story=Synge City Blues | title=X-Men 2099 | volume = 1 | issue=2 | date=November 1993| publisher=Marvel Comics}}{{cite comic | writer=Moore, John Francis | penciller=Lim, Ron | inker=Kubert, Adam, Ivy, Chris, Sanders III, Jim, Smith, Cam, Martin, Gary | colorist=Smith, Tom | letterer=Babcock, Jon, Lopez, Ken | editor=Cavalieri, Joey | story=Viva Las Vegas | title=X-Men 2099 | volume = 1 | issue=3 | date=December 1993| publisher=Marvel Comics}}
Xi'an then leads the team to find Mama Hurricane, a runner for the mutant underground railroad during the Great Purge of mutants some decades prior. They find her and gain knowledge on the Driver, her next contact within the railroad, but are then sidetracked to El Paso, where Krystalin has uncovered evidence of an Archangel-like mutant. They discover a hidden base where Master Zhao, the leader of the last known iteration of the X-Men, has kidnapped Krys and Xi'an's former Lawless teammate Victor Ten Eagles. Over the years, Zhao has made himself mentally unstable with drugs to preserve and enhance his psychic abilities, and plans to brainwash Xi'an's team into his own X-Men. However, in his initial assault on Xi'an's mind it is revealed that Xi'an's prior Lawless personality has been lying dormant, as a sort of alternate personality. In order to defeat Zhao, Xi'an returns to his more amoral personality, knocking the former mutant leader into a coma with a psychic backlash.{{cite comic | writer=Moore, John Francis | penciller=Lim, Ron | inker=Sanders III, James | colorist=Smith, Tom | letterer=Lopez, Ken | editor=Cavalieri, Joey, Morra, Matthew | story=Freakshow | title=X-Men 2099 | volume = 1 | issue=6 | date=March 1994| publisher=Marvel Comics}}{{cite comic | writer=Moore, John Francis | penciller=Lim, Ron | inker=Palmiotti, Jimmy | colorist=Smith, Tom | letterer=Lopez, Ken | editor=Cavalieri, Joey, Morra, Matthew | story=Hurricane Force | title=X-Men 2099 | volume = 1 | issue=7 | date=April 1994| publisher=Marvel Comics}}{{cite comic | writer=Moore, John Francis | penciller=Lim, Ron | inker=Sanders III, Jim | colorist=Smith, Tom | letterer=Lopez, Ken | editor=Cavalieri, Joey, Pelosi, Lia | story=Ghost Winds | title=X-Men 2099 | volume = 1 | issue=8 | date=May 1994| publisher=Marvel Comics}}{{cite comic | writer=Moore, John Francis | penciller=Lim, Ron | inker=Sanders III, James | colorist=Smith, Tom | letterer=Lopez, Ken, Dutro, Steve | editor=Cavalieri, Joey, Pelosi, Lia | story=Brand X | title=X-Men 2099 | volume = 1 | issue=9 | date=June 1994| publisher=Marvel Comics}}
Having returned to his old ways, Xi'an leaves the team, attempting to locate the Driver on his own, though he is followed by Skullfire. After finding the Driver, they are attacked by Brimstone Love, leader of the Theatre of Pain. Xi'an joins the Theatre, returning to El Paso to steal the bodies of Zhao and his failed attempt at genetically creating X-Men with powers similar to the originals, One-Eyed Jack, Psycho K and Wingspan.{{cite comic | writer=Moore, John Francis | penciller=Lim, Ron | inker=Koblish, Scott, McKenna, Mark, Adams, Greg, Sanders III, Jim | colorist=Smith, Tom, Caponsacco, Joe | letterer=Lopez, Ken | editor=Cavalieri, Joey, Pelosi, Lia | story=Roadwork | title=X-Men 2099 | volume = 1 | issue=10 | date=July 1994 | publisher=Marvel Comics}}{{cite comic | writer=Moore, John Francis | penciller=Lim, Ron | inker=McKenna, Mark | colorist=Smith, Tom | letterer=Chiang, Janice | editor=Cavalieri, Joey, Pelosi, Lia | story=Crossed Signals | title=X-Men 2099 | volume = 1 | issue=11 | date=August 1994| publisher=Marvel Comics}}{{cite comic | writer=Moore, John Francis | penciller=Lim, Ron | inker=Candelario, Harry | colorist=Smith, Tom | letterer=Lopez, Ken | editor=Cavalieri, Joey | title=X-Men 2099 | volume = 1 | issue=12-19 | date=September 1994-April 1995| publisher=Marvel Comics}}
During his initiation into the Theatre, Xi'an was forced to relive some of his most traumatic memories, fighting holographically-produced villains from his past. As a final rite of passage he refuses the aid of his moral half and is dubbed Controller X. Using the psychic energy of the comatose Zhao, Xi'an creates a symphony of suffering and pain for the Theatre on a scale they had not seen before. During the performance, the team of X-Men he had created infiltrate the Theatre and rescue him. New X-Man and former Theatre of Pain slave La Lunatica uses her mutant ability to bring to the surface all of Xi'an's past and present misdeeds, finally balancing his turbulent psyche, reverting him to his calm and moral self. With this comes the revelation of all he has done and a heavy-hearted need to atone for his sins.
Xi'an then travels with the X-Men to the mutant City-State of Halo City, where he leaves the team to open a clinic and heal people with his powers.{{cite comic | writer=Moore, John Francis | penciller=Lim, Ron | inker=Candelario, Harry | colorist=Smith, Tom | letterer=Lopez, Ken | editor=Cavalieri, Joey | story=City of the Dead (Part 1): Broken Halo | title=X-Men 2099 | issue=26 | date=November 1995| publisher=Marvel Comics}} He briefly rejoins his remaining Lawless brethren; Auntie Maim, Mongrel and Victor Ten Eagles, to escape The Foolkiller, a human hunting down members of the Lawless for their part in the massacre of his hometown.{{cite comic | writer=Moore, John Francis | penciller=Duursema, Jan | inker=Koblish, Scott | colorist=Smith, Tom | letterer=Eliopoulos, Chris | editor=Gardner, Jaye | story=Old Wounds | title=X-Men 2099 | volume = 1 | issue=32 | date=May 1996| publisher=Marvel Comics}}{{cite comic | writer=Moore, John Francis | penciller=Duursema, Jan | inker=Koblish, Scott | colorist=Smith, Tom | letterer=Eliopoulos, Chris | editor=Gardner, Jaye | story=Fools Rush In | title=X-Men 2099 | volume = 1 | issue=33 | date=June 1996| publisher=Marvel Comics}}{{cite comic | writer=Moore, John Francis | penciller=Duursema, Jan | inker=Neary, Paul | colorist=Smith, Tom | letterer=Virtual Calligraphy | editor=Gardner, Jaye | story=The Drowning City | title=X-Men 2099 | volume = 1 | issue=34 | date=July 1996| publisher=Marvel Comics}}
With the rest of humanity, Xi'an retreats to the Savage Land as the polar ice caps begin to melt and flood the world. He helps to rebuild civilization, often getting in heated arguments with the surviving humans. His long-time friend Victor Ten Eagles attempts to help him while Morphine Somers attempts to disrupt the fragile peace within the Last Refuge, believing mutants should rule by right of genetic superiority.{{cite comic | writer=Raab, Ben, Kelly, Joe | penciller=Ferry, Pasqual | copencillers = Jason, Armstrong, Karl Moline et al | inker=Thibert, Art | coinkers = Jaime Mendoza, Al Milgrom et al | colorist=Buccellato, Brian | letterer=Higgins, Michael | title=2099: World of Tomorrow | volume = 1 | issue=1-8 | date=September 1996-April 1997| publisher=Marvel Comics}}
Xi'an later becomes a leading figure at the Savage Land refuge, now named the Xavier Colony.{{cite comic | writer=Kaminski, Len | penciller=McKone, Mike | inker=McKenna, Mark | colorist=Wright, Jason | letterer=Comicraft | editor=Brevoort, Tom, Schigiel, Gregg | story=Manifest Destiny | title=2099: Manifest Destiny | issue=1 | date=March 1998 | publisher=Marvel Comics}}
Destiny
{{Main|Destiny (Irene Adler)}}
Destroyer
=Keen Marlow=
{{Main|Destroyer (Marvel Comics)}}
=Asgard=
{{Main|Destroyer (Thor)}}
Detroit Steel
{{Main|Detroit Steel}}
Devastator
{{Main|Devastator (comics)}}
=Kirov Petrovna=
{{Main|Devastator (Kirov Petrovna)}}
=Gregori Larionov=
{{Main|Devastator (Gregori Larionov)}}
=Unnamed=
{{Main|Devastator III}}
Devil Dinosaur
{{Main|Devil Dinosaur}}
Devil-Slayer
{{Main|Devil-Slayer (comics)}}
Devos the Devastator
{{Main|Devos the Devastator}}
Jean DeWolff
{{Main|Jean DeWolff}}
Diablo
{{Main|Diablo (Marvel Comics)}}
Bob Diamond
Bob Diamond is a member of the Sons of the Tiger in the Marvel Universe. The character, created by Steve Englehart and Jim Starlin, first appeared in The Deadly Hands of Kung Fu #1 (April 1974). Within the context of the stories, Bob Diamond is a skilled martial artist and allies with Abe Brown, Lin Sun, Luke Cage, and Iron Fist.
Diamond Lil
Diamond Lil is a fictional character appearing in Marvel Comics. She is the secret identity of Lillian Crawley, and first appeared in Alpha Flight #1 (May 1983), created by John Byrne.
Diamondback
=Willis Stryker=
{{Main|Diamondback (Willis Stryker)}}
=Rachel Leighton=
{{Main|Diamondback (Rachel Leighton)}}
Diamondhead
{{Main|Diamondhead (comics)}}
Diatrice Alraune
Diatrice Alraune is a fictional character appearing in Marvel Comics. She is the daughter of Marc Spector and Marlene Alraune, and first appeared in Moon Knight #190 (December, 2017), by Max Bemis and Jacen Burrows.
After Marlene Alraune leaves her husband Eric Fontaine, she returns to Marc Spector, who once again operates as Moon Knight out of his Long Island mansion.Marc Spector: Moon Knight #1 They stay together for a while, but soon agree to live separate lives, since Marc's lifestyle constantly endangers Marlene's life. Sometime later, Marc reappears to Marlene, this time in his Jake Lockley persona, and the two become romantically involved again, having conceived a daughter during this time. During her childhood, Marlene lets her daughter change her name to whatever she likes, so she chooses Diatrice. This is all hidden from Marc's other personalities, until Sun King and Bushman come to Marlene's house and discover the truth, using this secret to manipulate Marc.Moon Knight #190
When Marc confronts Sun King and Bushman in Marlene's house, a fight breaks out. The villains escape while Marc is distracted protecting Diatrice, taking Marlene with them. Marc takes Diatrice to his apartment and bonds with her, additionally revealing that he is her father, since she only knew him as "Uncle Jake". Marc then has his friend Frenchie keep an eye on Diatrice while he goes to rescue Marlene.Moon Knight #191 During his final battle against Sun King, Marc finds strength in his love for Diatrice to defeat the villain.Moon Knight #193
Diatrice's life is again threatened by the Société des Sadiques, whose leader Ernst wants to indoctrinate Moon Knight, and threatens to have Diatrice killed if he doesn't do as asked.Moon Knight #198 After Moon Knight kills Ernst, he joins forces with the redeemed Sun King to attack the Société's base to take them down before they can hurt Diatrice. When he returns home briefly before going into battle, Diatrice hands him a drawing called "Diatrice and Daddy" depicting her as a grownup superhero called "Moon Girl" and older versions of her father and mother, impressing him. After her father finally defeats the Société and The Truth, Diatrice is reunited with him and her mother Marlene.Moon Knight #200
Sometime later, Khonshu, the Egyptian moon god, senses Mephisto's plans for world domination, which leads Marc to leave his family and fight by his god's side to prevent that from happening. When Khonshu succumbs to madness, however, Marc has to turn against him and help the Avengers defeat him.Avengers (vol. 8) #33–37 Following Khonshu's imprisonment, Marlene takes Diatrice overseas and tells Marc to leave them alone, claiming he is dangerous.Moon Knight (vol. 9) #4
Digger
{{Main|Digger (Marvel Comics)}}
Digitek
{{Main|Digitek (comics)}}
Dinah Soar
{{Main|Dinah Soar}}
Dionysus
{{Main|Dionysus (Marvel Comics)}}
Dirtnap
Dirtnap is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Dirtnap is a mutant with body-switching abilities who is a member of the Dark Riders.Wolverine #99. Marvel Comics.
Discus
Discus (Tim Stuart) first appeared in Power Man #16 in December 1974, and was created by Tony Isabella and Billy Graham. The youngest son of Tyler Stuart, a warden at Seagate prison, Tim Stuart is employed by Justin Hammer and given a costume, jet-pack, and assorted weaponry. He takes the name Discus, as his weapon of choice is a throwing disc; he usually carries disc-shaped flying blades. He is the younger brother of Stiletto.Power Man and Iron Fist #110
DJ
DJ (Mark Sheppard) is a student at the Xavier Institute for Higher Learning who first appears in New X-Men: Academy X #2 (2004). Mark Sheppard was born in the fictional town of Bluewater Village as revealed in New X-Men. It was also revealed that his father was an alcoholic and his mother died when he was young.{{Citation needed|date=April 2010}} At the Xavier Institute for Higher Learning, DJ is a member of the Corsairs training squad who transfers to the Paragons squad. DJ is one of the many students depowered on M-Day, and later dies after a bus bombing.New X-Men (vol. 2) #25 (June 2006) Years later, he is resurrected following the establishment of Krakoa and its resurrection protocols.X-Factor (vol. 4) #5 (February 2021){{Cite web |last=Zachary |first=Brandon |date=December 9, 2020 |title=X-Men: A Hero's Resurrection Reunites a Fan-Favorite New Mutants Team |url=https://www.cbr.com/x-men-reunites-academy-x-new-mutants/ |access-date=March 16, 2025 |website=CBR |language=en}} DJ possesses the ability to manipulate energy based on the type of music he is listening to.New X-Men: Academy X Yearbook Special #1
D'Ken
{{Main|D'Ken}}
D.O.A.
{{Main|Hellions (comics)#Emplate's Hellions}}
Doc Samson
{{Main|Doc Samson}}
Doctor Bong
{{Main|Doctor Bong}}
Doctor Decibel
Doctor Decibel is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Anton Decibel is a criminal surgeon working for the Institute of Evil, and he performed the operation on Lady Lark that endowed her with hypersonic vocal cords.Squadron Supreme #5 Like the rest of the Institute members, he was defeated by the Squadron Supreme and behavior modified and elected to full membership in the Squadron.{{Volume needed|date=April 2010}} Doctor Decibel was killed when he suffocated in Quagmire's extradimensional slime.{{Volume needed|date=April 2010}}
Doctor Decibel carried a device capable of transmitting 300 deciBels of sonic energy.
Doctor Demonicus
{{Infobox comics character
|image=File:Dr. demonicus.jpg
|caption=Dr. Demonicus makes his first cover appearance. From Shogun Warriors #14.|character_name=Doctor Demonicus
|real_name=Douglas Birely
|species= Human
|publisher=Marvel Comics
|debut=Godzilla, King of the Monsters #4 (Nov. 1977)
|creators=Doug Moench and Tom Sutton
|alliances=Pacific Overlords
|aliases=
|powers=Scientific genius
}}
Doctor Demonicus (Douglas Birely) is a supervillain appearing in Marvel Comics. He possesses advanced knowledge of genetic engineering and clashes with the Avengers and the Shogun Warriors, in addition to S.H.I.E.L.D.
Doctor Demonicus first appeared in Godzilla, King of the Monsters vol. 1 #4 (Nov 1977) and was created by Doug Moench and Tom Sutton.{{Cite book |last=Rovin |first=Jeff |title=The Encyclopedia of Supervillains |date=1987 |publisher=Facts on File |isbn=0-8160-1356-X |location=New York |pages=89–90}}
= Fictional character biography =
Douglas Birely was born in Culver City, California. As a scientist, he was studying the correlation between radioactivity and mutation when he was contaminated by a radioactive spill. As Doctor Demonicus, he is a criminal geneticist. His discovery of the Lifestone radioactive meteorite allows him to create immense kaiju-style monsters mutated from animals. These include Batragon, Ghilaron, Lepirax, and Centipor. Using his monsters and his Demon-Soldiers, he raids oil tankers from his secret laboratory located on one of the Aleutian Islands. The monsters are defeated by Godzilla and Demonicus is defeated by Gabe Jones and taken into S.H.I.E.L.D. custody.Godzilla, King of the Monsters #4–5
Demonicus becomes an ally of Maur-Konn, who gives Demonicus his satellite. Demonicus later uses his monsters against the Shogun Warriors. Demonicus launches a meteor strike against Earth from his base on the dark side of the Moon. He is defeated by the Shogun Warriors and taken into custody by S.H.I.E.L.D. again.Shogun Warriors #7–14
He eventually captures, mentally controls, and further mutates Godzilla. The creature also, for unknown reasons, shrinks in size once Demonicus captures and enslaves him. He sets Godzilla against the West Coast Avengers, and also salvages Iron Man's armor and uses it to attack the West Coast Avengers personally. He is defeated by Tony Stark,Iron Man #193–196 and is later mutated by both the Lifestone and the demon Raksasa. His alter ego develops skin cancer, which is kept under control by devices in his costume.
Demonicus is the founder, creator, and leader of the Pacific Overlords, who gained their various superpowers due to Demonicus exposing them to fragments of the Lifestone, and with them battles Sunfire and the West Coast Avengers. He raises a land mass from the Pacific Ocean floor just north of Hawaii, and founds on it the new nation of Demonica with himself as ruler. He attempts, unsuccessfully, to get the United Nations to recognize Demonica as a sovereign nation.{{Cite book |last=Sanderson |first=Peter |title=The Marvel Comics Guide to New York City |publisher=Pocket Books |year=2007 |isbn=978-1-4165-3141-8 |location=New York City |pages=49–51}} Demonicus is seemingly killed when Demonica sinks into the Pacific.Avengers West Coast #69-74
Doctor Demonicus is eventually arrested, tried, convicted, and incarcerated for his crimes. He is sentenced to the Raft, a supervillain prison facility. He is among the 43 villains who escape during a breakout engineered by Electro.The New Avengers #2 The Hood hires him as part of his criminal organization to take advantage of the split in the superhero community caused by the Superhuman Registration Act. He helps them fight the New Avengers, but is taken down by Doctor Strange.The New Avengers Annual #2 Demonicus participates in the Hood's temporary alliance with superheroes to battle an invading Skrull force.Secret Invasion #1–6 As seen in flashbacks, the Hood used his powers to help Demonicus and the others escape from jail. During a secretive gathering, Demonicus and the others learn of the Skrulls' attempt to infiltrate and control their organization.The New Avengers #46 He joins with the Hood's gang in an attack on the New Avengers, who were expecting the Dark Avengers instead.The New Avengers #50
= Powers and abilities =
Doctor Demonicus is a genius with a PhD in genetics and has an advanced knowledge of genetics and Myndai technology. He wears a costume that contains life-support devices that keep his skin cancer in remission. He has demonic-looking features, including mottled skin and horns on his forehead. He carries a blaster that fires an unknown form of concussive energy. He uses advanced genetics, robotics, and force field technology adapted to various weaponry. Demonicus possesses the Lifestone, a radioactive meteor, with which he has created artificially mutated monsters and humans.
Doctor Doom
{{Main|Doctor Doom}}
Doctor Druid
{{Main|Doctor Druid}}
Doctor Faustus
{{Main|Doctor Faustus (character)}}
Doctor Midas
Doctor Midas is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Doctor Midas is an unnamed pirate who exposed himself to cosmic radiation enough to gain the ability to turn anything to gold. He founded the Midas Foundation and had a daughter named Oublliette Midas who took on the name Exterminatrix. In addition, Doctor Midas wore an armored suit that was similar to the Iron Man Armor Model 1. Their activities later led to their encounter with Noh-Varr.Marvel Boy Vol. 2 #1. Marvel Comics.
Doctor Midas later exposed himself further to the cosmic radiation and developed the powers of the Fantastic Four as well as gaining cosmic awareness, mind-control, regeneration, and telepathy. This gave Doctor Midas a rock-like body similar to Thing with blue light, Mister Fantastic's elasticity, Invisible Woman's forcefield, and Human Torch's pyrokinesis. He briefly went by the name Cosmic Man. Noh-Varr managed to defeat Cosmic Man and sent him into the Dark Dimension where he was chased by the Mindless Ones.Marvel Boy Vol. 2 #6. Marvel Comics.
During the "Original Sin" storyline, Doctor Midas escaped from the Dark Dimension and reunited with Exterminatrix where they accompanied Orb in going to the Blue Area of the Moon to steal one of the eyes of the murdered Uatu the Watcher. When confronted by an aged Nick Fury, Doctor Midas was forced to absorb all of the eye's abilities as he explodes from being overloaded.Original Sin #3-8. Marvel Comics.
Exterminatrix took over the Mias Foundation. She also chopped off of one of Doctor Midas' hands and used its blood to make bullets for her gun that turns anything struck by them into gold.Mighty Thor Vol. 3 #8-9. Marvel Comics.
During the "A.X.E.: Judgment Day" storyline, it was revealed that Doctor Midas had been made sterile by the cosmic radiation and that he just adopted Exterminatrix.Fantastic Four Vol. 6 #8. Marvel Comics.
Doctor Minerva
{{Main|Doctor Minerva}}
Doctor Nemesis
{{Main|Doctor Nemesis}}
Doctor Octopus
{{Main|Doctor Octopus}}
Doctor Pussycat
Doctor Pussycat is an anthropomorphic cat and animal version of Doctor Octopus.
Doctor Spectrum
{{Main|Doctor Spectrum}}
Doctor Strange
{{Main|Doctor Strange}}
Doctor Sun
Doctor Sun is a fictional character appearing in Marvel Comics. The character first appeared in Tomb of Dracula #16 (January 1974), created by Marv Wolfman and Gene Colan. The character dies in Fantastic Four #217 (April 1980).
Doctor Voodoo
{{Main|Daniel Drumm}}
Dogpool
{{Main|Dogpool}}
Stacy Dolan
Stacy Dolan is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Stacy Dolan is the occasional girlfriend of Danny Ketch. First appearing in Ghost Rider vol. 3 #1 by Howard Mackie and Javier Saltares, she's the daughter of NYPD captain Arthur Dolan. Stacy grew up the childhood friends of Danny and Barbara Ketch and Jack D'Auria. As they grew older Stacy and Danny developed a romantic relationship. Stacy has aspirations to become a police officer like her father. Her life changes when she finds out that Danny is in the hospital and his sister is in a coma. All she knows is they witnessed a murder and the sole suspect is the Ghost Rider. After that night Stacy notices a pattern as familiar neighborhood faces are murdered. Ghost Rider is involved in some way but she does not realize to what extent.
Over time, Stacy teams up with Ghost Rider and the Midnight Sons. During the event known as the Siege of Darkness, she acts as an unofficial representative of the NYPD, and works in conjunction with the Midnight Sons to help stop the growing threats of Lilith and Zarathos. During the battle she discovers Danny is the Ghost Rider.
Domino
{{Main|Domino (comics)}}
Dominus
Dominus is a sentient super-computer, created by the alien Quists and sometimes controlled by Lucifer. Dominus first appeared in X-Men #21 (June 1966) entitled "From whence comes... Dominus?", by Roy Thomas and Jay Gavin.{{Cite web |title=From Whence Comes Dominus?- X-Men (# 21)- Marvel Comics Group |url=http://www.comics-db.com/comic-book/1048573-X-Men#21.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927175010/http://www.comics-db.com/comic-book/1048573-X-Men |archive-date=2007-09-27 |website=www.comics-db.com}} Dominus is the channel by which the alien race known as "The Arcane" conquers planet after planet. At Lucifer's command post, the Supreme One tells Lucifer that the time is ready for his true purpose{{Snd}}to deploy Dominus. Dominus and Lucifer are then temporarily defeated by Charles Xavier, who suffers a debilitating injury in the process. The X-Men go on to defeat Lucifer permanently.
Big Ben Donovan
{{Main|Big Ben Donovan}}
Roger Dooley
{{Main|Roger Dooley}}
Doom 2099
{{Main|Doom 2099}}
Doorman
{{Main|Doorman (character)}}
Doop
{{Main|Doop (character)}}
Dorma
{{Main|Dorma (comics)}}
Dormammu
{{Main|Dormammu}}
Dorrek VII
Dorrek VII is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. He was created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, and first appeared in Fantastic Four #18 (June 1963).
He was the Skrull Emperor as well as the husband of R'Klll, father of Anelle and grandfather of Hulkling (also known as Dorrek VIII).
=Dorrek VII in other media=
- Dorekk VII appears in The Fantastic Four, voiced by Don Messick.
- Dorekk VII appears in Fantastic Four (1994), voiced by Robert Ridgely in the first season and by Beau Weaver in the second season.
Doughboy
{{Main|Doughboy (character)}}
Dracula
{{Main|Dracula (Marvel Comics)}}
Dragon Lord
{{Main|Dragon Lord (comics)}}
Dragon Man
Dragon Man is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Dragon Man is an android built by Professor Gregson Gilbert of Empire State University as an experiment. Gregson hoped to find a way to bring it to life. He could not find a way to do this until the alchemist Diablo arrived and brought it to life under his control.{{Cite web |last=Morales |first=Carlos |date=2022-07-24 |title=Fantastic Four: 5 Villains Who Could Appear (Who Aren't Doctor Doom) {{!}} Comic-Con 2022 |url=https://www.ign.com/articles/fantastic-four-5-villains-who-could-appear-who-arent-doctor-doom-comic-con-2022 |access-date=2023-03-01 |website=IGN |language=en}} However, Dragon Man broke his control and attempted to kill Diablo.{{Cite comic |date=February 1965 |title=Fantastic Four |story=Calamity On The Campus! |issue=#35 |volume=1 |publisher=Marvel Comics |writer=Stan Lee |penciller=Jack Kirby |inker=Chic Stone}}{{Cite book |last=Brevoort |first=Tom |title=Marvel Year By Year: A Visual History |last2=DeFalco |first2=Tom |last3=Manning |first3=Matthew K. |last4=Sanderson |first4=Peter |last5=Wiacek |first5=Win |date=2017 |publisher=DK Publishing |isbn=978-1465455505 |page=107}} Although Dragon Man is slow-minded to the point that he is incapable of speech, he understands orders given by Diablo and is a determined foe of the Fantastic Four (although the creature has always displayed a King Kong-like affection towards Sue Richards). Dragon Man is not especially malicious, although he is easily manipulated and provoked to violence.
Dragon Man is later upgraded by Valeria Richards and joins Reed Richards' Future Foundation.{{Cite web |last=Kahn |first=Juliet |date=2020-04-28 |title=Marvel Teams We Want To See In The MCU |url=https://www.looper.com/205301/marvel-teams-we-want-to-see-in-the-mcu/ |access-date=2023-03-01 |website=Looper |language=en-US}}Fantastic Four #579 In Marvel NOW!, Dragon Man creates the Thing Rings for Darla Deering to wear, which enables her to become Miss Thing.Marvel NOW! Point One #1
=Dragon Man in other media=
- Dragon Man appears in The New Fantastic Four.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}}
- Dragon Man appears in the Fantastic Four: World's Greatest Heroes episode "Frightful". This version is a member of the Wizard's Frightful Four who resembles an anthropomorphic dragon.{{citation needed|date=March 2023}}
- Dragon Man appears in Ultimate Spider-Man as a creation of Doctor Octopus.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}}
- Dragon Man appears in Spider-Man: Web of Fire.{{Cite web |last=Littlechild |first=Chris |date=2018-09-25 |title=The 20 Worst Spider-Man Games Of All Time (And The 10 Best) |url=https://www.thegamer.com/spider-man-video-games-best-all-time-ever/ |access-date=2023-03-01 |website=TheGamer |language=en}}
- Dragon Man appears in Fantastic Four (1997).{{citation needed|date=October 2020}}
- Dragon Man appears as a boss in Fantastic Four (2005).{{citation needed|date=October 2020}}
- Dragon Man appears as a mini-boss in Marvel: Ultimate Alliance.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}} This version is a former member of Doctor Doom's Masters of Evil who joined the Mandarin in leaving them when the latter failed to take command.
- Dragon Man appears in Marvel Heroes.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}}
- Dragon Man appears in Marvel Contest of Champions.{{Cite web |title=Entering Marvel Contest of Champions: Dragon Man |url=https://www.marvel.com/articles/games/entering-marvel-contest-of-champions-dragon-man |access-date=2023-03-03 |website=Marvel Entertainment}}{{Cite web |last=Anderson Han |title=Marvel Contest of Champions tier list – The best (and worst) characters by class |url=https://www.pocketgamer.com/marvel-contest-of-champions/tier-list/ |access-date=2023-03-03 |website=www.pocketgamer.com |language=en}}
- Dragon Man received several action figures released by Toy Biz.{{Cite web |date=6 September 2017 |title=Throwback Thursday: Fantastic Four: The Animated Series |url=https://comicbook.com/news/throwback-thursday-fantastic-four-the-animated-series/ |access-date=2023-03-01 |website=ComicBook.com |language=en}} The character was included in Fantastic Four series 2 (1995), Fantastic Four Metal Mania (1995), Marvel Universe (1997), and Fantastic Four Classics series 2 (2007).
- Dragon Man received an action figure from HeroClix (2021).{{Cite web |date=9 February 2021 |title=Marvel Fantastic Four: Future Foundation HeroClix Unboxing |url=https://comicbook.com/gaming/news/heroclix-future-foundation-fantastic-four-marvel-unboxing/ |access-date=2023-03-01 |website=GAMING |language=en}}
Dragon of the Moon
The Dragon of the Moon is a malevolent entity that has been a foe of both the Defenders and the Eternals. The Dragon of the Moon first appeared in The Defenders #138–139 (December 1984{{snd}}January 1985), and was created by Peter B. Gillis and Don Perlin.{{Cite book |last=DeFalco |first=Tom |title=The Marvel Encyclopedia |last2=Sanderson |first2=Peter |last3=Brevoort |first3=Tom |last4=Teitelbaum |first4=Michael |last5=Wallace |first5=Daniel |last6=Darling |first6=Andrew |last7=Forbeck |first7=Matt |last8=Cowsill |first8=Alan |last9=Bray |first9=Adam |date=2019 |publisher=DK Publishing |isbn=978-1-4654-7890-0 |page=117}} The Dragon's exact origins are unrevealed, however it does claim to know some of the Elders of the Universe. It has claimed to kill the inhabitants of Titan before the Eternals inhabited it. It has also claimed that the Lords of Light once took away his freedom. It has visited the Earth several times. The first time, it tried to take over the Earth, but was apparently repulsed by the Eternal known as Interloper. The Dragon of the Moon possesses control over massive amounts of cosmic and mystical forces, presumably on at least a global scale. It is immortal. Its strength is increased on the mortal plane as the host of the Dragon of the Moon succumbs further and further to the Dragon's influence.
Dragonfly
Dragonfly is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character first appeared in X-Men #94–95 (August–October 1975), and was created by Chris Claremont and Len Wein.
Veronica Dultry is endowed with superhuman powers by Maggia scientists to serve the crime lord Count Nefaria as a member of the original Ani-Men. The Ani-Men take control of the NORAD base at Mount Valhalla, but are defeated by the X-Men,X-Men #94–95. Marvel Comics. and imprisoned in the mutant research complex at Muir Island. She escapes shortly after when Erik the Red breaks into the complex.X-Men #104. Marvel Comics.
She is later abducted by the alien the Stranger to his laboratory world, where she and other abductees are manipulated by the Overmind into battling Quasar.Quasar #14–16. Marvel Comics.
After she returns to Earth, she mutates further due to the Stranger's experiments, but Ant-Man aids her in returning to her normal appearance.Iron Man Annual #12. Marvel Comics.
Dragonfly later joins Superia's Femizons and battles Captain America and Paladin.Captain America #389-392. Marvel Comics. Dragonfly and several other former Femizons battle Captain America again during an A.I.M. weapons demonstration.Captain America #411-413. Marvel Comics.
Much later, Dragonfly is invited to join the Crimson Cowl's Masters of Evil, where she battles the Thunderbolts. They are defeated and sent to prison.Thunderbolts #24-25. Marvel Comics.
In new battle armor, she is sent to attack Jackie Dio alongside several other criminals. Dio quickly defeats the villains by blowing up the building they were in.Underworld #4-5. Marvel Comics.
During the "Secret Empire" storyline, Dragonfly is recruited by Baron Helmut Zemo to join the Army of Evil.Captain America: Steve Rogers #16. Marvel Comics.
During the "Hunted" storyline, Dragonfly is among the animal-themed characters who are captured by the Taskmaster and Black Ant for Kraven the Hunter's Great Hunt.Amazing Spider-Man (vol. 5) #18. Marvel Comics.
=Dragonfly in other media=
Dragonfly appears in The Avengers: United They Stand episode "Command Decision", voiced by Susan Roman.{{citation needed|date=September 2022}} This version is a member of Baron Helmut Zemo's Masters of Evil.
Dragoness
Dragoness is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Tamara Kurtz is a member of the Mutant Liberation Front and a native of Madripoor whose parents survived the nuclear bombing of Hiroshima, which was likely the source of her mutation.
She possesses the ability to generate and store bioelectric energy that she can project as blasts from her hands that disrupt mechanical and neural activity, or can be modulated to excite atmospheric particles, creating high temperature flares. As a member of the MLF, she often wears a pair of mechanical dragon-like wings that enable high speed flight.
Dragonrider
Dragonrider is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Dragonrider was introduced in 1984's Sub-Mariner four-issue limited series; in that series, she appeared in Sub-Mariner #1–2 (September–October 1984), and #4 (December 1984), and was created by J. M. DeMatteis and Bob Budiansky.
Dragonrider was a sentinel in the Atlanean army who became a political dissident and rebel after seeing how her people remained poor while the rulers became more rich. She and her rebels sought mystic artifacts to empower themselves, and Dragonrider gained a mystic conch shell that would allow her to control sea creatures and an eel that had been mutated into an eel/dragon-like creature.
Carlton Drake
{{Comics character list header
|name = Carlton Drake
|Marvelwiki =
|CBDBid = 33584
|GCDid = Carlton+Drake
}}
Carlton Drake is a fictional character appearing in Marvel Comics. The character, created by David Michelinie and Todd McFarlane, first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man #298 (March 1988). He is the Life Foundation's leader who is constantly at odds with Spider-Man and Eddie Brock.
Drake hires Chance to steal European armaments.The Amazing Spider-Man #298 His men transport Chance to his survivalist facility Sanctum Maximus, and demand the secrets of Chance's suit. Spider-Man arrives to rescue Chance and the two destroy the facility while Drake escapes via helicopter.The Amazing Spider-Man #299 Drake next teams up with the foreign assassin Chakane in a plot to use Protectors, enhanced and mindless mercenaries, for the assassination of Symkaria's king. The Protectors are defeated by Spider-Man, Paladin and Silver Sable but Drake's resources prevent any prosecution.The Amazing Spider-Man #321 Afterwards, Drake used the Tri-Sentinel for his clientele's protection. While performing a "field test" against Spider-Man and Nova, the Tri-Sentinel is unresponsive to his controls and went on a rampage.The Amazing Spider-Man #351 With nothing else to lose, Drake has his men gather all the data and once again evade capture.The Amazing Spider-Man #352 Drake briefly teams up with Justin Hammer and Jonas Hale in an effort to steal superpowers for their own nefarious purposes, but are stopped by Spider-Man and the New Warriors.The Amazing Spider-Man Annual #26
Drake uses the Venom symbiote to create five new symbiote "children" (Scream, Phage, Agony, Lasher, and Riot) which he bonds to his employees. However, his symbiote enforcers are defeated by Spider-Man and Brock, forcing Drake to once again flee while realizing that web-slinger is more troublesome than he believed.Venom: Lethal Protector #3–5 Drake next funds a project in an attempt to create a race of arachnids and cure his cancer with Roland Treece and Orwell Taylor as co-conspirators.Spider-Man: The Arachnis Project #3 Drake is eventually injected with a serum which transforms himself into the Man-Spider.Spider-Man: The Arachnis Project #4 He lays waste to the entire facility, killing many of his former employees. However, the combined efforts of Spider-Man, Venom and The Jury send him falling beneath the facility. Drake later wakes up as a noticeably younger-looking human, swearing revenge against the ones who defeated him.Spider-Man: The Arachnis Project #5–6
Years later, Drake is Arthur Krane's campaign manager to inform about the threats symbiotes cause. It is strongly implied that he wants to use his position in an effort to study symbiotes more.Venom (vol. 5) #2–3
Drake later hired former Alchemax Guardsman Corwin Jones to steal the Symbiote samples of Phage, Riot, Scream, Agony, Lasher, and Toxin from Alchemax. When Corwin succeeded in it, Drake had Corwin merge with the Symbiote samples which led to the formation of the Madness Symbiote.Cult of Carnage: Misery #2
=Powers and abilities=
=Carlton Drake in other media=
Carlton Drake appears in Venom (2018), portrayed by Riz Ahmed.{{Cite news |last=D'Alessandro |first=Anthony |date=April 23, 2018 |title=As Tom Hardy Promised, A New 'Venom' Trailer Drops At CinemaCon – Watch |url=https://deadline.com/2018/04/as-tom-hardy-promised-a-new-venom-trailer-drops-at-cinemacon-1202374973/ |access-date=April 24, 2018 |work=Deadline Hollywood}} This version is the Life Foundation's vainglorious, egocentric founder and CEO who started out as a biochemist. After one of his company's spaceships discovers several symbiotes, Drake has them brought to him to run experiments on. However, two of the symbiotes die due to failed bonding attempts, the Venom symbiote escapes and successfully bonds with Eddie Brock, and Drake himself bonds with the Riot symbiote. Together, they attempt to bring more symbiotes to Earth, only to be killed by Brock and Venom.
Frank Drake
Frank Drake is a direct descendant of Count Dracula (via a marriage from before he became a vampire). The character first appeared in Tomb of Dracula #1 and was created by Gene Colan and Gerry Conway.
Frank Drake is a former millionaire who had squandered his inheritance and had nothing more than an ancestral castle in Transylvania. Planning to sell it, he and his friends travel to the castle, and discover Dracula's skeleton. They accidentally resurrect him, and Drake narrowly escapes death. Drake eventually relocates to London.Tomb of Dracula #1
Broke and in despair, Drake attempts to commit suicide but was saved by vampire hunters Rachel van Helsing and Taj Nital.Tomb of Dracula #3 The two, along with Quincy Harker, were dedicated to killing Dracula and his vampiric followers. Drake joins the group under van Helsing and Harker's tutelage.Tomb of Dracula #7 He is later killed in battle, and has largely remained dead since.Nightstalkers #18 (April 1994)
Frank Drake is a capable hand-to-hand combatant, and an experienced marksman. He has been known to carry conventional handguns. He also possesses a nano-tech weapon capable of disrupting occult energies, which he calls Linda.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=August 2018}}
= Frank Drake in other media =
Frank Drake appears in Dracula: Sovereign of the Damned, voiced by Keiichi Noda in the original Japanese version and Dan Woren in the English dub.
Odessa Drake
Odessa Drake is a supervillain and thief who first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 5 #8. She was created by Nick Spencer and Humberto Ramos.
Odessa Drake was raised in New York City by her father, Castillo, as a member of a secret society of criminals known as the Thieves' Guild. After her father's passing, Odessa continued his search for immortality, which she obtain via a deal with the Gilded Saint. She became leader of the Thieves' Guild, which she sought to return to glory by killing anyone on debt with the Guild and stealing gear from superheroes. Fellow Guild member Black Cat was worried over the consequences stealing from superheroes would have on the world, so she contacted Spider-Man and the two tried to give back the stolen items. Odessa and the Guild attempted to stop them by fording them into the magic-powered vault where they kept the stolen items, but had to retreat when Spider-Man used Ms. Marvel's phone to contact reinforcements. Odessa was nevertheless pleased that the Guild has risen in infamy through their actions.
In the aftermath of the King in Black storyline, Black Cat revealed to Drake that her father Black Fox has stolen the Thieves' Guild's immortality by surrendering New York's deed to the Saint. Under the agreement of getting rid of the Black Fox, Odessa agreed to help Black Cat, and the two traveled to the Saint's world, where they convinced the Saint that Black Fox was going to scam him, so he brought Fox to his world as punishment. Later, the two discussed the possibility of a relationship in spite of their positions in the Guild, before having sex together.
Through the following months, she would refuse to help Black Cat's mother after being diagnosed with cancer due to not wanting to bend more Guild rules for her sake, and helped Black Cat escape from Nick Fury Jr.
=Odessa Drake in other media=
Odessa Drake appears in Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur, voiced by Anna Akana.{{Cite web |title=Odessa Voice - Marvel's Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur (TV Show) |url=https://www.behindthevoiceactors.com/tv-shows/Marvels-Moon-Girl-and-Devil-Dinosaur/Odessa/ |access-date=January 1, 2025 |publisher=Behind The Voice Actors}} A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information. This version is a social media influencer who wields gadgets and weaponry stolen from superheroes, such as the Avengers. In the episode "Shoot for the Moon", Drake reforms after attending Moon Girl's Good Word Program.
Damon Dran
{{Main|Damon Dran}}
Drax the Destroyer
{{Main|Drax the Destroyer}}
Dreadface
Dreadface is a character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character, created by Tom DeFalco and Paul Ryan, first appeared in Fantastic Four #359 (December 1991). He is a Symbiote and a foe of the Fantastic Four.Fantastic Four (vol. 1) #359–360Fantastic Four: Foes (vol. 1) #1
Dreadknight
{{Main|Dreadknight}}
Dreadnought
{{Main|Dreadnought (comics)}}
Dreaming Celestial
{{Main|Dreaming Celestial}}
Dreamqueen
The Dreamqueen is the daughter of a succubus named Zhilla Char and Nightmare, ruler of the Dream Dimension. The character first appeared in Alpha Flight #57 (April 1988).{{Cite book |last=DeFalco |first=Tom |title=The Marvel Encyclopedia |last2=Sanderson |first2=Peter |last3=Brevoort |first3=Tom |last4=Teitelbaum |first4=Michael |last5=Wallace |first5=Daniel |last6=Darling |first6=Andrew |last7=Forbeck |first7=Matt |last8=Cowsill |first8=Alan |last9=Bray |first9=Adam |date=2019 |publisher=DK Publishing |isbn=978-1-4654-7890-0 |page=118}} The character was created by Bill Mantlo and Jim Lee.
Her birth killed her mother, and gave the Dreamqueen all her memories. She was born in a similar "dream dimension" of her own called Liveworld, of which she is the ruler. It was to this dimension that the fetus of Laura Dean instinctively sent her unborn twin sister, Goblyn. As the autistic Laura grew up, she discovered that she was able to switch places in Liveworld with her sister. After encountering Alpha Flight, Goblyn and Laura were admitted into Beta Flight under the misbelief that they were one and the same person. The Dreamqueen possesses a gifted intelligence, is entirely self-educated in the study of sorcery, and gains her powers through the manipulation of the forces of magic.
Igor Drenkov
Igor Drenkov, also known as Igor Skylar,The Incredible Hulk #312 (October 1985) is a minor character appearing in Marvel Comics. He was created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, and first appeared in The Incredible Hulk #1 (May 1962). He is a henchman of Gargoyle. Drenkov is a Russian spy who posed as a colleague of Bruce Banner, Thunderbolt Ross and Betty Ross while undercover. Drenkov detonated the gamma bomb as Banner rescues Rick Jones, resulting in his colleague's transformation into the Hulk.The Incredible Hulk #1 (May 1962) Drenkov is later driven insane by nightmares of his decisions and works with the Presence.The Incredible Hulk #393 (May 1992) However, he is betrayed and transformed into a gamma monster who fights the Winter Guard before being killed by Darkstar.Hulk: Winter Guard one-shot (February 2010){{Cite web |last=Rogers |first=Vaneta |date=May 25, 2010 |title=From High Moon to DARKSTAR: Zuda Alums Talk Russian Heroes |url=http://www.newsarama.com/comics/Darkstar-Ellis-Gallaher-100525.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110622064743/http://www.newsarama.com/comics/Darkstar-Ellis-Gallaher-100525.html |archive-date=June 22, 2011 |access-date=June 10, 2010 |website=Newsarama}}
=Igor Drenkov in other media=
- Igor Drenkov appears in The Marvel Super Heroes.{{Citation needed|date=February 2024}}
- Igor Drenkov appears in the Avengers Assemble episode "Dehulked", voiced by André Sogliuzzo.{{Cite web |title=Igor Drenkov Voice - Avengers Assemble (TV Show) |url=https://www.behindthevoiceactors.com/tv-shows/Avengers-Assemble/Igor-Drenkov/ |access-date=February 22, 2024 |publisher=Behind The Voice Actors}} A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information.{{Cite web |last=Walker |first=Glenn |date=May 3, 2016 |title=Avengers: Ultron Revolution S03 E08: Dehulked |url=https://biffbampop.com/2016/05/03/avengers-ultron-revolution-s03-e08-dehulked/ |access-date=September 19, 2024 |website=Biff! Bam! Pop! |language=en-US}} This version is a technology thief who is served by the Steelcorps.
Dro'ge
{{Main|Dro'ge}}
Dredmund Druid
{{Main|Dredmund Druid}}
Druig
{{Main|Druig}}
Dryad
{{Infobox comics character
| image=Callie Betto (Dryad).jpg
| imagesize=200
| caption = Callie Betto as she appeared in New X-Men: Academy X Yearbook Special
Art by Georges Jeanty and Don Hillsman
| character_name = Dryad
| real_name = Callie Betto
|species=Human Mutant
| publisher = Marvel Comics
| debut = New X-Men: Academy X #1 (July 2004)
| creators = Nunzio DeFilippis, Christina Weir
|alliances=Corsairs training squad
Xavier Institute
| aliases =
| powers = Plant manipulation
}}
Dryad (Callie Betto) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by Nunzio DeFilippis and Christina Weir, she first appeared in New X-Men: Academy X #1. Dryad is a member of the former Corsairs training squad, consisting of Specter, Quill, and the Stepford Cuckoos. She appears in New X-Men: Academy X #2 as a background character.
During "Decimation", Dryad is among the mutants who lose their powers to the Scarlet Witch, and is later killed by William Stryker.New X-Men, vol. 2 #23 Years later, she is resurrected following the establishment of Krakoa and its resurrection protocols.Marauders #5 (March 2020)
=Powers and abilities=
Dryad possesses the mutant ability to mentally manipulate plants, enabling her to accelerate their growth and communicate with them. However, larger plants require more time to grow and can only be manipulated one section at a time.
=Alternate versions=
In the storyline "Too Much Information", Dryad appears as one of the future X-Men who are killed during a mission to find the Hellions.
D'Spayre
{{Main|D'Spayre}}
Ducktor Doom
Ducktor Doom is an anthropomorphic duck and animal version of Doctor Doom.
Michael Duffy
{{Comics character list header
|name = Michael Duffy
|Marvelwiki =
|CBDBid = 16227
|GCDid = Michael+Duffy
}}
Sgt. Michael "Mike" Duffy is a fictional character in Marvel Comics. The character, created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby, first appeared in Captain America Comics #1 (March 1941).
Michael Duffy was the superior of Steve Rogers and James Barnes who were secretly Captain America and Bucky. He had a short temper and was always getting after his soldiers for "goldbricking". He was always picking on Rogers and Barnes for not being heroes, an ironic claim as he was unaware of their dual identities. He had nearly put two and two together, but would later deny the possibility.All Winners Comics #10 At one point, Duffy showed remorse when he thought that Rogers and Barnes had died in a Japanese air raid, only to go back to berating them when he found out they were alive.Captain America Comics #14 He also had a crush on Betsy RossCaptain America Comics #2 though this was retconned to show that he had a lover overseas named Flo.Captain America Comics #44 While out on a mission, Duffy and several soldiers were caught in an explosion. He survived and was recuperating in a hospital. Due to his lack of appearances afterwards, it's implied that he stayed in bed for the remainder of the war.Captain America Comics #47 Years later, Rogers would visit Arlington National Cemetery to see his former commander's grave stone and reminisce on old times.Young Allies Comics 70th Anniversary Special #1
=Michael Duffy in other media=
Michael Duffy appears in the Marvel Cinematic Universe films Captain America: The First Avenger and Captain America: The Winter Soldier, portrayed by Damon Driver.{{Citation needed|date=February 2024}} This version is a drill sergeant who is not comically temperamental nor mean-spirited towards Steve Rogers.
Dum-Dum Dugan
{{Main|Dum-Dum Dugan}}
Fred Duncan
{{Comics character list header
|name = Fred Duncan
|Marvelwiki =
|Marveldb =
|CBDBid = 15205
|GCDid = Fred+Duncan
}}
Frederick Amos "Fred" Duncan is a fictional government liaison for the X-Men in Marvel Comics. The character, created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, first appeared in X-Men #2 (November 1963).
Fred Duncan was an agent with the FBI. Along with fellow agent Bolivar Trask, Duncan was asked by his superiors on how to handle the "mutant threat". While Trask felt that America should fear them, Duncan thought it was best to work alongside them. Duncan's idea was approved, causing tension between him and Trask to the point that the latter suspected him to be a mutant as well.The First X-Men #2–3 He then teamed up with Wolverine to battle Lyle Doome who went by the name Virus.The First X-Men #4–5
He met with Professor Charles Xavier and became the FBI's federal liaison with the X-Men. He was then provided a special headband so that he can communicate with Xavier whenever it was necessary. He helped Xavier with the eventual recruitment of Scott Summers.X-Men #39 As a member of the Xavier Underground, a network of mutant supporters, Duncan maintained mutant criminal records and stockpiled weapons and technology from X-Men foes.X-Men #2
Duncan later helped the X-Men once again when the team had to break into the Pentagon to delete the files they had about their identities.The Uncanny X-Men #158 Henry Peter Gyrich suspected that Duncan had something to do with the files being deleted and demanded that he somehow get them back (the Department of Mutant Affairs answered to Gyrich's Project Wideawake), but Duncan instead resigned. Duncan then decided to write a tell-all book about his time working with the mutants.X-Men: Odd Men Out After Duncan's death, Carl Denti, an aspiring agent, takes the files, weapons, and technology for himself and assumes the name X-Cutioner, with the proclaimed mission of killing any mutant that has killed other people first.The Uncanny X-Men Annual 1993
Dusk
{{Main|Dusk (comics)}}
Dust
{{Main|Dust (character)}}
Dweller-in-Darkness
{{Main|Dweller-in-Darkness}}
Dyna-Mite
{{redirect|Dyna-Mite|the song|Dyna-mite|the DC comics character|Atom (Ryan Choi)#Television}}
Dyna-Mite (Roger Aubrey), subsequently known as Destroyer, was a member of the Crusaders. The character first appeared as Dyna-Mite in The Invaders #14–15 (March–April 1977). He also appears as Dyna-Mite in The Invaders #18–23 (July–December 1977). Aubrey, a close friend of the hero Brian Falsworth, also known as Union Jack, supported peace between Germany and Britain. Around 1938, the pair went on a German tour. War began and the two quickly discovered the evils of the Nazis. Both were thrown in prison. Falsworth's connections helped him but he could not help Aubrey, who was taken away. German scientists experimented upon Aubrey, while Falsworth became the 'Destroyer', fighting a guerrilla war against Germany. Aubrey is shrunk to just {{convert|12|in|mm}} in height, but manages to keep the strength of a full size man. He was brainwashed and sent to fight the Allies. He was eventually captured and reprogrammed. He joins the superhero team, the Crusaders, as Dyna-Mite. It is revealed in the 2002 series Citizen V and the V Battalion that Roger and Brian were lovers.Citizen V and the V Battalion (vol. 2) #1 (March 2002)
Dynamic Man
Dynamic Man is a fictional comic book superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The superhero was first published by Timely Comics, the forerunner of Marvel Comics during the period known to fans and historians as the Golden Age of Comic Books.
He was created by Daniel Peters{{gcdb issue|id=702|title=Mystic Comics #1}} and first appeared in Mystic Comics #1 (March 1940).{{Cite book |last=Benton |first=Mike |url=https://archive.org/details/superherocomicso0000bent/page/174 |title=Superhero Comics of the Golden Age: The Illustrated History |date=1992 |publisher=Taylor Publishing Company |isbn=0-87833-808-X |location=Dallas |page=174 |access-date=8 April 2020}} He made his first modern age appearance in The Twelve.[http://www.comicbookresources.com/news/newsitem.cgi?id=11312 Mystery Men's Dozen: Brevoort Talks "The Twelve"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303203206/http://www.comicbookresources.com/news/newsitem.cgi?id=11312 |date=2016-03-03 }}, July 26, 2007, Comic Book Resources[http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=124292 12 Days of the Twelve: Dynamic Man] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070929110527/http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=124292 |date=2007-09-29 }}, August 7, 2007, Newsarama
Dynamic Man started out as an android created by scientist Professor Goettler. However, when the professor threw the switch to bring life to Dynamic Man, the excitement was too much for him, and he died. Dynamic Man resolves to use his amazing powers for the betterment of humanity, and flies away to civilization. He became an F.B.I. agent using the alias Curt Cowan. When not working for the F.B.I., he would don a costume and become the superhero Dynamic Man.{{Cite web |last=Cowan |first=Curt |title=Dynamic Man (Golden Age hero, The Twelve member) |url=http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix7/dynamicmanmc.htm |access-date=4 July 2016 |website=www.marvunapp.com}}