My Favorite Avengers, #’s 5 – 3

Here we go, down to my Top 5 Avengers, but I’m only giving you three at the moment. I will save the last two for another post. The three Avengers listed here are all characters who have been under utilized and have great potential, particularly my #3 choice. All three are strong forces for good, with complicated backgrounds and personalities. All three are powerful additions to any team (perhaps too powerful for my #5 choice.. writers never really seem to know what to do with her). Here’s hoping they get to see more page time in the future!

Captain Marvel#5 – Spectrum (Monica Rambeau)
Other Aliases: Captain Marvel, Photon, Pulsar
Joined Avengers #231 (May 1983); Member-in-training Avengers #227 (January 1983)
Creators: Roger Stern; John Romita, Jr.

Talk about a comic book character that came bursting out of the gate, made quite the splash with fans, then became relegated into relative obscurity for years, and is now finally slowly getting more attention. Monica Rambeau was created by Roger Stern and John Romita, Jr. in the early 80’s, and given the significant name of Captain Marvel. She was that elusive African-American female hero, packed with power, and was offered Avengers membership almost immediately, going on to serve a distinguished stretch, including leading the team, only to be shuffled off when Stern left as writer. It seemed no one else knew what to do with her, so they just let her languish except for an occasional, poorly-used guest appearance.

Monica gets her powers
The debut of Captain Mavel!

Monica Rambeau was born and raised in New Orleans, the daughter of Maria, a successful seamstress, and Frank Rambeau a Firefighter. Monica was a lieutenant in the New Orleans Harbor Patrol. While trying to prevent the creation of a dangerous energy disruptor weapon created by a criminal scientist, Monica was exposed to extra-dimensional energy. As a result, she was thereafter able to convert her body to energy. After her initial appearance, she began experimenting with her powers, and the media dubbed her “Captain Marvel.” Early in her career, she met Spider-Man, who was kind enough to introduce her to the Avengers who accepted her as a member-in-training. Although slightly intimidated by her heroic teammates, especially Captain America, Monica was an exemplary member-in-training and was promoted to full membership shortly thereafter. She quickly befriended both Captain America and the Wasp, and the two became great mentors for her. She was the first African-American woman to serve on the team.

Name
Some advice from The Thing — the first of many name crises.

The trenchcoatDue to her keen, strategic intelligence, and her incredible powers, Captain Marvel was a great asset to the team. She quickly developed a small rogue’s gallery, including Moonstone, Blackout (whose powers were very effective against her), and Nebula, who trapped Captain Marvel in space, separated from the Avengers for an extended period of time. As a member of the team she helped to defeat such foes as the Beyonder, Kang the Conqueror, Attuma, Grandmaster, Nebula, and the Master of Evil. Monica later replaced the Wasp as leader of the Avengers, commanding them in battles against the X-Men, the Olympian Gods, and the Super-Adaptoid. Despite her relative inexperience, she proved to be a very effective leader. She spent a lot of time refereeing squabbles between Hercules and the Sub Mariner, and dealing with the duplicitous telepath Dr. Druid, who sought to supplant her as Avengers chairman and undermined her authority at every opportunity. When honorary Avengers member and wife of the Sub Mariner, Marrina, transformed into the gigantic sea monster Leviathan, Captain Marvel led the hunt for the creature. During the battle that followed, Rambeau transformed herself into a massive bolt of lightning to try and stop the beast. She made contact with the water and accidentally conducted herself across the surface of the ocean, dispersing her atoms so widely that she barely regained physical form. She reformed as a frail, withered husk of a woman devoid of super-powers.

After retiring from the team, Moinca regained first her physical health, and eventually her powers, but her appearances in comics were few and far between. She resumed crimefighting and stayed connected with the Avengers to served as a reservist, sometimes assuming leadership duties in the absence of the current chair.

Energy formMonica was known as Captain Marvel for most of her Avengers career; however, she agreed to change her alias to Photon, conceding the Captain Marvel title to Genis-Vell, the son of the original Captain Marvel, out of respect for her predecessor. After the return of the main Avengers from the pocket universe created by Franklin Richards, almost all the current and former Avengers members were trapped in a curse created by Morgan Le Fay where they served her as soldiers in a guard called Queen’s Vengeance. Due to her strong loyalty to the team Monica was one of the first Avengers to recover their will and rebel against the sorceress. For a time, Monica’s mother intercepted her Avengers calls out of fear for her daughter’s safety. After discovering this deception, Monica led an unofficial force of Avengers against the ‘Infinites’, who planned on relocating the galaxy. Photon continued to have sporadic appearances during major events, usually as part of a cosmic team of Avengers due to her effectiveness in outer space. She helped the team in their deep-space monitoring station with Quasar and Living Lightning, was called into action when Kang successfully conquered North America (supporting her friend Janet van Dyne and advising the new recruit Triathlon on his current issues as the newest member of the team), and when the Scarlet Witch suffered a nervous breakdown and attacked the Avengers. Monica was recruited by the Black Panther to fend off a vampire outbreak in post-Katrina New Orleans, as part of an all-black team-up. Monica was later angered upon learning that Genis-Vell had changed his name again, this time to Photon upon acquiring new powers. After a talk with him, she contemplated using the new alias of Pulsar.

Nextwave attitudeMonica next appeared with a new, gruffer attitude (perhaps at having to concede her name to others so often) as leader for Nextwave, part of the Highest Anti-Terrorism Effort (H.A.T.E.), against Unusual Weapons of Mass Destruction created by the Beyond Corporation© where she avoided using a code name altogether and changed her look. During the Superhero Civil War, Rambeau was a member of Captain America’s Secret Avengers, but also registered as a member of the Avengers Initiative. Monica spent time in New York City with her friends Black Cat, Hellcat, and Firestar to support Firestar during a bout with cancer.

Having adopted the new alias of Spectrum, Monica was in New York when the Mad Titan Thanos launched an invasion on Earth. Having been caught in one of the places where Proxima Midnight, one of Thanos’ lieutenants, made landfall, Spectrum decided to join the efforts against her. Since the Avengers were off in space during this event, the heroes that confronted Proxima Midnight decided to band together as the Mighty Avengers. Among this group of heroes was the Blue Marvel, who saved Spectrum’s life after she had been infected with anti-photons from Proxima Midnight’s spear, by infusing Monica with additional photons. The infection was burned out, but as a side effect, Monica’s powers were greatly augmented. While serving together, Blue Marvel and Monica developed romantic feelings for each other. They started dating not long afterward, and together they began testing the limits of Monica’s powers, coming to the realization that she had transcended humanity with her power-up, having become an immortal being of light. Monica would later start contemplating the implications of her new-found immortality, finding herself acting more pragmatically, expressing concern that she would grow apart from her humanity, and dreading a future in which she could outlive the Earth itself.

Ultimates

Following the dissolution of the Mighty Avengers, Spectrum joined the newly formed Ultimates at Blue Marvel’s suggestion, further consolidating their romance. After the second superhuman Civil War, the Ultimates were terminated by the government due to their differences on the source of conflict, the use of the precognitive abilities of the Inhuman Ulysses Cain. The Ultimates later reassembled in secret at the request of Galactus in order to investigate the mystery of who had chained the embodiment of the Multiverse, Eternity. In the process of unveiling the mystery and helping defeat Eternity’s jailer, the First Firmament, the Ultimates were absorbed into Alpha Flight, reinstating them as an openly sanctioned team.

When the Greek goddess of the night Nyx and her children returned and massacred their fellow Olympians, Spectrum was one of several heroes assembled by Voyager to stop this new threat before she could reclaim her godhood and remake the universe in her image. One of Monica’s companions in this journey was the android Vision, whose body was malfunctioning, due to Nyx’s return causing the Sun to blackout. Monica used her powers to provide Vision a source of energy. The end of this adventure took the heroes to the entry point to the House of Ideas, a plane of existence and the core of all of reality. Monica burned out most of her power helping Vision reach inside the House of Ideas, becoming the only hero capable to follow Nyx inside and stop her. Due to this exertion, Monica returned to her previous power levels, becoming human again. She most recently served with the team Strikeforce to combat mystical threats alongside Angela, Blade, Daimon Hellstorm, Spider-Woman, Wiccan, and Winter Soldier.

Due to bombardment by extra-dimensional energies, Monica can transform herself into any form of energy within the electromagnetic spectrum. Among the many energy forms she has assumed and is able to control are cosmic rays, gamma rays, X-rays, ultraviolet radiation, visible light, electricity, infrared radiation, microwaves, radio waves, and neutrinos. By assuming an energy-form, she gains all of that energy’s properties. She is invisible and intangible in many of her energy forms (the most frequent exception being visible light), and is capable of flight in all her energy forms (reaching velocities up to and including light speed). She also has the ability to project these energies from her body while she is in human form (only one wavelength of energy at a time), usually in the form of energy blasts from her hands. Monica can also divert small amounts of various energies for employment as force beams, which have the equivalent to 300 tons of TNT of explosive force. A variation of this ability enables her to project light-based holographic illusions of herself. Monica has also shown the ability to split her energy form into several miniature energy forms that are under her mental command. When she encounters a new or unfamiliar energy, Monica can often duplicate it given enough time for analysis. Monica tends to be physically insubstantial in her energy forms, though with concentration and effort she can sometimes perform tasks such as briefly grasping an object, either by partially solidifying or by applying some sort of force to the object in question. She is immortal and does not age beyond her prime.

Using her powers

Rambeau has strong leadership skills and law enforcement experience due to both of her time as a police officer and former leader of the Avengers. She is an excellent markswoman, unarmed combatant, detective, and swimmer with extensive nautical expertise. She has received Harbor Patrol training, and Avengers training in unarmed combat by Captain America.

Energy form

Monica Rambeau is a great character, with a strong personality and an amazing power set. The problem, I think, is writer’s have to think when they use her. She can easily become too powerful, and then awkwardly forced out of confrontations with silly plot contrivances. It would be great to see her return to the Avengers as leader again, especially with a roster that could be challenging for her. I would love to see her on the main team for an extended period of time. Perhaps her upcoming appearance in the WandaVision Disney+ series will give her greater exposure in the comic.

Jocasta#4 – Jocasta
Joined Mighty Avengers #21 (March 2009); Granted provisional status in Avengers #197 (July 1980). Left the team before she was to be offered substitute status with the team, in Avengers #211 (September 1981)
Creators: Jim Shooter; George Perez

Jocasta was built by the villainous robot Ultron to be his bride. To provide Jocasta sentience, Ultron based her mind and brain patterns on the Avenger Wasp (Janet van Dyne). Ultron brainwashed Hank Pym into transferring Wasp’s lifeforce into the feminine robotic shell. Jocasta was named after the wife/mother in the legend of Oedipus (a reference to the fact that Ultron’s obsession with his own creator/”father,” Hank Pym. However, as she came into awareness, Jocasta realized that Wasp would have to die in order for her to live. Jocasta secretly alerted the Avengers and the team defeated Ultron and reversed the process, leaving Jocasta a mindless husk. Ultron subsequently revived Jocasta with a remote link, activating Wasp’s mental “residue” left behind. She escaped from Avengers custody and led the Avengers into Ultron’s trap. Jocasta was programmed to be loyal to Ultron but even though she loved him intensely, she could not abide by her master’s evil. Jocasta eventually betrayed Ultron, choosing to help the Avengers defeat her “mate” again. She remained with the Avengers after being abducted again, this time by the Collector, and eventually aided them against the god, Korvac.

Jocasta and Wasp
Wasp’s lifeforce being drained to bring Jocasta to life

Jocasta vs. TaskmasterJocasta continued to reside at Avengers Mansion for a time. Due to their similar backgrounds, she developed feelings for the Vision, who was happily married to the Scarlet Witch and did not return Jocasta’s feelings. Jocasta proved particularly helpful in the Avengers’ first confrontation with the villainous mercenary Taskmaster displaying surprising wit and strategy, stemming from her Wasp-based personality. Jocasta was then granted provisional status with the team. During this period, she aided them against threats such as the giant robot Red Ronin (where she proved to be a great comedic foil for The Beast), the Yellow Claw, the Berserker, Pyron, and the second incarnation of the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants. Despite this, Jocasta did not believe she was accepted by most of the Avengers, and she was never officially inducted into the team. After she singlehandedly defeated a rogue sentient weather satellite, she left the Avengers following a membership reorganization. She was unaware that they had planned to grant her special substitute member status, which allowed her to remain with the team despite limits imposed on the team’s membership roster.

Jocasta with the Avengers

Wandering the country, Jocasta discovered that her cybernetic senses and powers were malfunctioning. She sought help from the Fantastic Four and was befriended by them and Alicia Masters. Soon, it became apparent that her malfunctioning powers were the symptoms of a pre-programmed suggestion which compelled Jocasta to rebuild Ultron. She did, but soon teamed up with Fantastic Four member Thing and the robot Machine Man to defeat Ultron. During this time, Jocasta and Machine Man developed feelings for each other, but in a final confrontation with Ultron, Jocasta intentionally detonated a weapon Ultron was holding, knowing she would be caught in the resulting blast. She was destroyed, but Ultron nevertheless survived, until Machine Man reached down his own throat to tear out vital circuitry. The Avengers held a memorial for their fallen ally, and Machine Man attended, realizing the depth of his love for her. Jocasta was reassembled some time later by technicians of the High Evolutionary. Jocasta retained enough of her programming to send out a signal to the Avengers. The team had disbanded at the time, but the signal reached reserve members, including Beast, The Captain, The Falcon, Hercules, the Hulk and Yellowjacket. Jocasta sacrificed herself once again to blow up the High Evolutionary’s command ship by deliberately disrupting the ship’s matter/anti-matter drive, which caused an explosion that destroyed the ship and its contents. Before she sabotaged the ship, Captain America assured her that she was a true Avenger.

Jocasta and Machine Man

Jocasta ProgramJocasta’s robotic head was later retrieved by the Avengers. They gave it to Machine Man who had been working on a way to resurrect her. During a conflict with the alien Terminus, the arms dealer Madame Menace became involved and appropriated Jocasta’s head, for her own purposes. Madame Menace manipulated events causing Tony Stark to unlock Jocasta’s programming so that she would become the basis for Madame Menace’s new weapons systems. Stark soon realized the android’s identity, helped Jocasta to awaken, and Jocasta managed to turn the tables on Madame Menace, seemingly sacrificing herself yet again. In reality, Jocasta managed to survive by downloading her intelligence into Iron Man’s computerized armor, where she reasserted herself. Jocasta’s intelligence was placed within Stark’s computerized mansion, and she helped Tony with daily operation of Avengers Mansion as well as to procure information as needed. Having been programmed with the latest in diagnostic, preventative medical and surgical techniques, Jocasta also spent time serving as Stark’s physician/psychologist, providing Tony with someone that could talk to about problems and who could examine the latest injuries without risking Iron Man’s secret identity being compromised.

Jocasta flightSince the Iron Man armor was used to house the programming that made up Jocasta, it became infected with the pre-programmed subconscious suggestion to rebuild Ultron, but instead managed to develop its own artificial intelligence. After being deactivated during a confrontation with Stark, the armor was revived, by the Sons of Yinsen. Free of its artificial intelligence, the armor was contacted via remote by Ultron’s disembodied head after the android’s most recent encounter with the Avengers and in the company of the bio-synthetic robot Antigone. Ultron’s head attached itself onto the armor and took control of the Sons of Yinsen and the flying city that they inhabited. Stark confronted Ultron directly and managed to download Jocasta’s intelligence into the armor once more. The vestiges of the armor’s intelligence battled with the presence of Jocasta, the result of which caused Ultron’s head to come shooting off the armor. The head hit Antigone, and both fell off the floating city, which Ultron rigged to explode after the defeat. Stark failed to find a trace of Jocasta and assumed her to have died fighting the sentient armor. In reality, Jocasta did not die. She appeared in possession of Antigone’s body and left, taking Ultron’s head with her.

Jocasta InitiativeJocasta would later appear with her classic silver robotic form rebuilt and reunited with Machine Man to battle an infestation of zombies. She then became a member of the New Mexico Fifty State Initiative superhero team known as the Mavericks after which she joined the Mighty Avengers along with the new Wasp (Henry Pym). During this time, Edwin Jarvis witnessed Jocasta kissing Pym. When Jarvis brought up the subject, stating it was akin to kissing her “grandfather”, Jocasta countered by saying that, since Pym was the creator of modern artificial intelligence, the act was more along the lines of “kissing God”. Pym created a special machine that allowed Jocasta to transfer her consciousness into multiple different robotic bodies. Unbeknownst to the Avengers, one of those bodies was later infected by Ultron, who managed to reconstruct himself using the majority of Jocasta’s duplicate bodies. Eventually the real Jocasta managed to broker a deal with Ultron: he could finally marry her in exchange for a cease to hostilities. After the two androids completed their cyber-marriage, Pym tricked Ultron into going to an uninhabited planet where he could not harm anyone. Though Jocasta’s main body went with Ultron, she projected her consciousness onto one of her duplicates and remained with the Avengers. Jocasta most recently served on staff at the Avengers Academy.

Jocasta working for Stark UnlimitedWhen Tony Stark refashioned his company into Stark Unlimited, he sought Jocasta’s help to establish an ethical protocol for robotic life forms, and she became the company’s chief robot ethicist. Jocasta wished to belong among the humans but struggled to fit in. Because of this, she helped Stark Unlimited develop a virtual universe called the eScape. This caused a rift between Jocasta and Machine Man, since he had become a militant of mecha-activism, and considered eScape an appropriation of robo-culture. The supervillain Controller facilitated Machine Man access into the eScape, but his sabotage attempt was stopped. Jocasta broke up with him and moved to Stark Unlimited afterwards. By the time eScape launched as a consumer product, Jocasta made heavy use of the virtual world to experience living life as a human. Fueled by this desire, Jocasta sought the help of Tony’s brother Arno to upgrade her body with more human-like artificial organs. Unbeknownst to Jocasta, her new yearning influenced Ultron through the bond they shared, giving shape to his new objective to turn humanity into machine hybrids in a similar way he had been physically merged with his creator Hank Pym. The villain kidnapped Jocasta in the middle of Arno’s procedure, and intended to use a molecular fusion process to merge her with Wasp. Iron Man intervened with the help of Machine Man, and Ultron was eventually defeated. In the process, Jocasta’s system started failing since her body had been abducted midway into Arno’s operation. To save her life, Jocasta’s former co-worker Andy Bhang uploaded her mind into the disused body that belonged to Friday. This body was severely damaged in battle against Ultron, and Jocasta was taken for repair by Arno after he seized control of Stark Unlimited, but he denied her allies access to her.

Arno eventually finished building Jocasta a new, less humanoid body during the robot revolution. He additionally equipped her operative system with a code that made her compliant to humans. Jocasta became the first subject of this submission code, which Arno planned to broadcast worldwide in order to subjugate the entirety of robotkind. When the premier force of robo-liberation, the A.I. Army, became aware of this plot, they assaulted Bain Tower to stop it. Machine Man was a general of A.I. Army, and Arno had Jocasta lure him away from the fight. Jocasta took Machine Man to a Baintronics facility and introduced him to his would-be successor and her new lover, X-52. Jocasta and X-52 attempted to convince Machine Man to accept the submission code to achieve peace of mind, but he resisted them, decapitated Jocasta and destroyed X-52, then fled from the facility with Jocasta’s head. He took Jocasta to Andy Bhang, and he managed to reverse the submission code using a back door key he had slipped into its programming when Sunset Bain had him work on it. Jocasta was subsequently given a new body.

Jocasta betrays Ultron
Jocasta betrays Ultron

Jocasta later aided the A.I. Army, Andy Bhang, Bethany Cabe, and Rescue in attacking Bain Tower in order to restore Tony Stark’s body using the tower’s bio-tubes. When she confronted Sunset Bain, who was actually an A.I. duplicate created by Arno, Jocasta subjected her to the same submission code to make her surrender. After Stark’s body was restored, Jocasta, Stark, and their allies went to the Stark Space Station to stop Arno’s made plan to to take control of humankind to fight the non-existent Extinction Entity, a delusion caused by his relapsing illness. Tony was able to subdue Arno by submerging him into a virtual reality where the Extinction Entity was real and he managed to stop it. Still pulling Bain’s strings with the submission code, Jocasta later made her take all the blame for the actions of the A.I. Army and Arno.

Jocasta battles the AvengersJocasta’s body is composed of titanium steel with remarkable superhuman strength, speed, stamina, and reflexes, which can withstand most physical and energy attacks. Being a “non-living” construct, she requires no food, water, or oxygen to survive and thus is also immune to poisons and diseases and can easily survive in the vacuum of space and underwater. She is able to project beams of electromagnetic energy from her eyes, and erect a force field around herself to protect her from incoming attacks. She also possesses a heightened sense of sight, smell, and hearing. Jocasta can also perceive electromagnetic particles, and detect energy patterns and track them to their source. She is hyper-intelligent, with a capacity for unlimited self-motivated activity, creative intelligence, and human-like emotions. Jocasta can communicate through an incalculable number of media. She possesses superhuman cybernetic analytical capabilities and has the ability to make calculations with superhuman speed and accuracy. Recently, it has been revealed that Jocasta’s internal circuitry has a built-in holographic image inducer, allowing her to disguise herself as a human being. Jocasta, besides sharing the same brain patterns with van Dyne, also has her mental template’s voice.

Jocasta's tough

I loved Jocasta during her initial run with the Avengers. George Perez’ gorgeous design was so sleek and striking, and Jocasta’s good-natured personality, augmented by the wit obtained by Janet’s brain patterns made her a great companion to the Avengers at the time. Her long association with Tony Stark has made her a great ally, and I would love to see her back with the Avengers for a lengthy run. I would love to have her story evolve without the influence of Ultron, which I feel has been played out over the years. I would also like to see less of Jocasta being controlled by external forces and given more agency on her own.

Firebird#3 – Firebird (Bonita Juárez)
Other aliases: Espirita
Joined: West Coast Avengers Annual #2 (1987)
Creators: Bill Mantlo; Sal Buscema

Bonita Juárez was born in Taos, New Mexico, a devout Roman Catholic, who, while walking in the deserts of Albuquerque, New Mexico, came into contact with a radioactive meteor fragment. The radiation altered her DNA, and gave her the power to generate flames and heat, and even fly. Believing her gifts came from God, she assumed the mythical bird’s name, and donned a costume. As Firebird, she received a distress call from the Avengers, and mistakenly battled the Hulk, joining with other Southwestern heroes (forming a team called the Rangers) and fighting the Corruptor to rescue Rick Jones, who had actually sent the signal.

Firebird Origin
Firebird’s origin

Firebird became embroiled in a battle with the sorcerer Master Pandemonium. Exhausted from their struggle, she plummeted to the ground near the new Avengers Compound on the West Coast, where she was found by the Thing. She enlisted the aid of the Avengers to defeat Master Pandemonium. She assisted the Avengers during several adventures, and desperately wanted to be invited to join, something to which chairman Hawkeye remained oblivious to, since he was intent upon recruiting the Thing. Despite Mockingbird’s discovery of Firebird’s desire to join, and after working with the Avengers for several weeks, Firebird left without joining the team. Hawkeye would later change his mind at Mockingbird’s urging and the Avengers sought out Firebird to invite her to join, but could not find her.

La EspiritaEventually, she reappeared after a spiritual journey where she took on the identity of La Espirita and arrived in the nick of time to stop Hank Pym’s suicide attempt. With the help of La Espirita, Hank re-invented himself as the adventurer Doctor Pym, and he was able to move on (at least temporarily) from his past troubles. The rest of the West Coast Avengers, however, had been lost in time. Together, La Espirita and Pym found the time-lost Avengers’ message and helped rescue them and defeat the villainous alien computer, Dominus. Despite sharing a brief romance with Hank, La Espirita did not stay with the Avengers long, but parted with them in good company and accepted their membership offer, serving as a reserve Avenger after that. During one of their adventures, Bonita discovered that she was seemingly immortal, when all of the Avengers died except for her, due to being poisoned by the Collector, an Elder of the Universe. This furthered Bonita’s belief that she had been blessed by God. Bonita was later captured by al alien race from the planet Rus, who revealed to her that the flaming fireball that gave her powers was merely an alien child’s discarded experiment. Briefly engaging a crisis of faith, Bonita nonetheless decided that God was still responsible for her powers, however she returned to her original code-name, Firebird. After that she was called in on various Avengers events. She assisted Hellcat, Monica Rambeau, Moondragon, and Black Widow in subduing the Awesome Android, and encountered a small platoon of Atlanteans in Mexico getting help from a few Avengers.

Firebirds true origin
Firebird discovers her true origin

Firebird returnsFirebird largely acted as a reserve member, preferring to spend her time as a social worker, although she was caught up in several significant Avengers conflicts. The first was after the team had been missing for a year in a pocket dimension created by Franklin Richards. Firebird was among the heroes struggle when Morgan La Fey rewrote reality. She was also present when the Avengers and the Thunderbolts teamed up to stop the alien Dominex, a remnant of the Dominus computer.

Most significantly, her immunity to radiation later made her indispensable when a mysterious energy field engulfed a small Russian country and turned everyone into zombies during the first blows of the Kang War. Firebird was one of the few individuals who could travel into the energy field without harm. Fellow Avenger Thor also surmised that Firebird may be immortal.  When Captain America was briefly transformed into an energy zombie, Thor, briefly believing him dead, began to fear that he had become too close to his mortal comrades despite his knowledge that he would outlive them. He contemplated leaving the Avengers after Firebird and Thorthe war was over, but Firebird helped him to see that the bonds between him and the Avengers were so valuable precisely because they wouldn’t last forever, and he shouldn’t neglect them just because he would outlive them. In recognition of her advice, Thor toasted her when he arranged for Asgardian cooks to prepare a feast for the Avengers to celebrate Kang’s defeat, commenting that she had taught a god a lesson by treating him as the fool he was.

Friebird rekindled her brief romance with Hank Pym when they were among a small group of heroes taken to Battleword by The Stranger, masquerading as the Beyonder. Shortly after that, during the Civil War over superhero registration, Firebird joined the anti-Registration Secret Avengers, but after the death in battle of Goliath she decided to register, and later joined Texas’ team in the 50-State Initiative, a new incarnation of her old team the Rangers. She has since appeared during several large events fighting alongside the Rangers.

Firebird's powersBonita Juarez gained superhuman powers due to bombardment by radiation from a meteorite containing energy waste from an alien’s scientific equipment. As Firebird, she has the power of pyrokinesis, which enables her to mentally excite the atoms in an object until it spontaneously combusts. By using her powers to ignite the air around her, she can surround herself with an aura of flames that often takes the shape of a bird, and if she focuses her flames downwards in a tight stream, she can propel herself through the air like a rocket. She can channel her powers through her hands to seemingly project searing thermal blasts from her body (actually from her mind), capable of melting steel with enough thrust to topple a filled garbage truck at 100 feet. She can willfully lower the thermal energy’s temperature to a minimum of 120° F and can project the thrust energy alone. Firebird’s body is immune to the detrimental effects of wielding her power. She can fly by riding wind currents stirred up by the nimbus of fire with which she surrounds herself while flying. She has also displayed a limited power of precognition, allowing her to have glimpses of the future.

Firebird also seems to be immune to most forms of radiation and poison (and even demonic possession) as well as the physical effects of her mental powers, and has displayed the ability to survive in the vacuum of space. Firebird may be immortal, but the precise details of this are unclear beyond the fact that she has twice survived apparently fatal attacks that only Thor – himself an immortal – could withstand.

RangersFirebird is a unique character among comic book heroes, being both LatinX and a devout Catholic. Her tremendous desire to do good, and to help others makes her a great hero to serve with the Avengers, and I’d love to see her interacts and develop relationships with the varying personalities who have served, such as Black Widow, or Wolverine, who have very different outlooks on life. Her interactions with Thor during the Kang Wars were certainly a fascinating way to bring her beliefs into the storylines. In addition, she has a dramatic look and a great power set that would be a tremendous asset to the team.

Flying

My Favorite Avengers, #10 – 6

Spider-Woman Classic#10 – Spider-Woman (Jessica Drew)
Joined Avengers vol. 4 #1 (May 2010)
Creators: Marie Severin; Archie Goodwin

There have been several Marvel characters who have borne the name, Spider-Woman over the years, but the first, the best, and most well-known is Jessica Drew. (She’s not even the only Spider-Woman who was a member of the Avengers! That distinction goes to Julia Carpenter who was created perhaps 10 or so years later, but became a member of the Avengers 19 years before Jessica. By the way, Julia made my list at #30.) Jessica Drew has had a tumultuous comic career, and her membership with the Avengers has been relatively recent; in fact, I like Jess far more as a solo adventurer than an Avenger, but her time on the team has developed some pretty nice connections and certainly gave the character a much higher profile that she’d ever had. And she needed that.

Original Spider-WomanMarvel created Spider-Woman in the mid-70’s to claim the rights to the name so no other comic company could. Intended as a one-off character appearing in Marvel Spotlight, to claim copyright then never really be seen again, she was conceived to be a spider that was mutated into a human. When the character proved to be very popular, they decided to keep using her, but original writer Marv Wolfman decided that origin was too far out even for 70’s audiences, and modified it greatly in her next appearance, a four-issue run in the Thing’s team-up comic, Marvel-Two-In-One. In that story we learn that she is a human woman, Jessica Drew, who had the memories of being a spider implanted in her by the terrorist group, HYDRA.

Claremont's Spider-WomanThis appearance launched into her own series that ran fifty issues and had some great highs, but never really coalesced into a cohesive run, as writers and artists bounced in and out, each with their own unique take on Jessica Drew. Her most consistent tone, the one set up by her initial appearances, were dark, tied to mysticism, and a little creepy. Jessica gained a mentor in Charles Magnus, and an arch-enemy in Morgan Le Fay. She struggled with socializing with regular folks, and discovered a new side affect of her abilities. She emitted a pheromone that instilled desire in some, and repulsed others. At first she could not control this ability, but eventually was able to harness it. After twenty issues, and despite a concurrently running animated series, and a major ad campaign trying to differentiate her from her male counterpart, the series had dropped from its initial success and Spider-Woman was basically seen by many as a lesser version of Spider-Man. Marvel changed writers and took a major shift in direction. Jessica became a bounty hunter, jettisoned the dark, creepy tone, and her supporting cast disappeared and was replaced with a new one… without explanation. That direction only lasted 12 issues, when celebrated X-Men writer Chris Claremont came in and returned to some of the earlier themes and subplots, and added his own great character development, delving further into Jessica’s origins. It was a huge improvement to the book, but it was too little, too late. Claremont was only able to write 13 issues before being pulled to other projects, and editorial decided that they would end the series at issue #50 — four issues away. New writer Ann Nocenti was able to tie storylines up to the best of her ability, but she decided to end the series on a somber note, with Jessica dying. Fans were outraged, and the creative team felt remorse for their creative decision, and not long after, Jessica was resurrected in the Avengers, creating her first tie with that team.

Spider-Woman is tough

But after that, for nearly twenty years, Jessica languished mainly in comic book limbo. She would make an odd appearance here and there, became a supporting character along with her best friend Lindsey McCabe in Wolverine, where she helped him fight against the underworld of the island nation of Madripoor, but only as Jessica Drew, and never in costume as Spider-Woman. She also had a guest appearance in Brian Michael Bendis’s critically acclaimed series Alias featuring Jessica Jones. Bendis had intended to feature Jessica Drew as the main character of Alias, but as he began writing the series, the voice that emerged was very different than Drew’s and he created a whole new character. Still, his interest in Jessica Drew remained, and a few year’s later when Bendis was deeply in charge of the Avengers franchise (read https://uslawnsfranchise.com/blog/enjoy-a-rewarding-career-in-the-commercial-landscaping-industry site that helps you to open up one), he finally gave her the break she needed. People can check here fro switch to pizza voip today. In January 2005, Bendis launched The New Avengers, ostensibly featuring Spider-Woman as a member. This character was ultimately revealed to be a Skrull impostor, but the exposure to the Spider-Woman character under Bendis’ pen renewed readers’ interest in her, enough that Bendis also wrote a successful mini-series, Spider-Woman: Origin. When the Skrull was discovered and the real Drew freed from captivity, she took her rightful place as an Avenger, and served with distinction.

Spider-Woman pregnant

Sadly for me, Bendis’ Jessica Drew had a pretty different voice and characterization than the original, dark, intense Drew I had first fallen in love with. Bendis focused a bit too much on her pheromone abilities, and characterized her as a bit of a man-trap, and focused on her sexuality. She also became a bit more light-hearted and wise-cracking. I wasn’t all that interested in her time as an Avenger, however that exposure, and that high-profile position allowed her to become a fan-favorite again, and also got her to interact, and develop new relationships with different parts of the Marvel universe. Instead of trying to keep her apart, Marvel finally decided to fully immerse her into Spider-Man’s part of the Marvel Universe, and she began interacting with all of those characters. Writer Dennis Hopeless took quite a liking to Ms. Drew and wrote two subsequent Spider-Woman series, forging for her strong ties with Captain Marvel, giving her a sidekick in the form of Roger Gocking, the former D-list villain, The Porcupine, and also making her a single-mom with her very own child! He also deepened her relationship with former love interest, Hawkeye, as well as Patsy Walker (Hellcat) and Jennifer Walters (She-Hulk.)

Hopeless' Spider-WomanSince then, Jessica has continued her own adventures, including embarking on a romance with Roger and becoming a member of an underground Avengers team called Strikeforce. Her latest new ongoing series features a new costume, and a new direction featuring a deeper exploration of Jessica’s family. She continues to have strong ties with both the Spider-Family and through her best bud Carol Danvers, Captain Marvel and the Avengers. While Bendis’ more light-hearted personality stuck with Jessica, I grew to appreciate it much more, especially under the talents of Dennis Hopeless and subsequent writers, who gave Jessica a more unique voice that Bendis had. Despite that, I will always appreciate Bendis’ interest in the character and his successful lifting of Jessica into the spotlight again.

The new Spider-WomanAfter her mother, pregnant with Jessica, was struck with a beam of radiation containing the DNA of several different types of spiders, Jessica Drew developed superhuman powers patterned after several different types of spiders when she was born. Jessica is super-humanly strong and is able to lift several tons at her peak. She also possesses superhuman speed, stamina, agility, hearing, smell, and reflexes. Jessica’s body is more resistant to injury than an ordinary person’s, allowing her to take far more physical punishment compared to the average human. Jessica’s palms and soles secrete a special fluid that allows her to cling to solid objects, like a true spider. Jessica’s physical makeup also makes her highly resistant to all terrestrial poisons, toxins, and completely immune to radiation. While she is typically rendered dizzy by the initial dose, she is completely immune to it after being exposed again. She also exudes a high concentration of pheromones that elicit pleasure and attraction from others, depending on unknown factors which might include gender and mood, although she typically uses a chemical “perfume” that renders these pheromones inert. Jessica’s body also produces an inordinate amount of bio-electrical energy which she can discharge from her hands. She refers to these discharges as “venom blasts,” although they actually have nothing to do with poison and typically cause pain and unconsciousness. Jessica can kill a man in the same way that a lightning bolt would and can pierce solid metals like steel by using her blasts at their greatest intensity. Jessica was also able to glide through unknown means using the web-like extensions of her costume but she seems to have gained the ability to fly after being replaced by the Skrull Queen, Veranke. In addition to her powers, she is a superb hand-to-hand combat fighter, and has trained in several styles of fighting including Boxing, Capoeira, Judo, Karate, and Tai chi, learned under the training of the Taskmaster.

While I wasn’t necessarily paying that much attention to Jessica’s career as an Avenger, I do credit it, and Brian Michael Bendis, with reviving the character after decades of inactivity. I love that she is much more connected to the Marvel world in general, and has made strong ties with many Avengers, and is set up to appear in such groups as Strikeforce, Lady Liberators, and more. Her recent characterization (last ten years or so) under Dennis Hopeless and others, is refreshing and fun, and her new series is off to a very promising start. I would definitely enjoy seeing her in future Avengers stories once its current creative team have moved on.

Valkyrie#9 – Valkyrie (Brunnhilde)
Joined Secret Avengers vol. 1 #1 (May 2010)
Creators: Roy Thomas; John Buscema

Perhaps known more for her time with the Defenders than the Avengers, I’ve always thought Valkyrie was an underrated and underused character, so I was thrilled by her eventual inclusion on Marvel’s A-list team. While only serving for a few years in the Secret Avengers, she made an impact, and served well, even embarking on a physical relationship with her teammate, Gene Thompson, who was Agent Venom at the time. She has particularly close ties to Thor, Hellcat, Hulk, Dr. Strange, and Clea. Brunnhilde was selected by Odin, King of the Asgardian Gods to lead the Valkyrior (the Choosers of the Slain), a group of warrior goddesses who would appear over the battlefields of mortal worshippers of the gods and choose which of the fallen were worthy to be taken to Valhalla, the land of the honored dead. Brunnhilde served capably in this capacity for centuries. Brunnhilde and her fellow Valkyries continued to gather heroic mortal warriors for Valhalla until roughly a millennium ago, when Odin was forced to cease virtually all interaction with the Earth in accordance with a pact that he and the leaders of Earth’s other pantheons of gods made with the extraterrestrial Celestials. From then onward, the Valkyries could only choose slain heroes from among fallen Asgardian warriors.

Valkyrie in the Lady LiberatorsSoon after this change, Brunnhilde encountered Amora the Enchantress, who offered her a life of adventure. For several weeks Brunnhilde accompanied the Enchantress on her conquests.until she discovered Amora’s immoral nature and tried to end their partnership. In response the Enchantress trapped Brunnhilde within a mystic crystal of souls. While Brunnhilde’s body remained in suspended animation, her immortal soul became Amora’s plaything. Over the centuries the Enchantress used Brunnhilde’s spiritual essence to give the Valkyrie’s powers to herself or to her pawns. The first time the Enchantress assumed the Valkyrie’s physical aspect in recent years was in a plot to lead a handful of female superhumans against the male Avengers as the Lady Liberators. Her true identity was discovered and her plan thwarted. Months later, the Enchantress bestowed the Valkyrie’s power upon a socialite named Samantha Parrington in an attempt to get revenge on the Hulk. Finally, a woman driven mad by being trapped in another mystical dimension, Barbara Norris, was given the Valkyrie’s power and consciousness by the Enchantress to help her then-allies, the group of superhumans called the Defenders. Amora did not undo her spell on Norris after this encounter, and as a result, Norris’ body now possessed Brunnhilda’s consciousness, appearance, and powers, while Norris’ own mental essence was trapped in Brunnhilde’s real body in Asgard.

Valkyrie joins the DefendersValkyrie served with the Defenders from then on until their ultimate end. During that time, with the help of Dr. Strange, the body of Barbara Norris was murdered and Brunnhilde’s spirit was inadvertently freed. With the help of Doctor Strange, Brunnhilde regained her true body with her full memory and normal warrior personality as well. Brunnhilde then battled Amora and banished her to the crystal of souls. Feeling estranged from Asgard in general and Odin in particular for their neglect of her centuries-long plight, Brunnhilde chose to return to Earth with the Defenders. After a brief period where the Avenger Moondragon went mad with power, Odin placed the dangerously powerful self-styled goddess into Brunnhilde’s charge. Brunnhilde was to teach Moondragon humility, and Moondragon served alongside Brunnhilde in the Defenders. Brunnhilde was to take action against Moondragon should she again become a menace. Moondragon reformed, but later she fell once again under the malevolent influence of the alien entity burrowed deep in her mind called the Dragon of the Moon. Moondragon attacked the Defenders, but Brunnhilde, given temporary additional powers by Odin for this occasion opposed her. Brunnhilde summoned other Valkyries to her aid and together with Valkyrie's New Outfittwo other Defenders, the Angel and Cloud, they defeated Moondragon but failed to capture her. Months later Moondragon returned to attack the Defenders, her power vastly augmented by the alien Beyonder. In order to defeat the Dragon, Brunnhilde and the Eternal called Interloper projected their immortal life forces against it along with Defenders members Andromeda and the Defenders’ former foe Manslaughter. As a result, Brunnhilde, Interloper, Andromeda, Manslaughter, Moondragon, and their teammate, Gargoyle, had all seemingly been transformed into statues of ashes and dust, and the Dragon of the Moon was apparently gone. Brunnhilde was restored to life by Doctor Strange, now in the host body of a woman known as Sian Bowen. The other Defenders, Interloper, Andromeda, and Manslaughter were restored to life as well and they formed the Dragon Circle to battle the Dragon of the Moon. After the Dragon of the Moon was defeated, Brunnhilde returned to Asgard.

Brunnhilde was one among the many casualties of Ragnarok, having been killed by Durok the Demolisher. Before her death, she ceded leadership of the Valkyries to Sif, who also inherited her sword Dragonfang upon Brunhilde’s death. When the Asgardians who had perished during Ragnarok were mysteriously resurrected on Earth, Brunnhilde joined the Secret Avengers. Her time with Secret Avengers was fun, and interesting, and it was great to see her in action with a whole new set of heroes, but I don’t feel they really used her to the best of her potential. In fact, despite her appearing in my Top 10 Avengers, it’s more for my overall love of the character, and the potential she has to be a really great Avengers. I’d love to see her fill in for Thor sometime, and take that godly, powerhouse role on the team.

Valkyrie rides Aragorn
Brunnhilde astride Aragorn

Valkyrie in Secret AvengersAt any rate, there was more to come for Valkyrie during and after her stint with the Secret Avengers. After the events of the Serpent War during the Fear Itself storyline, Brunnhilde was charged by Odin to find and destroy the Serpent’s eight remaining Hammers so their power would not be used again. She was unable to prevent Sin from obtaining the hammers and activating the Final Sleeper, a giant war-machine. This machine killed Brunnhilde by snapping her neck, but she forfeited her place in Valhalla and that sacrifice enabled the other eight Valkyrior to return to Midgard and claim the hammers. Afterward, Freyja the All-Mother of Asgard suggested that Brunnhilde choose and lead a new team of shieldmaidens from Earth’s heroines. Around this time, Agent Venom joined the Secret Avengers, Brunnhilde began a flirtation with him. Eventually, she grew tired of it and seduced him outright. Brunnhilde had decided that Earth did not possess women strong enough to replace the Valkyrior. This absence allowed the villainous Caroline le Fay to plot the return of the Doom Maidens. Valkyrie joined with Misty Knight and Annabelle Riggs, an Val reunites with Cleaarchaeologist who found herself infatuated with Brunnhilde, Hela, the Asgardian Goddess of Death, added Hippolyta to the mix, and charged this team to rescue Dani Moonstar, whose powers le Fay was going to use to revive the Doom Maidens, a twisted evil version of the Valkyrior. They arrived too late to stop le Fay, but the group, along with a host of other heroines, were able to destroy the Doom Maidens, but only by channeling power into Brunnhilde and turning her into the Doom Maiden of Rage. Though she turned next on the heroes, Annabelle was able to stop her at the cost of her life. Thanks to her valiant sacrifice, Annabelle found herself in Valhalla, and so Brunnhilde sought out her old friend Clea and called in a favor owed. They went to the halls of Valhalla and found Annabelle, and Brunnhilde had Clea resurrect her, at a cost. To revive Annabelle, Clea had merged the lifeforces of Annabelle and Brunnhilde and as such she was the new host of Valkyrie. Their connection worked in such a way that any time Valkyrie took Annabelle’s place, Annabelle was transported to a pocket dimension in the confines of Valhalla, and vice versa.

Brunnhilde’s final adventures revolved around the Asgardian War of the Realms. Anticipating the this war, sparked by Malekith the Accursed, Kid Loki assembled a group of heroic allies, the Asgardians of the Galaxy. Annabelle was part of this team, together with her other half, the Valkyrie. After succeededing in their, the Asgardians of the Galaxy became embroiled in defending Manhattan from Malekith’s assault. When Doctor Strange lost control of a spell meant to help evacuate the island and teleported away all combatants save the Valkyries, the Asgardian warriors were overpowered. Brunnhilde became the last Valkyrie standing before being finally slain by Malekith. For a few seconds before Brunnhilde’s death, she and Annabelle co-existed in the pocket dimension adjacent to Valhalla where each rested when the other walked on Earth. Valkyrie bid Annabelle farewell, and her death caused the collapse of the pocket dimension. Annabelle was left to wonder the mists that surround Valhalla until being rescued shortly afterwards by her girlfriend, the Inhuman Ren Kimura, Clea, and the Asgardians of the Galaxy.

Val and Annabelle
Brunnhilde and Annabelle Riggs

Valkyrie is the strongest of all Valkyrior. While the average warrior Asgardian can lift approximately 25 tons, Brunnhilde can list closer to 50 tons. Like all her people, her body is several times denser than that of humans. She is not immortal, but she ages far more slowly than humans. Valkyrie is immune to all earthly diseases and is difficult to injure. Her Asgardian physiology grants her enhanced levels of stamina. Valkyrie can perceive the approach of death, in the form of a “deathglow” surrounding a person’s body. She does not know how death will come but she can tell that it is imminent. Valkyrie can transport herself and a dying or dead body to and from the realm of the dead by willing it. Valkyrie has had extensive training in sword fighting as well as unarmed combat and horseback riding. Her natural fighting ability is among the best of all Asgardians, matched only by Sif. Valkyrie carries as her weapon of choice, Dragonfang, an enchanted sword that was carved from the tooth of an extra-dimensional dragon by the wizard Kahji-Da. The sword eventually passed into the possession of the Ancient One, who in turn gave it to his disciple Doctor Strange. Strange went on to return it to the Valkyrie after she had bequeathed the virtually indestructible Black Knight’s Ebony Blade to its rightful owner. Valkyrie rides a winged horse named Aragorngiven to her by the current Black Knight.

Val with the Asgardians of the GalaxyAs I mentioned above, Valkyrie appears so high on this list mainly for my love of her as a character, and the long series of adventures she has had. I do feel that she is rarely used to her full potential. There was a brief time in the Defenders, just after she regained her immortal Asgardian body, that she was shown as a force to be reckoned with, nearly equal to Thor in power and personality. She became a truly imposing figure, and that made sense, given that her previous incarnations had all been funneled through a mortal host. Her burgeoning relationship with Annabelle Riggs was really lovely, and I am terribly disappointed that they decided to kill the character off, mainly to give Jane Foster, who had just given up the role of the Mighty Thor, a heroic place to land as the new Valkyrie. I long for the eventual return of Brunnhilde, and I think her inclusion in the Avengers could be a great way to give her some spotlight… although I loved the idea of the Secret Defenders that reunited her and Clea, along with others great female characters.

Mockingbird#8 – Mockingbird (Barbara “Bobbi” Morse)
Joined West Coast Avengers #1 (September 1984)
Creators: Len Wein; Neal Adams

Barbara Morse started her career as S.H.I.E.L.D. Agent #19, who met Ka-Zar in the Savage Land while undercover to gather intel on A.I.M. She eventually embarked on a romantic relationship with Ka-Zar until he met and fell in love with Shanna the She-Devil. A skilled agent with a PhD in Biochemistry, Barbara (now knows as Bobbi() briefly took on the costumed identity of Huntress. Her next appearance was finally in the guise of Mockingbird, teaming up with Spider-Man to root out some corruption in S.H.I.E.L.D. under the guidance of Nick Fury. They were successful in their Barbara Morse with Shanna the She-Devilmission, but Bobbi was badly injured in gunfire during the final melee. After a period of recovery, Mockingbird became a free agent, and next encountered Hawkeye during his time away from the Avengers, working security for Cross Technologies. Sparks flew as they successfully stopped Crossfire from his nefarious plot., and the two eloped after their first adventure.

Mockingbird in the WCAWhen Hawkeye returned to the Avengers, with his new wife by his side, then chairman The Vision asked the two of them to start a west coast branch of the team. The two gathered a team together, and became the motivating force and longest standing members of Avengers West Coast. One of their most significant adventures as a team spanned space and time, and found Bobbi trapped in the Old West, captured, drugged, and unknowingly forced into an intimate relationship with the Phantom Rider. When she eventually regained her memories, she battled the Phantom Rider, and in the heat of battle had the opportunity to save his life, but instead stood by and let him fall to his death. Ultimately returning to the present, her husband, and the team, life and adventures continued, but eventually Hawkeye discovered what his wife had done and had Mockingbird pantstrouble reconciling that with the Avengers “no killing” rule. The two temporarily separated, and Mockingbird led a small splinter group including Tigra and Moon Knight on several adventures. Ultimately, Bobbi was tricked by a group of several world governments into giving them access to Avengers compound as a “contingency plan” to stop the Vision should he ever try to take over the world again. By the time Mockingbird realized that their “contingency plan” was already active and raced to alert her teammates, the deed had already been done and the Vision had been dismantled. This deepened the rift between husband and wife. While Hawkeye remained an active member, Mockingbird became a reservist. She was involved in a battle with Ultron, where the mad robot created another robot bride, Alkhema whose brain patterns had been based on Mockingbird’s. When Ultron was ultimately defeated, Hawkeye and Mockingbird seemed to have reconciled.

Mockingbird and Hawkeye

Modern-day MockingbirdIn fact, a Skrull had kidnapped Bobbi and replaced her with a sleeper agent called Hr’pra prior to Bobbi and Clint’s reconciliation. She served with the team for some time. But H’rpra/Bobbi was captured by Satannish the Supreme, the AWC embarked upon what would be their last mission. The team battled the combined forces of Satannish and Mephisto. During their escape, “Bobbi” was killed by Mephisto. Shortly thereafter, the Vision disbanded the West Coast team. It was fifteen years (real-time) before Mockingbird’s story was picked up again. After the climactic battle between the Skrulls and Earth’s heroes during the Secret Invasion, the individuals replaced by Skrull agents were revealed to be alive and well, including Bobbi. She was apparently one of the first people captured and replaced. The returned Mockingbird then joined her estranged husband and his teammates in the New Avengers. Bobbie also formed a private spy organization, the World Counterterrorism Agency, as a side-gig. She was joined on one of her first missions by her husband, Clint Barton, as Ronin, and they reconciled over the Phantom Rider issue once and for all. During a conflict with Superia, Mockingbird was grievously injured, and in order to save her life, Nick Fury administered a formula that combined the Super Soldier serum that turned Steve Rogers into Captain America, and the Infinity Formula that essentially gave Nick Fury immortality.

Mockingbird and Lance HunterAfter another successful stint with the Avengers, Mockingbird becomes involved once more with S.H.I.E.L.D. where Nick Fury assigned her to be the liaison with Parker Industries, operated by Peter Park (Spider-Man). She shared several adventures with Spider-Man, and also became Silk’s handler when the young heroine attempted to infiltrate Black Cat’s criminal gang. During this time she also began a relationship with fellow spy Lance Hunter, in spite of the fact that Bobbi frequently referred to him as “Clint” during intimate moments, whether due to a Freudian slip, or intentional Hawkeye and Spider-Manribbing, no one is sure. Bobbi also tried to help Clint (Hawkeye) after his murdered Bruce Banner to stop the threat of the Hulk. Shortly after this she found herself working with Spider-Man again, and the two shared a brief romantic relationship before realizing that they shared very little in common. Most recently she has helped sponsor Nadia Van Dyne, the new Wasp in her endeavor to start a scientific collaborative called Genius in Action Research Labs (G.I.R.L. ) She also maintains her ties with the Avengers, most recently joining Force Works to help Iron Man, and being called upon to help out during the Empyre/Cotati wars.

Mockingbird is a trained S.H.I.E.L.D. agent who graduated at the top of her class and as such she is very proficient in several forms of hand-to-hand combat, including Kung Fu and Taekwondo and familiar with a wide range of weapons. She usually uses a pair of batons which can be combined to form a single bō-staff in combat, weapons with which she has great expertise. Morse also uses a pair of night vision and vision enhancing goggles. Her latest uniform came attached with wing-like extensions allowing Morse to glide on wind currents. Due to the formula she was injected with, Bobbi has a degree of super-strength, with an unknown upper-limit, strong enough to dent steel with her bare hands, and enhanced agility. Her healing speed was also accelerated, being able to heal all the catastrophic wounds that put her in a comatose state. She can also recover from a broken leg in under 24 hours. Her aging process has been seemingly halted for good.

Mockingbird's Battle Staves

While I always enjoyed Mockingbird during her tenure with Avengers West Coast, she became a favorite character of mine under the writing guise of Chelsea Cain who wrote a 12 issue series that was fairly divisive among fans, but critically acclaimed, and one of my favorite comics. It really showed off Bobbi’s brilliance and competence as an agent, and was filled with humor as well. I would love to see an Avengers series penned by Cain, although this is highly unlikely.

Winsome Wasp#7 – Wasp (Janet Van Dyne)
Joined Avengers #1 (September 1963)
Creators: Stan Lee; Jack Kirby; Ernie Hart

One of the longest running Avengers, and the second longest-running leader of the team after Captain America, The Wasp, like her contemporaries, the Invisible Girl and Marvel Girl, was created in the early 1960’s and suffered from the general depictions of women at during the time. Perhaps Janet suffered the most from her stereotypical depiction as a ditzy, man-crazy, socialite shown as the weak-link of the team. It’s only fitting that her evolution through the latter half of the 20th century allowed her to blossom into one of the cleverest of the team, and one of their best leaders. She has endured physical and emotional abuse over the years that would daunt or embitter less determined people, maintaining her upbeat, positive outlook.

Wasp's first appearanceJanet van Dyne was born the socialite daughter of wealthy scientist Vernon van Dyne. When her father was killed by an alien entity unleashed during one of his experiments, Janet turned to his associate Dr. Hank Pym for aid and convinced him to help her. In order to avenge her father’s death, she underwent a biochemical procedure that granted her the ability to grow wings upon shrinking under four feet tall and used a supply of “Pym particles” by which to change her size. Together, she and Ant-Man defeated the alien and avenged her father. Janet decided to remain as Wasp and be Hank’s partner as she had fallen in love with him, though Hank initially rejected her feelings due to the similarities between her and his first wife that had been murdered. After the initial confrontation with Loki that brought together the founding Avengers, it is Janet and Hank who propose forming a team of superheroes. Janet suggests the name for the team and becomes a founding member. Never lacking confidence or bravery and by nature an outgoing personality, Janet is always in the thick of battles with villains, who include Norse gods and aliens, despite being the most underpowered member of the team.

Wasp 1960sThough Janet hoped that her long-term boyfriend Hank would propose, their relationship does not move forward to that point until something more dramatic happened. The new vigilante Yellowjacket broke into the Avengers mansion, demanded to be admitted as a member of the team, claimed to have killed Hank Pym, and then kidnapped Janet. Not believing that Yellowjacket was Hank’s killer, she attempted to find where Yellowjacket is holding Hank, but instead determines that Yellowjacket was, in fact, her boyfriend. Before revealing this, and during the period in which Yellowjacket still believeed himself to have killed Hank, Janet married him, though the wedding was disrupted by an attack from the Circus of Crime. During the fight, it was revealed that Yellowjacket was Pym.

Wasp attacks!After a departure from the team, she also battled Equinox alongside Spider-Man and Yellowjacket; during this time her powers were augmented to allow her to harness her body’s bio-electrical current and fire powerful blasts of energy which she called her “wasp’s stings,” and to harness the kinetic energy unleashed by her shrinking to giver her added strength and energy. During another of her breaks from active Avengers duty, Janet approached the team with concerns about her husband having suffered a breakdown and attacked former teammates. In attempting to find a way to help him, she was captured by a brainwashed Hank, and used by Ultron as a template to create Jocasta to be Ultron’s bride. She is rescued when Jocasta alerts the Avengers to her location, and Black Panther suggests that the A.I.’s ability to reach out to them was brought about because of Janet’s personality breaking through. Janet soon discovered that her husband, then paranoid, overbearing and verbally abusive, had concocted a plan to make himself look good in front of the Avengers by staging an attack that can only he can stop. When she attempted to dissuade him, Hank struck her; she divorced him soon after and took a very brief break from the team. When Janet returned to the Avengers, she proposed that the team is in need of new leadership and nominated herself for the role of Chairperson. Janet took to the role naturally, proving to be an efficient and smart leader who was praised by Captain America for her leadership skills. She makes it a point to increase the number of women on the team and recruited She-Hulk and Captain Marvel (Monica Rambeau). At the same time as taking on leadership of the team, Janet began to work in earnest as a professional fashion designer. She also renewed her social life, engaging in a whirlwind romance with Tony Stark before learning that he was her colleague from the Avengers, Iron Man.

Wasp kayos the Collector
The Wasp lets loose on The Collector

Wasp and CapJanet briefly handed leadership of the team off to the Vision, though he soon left the team and returned the position to her. The new team line-up proves difficult, and Janet clashed with Hercules who took issue with acknowledge a woman as leader. During the Under Siege storyline, Janet led the team during a time where they were attacked from all sides and nearly overwhelmed. She defeated Titania and the Absorbing Man, then led a team against Baron Zemo’s forces to rescue Captain America, the Black Knight, and other team members who had been captured. Shortly after the resolution of this story, she stepped down from leadership once more, succeeded by Monica Rambeau in that position. After leaving the team, she battled the threat of Red Ronin by herself, then later joined the West Coast Avengers. Initially, acted as though the team leader, to the chagrin of the team’s actual leader, Hawkeye. During this time, she resumeds a romantic relationship with Hank. Although he was elected as a regular member of the Avengers West, Janet chose to become a reserve member. Several years later, Janet returned to the Avengers main team, first as reserve status, and later as a full member. During the Destiny War, the Janet of the present became the leader of a team of Avengers assembled from different time periods, cited as being chosen due to her “inner strength and flexibility to give the team direction without exerting too much control”. After the Destiny War, Janet returned to work with the Avengers once more, taking up leadership of the team and commanding the team through a number of conflicts, including Kang the Conqueror’s invasion of Earth. Janet continued to make sure there was a strong female presence on the team, and the number of women on the team outnumbered the number of men for the first time in Avengers history. Though her relationship with Hank Pym remained strong for some time, she turned down his proposal of remarrying. During the Lionheart of Avalon storyline, Janet was shown fighting the Wrecking Crew while at giant size, a power she had rarely, if ever, used prior. She was shown to be powerful enough at this size to take down a jet. She also had a brief fling with fellow team member Hawkeye.

Giant-Sized Wasp
The Wasp can grow too!

WaspJanet continued to serve with the Avengers intermittently over the next several years, until the Secret Invasion storyline where the Skrulls infiltrate Earth. After Queen Veranke was thought to be dead, the Skrull imposter pressed a button that made Janet increase in size rapidly and out of control. Janet realized that the “new” particles Pym had given her had turned her into a bio-bomb, and she tried to flee the battlefield and take as many Skrulls with her as possible when she explodes. To save both the city and heroes, Thor used his enchanted hammer Mjolnir to create a spatial warp that seemingly dispersed Janet into nothingness. Thor was devastated by the act and vows to avenge her. Upon accepting Janet’s death, Hank Pym took up his ex-wife’s role as the Wasp. Eventually it was revealed that Janet had not died after all, but had been shunted into a Microverse by Thor’s spatial warp in the same spot that she appeared to have died. Using her Avengers communication card she was able to send a signal with help from a local being called Cru-Sani. Giant-Man, Captain America, Thor and Iron Man went into the Microverse to rescue her and found her alive and fighting against an evil despot, Lord Gouzar. After liberating the Microverse from Lord Gouzar’s tyranny, Janet and her fellow Avengers returned to their normal universe.

Wasp takes out the Absorbing Man
Wasp takes out the Absorbing Man

Following a brief hiatus, Janet returned to the team as a member of the Avengers Unity Squad, a team that brought together superhumans and X-Men to help dispel the distrust of mutants. In the Avengers Unity Squad’s battle with the Horsemen of Death, the Wasp defeated both the resurrected Banshee and Sentry by utilizing both her ability to grow to giant size as well as her ability to control insect life. During a time travel battle with Kang the Conqueror, Janet ended up being the last surviving human and began a romance with Havok (Alex Summers). Together they finally manage to undo the horrific damage Kang had inflicted upon the Earth, but this led directly into a major conflict with Red Skull.

Janet and Nadia Van DyneAfter a side adventure where Janet aided the all-new Wolverine (X-23), she returned once more to the Avengers for a battle with Ultron, who had physically merged with Hank Pym. The team defeated the mad robot, but they lost Hank in the process. A short time later, the Avengers butler, Jarvis, brought to Janet’s attention Nadia Pym, Hank’s daughter from his first marriage. Nadia was acting as a new Wasp, using her father’s Pym particles, as well as her extensive training as an assassin by the same Soviet covert group that had trained the Black Widow. Janet took Nadia under her wing as both a mentor, and a financial supporter of Nadia’s desire to create a place where teen girls could explore their scientific endeavors. Nadia even took Janet’s last name in her honor. Lately Janet had joined Black Panther’s Agents of Wakanda.

Making use of the cellular implantation of sub-atomic Pym particles, the Wasp possesses the power to alter her physical size, causing her body’s mass to be shunted to or gained from an alternate dimension known as Kosmos. She is able to shrink to a minimum of several centimeters or grow to a maximum of several hundred feet. Smaller or larger sizes are possible but the exertion puts a strain on her body. Initially, these abilities stemmed from use of a Pym particle gas released from special capsules, and later biochemical augmentation by Henry Pym. Over time, however, her body absorbed enough particles to cause cellular mutation due to repeated exposure to Pym particles, allowing her to alter her size at will. At miniature size, her strength level increases as her body’s mass is compacted. At giant size, her strength and endurance increase geometrically with her height, reaching superhuman levels. Despite the advantages of giant size, Janet usually prefers to remain the diminutive Wasp, calling on her growth power only in times of extreme emergency. At miniature size, the Wasp grows a pair of translucent insect wings from her back, a result of genetic modifications provided by Hank Pym. These grant her the power of flight, at speeds up to 40 mph. The Wasp is able to harness and augment her body’s natural bio-electric energy, releasing it from her hands in powerful electrical force bursts, which she calls her “wasp’s stings”. The Wasp’s genetic modifications also grant her the ability to sprout small prehensile antennae from her temples which allowed her to telepathically communicate with and control insects.

Wasp takes out Modred
Wasp takes out Modred the Mystic

The Wasp is a terrific example of a great Avengers character who received the bulk of her characterization through her association with the team. Her journey from fairly ineffectual ditz, to powerful assured leader was done gradually over time in a way that showed great care and continuity by Avengers writers over time. She has proven herself a great asset to the team in many different ways, from combat, to leadership, to financial support, to team spirit. She has successfully shaken her association with Hank Pym, who overshadowed her for so many years, and has developed strong relationships with many other characters across the Marvel Universe, being shown to be good friends with Susan Richards (Invisible Woman), Jennifer Walters (She-Hulk), Bobbi Morse (Mockingbird), and now as a fantastic mentor to the new Wasp. Janet is a welcome addition to any team of Avengers, either as leader or member, but only if she is treated with the respect and ability she deserves. I’m very glad she wasn’t involved in Brian Bendis’ tenure writing the team for fear of what he might have done with her. One of my favorite quirks that artist George Perez introduced into Jan’s character, and profession as a fashion designer, is her penchant for changing her costume frequently, whenever the whim hits her.

Showing off a new costume
Wasp shows off a new costume.

Moondragon#7 – Moondragon (Heather Douglas)
Joined Avengers #151 (September 1976); Originally given probationary status in Avengers #137 (July 1975)
Creators: Bill Everett; Mike Friedrich; George Tuska

Ah, Moondragon, a more complex, fascinating hero is hard to find. Hated by most, beloved by some, written well by only a select number of writers. Overall, Moondragon comes in at #5 for my all-time favorite superheroines, but she’s only ranked at #6 for my favorite Avengers, and the reason for that is except for a few minor exceptions, I feel that is largely mishandled when used as an Avenger. She has gotten much better development and treatment in other titles. Still, she has a few high moments in my mind during her tenure with the Avengers, and those coupled with my overall admiration for the character merits her a high spot on this list.

Heather Douglas was born in Los Angeles daughter of Arthur and Yvette Steckley Douglas. When she was still a girl, her family was driving through the desert when they accidentally happened to see the Thanos’ spaceship landing; Thanos wanted no witnesses to his arrival, so he destroyed their car. Heather was thrown clear and survived, but her parents were killed. (She would later discover that her father’s soul was bound into a new body, becoming Drax the Destroyer.) She was found by Thanos’ father, Mentor, who took her to Moondragonhis home world, Titan, to be raised by the monks of Shao-Lom.

The monks taught Heather to utilize her body to its full potential, training her to become a formidable martial artist. They also taught Heather various scientific disciplines such as chemistry and genetic engineering; but most significantly, they helped her tap into the latent psionic powers, present within all humans. Heather excelled at this and was able to develop her mental powers far beyond even those of her teachers, so much so that she eventually and inadvertently connected with a powerful entity called the Dragon of the Moon. The Dragon immediately tried the novice priestess and overwhelm her, but Heather fought back, driving the Dragon away. Heather’s victory filled her with pride and an overwhelming sense of superiority. To commemorate her victory, she took the name Moondragon, but unbeknownst to Heather, the Dragon continued to subtly influence her on a subconscious level. Sometime later, Thanos attacked Titan, destroying the monastery and the Shao-Lom monks. Moondragon escaped in her spaceship and fled to Earth.

Moondragon and Daredevil
Daredevil makes Moondragon see the error of her ways.

Her first return to Earth was under the identity of “Madam MacEvil” an alias she used to perform genetic experiments to develop a means to combat Thanos; this led to the creations of some villains such as Angar the Screamer. She forced Iron Man to battle Namor in order to study them. She then revealed her true identity and helped the Avengers in their first confrontation with Thanos. Mantis returned to the Avengers when the revelation of the “Celestial Madonna,” a woman who was prophesied to give birth to a universal savior, was about to be revealed. Unbeknownst to her, Moondragon was one of two candidates prepared to become the “Celestial Madonna”, but Mantis proved to be the better candidate. She then decided to join the Avengers. and again aids them against Thanos as well as a handful of additional adventures. Her time with the team is short, and she argues with Thor about his need to spend time with mortals, when he was clearly so far superior to them, as she perceived herself to be. During this time she also met Patsy Walker who became the heroine Hellcat. Even though Walker wanted to join the Avengers, Moondragon convinced her to accompany her to Titan so she could train her. Moondragon returned when the Avengers confronted Korvac; her powers allowing her to see into his mind while they fought. She realized that Korvac’s goal of saving the universe by ruling it was one that he truly believed in and she believed it was the correct choice. She stayed out of the battle as Korvac slaughtered her teammates, until Korvac, betrayed by his beloved used the last of his cosmic powers to restore life to his opponents and let himself die.

Moondragon and Thanos
Moondragon and Thanos in a Mind War

After this unsettling conflict, Moondragon left Earth with her father, Drax and found a planet immersed in war. To save them, Moondragon took mental control of all its inhabitants and forced them to live in peace, setting herself up as their “peace goddess”. Seeing the moral ambiguity of the situation, Drax summoned the Avengers to intervene and in the resultant confrontation, Moondragon was forced to kill her father with her mental powers. Afterwards, Thor brought her before his father, Odin, to be judged. Odin sensed within Moondragon a stalwart but tainted spirit. He condemned her to wear a magical headband that reduced her mental powers until she could overcome her arrogance and learn humility. He also assigned Valkyrie to be her guardian, and sentry should the Dragon of the Moon, which he sensed within her, try to assert control.

Moondragon and Defenders
Moondragon in the Defenders

When Valkyrie rejoined the Defenders, Moondragon was forced to come along. At first, she sent out low level telepathic signals, luring threats to the vicinity of the Defenders’ headquarters, hoping that one of these threats would remove her headband or force the Defenders to remove the headband so she could use her powers to aid them unhindered. Despite the fact that Moondragon resented being with the Defenders, her mental powers stifled causing her to feel like a caged animal, she fiercely desired to be accepted by them as the good and heroic person she perceived herself to be. In an encounter with Asgardian trolls, Moondragon resisted the temptation of letting the trolls and the Dragon of the Moon remove her headband, thus proving herself to Odin, who promptly let the headband fall off. This personal victory was short-lived, for soon afterwards the Defenders came into conflict with an entity comprised of mutated spores which Moondragon help to vanquish. In doing so, Moondragon became infected with the spores. When she finally discovers weeks later that she has been infected, the spores have supplanted a good portion of her own internal organs and she is doomed to become a rampaging monster and ultimately die. The Dragon of the Moon appeared to her again and told her that it could save her life, but only if she agreed to be its host. Moondragon initially turned down its offer, knowing that it would use her to kill the Defenders and spread evil across the cosmos. The Dragon then mocked her sentimentality by showing her the negative things the other Defenders were saying about her behind her back even though she had reformed. Finally overwhelmed with pain and humiliation, she accepted the Dragon’s offer becoming totally corrupted by its influence. Moondragon battled the Defenders until Andromeda, Interloper, Manslaughter, and Valkyrie sacrificed themselves to kill both the Dragon and its host. Heather’s soul manages to survive, and, free from the Dragon again, contacted her cousin Pamela; through her, she was able to obtain a new cloned body for herself on Titan. For a while, she and her cousin, who became the heroine Sundragon, adventured together in space.

Moondragon in WhiteLater, when Adam Warlock sought companions to help him safeguard the Infinity Gems, he choses Moondragon to keep the Mind Gem—but only after erecting safeguards so she could not exploit the gem’s full power. Still, she agreed to join his team, the Infinity Watch. She eventually lost the gem when it was stolen by Rune. Moondragon later became an associate of Genis-Vell (the third Captain Marvel), determined to help him control his cosmic awareness. During this time, she found herself falling in love with Marlo Chandler, the wife of Rick Jones (whom Captain Marvel was bonded to). When Marlo and Rick begin having marital problems, she turns to Moondragon for solace, and the two are drawn together into a relationship, but it doesn’t last for Marlo, and she decides to reconcile with Rick. Moondragon tells Marlo that she must have unknowingly influenced Marlo’s behavior telepathically causing her to think she was romantically interested in her, but this was a lie to make the break-up easier on Marlo. In truth, Moondragon was heartbroken; she left shortly after with Genis’ sister, Phyla-Vell.

Moondragon and PhylaMoondragon and Phyla-Vell become in embroiled in the two Annihilation events, first becoming in entangled in Thanos’ dealing with Annihilus, who was hell-bent on destroying our universe. Once the threat of Annihilus was resolved, Moondragon and Phyla-Vell (then called Quasar) realized that they have fallen in love and they began an intense relationship. When the techno-organic race, the Phalanx took over the Kree Empire, Quasar and Heather try to find the ‘savior’ that is revealed to Quasar in a vision. During the adventure, Moondragon in Dragon formthe Dragon of the Moon returned and changed Heather into a draconic form, intending to take full control of her body. Moondragon was able to resist the mind-parasite, and despite the fact that Heather would never be able to return to human form, Phyla remained by her lover’s side. Their time together was ultimately cut short as Ultron, who was leading the Phalanx, killed Heather in battle. Heather died in Phyla’s arms and her soul was sent to oblivion inside the Dragon of the Moon. Sometime later, Phyla and Drax were alerted by a prophet that Moondragon was attempting to return. They sought out Mentor for aid, and he determined to only course was to kill the two of them so that they were able to journey into the realm of the dead to retrieve Heather. Their plan was successful, and Moondragon was returned to life in her human form.

Moondragon GuardianHeather returned to Knowhere with Phyla and became a member of the Guardians of the Galaxy. She assisted Cosmo and Mantis as part of the telepathic support team. Her resurrection left her mind more open than it had been before her death, so she was able to detect things before either Mantis or Cosmo could, but it also made her more susceptible to psychic manipulation. With Phyla’s death at the hands of Adam Magus, Moondragon took it upon herself to become a field agent for the Guardians of the Galaxy. However, she ends up becoming host to an alien parasite originating in a parallel universe across the Fault, a time-space tear created by Black Bolt’s Terrigen Bomb. Members of the Church of Universal Truth kidnap Moondragon, seeing the parasite as a god, whom they intend to worship at birth. Luckily, the Guardians mount a successful rescue mission. With the help of Knowhere’s medical staff, they were able to remove the organism from Moondragon. During these experiences, Moondragon had visions of a cocoon and Phyla being alive, and the two were reunited. Tragically, Phyla was killed yet again by a resurrected Thanos, which caused Heather to lash out at him before Star-Lord subdued the Mad Titan with a Cosmic Cube. Despite wanting Thanos dead, Moondragon assisted Mantis in keeping the Mad Titan in check while probing his mind to find out why he had returned to the world of the living. After Adam Magus detonated the Church converted worlds to open the Fault further, Thanos managed to escape captivity and attacked the Guardians, but was eventually subdued, but it cost them the lives of Drax, Star-Lord, and Nova.

Moondragon MergedFor a time, Moondragon left the Guardians of the Galaxy and wandered space on her own, missing her beloved. Upon learning that an alternate, more heroic version of herself from another reality had joined the Guardians, Moondragon was susceptible once again to the Dragon of the Moon. Moondragon was jealous of her counterpart, who seemed to be perfect in every way, without having to struggle, and with her still living Phyla by her side. The Dragon fanned Heather’s desire to destroy her counterpart our of jealousy. Heather joined Gamora’s new splinter Guardians group and manipulated events so that her team would eventually confront the original Guardians, giving her the opportunity to confront and destroy the alternate Moondragon. Unbeknownst to her, the alternate Moondragon had also been manipulating events so that the two would meet, but she intended to save her counterpart from the Dragon’s darkness. Their confrontation ended with the alternate Moondragon victorious, and, since she was willing to share everything that she had, the two merged into a single being. The new Moondragon seemed at peace, but they were unaware that the Dragon of the Moon was still buried in their subconscious, and planning their downfall.

Moondragon primarily possesses tremendous telepathic abilities which have enabled her to control the population of an entire planet to stop an ongoing war, while enslaving the thunder god Thor as her personal lover. She has demonstrated willpower and spiritual strength rivaling that of Thanos, and the Sorcerer Supreme Doctor Strange, pierced the psionic shields of the cosmic entity Galactus to enable communication, and when borrowing her abilities, Thanos almost manages to overwhelm the Devourer. Beyond communication and control of other minds, she can induce mental illusions, cause personality changes, and erase specific memories. She can also fire bolts of psionic energy as concussive blasts that can either stun an opponent or render an opponent brain dead. She is also a low-level telekinetic, an ability that lets her move and manipulate most physical matter by using only her thoughts, levitate herself and others, create shields of psychic force, and fire concussive psychokinetic energy blasts with sufficient strength to affect steel.

Moondragon

Moondragon has undergone extreme levels of training in the Titanian martial arts, as well as mental disciplines allowing her near-complete control over her body, including autonomic functions such as heartbeat, bleeding, and breathing, as well as awareness of pain. She has honed her strength, speed, stamina, agility and reflexes to her highest limits. Her martial arts skills have even allowed her to beat Captain America and Mantis in hand-to-hand combat. Heather possesses a genius intellect and is extremely knowledgeable in various areas of advanced Titanian scientific disciplines such as genetics and bionics and has been able to upgrade the cyborgs Ramrod, and Angar the Screamer, and restore Daredevil’s eyesight. She is also a highly skilled starship pilot. She has demonstrated the ability to assume the form of her namesake, a fire-breathing dragon capable of surviving in outer space, traversing interstellar distances. However, it is unclear if she retains this ability after her latest resurrection.

Moondragon’s powers are not without weaknesses. For instance, Rick Jones was able to stop Moondragon’s telepathy by taping her to a chair, covering her eyes and mouth with duct tape, and placing headphones on her ears that blast deafening Limp Bizkit nu metal music. This caused Moondragon to lose touch with her senses and concentration, thus leaving her powerless. Moondragon also suffers from emotional instability due to her isolated upbringing and intense superiority complex, which alienates her from her environment. This sometimes causes her to coerce decisions or render ruthless judgment. However, more positive later relationships have helped her emotional state, particularly her relationship with Phyla-Vell, which has allowed her to be more open and compassionate towards others.

Avengers Infinity
Avengers Infinity

What I love about Moondragon is her intense desire to do good, and to be a hero, and the incredible struggle she endures to do so, whether that struggle in internal, based on her own insecurities and misguided feelings of superiority, or external through manipulations by the Dragon of the Moon. I love that she is not easy to like, and is arrogant, even when she is helping. She is very capable, and incredibly powerful, and she earned that ability through hard work and training. She does not love easily, but her bonds with her father, and with Phyla, sadly now deceased, are strong. I am particularly interested in her relationship with Mantis, which hasn’t really been explored fully, given their shared backgrounds in being honed as candidates for the Celestial Madonna. While I am enjoying seeing her in the spotlight again, I wish we could move on from the Dragon of the Moon storyline, and allow Moondragon to struggle, succeed and fail on her own merits, rather than those of an invasive mental parasite. I wouldn’t mind seeing her interact with the Avengers again, although I think I prefer her with the Guardians of the Galaxy.

My Favorite Avengers, #15 – 11

Four out of Five of this crew were in the Fearless Defenders!

The Avengers appearing in this group, leading up to the Top 10, are an interesting batch. We’ve got our last male Avenger to appear, and he was romantically involved with one of the women on this list when he was first introduced. Two of these characters have a linked origin, two of them have also both been members, or quasi-members of the Fantastic Four, two of them have both been members of the Defenders, and two of them were both involved with the Thunderbolts. Lots of links in this crew, and it’s a nice batch, if you ask me.

#15. Hawkeye – Clint Barton
Joined Avengers #16 (May 1965)
Creators: Stan Lee, Don Heck

Hawkeye and Black WidowCaptain America is clearly the Avenger who was not a founding member, who is most associated with the team, and has the biggest impact on it. He throughly represents that Avengers spirit, the guiding force that makes the team what it is. For Captain American to be that figurehead; that guiding spirit, there clearly needs to be success stories of members for whom he has made a difference, and for whom the Avengers have shaped into a better person… a better hero as a result. In my eyes, Hawkeye is that Avenger. After getting started as an Iron Man villain alongside the Black Widow, he, along with Quicksilver and the Scarlet Witch, were the first new members to join after Captain America, and they did so in the wake of all the founding members departing. Dubbed Cap’s Kooky Quartet, the trio were all reformed villains, making a go at a heroic lifestyle, and while each had their challenges, Hawkeye was the brash rebel who viewed Cap as the establishment… the old guard to constantly challenge and provoke. Clint never became a straight-laced, by the books “Captain America,” but he does owe much of his eventual successful career as a leader, first of the West Coast Avengers, and then of the Thunderbolts, to his former mentor.

GoliathAfter a long stint with the Avengers, butting heads with Cap, slowly learning the ropes of becoming an effective team player, taking a stint as the size-changing hero Goliath with the help of Hank Pym’s growth serum, and coming to terms with his criminal past under the mentorship of The Swordsman, and the conflicted relationship with his brother Barney, Hawkeye eventually left the team to prove himself on his own. Ironically, he immediately hooked up with the Defenders for a short period, even battling against his former teammates in the Avengers/Defenders Clash. Clint spent some time trapped in the year 1870, where he became partners with the old-time Western hero, Two-Gun Kid, even going so far as to bring him back to the present when rescued by Thor and Moondragon. Later, after helping the Avengers battle the Collector and Korvac, Hawkeye was ready to rejoin the team, only to be forced out by the U.S. Government, who, under the guise of Affirmative Action, replaced him with The Falcon.

Hawkeye and his bride, Mockingbird

Forced to find his own path, Hawkeye started working for Cross Technologies, where he got involved with former S.H.I.E.L.D. agent Bobbi Morse, aka Mockingbird. Their adventures together left Hawkeye with a new hearing aid to compensate for an 80% hearing loss due to a sonic attack, and a new bride in Bobbi. After some time away, and a series of adventures with his new wife Clint returned to the Avengers, and was asked to chair a new West Coast branch of the team. Hawkeye’s tenure with the team was marked with several wins, but some devastating personal losses as well. During a time-travel adventure, Mockingbird was taken captive by the Phantom Rider, who drugged her, convinced her that they were in love, and forced her to engage in a sexual relationship. Mockingbird regained her senses and in the resulting battle between the two, allowed the Phantom Rider to fall to his death. When Mockingbird confessed what she did, Hawkeye was stunned that his wife would allow a man to die instead of facing justice. Their relationship frayed as Mockingbird left the West Coast Avengers and separated from Hawkeye. The pair reconciled several months later when Mockingbird helped Hawkeye and his former mentor Trick Shot fend off an army of supervillains seeking a bounty set on Hawkeye’s right arm. Shortly thereafter, the West Coast Avengers found themselves caught in a supernatural battle between the demons Satannish and Mephisto. The Avengers were victorious, but in retaliation, Mephisto tried to kill Hawkeye with a fiery parting shot. Mockingbird intervened to save him, and died in his arms. After a period of isolation in the Canadian Rockies to mourn his loss, and the subsequent dissolution of the West Coast team, Hawkeye returned to the Avengers for their final battle against Onslaught. The team spent a year trapped in an alternate universe created by Franklin Richards, and when he was restored, Hawkeye regained his hearing.

ThunderboltsAfter further adventures with the Avengers, Hawkeye ended up leading the newly formed Thunderbolts, a team of reformed villains who had been tricked by Baron Zemo and needed guidance. Hawkeye proved to be a strong positive influence for the team who had a successful run as a force for good. During Brian Michael Bendis’ wretched Avengers Disassembled storyline, Hawkeye was killed by the Scarlet Witch. During a series of ridiculous stories, Clint was resurrected and killed again, only to be resurrected finally when Wanda rewrote reality again. Remaining hidden, Clint sought out Wanda, who he discovered living a quiet life in Eastern Europe with no memory of her past. He decided to leave her be and forgave her for his murder. He ultimately returned to the Avengers borrowing Echo’s identity of Ronin to operate in secret. During this time the world was nearly taken over by Skrulls and their Secret Invasion. When a Skrull ship filled with humans who had been replaced by the shape-changing aliens at various points over the past couple of years, is discovered Mockingbird is among the newly released. Hawkeye helped his long-missing wife adjust to life again and the two shared a series of adventures, both alone, and with the Avengers. Unfortunately, too time apart had passed and the pair realized that their romantic relationship was over.

Kate & ClintSince then, Hawkeye has served with various incarnations of the Avengers, and embarked on a series of adventures on his own as well, or with past partners like Black Widow, Falcon, Winter Soldier, or Kate Bishop, the new Hawkeye. Kate and Clint shared a special relationship, and even briefly started a new West Coast Avengers together.

While Clint Barton has no superhuman powers (with the exception of the period when using Pym particles as Goliath), he is at the very peak of human conditioning. He is an exceptional fencer, acrobat and marksman, having been trained from childhood in the circus and by the criminals Trick Shot and Swordsman. Hawkeye has also been thoroughly trained by Captain America in tactics, martial arts and hand-to-hand combat. Hawkeye excels in the use of ranged weapons, especially the bow and arrow and carries a quiver containing a number of customized “trick arrows”. He has gained a reputation for being able to “turn any object into a weapon”, and has been seen using items such as tin plates, coins, sticks and other debris to great effect against his enemies.

HawkeyeHawkeye used to be the type of character I couldn’t stand. The “bad-boy” always causing trouble, giving people a hard-time. But Clint’s evolution over the yours has really turned him into a very appealing hero. He’s incredibly skilled, and worthy of a pretty good-sized ego, but he’s been taken down a peg enough times that it keeps him from getting too full of himself. He’s a huge champion of the underdog, whether that means a ragtag team of reformed villains, or his low-income neighbors in the apartment building he owns. He’s a real ladies man, with a string of failed romances behind him, including Black Widow, Mockingbird, Spider-Woman, the Wasp, Scarlet Witch, and even Kate Bishop. Clearly there’s something about this guy that the ladies love, and his appeal has only gotten stronger in recent years under the pens of the likes of Matt Fraction, Jeff Lemire, Jim McCann, Matthew Rosenberg, and Ethan Sacks. He’s absolutely the type of guy you would get involved with even as you told yourself you know better. Anytime, Clint.

Black Widow#14 – Black Widow – Natasha Romanoff
Joined Avengers #111 (May 1973)
Created by Stan Lee, Don Rico, Don Heck

Like Hawkeye, Black Widow was first introduced as a villain, a Russian Spy, actually, who had some run-ins with Iron Man. She became romantically linked with Hawkeye and became involved with the Avengers pretty early, although she didn’t formerly join for some time. Natasha Romanova was born in Stalingrad, and became a Russian agent trained as a spy, martial artist, and sniper, and outfitted with an arsenal of high-tech weaponry, including a pair of wrist-mounted energy weapons dubbed her “Widow’s Bite”. Romanova eventually defected to the U.S. for several reasons including her love for Hawkeye.

Black Widow early daysNatasha was raised from very early childhood by the U.S.S.R.’s “Black Widow Ops” program. She had been taken to Department X, with other young female orphans, where she was brainwashed and trained in combat and espionage at the covert “Red Room” facility. There, she was biotechnologically and psycho-technologically enhanced—which provided a rationale for her unusually long and youthful lifespan. During that time she also had some training under the Winter Soldier (Captain America’s former teen sidekick, Bucky ‘Barnes), who had also been brainwashed, and the pair had a short romance. Each Black Widow was deployed with false memories to help ensure her loyalty. Romanova eventually discovered this after her defection.

After her early run-ins with Iron Man and the Avengers, Nick Fury approached her about becoming a free-lance agent of S.H.I.E.LD. and she quickly became on of their most effective and dangerous assets. She became romantically linked with Daredevil, and the two fought crime together in San Francisco fore a time After their relationship ended, Natasha continued to work for S.H.I.E.L.D. and shared some adventures with Spider-Man and Shang-Chi. Natasha also spent a brief stint leading the super-hero team known as The Champions which consisted of Hercules, Angel, Iceman, Ghost Rider and Darkstar.

Black Widow - Avengers LeaderAfter that, Black Widow spent several years mainly as a solo operative, living the dangerous spy’s life, working for S.H.I.E.L.D. and other shady organizations. She has recurring encounters with her old flame, Matt Murdock (Daredevil), once to prevent the Hand from resurrecting Elektra, again to protect an infant that Daredevil believes to be the Anti-Christ. While the romantic tension simmers between the two, they know it’s better to remain platonic friends and professional partners. At a certain point, Black Widow returns to the Avengers, co-leading the team with the Black Knight. When most of the team is believed dead, but in fact, shunted to an alternative reality created by Franklin Richards, Natasha tries to assemble a new team and fails. For some time, Natasha blames herself for the dissolution of the Avengers.

Two Black WidowsNatasha was challenged by Yelena Belova, a graduate from the “Red Room” training program, who was the first to ever surpass Natasha’s marks and considered herself the rightful successor to the “Black Widow” mantle. Natasha encouraged her to discover her individuality rather than live in blind service, asking her “why be Black Widow, when you can be Yelena Belova?” After several confrontations, Natasha subjected Yelena to intense psychological manipulations and suffering in order to teach her the reality of the espionage business, and an angry but disillusioned Yelena eventually returned home and temporarily quit being a spy. Although Matt Murdock is appalled by the cruelty of Natasha’s treatment of Yelena, Nick Fury described the action as Natasha’s attempt at saving Yelena’s life. Yelena has returned to aid Natasha on numerous occasions since then.

When Hydra abruptly conquered the United States guided by the hand of a twisted fascist version of Captain America that had secretly taken the real one’s place with the aid of a Cosmic Cube, Black Widow joined the last line of resistance, the Underground. Having grown tired of their reluctance to take the extreme approach to end Captain America even after his regime had leveled Las Vegas, Natasha left on her own to kill him.

When Hydra abruptly conquered the United States guided by the hand of a twisted fascist version of Captain America that had secretly taken the real one’s place with the aid of a Cosmic Cube, Black Widow joined the last line of resistance, the Underground. Having grown tired of their reluctance to take the extreme approach to end Captain America even after his regime had leveled Las Vegas, Natasha left on her own to kill him. While preparing to shoot Captain America with a sniper rifle, she was forced to reveal herself to prevent the Miles Morales Spider-Man from hilling him to prevent the innocent boy from becoming an assassin like her. During the fight, she was struck by Captain America’s shield, which broke her neck and killed her. t was later discovered that a series of clones of the original Black Widow had been produced by the Black Widow Ops Program following her death. They added the current memories of the deceased Natalia Romanova to one such clone while secretly disposing of the bad programming. This clone revealed herself to Hawkeye and the Winter Soldier, and eventually Captain America and the Avengers, but of the world at large still believe her to be dead.

Black Widow by Frank MillerBlack Widow has been enhanced by biotechnology that makes her body resistant to aging and disease and heals above the human rate; this also enhances her strength, speed, durability, reflexes, and stamina. The white blood cells in her body are efficient enough to fight off any microbe, or foreign element from her body, keeping her healthy and immune to most, if not all infections, diseases and disorders. Romanova has a gifted intellect. She displays an uncanny affinity for psychological manipulation and can mask her real emotions perfectly. She possesses the ability to quickly process multiple information streams and rapidly respond to changing tactical situations. Black Widow is a world-class athlete, gymnast, acrobat, aerialist capable of numerous complex maneuvers and feats, expert martial artist, marksman, and weapons specialist as well as having extensive espionage training. Black Widow uses a variety of equipment invented by Soviet scientists and technicians, with later improvements by S.H.I.E.L.D. scientists. She usually wears distinctively shaped bracelets which fire the “Widow’s Bite”, electro-static energy blasts that can deliver charges up to 30,000 volts, as well as “Widow’s Line” grappling hooks, tear gas pellets, and an aerosol instant knock-out gas called the “Widow’s Kiss.”

Black Widow is a cool character. I actually enjoy her solo adventures, or those with just one or two other allies, than her times with the Avengers. It’s ironic that she was made one of the founding members in the Marvel Cinematic Universe when her role in the comic has been much smaller, despite leading the team at one point. Her abilities are put to far better use in an espionage capacity than super-heroics. One of Natasha’s most fascinating aspects is her massive array of relationships with other heroes in the Marvel Universe. From the teams she has been associated with such as the Avengers and the Champions, to her work with S.H.I.E.L.D., connection with Wolverine, Invisible Woman, Daredevil Spider-Man, the Thunderbolts and more she is intrinsically linked to the Marvel Universe and a definite ally to have at your back.

Savage She-Hulk#13 – She-Hulk – Jennifer Walters
Joined Avengers #221 (July 1982)
Created by Stan Lee, John Buscema

Jen Walters, shy and lacking in confidence, the cousin of the far-more infamous Bruce Banner, The Incredible Hulk, was the last original character created by Stan Lee for Marvel. A lawyer whose father had some run-ins with crime boss Nicholas Trask, Jen is shot and injured by Trask on the day that her cousin Bruce is in town to tell her that he is the Hulk. Knowing that they share the same blood type and DNA, and being the only person who can save her in time, Bruce gives her a blood transfusion. His gamma-irradiated blood, combined with her anger, transformed Jennifer into the green-skinned She-Hulk when the mobsters tried to finish her off at the hospital. Initially her transformations were triggered by anger like her cousin Bruce, and while her She-Hulk persona was more aggressive, unlike Bruce, Jen retained her core personality and intelligence while in her She-Hulk form. She eventually gained control of her transformations when Michael Morbius cured her of a lethal blood disease.

She Hulk by ByrneEventually, Jennifer decided to remain in her She-Hulk form permanently—preferring the freedom, confidence, and assertiveness that it gave her compared to her more timorous and fragile “normal” form. After her brief solo career, where among other things, she befriended Patsy Walker, Hellcat; she joined the Avengers where she quickly became fast-friends with Janet Van Dyne, the Wasp, and formed a somewhat aggressive and flirtatious rivalry with Hawkeye. Her stint with the Avengers didn’t last that long though, as she was transported by the Beyonder to Battleworld with the rest of the team, and when they returned, she had taken the Thing’s place on the Fantastic Four and began dating Wyatt Wingfoot. She was granted detached membership status by the Avengers for this period. After her stint with the FF, Jen did rejoin the Avengers, shortly after the Masters of Evil’s attack on the mansion. During this tenure with the team, She-Hulk and the other members were influenced by Dr. Druid and his lover, Nebula to make him leader of the team.

She-Hulk the AvengerDuring this time, She-Hulk joined the staff of District Attorney Blake Tower, where she met Louise “Weezi” Mason, formerly the Golden Age superheroine called the Blonde Phantom; but she discovered that Mason had manipulated Towers into hiring She-Hulk so that Mason could again star in a comic book and thus avoid dying of old age. Mason’s husband, also a former comic book character, had passed away three years ago, but other, more popular characters from the era, such as Captain America and The Sub Mariner. She also served a brief stint with the team, Fantastic Force, and also with Heroes for Hire while she was dating Luke Cage. Eventually, Jen returned to the Avengers and remained with the team for some time. On one adventure, the She-Hulk was exposed to fellow Avenger Jack of Hearts’ radiation powers, causing her to lose control of the savage side of her personality. She injured several Avengers and went berserk in Bone, Idaho, virtually destroying the whole town. With Jen’s fear and rage at an all-time high the assembled Avengers couldn’t stop her. Only the Hulk himself was able to slow her down until Jack of Hearts was able to use his powers to balance her gamma levels and she regained control over her savage side.

Destroying Vision
She-Hulk tearing Vision in half!

Jennifer’s Avengers status eventually conflicted with her work at the DA’s office, and Tower let her go. She was hired as a lawyer for the Superhuman Law division of the New York firm of Goodman, Lieber, Kirtzberg & Holliway. Her worst fears came true when Scarlet Witch went temporarily insane and used her magic to cause Jen to lose control again. This time, she nearly killed Captain America and tore the Vision in half with her bare hands. Although she had been manipulated, She-Hulk was devastated at her part in the Vision’s death and the destruction of the town of Bone, Idaho. Ashamed, She-Hulk quit the Avengers to resume her law career and spend more time as plain Jennifer Walters. Sometime later, during a charity event, she spotted the newly-rebuilt Vision and promptly sought to make amends with him. They had a brief conversation, where she expressed her regret for what happened, and Vision forgave her. She also told him not to be mad at Wanda. After a brief Shulkietime with the Future Foundation while the Fantastic Four was lost in space/time, she returned to the Avengers again, helping them during their conflict with the X-Men, and working with the Might Avengers as both legal counsel as well as field agent.

After the second Secret War, when Dr. Doom gained the powers of a God and created an alternate reality on Battleworld, She-Hulk found herself leading a new team of super-heroines called A-Force, with a core membership of Medusa, Nico Minoru, Singularity, Dazzler and Captain Marvel. During the 2016 Civil War II storyline, after the Inhuman Ulysses predicts Thanos’ arrival on Earth, during which the She-Hulk was mortally wounded. When Iron Man learns that they used Ulysses’ precognitive power to ambush Thanos, he vows to make sure that no one uses it again. Before She-Hulk goes into cardiac arrest, she tells Captain Marvel to fight for the future. After Hawkeye was acquitted for shooting and killing Bruce Banner, Captain Marvel visited She-Hulk, who came out of her coma. When She-Hulk angrily demanded to know the verdict of Hawkeye’s trial, Captain Marvel remained silent.

Gray She-Hulk
Gray She-Hulk

Following Bruce Banner’s funeral, Jennifer Walters left the superhero business and continued to work as a lawyer, where she gained her first client: Maise Brewn, who was an Inhuman descendant. Due to the stress following the fight with Thanos, Jennifer started turning uncontrollably into her version of the Grey Hulk at different intervals. Jennifer helped Maise when she was recovering from the trauma and being evicted by her landlord Mr. Tick. When Maise got impatient with Jennifer and summoned a Fear Golem that killed Mr. Tick and some police officers, Jennifer is nearly killed by it and transforms into the Hulk. She defeated the Fear Golem and prevented Maise from committing suicide when Maise was arrested for reckless endangerment afterwards. Afterwards, Jennifer transformed into the Hulk and met with Hellcat. After changing back, Jennifer told the Hellcat that she was worried over the fact that her grey color could mean that she is like Bruce (since Bruce also had a grey incarnation). Later, Jennifer was watching a live video on the internet when a baker named Oliver turned into a Hulk-like creature on-camera. Jennifer spent several days trying to track him down, eventually confronting him as the Hulk at the Brooklyn Bridge. During the following battle, she lost control of her Hulk persona, almost killing him, though Hellcat managed to calm her down. However, the incident left Jennifer worried about losing control again. With the help of self-help guru Florida Mayer, Jennifer finally comes to terms with Bruce’s death and regains her green She-Hulk form. Currently the She-Hulk has become more Hulk like in appearance, and no longer has access to her full intelligence while in her super-powered form due to an influx of gamma radiation give her by a Celestial. She still serves on the Avengers in this form.

She-Hulk and Thor

A transfusion of gamma-irradiated blood from her cousin Bruce Banner (the Hulk) granted Jennifer Walters superhuman powers. In her She-Hulk form, she possesses enormous strength, that potentially makes her the physically strongest known woman in the Marvel Universe when her emotional state is sufficiently high. In addition She-Hulk possesses superhuman speed, agility, stamina, and reflexes. She-Hulk received a power upgraded from Eson, the Celestial, and became more powerful than ever before, far surpassing Thor, Captain Marvel and other characters in strength. Thor stated that She-Hulk “could seemingly tear me asunder with her bare hands, if she so desired”. A Cotati Possessed She-Hulk nearly killed the Thing with her bare hands and punched through the Invisible Woman’s force field, without even noticing Susan Richards’ efforts to protect her teammate. She-Hulk’s body is superhumanly durable and nearly impervious to force, pain, and disease: her skin can withstand extremes of temperature, as well as tremendous stresses and impacts without puncture wounds or lacerations. Her enhanced physiology renders her immune to all terrestrial diseases. She-Hulk also possesses a healing factor, which enables her to completely recover, within minutes from impaling. She-Hulk is a She-Hulk Lawyerformidable hand-to-hand combatant, having been trained by Captain America and Gamora. She is also a skilled and experienced attorney who attended the UCLA Shool of Law, where she was a member of the Order of the Coif, a national merit society for top legal scholars.

For me, She-Hulk is at her best when she retains her intelligence in her super-powered form as well as her assertive, uninhibited nature. While I have to say I think I prefer She-Hulk as a member of the Fantastic Four, her tenure as an Avenger is also usually lots of fun, and her personality meshes well with her teammates, especially Wasp, Hawkeye and Captain America. She has ties throughout the Marvel Universe and is generally well-known and well-liked. I very much look forward to her appearance in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, especially now that it has been announced that she will be played by Tatiana Maslany.

Hellcat!#12 – Hellcat – Patricia “Patsy” Walker
Joined Avengers #151 (September 1976); originally given probationary status Avengers #148 (February 1976).
Created as Patsy Walker by Stuart Little, Ruth Atkinson; as Hellcat by Steve Englehart, George Perez

Hellcat premiered as the star of a teen romantic-comedy series called Miss America Magazine in 1944, and was later integrated into the Marvel superhero franchises such as the Avengers and the Defenders. Patsy remained popular in her original incarnation until 1967, even appearing in a cameo at the wedding of Reed Richards and Susan Storm in Fantastic Four Annual #3 in 1965. When Steve Englehart was writing a solo feature for the X-Men’s Beast character, he remembered that cameo and introduced her as a supporting character. The Beast’s solo adventures only lasted a few issues, so when Englehart brought him over to the Avengers, he brought Patsy over as well.

I am Hellcat!After growing up in suburban Centerville, and marrying high-school sweetheart Robert “Buzz” Baxter, Patsy Walker became an assistant to scientist Hank McCoy, the mutant superhero the Beast. Estranged from her husband, now a U.S. Air Force colonel, Walker befriended McCoy, and, desiring to become a superhero, accompanied him on a quest with the Avengers where she adopted an ability-enhancing costume that formerly belonged to Greer Grant Nelson, the former masked adventuress the Cat, and took on the identity of Hellcat. After assisting the Avengers on a mission, she is offered membership on the team, but the cosmic adventurer Moondragon, persuades Hellcat to decline and instead accompany her to Titan for training in psychic ability and advanced martial arts. Walker’s training is soon interrupted when she returns to Earth to assist the supernatural hero Doctor Strange, joining the Defenders in the process.

Patsy and Val
Patsy & Val were close friend\

Post-HellDuring her lengthy stint with the Defenders, she became close friends with the Asgardian warrior, Valkyrie. She also met her future husband, Daimon Hellstrom, the Son of Satan, during the course of a quest with the Defenders. After learning that her mother had promised her soul to Satan, she marries Hellstrom. The two then retired from being superheroes. Ultimately, Hellstrom’s demonic inheritance took possession of him and drove Walker insane. Institutionalized, she was driven to suicide by the otherworldly being Deathurge. Trapped in Hell, Walker learned to develop and use her psychic powers. Hellstrom tricked the Avenger Hawkeye into returning her spirit to Earth; by making him believe he is retrieving his presumed-dead wife, Mockingbird. Resurrected and back on Earth, Walker retained the powers she developed in Hell. Once again a member of the Defenders, Hellcat focused on combating occult evils.

During the Superhero Registration Act time, Hellcat registered. She returned to the Avengers, and served as one of the Avengers Academy instructors, and was then assigned as the Avengers 50 State Initiative official superhero for Alaska, but eventually returned to New York City. Hellcat developed and maintained a deep friendship with the superheroes Firestar, Black Cat, and Monica Rambeau, partly stemming from their support of Firestar, who had developed and then survived breast cancer. In New York she Reconnected with Jennifer Walters, aka She-Hulk, and served as her Private Investigator for her work as an independent lawyer for hire. They shared several adventures, and aided the likes of Tigra, Hank Pym, and Captain America.

Hellcat Kicking BuzzHellcat is in possession of a magic cloak that enables her to sense mystical phenomena or deflect mystical attacks. She is able to summon her costume at will. She possesses retractable claws and grappling hooks on her wrists. Patsy is a well-trained martial artist and gymnast, having trained with the Avengers and Moondragon. Through her work with Moondragon and her time in Hell, Patsy also retains low-level psychic abilities.

Hellcat never really spent much time with the Avengers, but through her interactions with various Avengers members, and her general upbeat, positive attitude, she would be a great addition to the team. I would love to see this currently storyline wrap-up and a new writer take over the title and move it in a different direction. It would be a lot of fun to see Patsy spend some time with the team and develop stronger relationships with them. I know she is going to be featured in the new Iron Man comic, which will definitely be enough to get me to check it out.

Early Patsy!

Tigra#11 – Tigra – Greer Grant Nelson
Joined Avengers #211 (September 1981); Founding West Coast Avenger
Created as The Cat by Roy Thomas, Wally Wood; as Tigra by Tony Isabella, Don Perlin

Tigra (Greer Grant Nelson) was introduced as the non-superpowered crime fighter the Cat, in The Claws of the Cat #1 (November 1972). She was launched alongside Night Nurse and Shanna the She-Devil as part of a trio of comics to appeal to girls. The Claws of the Cat only lasted 4 issues, and a couple of years later, Greer mutated into the super powered tiger-woman, Tigra, in Giant-Size Creatures #1 (July 1974).

Chicago native, Greer Grant, was a sophomore in college when she met her future husband, policeman Bill Nelson. She left college to marry him. Bill was tragically killed in an off-duty shooting, and Greer had to find a job of her own. After weeks of searching, she ran into her old physics professor, Dr. Joanne Tumulo, who was working on the human potential experiments that turned Shirlee Bryant into the super powered villainess called the Cat. Greer persuaded Dr. Tumulo to let her undergo the experimental treatments as well. She emerged with superhuman physical and mental capabilities, and she embarked on a brief crimefighting career as the Cat. Unbeknownst to Greer, Tumolo was a member of the Cat People, a race of humanoids magically evolved from cats in Europe during the Middle Ages. Agents of the criminal organization called Hydra learned about the Cat People, and Tumolo, and abducted her to learn more. The Cat pursued Hydra, but during the confrontation managed to shoot her with “alpha radiation.” To save Greer’s life, Tumolo and the Cat People mystically transformed her into the legendary half-human, half-cat warrior they called the Tigra. As Tigra, Greer helped the Cat People defeat the Hydra agents.

Evolution to Tigra

Although she was able to use a Cat’s-Head Amulet to change back to her human form, Greer became so accustomed to and enamored of her feline form that she seldom made the transformation. Moving from Chicago, she became a full-time adventurer, encountering and defeating such menaces as the Rat Pack led by the Super Skrull, Kraven the Hunter, and Tabur. She also briefly worked with Red Wolf, the Thing, Spider-Man, and the Fantastic Four.

TigraWhen the Avengers found themselves shorthanded, Moondragon used her mental powers to compel a dozen unaffiliated heroes (apparently selected at random) to travel to Avengers Mansion and audition for the vacant position. Though he disapproved of Moondragon’s methods, Captain America offered Tigra a spot on the team. Although Tigra’s first tenure with the Avengers was brief, she served well. Her time with the Avengers was highlighted by her saving the world from destruction by the Molecule Man single-handed. Alone among the Avengers, she was able to get close enough to him to talk him out of his plan. She convinced him to seek help from a therapist and the Molecule Man has ceased to be a threat to this day. The Avengers also fought the Ghost Rider, who blasted the team with his terror-inducing hellfire. The nature of Tigra’s powers caused her to be affected by the exposure on a far deeper level than her teammates. She was left with great self-doubts about her qualifications as a member of Earth’s premier superhero team, particularly alongside such heavy-hitters as Thor an Iron Man. Ultimately she resigned her membership, leaving the team on good terms.

Moving to San Francisco, she became friends with Jessica Drew, the original Spider-Woman, and even aided Jessica’s resurrection when she had become a ghost detached from her body by a plan by Morgan Le Fey, and even reuniting briefly with the Avengers to do so. Months later, when Hawkeye moved to Los Angeles to form a West Coast branch of the Avengers, she was invited to join. She made a staunch addition to the team, despite the fact that the human and feline sides of her personality had become at odds with one another, causing her behavior to become somewhat erratic. Because of her catlike need for attention, she became involved with teammates Henry Pym and Wonder Man at the same time. The ultimate solution to her discordant nature presented itself when she and the Avengers journeyed to the magical dimension where the parent tribe of the Cat People lived. The ruler of the Cat People offered to magically cure her of her split personality if she would kill Master Pandemonium,, a demonic human being whom the Cat People feared and hated. Although Tigra agreed, she could not bring herself to violate the Avengers’ code against killing when she had the opportunity to do so. Despite this, the Cat People eventually gave Greer’s personality dominance so she could control her feline urges. After a lengthy stint with the West Coast Avengers, Tigra eventually left the planet with Starfox to embark on an adventure of hedonistic pleasure. This proved to be less pleasurable than she’d originally thought and she was grateful when Moondragon showed up and asked her to join a small group of Avengers to investigate a cosmic threat. After successfully defeating the Infinites, Greer returned to Earth.

Greer Tranformation

Tigra fought on Iron Man’s side during the Civil War, fully supporting Stark’s Registration Act, although she expressed concern about the fate of Captain America and the other heroes who opposed the Act and turned fugitive. Nonetheless, Tigra registered to comply with the law and also, as having become an agent of S.H.I.E.L.D., to actively aid in its enforcement. Pretending to switch allegiances, she successfully infiltrated Captain America’s Secret Avengers team as a mole and passed information to Iron Man for more than a week before being discovered by Black Panther. Captain America exploited her presence to feed disinformation to Iron Man about his team’s strategy for the final push later that day. She again believed she had become involved in a romantic relationship with fellow superhero Yellowjacket, however, at the climax of the Skrull Invasion, she discovered her relationship was not with the true Hank Pym, but rather with his Skrull replacement, had become pregnant with the imposter’s child. Henry Pym founded the Avengers Academy and had Tigra join as a teacher. He inspected her baby after his birth, and let Tigra know that he had no traces of Skrull DNA, figuring that his Skrull impostor had copied him down to the genetic level. Tigra asked Hank to act as the boy’s father if something were to happen to her. Most recently, Greer introduced her son William, to the new Wasp, Nadia Van Dyne, daughter of Hank Pym and his first wife. The two bonded famously, which thrilled Greer to no end.

Tigra in ActionTigra’s powers are the result of a combination of science, magic, and mental energy. Her physical appearance is distinctly cat-like. A thick, sleek coat of orange fur with black stripes covers her entire body. She has pointed ears, sharper-than-normal teeth with pronounced upper and lower canines, eyes with enlarged irises and vertically slitted pupils, and retractable claws on her feet and hands instead of nails. Her claws and teeth are sufficiently strong to puncture sheet steel, such as that found in a car body. Tigra also has a long semi-prehensile tail, and can willfully contact (but not grasp and lift) objects with it. Tigra’s feline physiology grants her various superhuman attributes including superhuman strength, speed, stamina, agility, reflexes, and resistance to physical injury. If she is injured, her physiology enables her to heal much faster and more extensively than an ordinary human.

Tigra’s senses of sight, smell, and hearing extend far into the superhuman range and are also superior to those of ordinary cats. Tigra can see farther, and with much greater clarity, than an ordinary human. She has this same level of clarity at night, and her vision also extends slightly into the infrared spectrum, allowing her to see in complete darkness. Her hearing is similarly enhanced, allowing her to hear a wider range of frequencies than a normal human as well as clearly hear sounds that would be far too faint for a human to detect. Exposure to intense, high-frequency sound is far more painful for Tigra than a normal human. Tigra’s sense of smell is developed to the point that she can recognize a person by scent alone, and track an individual across great distances and through complex environments. She can also sense changes in a person’s mood through changes in their scent. Thick pads on her feet, combined with her natural grace, allow her to move in almost complete silence.

Greer received a form of empathic ability when she became the Cat. She retains this ability as Tigra. With careful concentration, she can sense the emotions of others within her immediate proximity. Tigra is an experienced and formidable hand-to-hand combatant, with a unique fighting style that exploits her feline speed, agility, senses, and instincts. She is a superhumanly adept athlete and gymnast. Like all Avengers of her generation, she has sparred and trained extensively with Steve Rogers, the original Captain America. She is also a capable leader and pilot, qualified to operate Avengers aircraft as well as interstellar spacecraft. While working undercover in human guise, Tigra attended the New York Police Academy to investigate the decade-old murder of her husband Bill Nelson. After bringing the murderers to justice, she completed her training under her Greer Grant Nelson identity. On the HuntWhile she does not serve as an active-duty police officer, she retains legal authority under both her civilian and super-powered identities and unofficial ties to the police community. Tigra possesses mystical abilities that have largely gone unexplored. When Dr. Strange abdicated his position as Sorcerer Supreme, the Eye of Agamotto created a vision showing the many mystic beings who were potentially worthy and/or capable of assuming the title. An image of Tigra was included in this vision.

While Tigra has gotten a lot of play over the years, she’s not usually in a featured role, and is often used for humor, as when she was succumbing to her cat-like nature. My favorite portrayal of Greer’s was just after she became Tigra, and was fighting the Rat Pack, Super Skrull and Kraven. She was much more serious, and competent; confident in her abilities and a dangerous opponent. I would love to see her back on the Avengers with that kind of attitude; more the temperament of the ferocious big cats, and less the playfulness of the sex kitten, which some writers lazily fall back on.

My Favorite Avengers, #20 – 16

Avengers Return by George Perez

What’s going on here? Four guys and only one woman on this section of the list? As we enter my Top 20 Avengers, that is absolutely true! I do like a lot of guy Avengers… but we’ll see how far up the males make their presence known. We’ve got three classics in this segment — as in three members who join in the 60’s. Then a couple who became members in the 90’s. Three characters who have familial ties show up here as well. And all but one have live-action counterparts in the movies or television!

#20. Quasar – Wendell Vaughn
Joined Avengers #305 (July 1989); probationary status: Avengers Annual #18 (1989)
Creators: Don Glut, Roy Thomas, John Buscema

Wendell Vaughn was a young man from Wisconsin, who graduated from S.H.I.E.L.D. Academy but was deemed lacking the “killer instinct” that would have enabled him to be a successful field agent. Instead he was assigned routine guard duty to protect a pair of “quantum bands” taken from the deceased Crusader, who perished when the energy output from the bands reached a critical mass beyond his control.  Vaughn dons the quantum bands when the criminal organization A.I.M. launch a full-scale assault n the facility to steam them. Using the bands’ power, he repulses the attack. When the energy buildup begins to overwhelm him, he decides to simply relax and “go with the flow.” To his surprise, the buildup abruptly dissipates. Vaughn realizes the key to wielding the bands is a flexible will, rather than an indomitable, uncompromising one. Ultimately, his lack of a killer instinct makes him a more suitable wielder of the bands.

The many costumes of Quasar over the years.

Wendell received additional training from S.H.I.E.L.D. as Marvel Boy before working with Captain America, The Thing, and getting a job for the scientific facility, Project Pegasus and evolving into the hero Quasar. After a disappointing adventure in which Wendell succumbed to the Serpent Crown, Wendell gave up his heroic life, until his father convinced him to take a cosmic sojourn to explore the origin of the quantum bands. After a four year journey in a cryogenic sleep, Wendell emerged in the former home of the Uranian Eternals where he learned form the cosmic entity Eon that the quantum bands were made to assist the Protector of the Universe in his mission. That Protector, Captain Mar-Vell had died of cancer, and Eon determined that Wendell possessed the qualities needed to become Mar-Vell’s successor as the new Protector of the Universe.

Quasar the AvengerMany of Quasar’s subsequent adventures revolved around cosmic threats the the potential for the the destruction of the Universe. Quasar joined the Avengers during one such adventure, which led to his membership, and eventually to the team’s involvement in a developing war between two galactic empire, the Kree and the Shi’ar. As the conflict escalated, a powerful bomb was created that threatened to destroy the Sun, and hence all -life on earth. Quasar’s quantum powered bands enabled two teams of Avengers to jump to the respective homeworlds of the warring empires. Convinced by the Avengers, Empress Lilandra of the Shi’ar decided not to use the bomb and attempted a diplomatic settlement with the Kree. However, the Skrulls, ancient enemies of the Kree, stole the bomb and successfully detonated it in the Kree Empire, killing over 90% of the populations of thousands of worlds. Upon reaching Hala, the Kree homeworld, the Avengers discovered that the decimation of the Kree Empire had been planned from the beginning by the Kree leader, the Supreme Intelligence. Divided on how to deal with him, a group of Avengers led by Iron Man went to kill him. The other group led by Captain America, and including Quasar, could not condone the murder. This caused Quasar to leave the team.

Quasar Resigns from the AvengersQuasar has worked with the Avengers subsequently, notably when Morgan Le Fay transformed reality to a medieval kingdom that she ruled. Quasar was one of the the handful of Avengers who heard the Scarlet Witch’s call, a call heard only those who possessed the ‘Avengers spirit.’ Quasar later joined the Avengers Infinity team, made up of Thor, Photon, Tigra, Starfox, and Moondragon, once again saving all life in the universe from a cosmic threat. After so many cosmic threats threatened to destroy the earth, the Avengers set up a base in the Asteroid Belt, as something of an early warning signal against potential threats. Quasar was stationed at this base and shared his guard duties with various Avengers. Quasar has also become increasingly involved in other cosmic adventures through the Annihilation series of stories linking most of Marvel’s cosmic characters.

Quasar NowSome readers found Wendell’s clean-cut, midwestern boy attitude somewhat boring, but i found it refreshing in a time where heroes began to develop attitudes during the 90’s and early 2000’s. Wendell always looked up to Captain America, and had a strong moral core. His wide-eyed, slight naïveté was offset by this powerful sense of duty and incredible cosmic power. Quasar has died more than once, and his body now made entirely of quantum energy, making him essentially immortal. As a being of pure quantum energy, he can shape his “body” into any shape he can imagine, explosively disperse his form, though he can tire if he overuses his powers. His quantum bands can draw upon quantum energy for a number of effects such as creating various kinds of constructs, shields, interstellar flight and a form of teleportation he calls quantum jumping. The bands are able to control energies of the electromagnetic spectrum to a high degree. He is able to project and absorb any variety from radio waves to light to gamma radiation. Quasar will often attempt to contain an enemy or potential threat before resorting to combat.

Quasar hasn’t been active with the Avengers for a while, and as I’m not a fan of the current team, and really haven’t been that interested for several years, I don’t think that’s a bad thing. It might be nice to see him join the Guardians of the Galaxy for a while, and give him some exposure. He basically just shows up for major cosmic epics nowadays.

#19. Captain America – Steven Rogers
Joined Avengers #4 (March 1964)
Creators: Joe Simon, Jack Kirby

Captain America Leads the AvengersEveryone knows who Captain America is… especially since Marvel took over the movies. Young kid volunteers to take part in a government experiment, allowing himself to be inject with a super-soldier serum, giving him the peak strength and endurance of a human male. He becomes the nation’s symbol in the battle against the Nazi’s in World War II until he disappears for decades. Believed to be dead, Captain American is actually frozen in a glacier in the Arctic, and is found by the Sub Mariner, from the City of Atlantis, and rescued by the incipient Avengers, only recently formed, comprised of Thor, Iron Man, Giant Man and the Wasp (the Hulk had already left the team by this point). From that point on, Captain American becomes synonymous with the Avengers, becoming a mainstay on the team for almost all of the iterations to follow.

Captain America by Alex RossAs a paragon of moral and ethical guidance, Captain America brings so much more to the team than his combat skills. From his inspiring motivational presence, to his tactical skills, there is no better leader for a team of super-powered, strong-willed individual. Much of Cap’s time with the team is spent as a leader, but he’s a great coach and mentor as well, and when he has been on the team, but not acting as leader, he is eminently supportive, as in the case of The Wasp or Captain Marvel (Monica Rambeau). He is courageous, but careful in his planning. He doesn’t back down from anything, but he is mindful of the members of his team. And while it sounds like he’s the perfect man, there are plenty of times when he messes up, and he just gets back up and keeps going. He earns the respect of his peers more than any other character I can think of and the relationships he develops are complex and powerful.

Cap TodaySome of the best and most interesting relationships Steve has developed over time include Hawkeye, Black Widow, Scarlet Witch (although not during that very brief time where they dated), Captain Marvel (Monica Rambeau), The Wasp, Sersi (loved how she tried to get under his skin with her flirting). In fact, some of the best relationships are the ones that push him and test him. I never enjoyed Captain America more than when he was dating Diamondback (Rachel Leighton) a reformed jewel thief and former-member of the Serpent Society.. Steve truly cared for Rachel, and she got him to lighten up a bit, and working with him made her a better person. I’ve also often likened the Invisible Woman to Captain America. It’s no surprise that in the first Civil War which pit Cap against Iron Man around superhero registration, Susan Richards took Cap’s side against her own husband, Reed. She, like Cap, has a strong moral sense of what is right and wrong, and I always wanted to see the two of them to interact more as they seem so simpatico. I was pleased to see Susan included as a member of the Daughters of Liberty, a team of women led by Agent 13, Sharon Carter, to help Captain America clear his name.

That’s all I have to say about Captain America. What more really needs to be said? He’s the ultimate Avenger, and the team often falters when he’s not there to keep them on track.

And it’s true, as they say in the movie, that’s America’s butt.

#18. Quicksilver – Pietro Maximoff
Joined Avengers #16 (May 1965)
Creators: Stan Lee, Jack Kirby

Quicksilver has been around a long time, and is intertwined with so much of the Marvel Universe. Twin to the Scarlet Witch, son to Magneto, husband to Crystal, half-brother to Polaris, he was created as a villain for the X-Men, he has been a long-term Avenger, he married into the Inhumans, which got him caught up with the Fantastic Four. He has been a member of X-Factor. He has been a hero, a madman, a villain, a mutant, a human, and an Inhuman. He’s quite the complex character. Never warm and fuzzy, often arrogant and prejudiced, occasionally insane and evil. He’s also a father. Consequently, he has one of the most convoluted, ever-evolving backgrounds in comics.

Quicksilver vs. CyclopsPietro Maximoff. and his twin sister, Wanda, were raised by Django and Marya Maximoff, a Roma couple. As adolescents, Pietro and his sister Wanda discovered that they had peculiar talents. When Django began to steal food to feed his starving family, enraged villagers attacked the Roma camp. Using his phenomenal speed, Pietro fled from the camp with his sister. Over the next few years, Wanda and Pietro wandered Central Europe, living off the land before being found by Magneto and inducted into the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants, coming into conflict with the X-Men. They believed themselves to be mutants and felt they owed Magneto for helping them, but after a small series of misadventures with that band, they decided to reform, the opportunity which came about when the Avengers put out a call for new members, and they were successfully accepted onto the team.

Quicksilver served a long, distinguished career with the Avengers, despite his over-protectiveness of his sister, and his overbearing arrogance towards his teammates, and his irritability in general. Peter David, who did a lot of work developing Pietro’s character during his tenures with X-Factor, explains it as a result of his superhuman powers:

“Have you ever stood in the post office behind a woman with 20 packages who wants to know every single way she can send them to Africa? It drives you nuts! You think to yourself, ‘Why do I have to put up with this? These people are so slow, they’re costing me time, and it’s so damned irritating. I wish I didn’t have to put up with this.’ Now—imagine that the entire world was like that… except for you. … to Quicksilver, the rest of the world is moving in slow motion. That must really, really get on your nerves. Quicksilver lives in a world filled with people who don’t know how to use cash machines, and want to know all the ways to send packages to Africa, and can never get your order right in a Burger King unless you repeat it several times. That would tend to make you feel very superior to everyone and very impatient with everyone.”

Quicksilver's FamilyAs a result of his rather strong personality, writers tend to drive him to extremes. At one point, after being injured during a battle between the Avengers and the Sentinels, he is found dying in the rubble by Crystal, of the Royal Family of the Inhumans and her teleporting dog, Lockjaw. She brought him back to her homeland of Attilan, and nursed him back to health, where the two fell in love and eventually wed. During his time with the Inhumans, two significant events occurred. Wanda had fallen in love and married her fellow Avengers, the android, Vision. Through magic, she was able to create a pregnancy that yielded twin boys. While Pietro and Crystal were visiting Wanda and his new nephews, they also received a visit from Magneto, who revealed to them that he had learned that the twins here his children with the mysterious woman Magda, who had fled to Mt. Wundagore, delivered by Bova, a evolved cow and colleague to the High Evolutionary, and given to the Maximoff’s to raise as their own. Shortly after that, Black Bolt’s bother Maximus the Mad used technology to cause Quicksilver to become psychotic. This put him into conflict with both the Avengers, and the West coast Avengers, before the Inhumans managed to rescue him and cure him. He didn’t remain with his adopted family as his relationship with his wife had become quite strained over the years, and after helping the Avengers rescue his sister from a traumatic mental breakdown, he joined the the U.S. government-sponsored superhero team X-Factor.

During this time, X-Factor author Peter David did some significant, psychological development with Quicksilver, reconciling his heroic and arrogant sides nicely. It was also during this time that he was reunited with his estranged wife, Crystal, then an Avenger herself, only to find that she had developed romantic feelings for her teammate, the Black Knight. Pietro left her and X-Factor and spent some time with his daughter, Luna.

Quicksilver AvengerQuicksilver played a pivotal role in the limited series, House of M, convincing his then mentally unstable sister Wanda to use her abilities to warp reality and create a world where mutants are in a majority and humans are the minority. Things went horribly wrong and after Magneto crushed Pietro, killing him in battle, Wanda snapped completely, and used her reality-warping powers to reset the world, resurrect Quicksilver, and remove the powers of 98% of the mutant population, including, inadvertently, her brothers. This set Pietro off on the next disastrous chapter in his life, where, in a desperate move to regain his powers, he stole the sacred Terrigen Crystals that granted abilities to Inhumans, in the hopes that it would also restore the abilities of mutants. He did indeed gain new “time jumping” powers and kidnapped his daughter Luna. Quicksilver discovered the crystals can restore mutant abilities but they had an extreme effect on non-Inhuman physiology, causing several deaths. When the Inhumans apprehended him, and Crystal saw how the crystals had affected him, she had their marriage annulled according to Inhuman law. In the book X-Factor, Rictor was able to remove the shards of Terrigen crystals from Pietro’s body, leaving him powerless again, and subsequently jailed and destitute. During his lowest point, he inexplicably regained his powers, and in saving an innocent, rededicated his life to the heroic.

Quicksilver and the Scarlet WitchQuicksilver then found himself with the Avengers once more, in a desperate attempt to find his sister who had been missing since the events during House of M. During this time he lied to the press that he had been one of several heroes abducted by shape-shifting Skrulls and held captive for several years, in order to explain his villainous actions. While a handful of Avengers were aware of this deception, they let it lie in order for Pietro to try to redeem himself. His daughter Luna was less forgiving and cut ties with her father. The Avengers were fortunate enough to reconnect with a mentally restored Wanda and the siblings were reunited. In the most recent twist in their already confusing origins, Wanda and Pietro found themselves in conflict with Magneto. Wanda cast a curse that would affect all blood-relations, and only Pietro was affected, revealing that in fact, Magneto was not the twins father. They learned from the High Evolutionary that they were actually the long thought deceased children of Django and Marya Maximoff. He also told them that they were not mutants at all, but had been experimented on by the High Evolutionary, which caused them to manifest their powers. Despite one more major disagreement that saw Wanda and Pietro part ways again, the two have since reconciled, and Quicksilver retains his Avengers membership.

Quicksilver was originally presented as a mutant able to move and think at superhuman speeds. Originally capable of running at the speed of sound, exposure to the High Evolutionary’s Isotope E made it possible for the character to run at supersonic speeds of up to Mach 10 and resist the effects of friction, reduced oxygen, and kinetic impact while moving at super-speeds. It was later revealed that he actually was a normal child that was put through several experiments by the High Evolutionary which granted his powers in the first place.

Quicksiver No SurrenderMy two favorites types of characters in superhero comics, and the morally and ethically pure characters, like Quasar, Captain America, and the Invisible Woman, followed very closely by those characters who struggle with character flaws, constantly trying to overcome them to do good. It is this character that Quicksilver falls under. As already mentioned, Pietro is over-protective, arrogant, irritable, impatient, and all-around unpleasant. but at his heart, he wants to do good; he wants to be a hero. His association with the Avengers is never boring, and is always lively. Honestly, I also love to see him as a member of X-Factor, where he has undergone so much positive character development. It’s only when writers get lazy and start writing him as a type rather than a person, that he becomes less interesting. Most of all, I hope to see his new, matured relationship with Wanda get some exploration, but something tells me that things will slip back to the old habits pretty soon.

#17. Crystal – Crystalia Amaquelin Maximoff
Joined Avengers #343 (January 1992); probationary status: Avengers #336 (August 1991)
Creators: Stan Lee, Jack Kirby

CrystalCrystal, like her former husband, Quicksilver, is a very well-connected character. She made her first appearance (alongside her fellow Inhumans) in the Fantastic Four, as a love interest for the Human Torch. Their tragic romance found some semblance of happiness when Crystal joined the team to fill in while The Invisible Woman was pregnant with her first child, Franklin. Shortly after Sue’s return, however, Crystal became quite ill and it was discovered that her system could not handle the pollutants of modern-day society after growing up in the Inhuman’s homeland of Atillan. After leaving Johnny using her teleporting dog, Lockjaw, she stumbled across Quicksilver, who was dying from injuries sustained in a battle with a Sentinel. She brought him to her home with the Inhumans, and while nursing him back to health, she fell in love with him, much to the chagrin of the Human Torch. Crystal and Quicksilver eventually marry, and have a daughter named Luna. During their time as a couple, Crystal begins spending time with her sister-in-law, Wanda, who had recently married the android Avenger known as the Vision. Wanda and Vision tried to live a normal life in the suburbs of New Jersey, and during that time, Crystal embarked on a romantic affair with one of their neighbors, Norm Webster. At the time this behavior was explained as a result of her mistreatment at Quicksilver’s hands, but it was later revealed to be the result of Maximus the Mad’s mental tampering of the couple’s minds. While Quicksilver spent time with the mutant team, X-Factor, Crystal returned for a time to the Fantastic Four.

Crystal AvengerAfter returning to Atillan, the Inhumans were attacked by an alien race, The Brethren. Crystal reached out to the Avengers for assistance, and shortly thereafter, she joined the team. Crystal acquitted herself quite well on the team, becoming a valuable member in combat during some major storylines such as Operation: Galactic Storm, The Gatherers Storyline, and a Bloodties cross-over with the X-Men. During her tenure with the Avengers, she developed an attraction with teammate Dane Whitman, the Black Knight. This relationship was complicated by a contrite Pietro trying to fix their marriage, and the available and aggressive Sersi pursuing Dane at the same time. Crystal recommitted to Pietro when he returned to the Avengers and Dane and Sersi were soon transported to another universe, ending their thoughts of an affair. After the disastrous outcome of the battle with Onslaught, Crystal was among the Avengers who disappeared for a year to an alternate reality created by Franklin Richards. Upon their return, she helped the Avengers reassemble then returned to Attilan, where she remained beside the Royal Family, raising Luna. During that time she once again became estranged from Quicksilver.

Crystal TodaySince that time, Crystal has spent most of her time involved with Inhuman affairs. They became embroiled in a major War involving their creators, the Kree that found Crystal participating in a political marriage with Ronan the Accuser. Returning to Earth, the Inhumans’ Terrigen mists, the source of their Inhuman powers, were released into Earth’s atmosphere as a huge cloud that moved across the Globe. Crystal became a diplomat, leading a small team of Inhumans to the places affected by the cloud, aiding the Inhumans that emerged in those locations due to its appearance. Recently, the Inhumans were taken out of rotation in Marvel, and I am waiting for them to return sometime in the future.

Crystal PowersCrystal has a great power set that adds a lot to any team she appears on. Crystal possesses the ability to mentally manipulate the four classical elements: fire, water, earth, and air. Her psionic powers are a result of exposure to the Terrigen Mists, which coupled with genetic engineering of the Inhumans by the Kree in the distant past, grant Inhumans abilities beyond the capabilities of an ordinary Inhuman that are unique to each individual. Crystal can control oxygen atoms and oxygen-containing molecules to create atmospheric disturbances of various kinds. By intermingling air with earth she can cause a dust storm, air with water a typhoon, and air with fire a firestorm. She is able to create a wind of tornado intensity, approximately 115 miles per hour. Crystal can control the various substances that make up common bedrock (earth: iron, granite, shale, limestone, etc.), creating seismic tremors by causing a sudden shifting of the earth. Crystal possesses the psionic ability to manipulate fire, cause it to grow in size and intensity, and take any form that she desires. She can also douse any oxidizing flame by altering the ionization potential of the outer electron shells of oxygen atoms. By accelerating oxygen molecules in the air, she is able to cause fire to spontaneously ignite. Further, Crystal can control the movement of water divining water from the ground, and causing it to flow in designated directions. She is able to instantly freeze water to create ice blasts. She can also cause hydrogen and oxygen atoms in the air to recombine and form water molecules. This allows her to spontaneously create water, even in a dry environment, provided oxygen and hydrogen are present.

For me, Crystal works best with the Inhumans; earned her chops nicely with the Fantastic Four, and while intriguing, has been least successful as a member of the Avengers. I blame that largely on Bob Harras, the man who wrote most of Crystal’s time on the team. He used her more as one-side of a romantic, soap-operatic triangle… and one that was not very well-done. I appreciate that he showed her as one of the team’s powerhouses, but her history was already tangled enough with relationships and her attraction to the Black Knight just seemed like a tactic to convince the reader that he was a brooding, stud that all the women fell for. Crystal deserved better. I’d love to her see serve another term on the Avengers sometime, where she could really stand on her own, and not be involved in silly romantic escapades.

Ugh. Did not enjoy this storyline. But it wasn’t Crystal’s fault.

#16. Vision
Joined Avengers #58 (November 1968)
Creators: Roy Thomas, Stan Lee, John Buscema

The iconic VisionThe Vision was tough to place on my list. Throughout the 70’s and 80’s, I’d have to say Vision was one of my favorite Avengers and probably would have at minimum made the Top 10 back then. Then John Byrne came along in 1989 and completely destroyed the character (literally) and he has never been able to capture my attention again, except for one exemplary 12-issue-limited series in 2016 by Tom King. More work like that on the character, and he will probably be able to get back into my Top 10.

In the late 60’s Stan Lee wanted to introduce a new Avenger, and he was leaning toward the Golden-Age Vision. Roy Thomas, who was writing the Avengers at the time, really wanted to introduce an android into the team, so they compromised and created a new character who was an android called the Vision. Created by the mad robot, Ultron (who was itself created by the Avenger, Hank Pym) Vision was created to infiltrate and destroy the Avengers. His body was created from the android body of the original Human Torch, and his brain patterns were based on those of Simon Williams, Wonder Man, who had sacrificed his life to save the Avengers after becoming a member of the Master of Evil to destroy them. The Vision first encountered The Wasp, and battled with her, but before he could seriously harm her, he stopped himself, and collapsed. He very quickly turned against his creator and followed the heroic path alongside the Avengers.

Vision and WandaRoy Thomas wanted to develop a long-term storyline of the Vision’s quest to become human, and as part of the quest, he developed a slow-burning romance between the android-Avenger and the Scarlet Witch. This fan-favorite storyline simmered for years, reaching a number of pinnacles, most notably during the Kree-Skrull War when the Vision loses his cool nearly killing a Skrull as he tries to find the kidnapped Wanda, and then a breakthrough moment, when Vision offers Wanda his love after she is distraught over her brother Quicksilver’s disappearance. The two then embarked on a tempestuous romance, largely from external forces: bigoted humanity’s opposition to the love between a synthetic man and a mutant — an opposition that included Wanda’s twin brother Pietro — and the romantic attentions of fellow Avenger, Mantis who became interested in the Vision. Yet the two persevered, married, and even eventually bore twin children, created by magic. Throughout the 70’s and 80’s, the Vision/Wanda romance was a highlight of Avengers life.

A major storyline saw a crystal that governed much of the Vision’s higher level thinking malfunction and become corrupted by Isaac, an artificial intelligence used by the Titans on the moon os Saturn. Due to this malfunction, the Vision connected himself to all electronic and computer systems across the world, slowly taking then over in efforts to enforce world peace by taking over all defense systems and create a utopia. The malfunction was eventually corrected, and The Vision relinquished control of the world’s systems, let himself be interrogated by the government, and eventually forced to leave the Avengers and live as private citizens to focus on their family life.

Vision in WhiteThen John Byrne took over the Avengers West Coast, and in an effort to shake things up he basically tore Vision and Wanda apart in the most horrific way, and the two characters are still feeling the ramifications of these actions today; and sadly their characters have never fully recovered. Focusing on the Vision (Wanda will get her own entry further up the list), a rogue government group, being influenced by the time-traveling Immortus, captured and completely dismantled the Vision to his component parts, traumatizing Wanda. To make matters worse, although Hank Pym was able to reconstruct Vision’s body, Simon Williams now a member of the team, and himself in love with Wanda, would not allow his brain patterns to be used again to provide a matrix for the Vision’s emotions, as he felt the original process had “ripped out his soul” and been done without his consent. Although his love for Wanda led him to feel guilt, he attempted to justify his actions by claiming that the Vision was never anything more than a copy of him. This, along with damage to the Vision’s synthetic skin when he was dismantled, resulted in his resurrection as a colorless, emotionless synthezoid. For years after that, Wanda tried to reconnect with the Vision, to little or no effect, and ultimately, after her own traumatic breakdowns, the two tried to move on. Occasionally writers will show small glimmers of their love still in evidence, but little has come of it. Still they share a bond, even as they both try to move on with their lives.

Since that, the Vision never really settled into a steady role with the Avengers. Despite intermittent periods where he would recover his emotions, he was often portrayed as much more mechanical, a sophisticated robot, than a synthetic man. His body was often destroyed, only to be rebuilt again, further underscoring his inhumanity. When Tom King wrote the Vision limited series in 2016, he created a story that was compelling, focused on real next steps in the characters evolution, and was full of tragedy and humanity. It also gave Vision a family, a wife and two children, of which only a daughter Viv Vision, survived. Since the completion of that storyline, however, Vision doesn’t get much attention, even in the Avengers, where he is still active as a member. Modern comics don’t spend much time on character development though, so not much changes.

Vision creates a family in Tom King’s exemplary series from 2016

Vision AttacksThe Vision is one of the most powerful Avengers due to the abilities given him by Ultron. Vision is described as being “every inch a human being—except that all of his bodily organs are constructed of synthetic materials.” (This seems to be proven wrong with Byrne’s visual depiction of his dismantled form). The Solar Jewel on Vision’s forehead absorbs ambient solar energy to provide the power needed for him to function, and he is also capable of discharging this energy as optic beams; with this, he can fire beams of infrared and microwave radiation. By interfacing with an unknown dimension to which he can shunt and from which he can accrue mass, thus becoming either intangible or extraordinarily massive, Vision can change his density, which at its lowest allows flight and a ghostly, phasing intangibility, and at its heaviest, a density ten times greater than that of depleted uranium, which gives him superhuman strength, immovability, and a diamond-hard near invulnerability. One of his signature attacks finds him thrusting an intangible hand into an appointment, then partially solidifying it, a process he describes as “physical disruption.” This effect typically causes great pain and results in incapacitation. Being an artificial life-form/android of sorts, Vision has superhuman senses, superhuman stamina, reflexes, speed, agility, strength (even without being at high density), superhuman analytical capabilities, and the ability to process information and make calculations with superhuman speed and accuracy. Due to recent upgrades, the Vision’s body is now formed from millions of nanobots that allow him to split himself into smaller parts and change shape.

The Vision todayI feel Vision truly suffered from his initial dismantling by John Byrne. Once he was seen, reduced to his component, mechanical parts, strewn out across a few laboratory tables in a stark two-page spread drawn by Byrne, it was difficult to ever think of him again as a man. In addition his lengthy emotionless period drove him further into a robotic arena and his subsequent destructions just kept underscoring his artificial nature. While Roy Thomas carefully and slowly developed a riveting, years-long storyline about a synthetic man trying to become human, Byrne and many of those who followed, decided to focus on his inhumanity. Thankfully, Tom King did some healing work to set him on the right track again. Hopefully that track will continue in the future.

My Favorite Avengers, #’s 25 – 21

Firestar is a heavy hitter

Back in what I consider the Avengers hey-day, in the 70’s and early 80’s, when George Perez earned his chops and grand sagas rather than events were the driving force of this great comic, the Avengers were like a professional organization. The Fantastic Four was a family the X-Men were students drawn together by shared circumstance. The Avengers was a world-saving organization. Called together by a need to protect the world against dangers that were too much for anyone hero to stand against alone. They had probationary members, substitute members, reserve members, housing if needed, a stipend if needed, all bankrolled by millionaire, Tony Stark, who also happened to be a founding member of the Avengers, Iron Man. You had to earn your place at the table… at least for a while. Things started to loosen up and the ranks started to really swell, until the Brian Michael Bendis and subsequent writers got a hold of the team and just decided that basically every superhero should be an Avengers when needed.

It should come as no surprise that most of my favorite Avengers will be superheroines, but down here in the 20’s you’ll see a lot of guys. I tried to rank these characters on their tenure as Avengers, not on how much I enjoyed them as a comic character generally.

#25. Beast – Dr. Henry Philip “Hank” McCoy
Joined Avengers: Avengers #151 (September 1976); joined as probationary member in Avengers #137 (July 1975)
Creators: Stan Lee and Jack Kirby

Beast is a rather interesting case for being one of my favorite Avengers, because most people think of him as an X-Man, which he is, a mutant, and one of the founders, but he also had a celebrated and lengthy tenure as an Avenger. (He spent quite a bit of time with the Defenders as well). As an X-Man, Beast never really did all that much for me. I didn’t dislike him, but nothing really enamored me of him. As an Avenger, I found him to be a much needed source of light-heartedness that interacted really well with some of the more serious members. Yet his beastly appearance, and his jovial nature also hid the brilliant scientist that he was which often made him overlooked.

The X-Man called BeastUnlike most mutants, Henry showed signs of mutation from birth: unusually large hands and feet, coupled with unusual strength and agility. Hank was also endowed with an innate superhuman intellect and during adolescence further increased his powers of simian-like augmented agility, reflexes, and strength. He was recruited by Professor Xavier to attend his School for Gifted Youngsters, and trained to become an X-Man. When he entered his twenties, he left the team and sought a career as a renown geneticist and biochemist. While working for the Brand Corporation, he developed a formula caused him to undergo radical, physical changes. Hank grew blue fur over his entire body, his muscles expanded, ears became larger and pointed, claws sprouted, and his canine teeth became larger, resembling fangs. The serum further increased his superhuman agility, endurance, speed, and strength, as well as enhanced his senses For a time, Hank struggled with his new appearance, desperate to find a way to reclaim his humanity, but over time he learned that his outward appearance wasn’t a hindrance to him, and in fact, it brought him a great deal of appeal.

Beast joins the AvengersAfter a brief period of adventures on his own, Beast tries out for the Avengers, when they are seeking new members. He helps them out battling the Toad, and is granted probationary membership along with Moondragon. During subsequent adventures with the team, in addition to helping and old friend, Patsy Walker, take on the superheroic role of Hellcat, Beast is granted permanent membership to the team. His tenure with the Avengers is memorable due to his humor and his strong relationships made with other members of the team, most notably, Wonder Man, with whom has enjoyed an enduring friendship, something not often seen in comics. While he rushes off to aid his good friends the X-Men from time to time, he always returns to the Avengers. On of my favorite, albeit short-lived relationships Beast developed was with Jocasta, a sophisticated robot created by Ultron whose brain patterns came from Janet Van Dyne, the Wasp. Under the writing of Dave Micheline, Jocasta became the “straight man” to Beasts comic persona while they were adventuring together, and it really worked. Sadly it only last a few issues, with both Jocasta and Beast eventually leaving the team.

Ultimately, after leaving the Avengers and a shorter stint with his former co-probationary Avenger Moondragon in the Defenders, where he also reunites with his old X-Men pals Iceman and Angel, Beast returns to the company of mutants in X-Factor. He has stuck with the X-Men family ever since, but for some reason, his appeal for me was always stronger with the Avengers than his fellow mutants. It would be fun to explore a reunion with his old teammates where he could let his hair down and have some fun.

Beast

#24. Sandman – William Baker (aka Flint Marko)
Joined as a Reserve Substitute Member Avengers #329 (February 1991)
Creators: Stan Lee and Steve Ditko

Sandman vs. The Fantastic FourThe Avengers have a long history of taking on reformed villains as members, most notably Hawkeye, Scarlet Witch, and Quicksilver, but others have followed, like the Swordsman, Wonder Man, Black Widow… even the Vision. But The Sandman was probably one of the more improbable former villains to join the team, and sadly, it didn’t last all that long, and he didn’t have many adventures with the team. The villain was created to oppose Spider-Man, and he had a long illustrious career as one of the web-slinger’s major foes. He also became a founding member of the Sinister Six, a group of Spider-Man villains who worked together, a founding member of the Frightful Four, who became arch nemeses of the Fantastic Four, and a found himself fighting other heroes such as the Hulk.

SandmanThe Sandman was usually depicted as a bullying thug, but his childhood and young adulthood was pretty rough, and shows how easily a young person’s life can go off-track. Even as early as 1972, less than ten years after his introduction as a villain, writer Roy Thomas introduced some morally ambiguous motives into the character in the first issue of Marvel Team-Up featuring Spiderman. Ten years later, in 1982, Sandman shares top billing in the Thing’s team-up comic, Marvel Two-In-One where the two work together and the Thing urges him to consider going straight. After that encounter, Sandman appears sporadically assisting Spider-Man. In one such encounter, he assisted Spider-Man and the mercenary Silver Sable against the Sinister Syndicate, and Silver Sable was so impressed with the Sandman’s aid, she offered him a job. During his time with Sable, Sandman ended up working several time with the Avenger Hawkeye, and eventually ended up working with a vigilante group called the Outlaws. Through trickery initiated by the villain the Space Phantom, the Outlaws ended up tangling with the Avengers. Eventually things worked out and the two teams worked together to defeat their common enemy.

When the Avengers reformed under a new charter by the United Nations, Captain American created two new teams, a main team and a reserve team. He also created a probationary program which consisted of the Sandman and Rage. Sandman worked with the Avengers on a handful adventures which led to a Presidential pardon for him. He eventually returned to his work with Silver Sable as part of her Wild Pack, and after that, through manipulations by the Wizard, ended up working again as a villain. His career since then has been checkered, as he struggled with his baser instincts, eventually even splitting into two beings, one good and one evil. During this time he participated in a few Avengers adventures, most notably when the villain Morgan Le Fay rewrote reality to create a medieval kingdom that she ruled. In more recent years, Sandman has continued his struggle with his darker side, and his physical form started to devolve. His latest adventures have turned fairly tragic, and he ended up several his ties with the Avengers as well.

Sandman with the Avengers

I would have enjoyed seeing the Sandman be a part of the regular team for a longer period. His power set is really interesting and allows him to do many things. The Sandman has the ability to transform his body to be hardened, compacted, dispersed or shaped, or a combination of those qualities, an Earth manipulation of sand and rock particles. More often than not in combat, this ability enables him to absorb most blows with little to no ill effect other than reforming himself. In addition to his superb endurance, the Sandman possesses superhuman strength several times more than Spider-Man’s and on a par with the Thing’s.

I also enjoyed his noble struggle to walk on the heroic side of life. Despite their many battles, Sandman and the Thing shared an empathy over their tragic, physical challenges, and even after he had reverted to his criminal ways, he helped the Thing several times. I think he would have been a great Avengers West Coast member, with Hawkeye, himself a former villain, acting a a strong mentor for him.

#23. Firestar – Angelica “Angel” Jones
Joined as a Reserve Member Avengers vol. 3 #4 (May 1998); Promoted to full status in Avengers vol. 3 #7 (1998)
Creators: Chris Claremont, John Romita Sr., John Romita, Jr., Tom DeFalco, Christy Marx, Dan Spiegel, Rock Hoberg

FirestarFirestar had enjoyed a pretty lengthy career before coming to the Avengers. She has the unique distinction of debuting in 1981 on the NBC animated television series, Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends, rather than in comics, along with the title character and the X-Man Iceman. The show had originally planned to feature the Human Torch, but rights to his character were not available, so they created the Firestar character. Her comics debut was in X-Men #193 in May 1986, and subsequently in her own miniseries which presented her definitive, in-continuity origin as a mutant who was recruited into the Hellions, taught my Emma Frost, the White Queen, at the prestigious private school the Massachusetts Academy, a twisted version of Professor Xavier’s School for Gifted Youngsters. Firestar’s time with the Hellion’s and the White Queen was fraught with manipulation, first at the hands of her fellow student, Empath, who used his powers to make her fall in love with him and attack the X-Men, and later by the White Queen herself, as she trained Firestar to become a weapon she would use to assassinate her rival, the Black Queen, Selene. Firestar broke free from these manipulations, and destroyed one of the Academy’s training bases before leaving the School. She also turned down Professor Xavier’s offer for her to come to his school, although she was grateful for it.

Firestar fullFirestar was next contacted by the hero Night Thrasher to join a new team of teenage superheroes called the New Warriors. She joined with them for a long tenure, gradually developing a romantic relationship with Marvel Boy (later known as Justice). During her lengthy stint with the New Warriors, she discovered that continued use of her powers could make her infertile, so she used them less and less. Shortly before leaving the team, Angelica proposed to Justice, and he accepted.

When the Avengers were reforming after a year of inactivity, Justice, who was quite enamored with the team, convinced Firestar to join him in an effort to join. After showing their worth on an adventure with the team, they were accepted as reserve members under the tutelage of Hawkeye, graduating to full membership soon thereafter. She shared her health concerns to her fellow members, and Dr. Hank Pym developed a special costume for her that shielded her from the detrimental effects of her powers while her body built up a natural immunity to it. The two served a distinguished term with the Avengers, helping them infiltrate a mysterious cult, stop the mad campaign of Ultron, and struggling for nearly a year against the villainous Kang the Conqueror, who had taken control the United States. Thereafter the two retired to work on their relationship before they were to get married. Angelica started college and enjoyed a normal life for a time, but her relationship with Justice developed some strain, and she confessed that she needed more life experience before settling into married life. Justice left in anger and presumably ended their engagement. The two have since become friends.

Firestar as AvengerSince leaving the Avengers, Firestar got her degree, retired briefly from heroics after the Superhuman Registration Act was passed into law, subsequently worked with a team called the Young Allies, got a job teaching Physics at the Jean Grey School of Higher Learning and joined the X-Men as a sometime member. She currently resides on the mutant island of Krakoa alongside the X-Men.

Firestar’s mutant ability allows her to tap into Earth’s electromagnetic field and convert it into microwave radiation emissions, which she can utilize in different ways. She can focus microwaves on a specific target, and cause it to burst into flame, or explode, or melt. She can also sense microwave signals (such as cell-phone signals or even remote-control devices) and disrupt electronics with her own microwave emissions. The nature of Firestar’s power grants her the capacity for large-scale destruction. However, she typically limits how much of her own power she accesses for fear of permanently damaging the planet, its atmosphere, and electromagnetic field. In space, she is far less inhibited and can access greater levels of ambient electromagnetic energy to fuel her powers. Her manipulation of microwaves also allows her to fly.

Firestar added a nice and unique outlook to the Avengers, as a reluctant member. She was mainly there to support her fiancee. She added a great deal of virtue, courage and power, but she was insecure, hesitant about the physical affects her power was having on her body, and slow to bond with her teammates. She really came into her own powerfully during the struggle with Ultron, being one of the heavy hitters alongside the likes of Thor and Iron Man. I wouldn’t mine seeing Firestorm alongside the Avengers again for an adventure or two, without Justice and see what path her development would take.

Firestar let's loose


#22. Thor – Thor Odinson, formerly Dr. Donald Blake
Joined in Avengers #1 (September 1963)
Creators: Stan Lee and Jack Kirby

ThorThor is a founding member of the Avengers, and one of the more well-known members of the team due to his feature roll in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Thor is part of a long-lived race of beings worshipped as gods in the Norse pantheon of Asgardians. He is the blood-son of Odin, All-Father of the Asgardians, and Jord, known as Gaea, the earth-goddess who was one of the Elder Gods. He is colloquially known as the god of thunder and wields the Uru hammer, Mjolnir, forged by ancient dwarves, upon which various enchantments were bestowed by Odin. Only someone worthy is able to wield the mighty Mjolnir. Thor has been active since as early as the 9th Century AD and was widely worshipped in the early days by the Vikings of Scandinavia.

Founding AvengersThe young Thor was raised alongside Loki, who had been adopted by Odin after Loki’s Frost Giant father Laufey had been killed in battle. For all of their childhood, Loki was jealous of Thor. Loki’s jealousy, which grew to hatred, resulted in a desire to kill Thor. Thus began Loki’s enmity for Thor, which persisted for many centuries. In fact, it was because of this conflict that the Avengers came into being. When Loki’s manipulations forced several of Earth’s mightiest heroes to band together to stop the Hulk, Thor became a founding member of the team which consisted of Iron-Man, Giant-Man, the Wasp and the afore-mentioned Hulk. Thor has been a consistent member of the Avengers since its inception, He has, however, left the team several times for extended leaves of absence. Currently, Thor as assumed the mantle of the Asgardian All-Father, as Odin stepped down as the from his rule.

OdinsonBiologically half-Asgardian on his father’s side and half-Elder God on his mother’s side; Thor possesses a number of superhuman attributes common among the Asgardian and other gods. However, due to his unique birth, some are considerably more developed than those of the vast majority of his race, including his strength, endurance and resistance to injury. Thor has the ability to manipulate vast amounts of energy, using Mjolnir he can channel the storm’s energy into blasts so powerful that he can destroy nearly anything. Thor can also channel his godly energies through Mjolnir, creating rays powerful enough to kill even immortals. Thor has the ability to control the elements of storm, both with and without Mjolnir. He is currently able to wield the Odin Force as well. The Odin Force enabled him to tap into the resources of cosmic and mystical energies of the dimension Asgard exists within, enhancing all of his abilities in turn.

Thor’s appearances with the Avengers vary greatly based on whoever is writing the story. Obviously, when fighting against his teammates, it doesn’t make sense to show him wielding the full extent of his powers, or else he wouldn’t need anyone to assist him. One interesting storyline featured the demi-goddess Moondragon arguing with Thor that he was basically “slumming” with mortals when he served on the Avengers, calling him a hypocrite when he served with the team. She proposed that he was subconsciously holding back so as not to obliterate the human-based villains that he faced while with the team. It was an interesting argument that explained why Thor’s power levels fluctuated so wildly in his appearances. Another fascinating storyline that didn’t get enough attention, was when he was working with Firebird, during the Kang Wars. Firebird had recently discovered that she was immortal, and as a Christian, was uncomfortable with that knowledge. She had several philosophical conversations with Thor that were fascinating and insightful.

Thor and Moondragon
Moondragon argues with Thor about his godliness.

For a period of time, Thor became unworthy to wield Mjolnir. During this time, he went by the alias of Odinson, and Jane Foster, a former lover of Thor’s claimed the hammer for her own, and became the Mighty Thor, even taking his place with The Avengers. Thor wielded Mjolnir in very different ways than the traditional warrior who was Odinson, and this multi-year storyline really invigorated my interest in Thor, both as the title, and in Odinson as well.

Thor/Jane Foster

#21. Sersi – Circe
Joined in Avengers #314 (February 1990)
Creators: Stan Lee, Robert Bernstein, and Jack Kirby

SersiSersi is a member of the Eternals, a long-lived race of superhumans that were an evolutionary offshoot of humanity, created by Jack Kirby. Sersi was born in Greece, sometime after the Great Cataclysm that sank the island nation of Atlantis. Sersi was different than her fellow Eternals in that she enjoyed living amongst humanity rather than in isolation. It is said that Homer based his character Circe from The Odyssey, who turned men into pigs, on her. As Circe, she also imprisoned the devilish imps in Pandora’s Box in ancient times.

In more recent times, Sersi battled the Eternal’s hated enemies, the Deviants in New York City where she encountered the Avenger Thor. She first came into contact with other Avengers when The Wasp and Starfox crashed one of her legendary parties. She was thrilled to welcome them and even more thrilled to discover that Starfox was her long-lost “cousin” of the Titan Eternals. Shortly thereafter Captain America had need of someone with illusion casting or shape changing abilities for help with a case he was working on. She got great pleasure in flirting with the straight-laced hero and helped the Avengers on several cases. When her fellow Eternal Gilgamesh, who was an Avengers for a short time, was injured in battle, Captain American asked her to join in his place, and she was happy to do so.

Sersi flirting with CapSersi proved to be a powerful addition to the team and she served with them for quite some time. During an attack on the Earth by the Brethren, Sersi was forced to form a Uni-Mind with their leader, Thane Ector. Such a union, between two different species, is forbidden by the Eternals, as it may lead to the breakdown of the Eternals mental disciplines.Some months after this, Sersi became more aggressive, and this may have been due to the Uni-Mind with the Brethren. or, it may also have been due to the machinations of Proctor, a man from an alternate reality who had been spurned by the Sersi from his world. Her formed a group known as the Gatherers, and was planning to kill all the Sersi’s across the multiverse. During this time, Sersi goes nutsSersi began a relationship with fellow Avenger, the Black Knight. Unbeknownst to both of them, however, was the fact that Proctor was actually an alternate reality version of the Black Knight himself.

I really disliked the entire Proctor and the Gatherers storyline and most of the work Bob Harras did on the Avengers. I found the romantic triangle between Sersi, Black Knight and Crystal to forced and unsavory. Sersi’s descent into madness was yet another case of a woman being uanble to be powerful. His radical shift of personality for the Black Knight into a rugged, brooding, 90’s hunk with long straggy hair and permanent stubble was boring. While I know there were some readers who look back on that epic fondly I thought it was a poorly conceived story and a disappointing way to send Sersi off, from her otherwise fairly distinguished tenure on the team.

Sersi and the Eternals were given another go in the mid 2000’s under Neil Gaiman’s pen, and haven’t really been seen since. Of course, next year they will show up on the big screen as part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. It will be interesting to see how their complex tale fares.