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#avengers/thunderbolts (2004)
avengerscompound · 17 days
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Clint Barton
Avengers/Thunderbolts (2004) #1
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hawkzeyes · 1 month
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hey i'm so sorry i know you've linked to it probably a million times but i can't find it: can i have the link to your hawkeye reading list pleaseee and thank you 🥳
Hi Hi!! Please never apologize for asking I have the most unorganized blog in all hawkeye accounts LMFAOOO so not being able to find recs in here is understandable
Im assuming you mean Clint, but just in case not I will add Kate's in at the end!
So First of course is this icon's first appearance in
Tales of Suspense #57 (1964) - (he also shows up a few more times in tales of suspense but obviously this is the most important one!)
The Avengers #16 (1965) is when he joins and becomes our favorite little Avenging Archer (forewarning he is a little shit here. His favroite pass time in the beginning is driving Steve up a wall. I personally find this dynamic very funny but some dont)
He is with the Avengers for a really long time. Like more than 150+ comics(he isn't Hawkeye the whole time though as he does have a little bit I believe that starts in Avengers #63-#98 where he is Goliath. He comes back to us as Hawkeye in Avenger #99)
Hawkeye (1983) is his first solo ever! It's a mini series but its one of my personal favroites!
West Coast Avengers (1984)- this is where we get to see him take lead in a brand new team in California!
The West Coast Avengers (1985)- this is just a contitnuation of the previous mentioned!
Solo Avengers (1987)- We find out more tea about Clint's life prior to avenging here
He stays with the West Coast Avengers for a hot minute before we get his second solo
Hawkeye (1994) he's reaaaaal tough guy big feelings in this one
then he shows up in Avengers again in 1995 (yeah I know but hey he is the avenging archer so that's where youre gonna find him the most) He even gets a new lil fit and everything (he looks like he belongs in a boyband and I love it)
Thunderbolts (1998) is where Clint shows up ( in 2001 I believe) and takes over the team! He essentially helps try to guide them into being a good hero team and if I remember correctly I think its either #74-#75 where he leaves the Thunderbolts (I can't remember exactly I'm sorry)
Hawkeye (2003)- a third solo!!! look at our little guy go!!!
Then he... well he dies LMFAOOO in Avengers (2004) and the Clint Barton you knew and love is about to change forever
The New Avengers #26 (2006) if i remember correctly and it's.. well it's a sad one and he isn't the lovely Hawkeye when he comes back either. This is where Clint becomes Ronin, which is a rather dark time for Clint.
Secret Invasion (2008) This is also sad im sorry LMFAOOO Clint's morals are tested often as Ronin
The New Avengers (2009) Again he is ronin here so if youre looking for Clint just as Hawkeye he isn't here but don't worry he is back as Hawkeye soon enough
New Avengers: The Reunion (2009) whooooo's he getting a reunon with ;)
Hawkeye & Mockingbird (2010) guess what, that's who he got a reunion with I LOVE THIS COMIC
Widowmaker (2010) is basically a continue on of ^ with Nat involved
Avengers: Solo (2011) CLINT!!!! AS!!! HAWKEYE!!! Doin Hawkeye shit
Hawkeye: Blindspot (2011) do you like family angst? Good. Here. Have the family angst.
There is an event going on around this time called Fear Itself that he is involved in and also he is in Secret Avengers (2012) starting #21 or #22 where he becomes the leader.
Hawkeye (2012) We all know and love this bad boy. You could fit so many tears into it.
Secret Avengers (2013) again??? yes again.
Secret Avengers (2014) haha yeah again
Hawkeye Vs Deadpool (2014) it's fun! it's cute! Wade makes me laugh and he has a soft spot for the Hawkeyes
All-New Hawkeye (2015) there is some retconning done here
I don't wanna talk about Civil War II (2016) it makes me really sad LMFAOOO but yes he is in it and it should be read because well.. he makes a BIGGGGGG choice here that I feel has def echoed in his characterization since and has caused lots of misleading beliefs about Clint
Occupy Avengers (2016) Woooooooh I like this one it's fun
Secret Empire (2017) He is in it if I remember correctly but I grouch about this whole concept because I thought it was stupid. It gives the same energy as "What if Superman was evil" and I'm sure as a DC fan you know how annoying that concept is.
Generations: Hawkeye(2017) This is soooo cute I love this one. Kate meets a younger Clint in it and they run around together
Tales of Suspense #101 (2018) This will never not make me laugh. Him and Bucky working together is always funny
He is also involved in Kate's Hawkeye run during this time but I've got that on her list
West Coast Avengers (2018) I liked this. I love when Kate and Clint work together and I liked seeing the nods to the original WCA
Hawkeye: Freefall (2020) crying puking throwing up it's so good and fun until it's not fun anymore
Black Widow (2020) Not my favroite run for Nat... feels like the tone is off but he is in it
Thunderbolts (2022) I liked this...would have been super cool if Marvel had kept it as a continuing run because I feel like it didn't get to finish it's story. I'm still sour about it.
NOW obviously this is not everything ever he has ever been in and I'm certainly not perfect enough to have read every. single. appearance. So please forgive me if I missed something important cause sometimes my brain is not so greeat with memory.
x Kate Reading List!
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imperiuswrecked · 5 months
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hi imp I hope you're doing well :) I'm the new namor fan anon from last month! I've been reading a lot of silver age roy thomas namor and recently finished the byrne/jae lee run, I'm really enjoying the character so far! He's become one of my favorites. I hope this isn't too much of a bother but I'm a little lost of what goes after his 90s run and modern era (2010s-2020s). what should I read? I know of namor the (very little) minis he's had in the 2000s early 2010s, but I don't know what goes directly after the 90s run and I'm pretty out the loop with current marvel comics (I'm a pretty new reader overall) . Again I hope this isn't too much of a bother. thank you very much :)
Hello! I am doing as well as can be, thanks for asking, and fan questions are never a bother, I try to answer them as in depth and as quick as I can. I'm really glad to have you on board with Namor Nation! It's great to hear that you're enjoying the character.
As for what comes after the 90s run, I will admit that I never talk about this era much because frankly I don't enjoy all of it. So I will break down where to read next for chronological stuff and what I personally think is best to read.
So right after the 90's series concludes we have the Atlantis Rising Event which is a 10 issue arc but Namor appears in the Fantastic Four just before this arc kicks off.
Fantastic Four (1961) #400 Atlantis Rising: Fantastic Four: Atlantis Rising (1995) #1 Fantastic Force (1994) #8 Fantastic Four (1961) #401 Fantastic Force (1994) #9 Fantastic Four (1961) #402 Fantastic Four: Atlantis RIsing (1995) #2 Fantastic Four Unlimited (1993) #11 Warlock & the Infinity Watch (1992) #41-42
Namor isn't in every one of those comics and imo you can just read Atlantis Rising #1-2 and the Fantastic Four issues and you will be fine. Then you follow Namor's story as he joins, not officially, the Fantastic Four team, he just hangs around the team and spends his time trying to get with Susan. During this era the writer had killed off Reed with no intention of bringing him back unless Marvel ordered it. So the team spent real time years without Reed in the book, instead the writer takes Namor and sticks him in the comics where all he does is run around screaming about how he wants to be with Susan.
I cannot stress enough that you do not need to read these comics because when it comes to Namor they have his whole character revolve around trying to seduce Susan. This is the era where a lot of fans who haven't read Namor's comics get their characterization, the macho sleazy sexist Susan seducing sea man.
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Fantastic Four (1961) #400 - 412. (Note: #412 is where fans often like to go "Namor is a rapist" and take panels out of context to "prove" that, it's just really sexist terrible writing and I really don't think people should base all of Namor's character on these issues but unfortunately this era did a lot of harm to people's perception of Namor as a character.)
After that it's really hard to keep track of Namor's character without this list because he just appears in so many things as a one time cameo or guest star, and it's not until The Defenders (2001) that we get him in a consistent book again.
The Defenders (2001) - The Defenders are forced to work together The Order (2002) - The Defenders go evil
Then we have the young Namor series, because Marvel wanted a revamped starting point for new Namor fans due to the possibility of Namor getting a live action solo movie in 2004, however the movie was canceled after the script was done, and it's a good thing because the script was terrible!
Namor (2003) - Namor in his younger years, this comic series is considered part of Namor's continuity but really no one ever references it and it takes some departures from his first human interactions however I do enjoy this comic series even if it doesn't perfectly fit into his usual 30s-present origin.
Then after that we get Namor in Invaders, Avengers, Thunderbolts, seriously without the wiki list it's really hard to follow where he shows up next because Marvel just used him wherever they wanted.
Then we have a really fun series with The Defenders (2005) then that goes into Civil War, Namor loses Nita, and there are a few solo comics like Marvel Comics Presents (2007) #7 we finally have anther mini series solo for Namor in Namor (2007) which takes place right after Civil War and that transitions into Namor's Dark Reign/X-Men in the late 2000s - early 2010's era. When in doubt of where to look next the wiki is seriously a good tool to search through but I can always help out if you have any other questions. Also you SHOULD read Sub-Mariner: The Depths if you haven't yet, because it's a great undersea horror series, it's set around the 1950s and can be read at any time. I love that series.
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agentxthirteen · 1 year
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On this day (March 3, late) in Sharon Carter history, Sharon appeared in:
Avengers #322 (1990)
Avengers/Thunderbolts TPB (Reprint Avengers V3 #32) (2004)
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comic-bucky · 4 years
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Golden Age
Captain America Comics (1941) #1-78
All-Winners Comics (1941) #1-21
Young Allies Comics (1941) #1-20
USA Comics (1941) #6-17
Kid Komics (1943) #2-10
All-Select (1943) #1-10
Complete Comics (1944) #2
Mystic Comics (1944) #4
Young Men (1950) #24
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Silver Age
The Avengers (1963) #4, #56, #106-107, #277, #387, Annual #16
Sgt. Fury (1963) #13
Tales of Suspense (1964) #63-71, #75, #82, #95
Captain America v1 (1968) #105, #107, #109, #112, #121, #128, #131-132, #139, #162, #176, #215, #219-220, #227, #253, #255-157, #261, #264, #281, #294, #297-299, #326, #349-350, #372, #383-384, #423, #437, #441, #445, #447-448
Captain America Annual (1970) #1, #6, #9, #13
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Bronze Age
The Invaders (1975) #1-31, #38-39, Annual #1
Captain America's Bicentennial Battles (1976)
Marvel Premiere (1972) #29-30
What If..? (1977) #1, #4, #5
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Modern Age
What If..? v2 (1989) #28, #105, #200
Adventures of Captain America (1991) #1-4
Captain America: Medusa Effect (1994)
War Machine (1994) #15-17
Batman/Captain America (1996)
Deadpool v1 (1997) #0, #61
Captain America/Citizen V (1998)
Captain America: Sentinel Of Liberty (1998) #7, #12
Fantastic Four (1998) #569, #584, #588
Domination Factor: Avengers (1999) #2.4, #3.6
Earth X (1999) #0-1, #4, #10
Universe X (2000) #9, #X
Universe X Special: Cap (2001) #1
Paradise X (2002) #0-1
Captain America v3 (1998) #1, #12, #25, #32, #39, #48, #50, Annual 2001
Captain America/Nick Fury: The Otherworld War (2001)
The Ultimates v1 (2002) #1, #3, #7
The Ultimates v2 (2005) #1, #8
Ultimate Avengers (2009) #2, #6
The New Invaders (2004) #2
Captain America v4 (2002) #10, #17, #19-20, #26
Captain America: 65th Anniversary Special (2006) #1
Captain America Comics 70th Anniversary Special (2009) #1
Captain America Comics 70th Anniversary Special (2011) #1
Cable & Deadpool (2004) #45
Captain America v5 (2005) #1-50
Winter Soldier: Winter Kills (2007)
Young Avengers Presents (2008) #1
Punisher War Journal (2007) #11
Fallen Son: Wolverine (2007)
Wolverine: Origins (2006) #15-20, #23, #25, #30
Civil War: Battle Damage Report (2007) #1
Iron Man/Captain America: Casualties of War (2007) #1
Secret Invasion (2008) #4, #6-8
What If? Secret Invasion (2010) #1
Avengers/Invaders (2008) #1-12
House of M: Civil War (2008) #3-4
What If? House Of M (2009) #1
Mythos: Captain America (2008) #1
Invincible Iron Man v1 (2008) #17, #20-22, #501
Incredible Hulk v2 (2009) #601, #607, #609
Nomad: Girl Without a World (2009) #1, #4
Ms. Marvel v2 (2006) #41-42
Ms. Marvel: War of the Marvels (2009) #1
Agents of Atlas (2009) #3-5
New Avengers (2009) #48-64, Finale
The Amazing Spider-Man v1 (2009) #600-601, #637, #648, #661
Wolverine (2003) #38-40, #72-74
Young Allies: 70th Anniversary Special (2009)
The Marvels Project (2009) #7-8
Avengers: The Initiative (2007) #19, #34-35
Dark Reign: The List - Avengers (2009) #1
Captain America v1 (2009) #600-619
Captain America: Reborn (2009) #1-6
Captain America: Who Will Wield The Shield? (2010)
Siege (2010) #2-4
Siege: Captain America (2010) #1
Steve Rogers: Super Soldier (2010) #1
Dark Wolverine (2009) #84
Avengers v4 (2010) #1-7, #10, #12.1, #16
Avengers vs. Pet Avengers (2010) #1-4
I am An Avenger (2010) #2, #4-5
Free Comic Book Day: Avengers (2009) #1
AAFES 7th Edition (2009) #7
AAFES 9th Edition (2010) #9
Wolverine: Weapon X (2010) #12-15
Avengers vs. Atlas (2010) #1, #4
Dark Avengers Annual (2010) #1
Hawkeye & Mockingbird (2010) #1
Age of Heroes (2010) #1
Invaders Now! (2010) #1-5
World War Hulks (2010) #1
World War Hulks: Captain America vs Wolverine (2010) #1-2
Captain America The 1940s Newspaper Strip (2010) #1-3
Captain America: Forever Allies (2010) #1-4
Black Panther/Captain America: Flags of Our Fathers (2010) #4
Black Widow: Deadly Origin (2010) #1-4
Black Widow v4 (2010) #1-6
Chaos War (2010) #1, #5
Chaos War: Dead Avengers (2011) #1, #3
Heroes for Hire v3 (2011) #9-10
Fear Itself (2011) #3-4
Fear Itself: Captain America (2011) #7.1
Fear Itself: The Worthy (2011) #1
All-Winners Squad: Band of Heroes (2011) #1-5
Captain America and Falcon (2011) #1
Captain America: A Little Help (2011) #1
Captain America Corps (2011) #1-5
Captain America and Bucky (2011) #620-624
Captain America: Hail Hydra (2011) #1-2, #5
Captain America v6 (2011) #1-2, #19
The Winter Soldier (2012) #1-19
Marvel Zombies Destroy (2012) #1-5
Secret Avengers v1 (2010) #15
Secret Avengers v2 (2013) #9, #16
Captain America v7 (2013) #6, #13, #20
Winter Soldier: The Bitter March (2014) #1-5
Marvel 75th Anniversary Celebration (2014) #1
All-New Marvel Now! Point One (2014) #1
All-New Invaders (2014) #1-15
Original Sin (2014) #1-8
Bucky Barnes: The Winter Soldier (2014) #1-11
Black Widow v5 (2014) #8, #12, #15, #17-18
Planet Hulk (2015) #1-5
Runaways v4 (2015) #1-4
1602 Witch Hunter Angela (2015) #1
1872 (2015) #1-2
Red Skull (2015) #1-2
Civil War (2015) #1-4
Captain America: White (2008) #0-5
Captain America: Sam Wilson (2015) #7-8
Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014) #12
A-Force v1 (2015) #5
POP Secret Avengers: A Tussle in Time (2016)
Thunderbolts (2016) #1-12
Captain America: Steve Rogers (2016) #1-2, #4, #11-13, #16, #18
All-New, All-Different Avengers (2015) #8-9
Avengers Standoff: Welcome to Pleasant Hill (2016) #1
Avengers Standoff: Assault On Pleasant Hill Alpha (2016) #1
Avengers Standoff: Assault On Pleasant Hill Omega (2016) #1
Black Widow v6 (2016) #9-10
Captain Marvel v6 (2016) #8
Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. (2016) #8
A Year of Marvels: July Infinite Comic (2016) #1
Generations: Sam Wilson: Captain America & Steve Rogers: Captain America (2017) #1
Secret Empire (2017) #0, #2, #4-5, #8-10
Secret Empire: Brave New World (2017) #1-2, #4-5
Secret Empire Omega (2017) #1
Tales of Suspense v2 (2017) #100-104
Captain America v8 (2017) #25, #695, #701
Captain America v9 (2018) #1, #5-7, #12, #19-21
The Punisher v8 (2016) #227-228
The Punisher v9 (2018) #5
Old Man Hawkeye (2018) #6, #8
The Unstoppable Wasp (2018) #7-10
Rise of the Black Panther (2018) #3
Captain America Annual (2018) #1
Winter Soldier (2018) #1-5
Invaders (2019) #1-12
War of the Realms (2019) #3-5
War of the Realms - Strikeforce: The War Avengers (2019) #1
Strikeforce (2019) #1-9
Web of Black Widow (2019) #2, #5
Deadpool v5 (2018) #13
Gwenpool Strikes Back (2019) #3
Captain Marvel v8 (2019) #6
Uncanny X-Men (2019) #11
Marvel Comics (2019) #1000-1001
Marvel Comics Presents (2019) #7
History of the Marvel Universe (2019) #2, #5
Avengers: Save Like A Hero (2019) #1
Captain America & The Invaders: Bahamas Triangle (2019) #1
Spider-Woman v6 (2020) #1
Amazing Spider-Man (2020) #38
Ruins of Ravencroft: Dracula (2020) #1
Hawkeye: Freefall (2020) #1, #4
Falcon & Winter Soldier (2020) #1-5
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Other Bucky reading guides *work in progress*
BuckyCap | Kid!Bucky | Steve/Bucky | Bucky/Nat | Falcon/Bucky | Bucky/Daredevil | Bucky/Hawkeye
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updated 12/08/20
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panels-of-interest · 3 years
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Blackheath vs. Moonstone.
[from Avengers/Thunderbolts (2004) #5]
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bobbimorses · 4 years
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hello, I'm new with Hawkeye, but I want to know him more, so could you recommend me comics about him? thank you, I love your blog so much
if you want to start off with just a few issues, i first recommend hawkeye: blindspot to any completely new-to-hawkeye reader, because it gives a condensed version of his backstory
anyways, i’ve made some very general rec lists before, but i’ve recently been made aware that new readers don’t much like reading comics from before the modern age (clint was up to some wild stuff in the bronze age, guys!). so here are some recs of post-disassembled (that’s 2004) comics to get to know some things about clint:
for what clint’s currently up to, read tales of suspense #100-104, followed by hawkeye: freefall
now backpedaling a bit for what’s been up with clint the past 15 years (~3-4 yrs comics time) . . .
 to see clint’s adjustment to being twice killed and revived (in avengers #502 and house of m #7), his utter respect for cap, his first encounter with kate bishop, and a precursor to becoming ronin, read fallen son #3
for clint (as ronin) formally meeting kate, read young avengers presents #6
(here’s a list of some ronin stuff if you want)
you can read hawkeye & mockingbird for clint's return to hawkeye (and relationship with bobbi) post-ronin
[it is here where i assume you’ve read hawkeye v4 (2012) because usually everyone who asks me for recs already has]
if you’d like to see clint’s rough time (which spills over into freefall) after the absolutely baffling writing decision where he killed the hulk, read occupy avengers
now if you’re like “man, i don’t care what year the comic is from and i wanna see clint in his purple pointy mask and tights!!" then you can go through a few of my recs here. and if you want purple tights, don’t mind that it’s not a limited series, but want something more recent, then i personally love clint’s thunderbolts appearances. those would be thunderbolts #9-12 and #20-75ish (it gets complicated after 50 tbh). while we’re at it, captain america v3 #4 (1998) from the same period shows clint in ultimate pestering friend mode. hawkeye: earth’s mightiest marksman is also a one-off starring clint
these are just some recs off the top of my head. there are single issues in multiple series over decades where clint’s character really shines through (mostly in avengers, of course), so remember: sometimes it’s not just reading a limited or solo series where you really understand a character, but just the culmination of their actions and development in an issue here and there over time. happy reading!
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multiverseforger · 3 years
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Helmut Zemo (aka the 13th Baron Zemo) is Heinrich Zemo's son who was born in Leipzig, Germany. His father taught him the idea that the Master Race should rule the world. Helmut was originally an engineer until he became enraged when reading a report about the return of Captain America and his father's death. Helmut would ultimately follow in his father's footsteps as a supervillain using his family's money and his own scientific know-how to recreate his father's work.
He first surfaced under the alias of the Phoenix, and captured Captain America to get revenge upon him for the death of his father. He was presumed deceased when he fell into a vat of boiling, specially-treated Adhesive X. As he had not been wearing his mask when he fell into the vat, his face was hideously scarred by the boiling Adhesive X, giving his face the appearance of molten wax.[5]
He resurfaced years later as Baron Zemo, first allied with Arnim Zola's mutates. He allied with Primus I and the half-rat/half human mutate Vermin, and kidnapped Captain America's childhood friend Arnold Roth in order to lure Captain America into a trap. He forced the Captain to battle hordes of mutates before revealing that he knew Captain America's secret identity.[6]
Zemo later encountered Mother Superior and the Red Skull.[7] Zemo underwent tutelage by Mother Superior and Red Skull, and then kidnapped Captain America's friend David Cox and brainwashed him to battle Captain America.[8] Zemo then kidnapped Roth again, and directed a shared mental reenactment of Heinrich Zemo's last World War II encounter with Captain America.[9] Zemo then battled Mother Superior, but was psychically overpowered.[10]
Most notably, he formed a new incarnation of the Masters of Evil. This fourth Masters of Evil was formed to strike at Captain America through the Avengers; they invaded and occupied Avengers Mansion and crippled Hercules and the Avengers' butler Edwin Jarvis. Zemo captured Captain America and the Black Knight. Zemo battled Captain America, but fell off the mansion roof.[11]
Zemo later hired Batroc's Brigade and psychic detective Tristram Micawber to help him locate the five fragments of the Bloodstone in hopes of restoring his father to life. Fighting Captain America and Diamondback, Zemo's plan backfired, as he instead turned his father's corpse into a vessel for the demonic forces that lurk inside of the Bloodstone. The reanimated corpse was destroyed by Crossbones (who sought to steal the Bloodstone for Red Skull) and a distraught Zemo fell down an inactive volcano in Japan trying to retrieve it.[12]
Zemo survived the fall, though his right hand (which was not protected by a glove) was horrifically burnt and mangled. Driven insane by the destruction of his father's body, Helmut took control of an army of mutates and tried to re-enslave Vermin. He was defeated by Spider-Man and Vermin was freed.
Broken and beaten, Zemo was taken in by a female scientist calling herself "The Baroness" who modeled herself after Heinrich. The two married and began kidnapping abused, neglected children to serve as their children. Zemo's sanity returned and he even created a new realistic face mask to hide his disfigured face from his adopted children, whom he nurtured and swore to protect from those who might return them to their abusive foster homes. The couple's peaceful life was ultimately shattered when Captain America discovered their home, while searching for the evil super-scientist Superia. Superia and the Baroness (who revealed that she had pretended to be Heinrich Zemo reborn in a clone body during a fight with Silver Sable and Spider-Man) mocked Helmut and his newfound domestic househusband status as they plotted to kill him. Zemo turned on his wife and Superia, before turning his attention to dropping Captain America into a vat of Adhesive X. The plan failed and Zemo (now wearing his trademark hood) fell into the container instead, with the Baroness (hoping to curry favor with her husband), falling in after him. The two were rescued by Captain America and Helmut bemoaned that like his father, his face now was permanently hidden by his mask. Captain America responded by revealing that the Avengers had since found a way to dissolve Adhesive X and would use it to free Zemo from his costume and hood, a fact that drove him further into a rage due to Captain America never offering to share this adhesive remover with his father.
Helmut Zemo as Citizen V. Art by Mark Bagley.
Zemo ultimately escaped prison, though his wife the Baroness died shortly after being sentenced to prison for her role in the abduction of the children they were raising. During this time, Zemo discovered that Goliath was imprisoned in the Microverse and formed a new version of Masters of Evil to free Goliath. But after rescuing Goliath, the Avengers and The Fantastic Four disappeared during the Onslaught crisis and were presumed dead. After overhearing the Beetle (Abe Jenkins) and Goliath talk about who would replace the Avengers and The Fantastic Four, a distraught Zemo soon found a new purpose for his team: the Masters of Evil would take on new heroic identities as the Thunderbolts.[13] Zemo would lead the group under the alias Citizen V (a twist of irony as Heinrich Zemo had killed the original Citizen V during World War II) and planned to have the Thunderbolts gain the world's trust in order to conquer it.[14] The public took a liking to the team much more quickly than Zemo, or any of the other Thunderbolts, expected and soon most of them came to like the feeling of being heroes.
When the missing heroes returned, Zemo had the Thunderbolts' true identities leaked, forcing them to flee with him into deep space to assist his plan to conquer the world through mind control.[15] However, most of the Thunderbolts rebelled and with the assistance of Iron Man foiled Zemo's plan.[16] Zemo went into hiding and plotted revenge on his former teammates (who were trying to win back the public's trust by being true heroes).[volume & issue needed] After another of Zemo's plans was foiled by Captain America and a new Citizen V (Dallas Riordan),[volume & issue needed] Helmut was killed by the new Scourge of the Underworld,[17] though his mind was transferred via bio-modem technology into the comatose body of John Watkins III.[volume & issue needed] Now in possession of Watkins' body, Zemo again played the Citizen V role, this time as a member of the V-Battalion,[volume & issue needed] until the Thunderbolts' final battle with Graviton, during which his consciousness was removed from Watkins' body and transferred, in electronic form, into his ally Fixer's mechanical "tech-pack".[volume & issue needed]
On the artificial world Counter-Earth - the same world to which the Avengers and The Fantastic Four had previously vanished - the Thunderbolts encountered Zemo's counterpart, Iron Cross, in that world.[volume & issue needed] Fixer transferred Zemo's mind into his double's unmutilated body.[volume & issue needed] Zemo then took up leadership of the Thunderbolts who were on Counter-Earth;[volume & issue needed] when this group was reunited with their teammates who had remained on the normal Marvel Universe Earth,[volume & issue needed] Hawkeye briefly resumed leadership,[volume & issue needed] but then left the team to return to the Avengers.[volume & issue needed]
For a while Zemo remained the leader of the Thunderbolts.[volume & issue needed] In 2004's "Avengers/Thunderbolts" limited series, he attempted to take over the world again — this time with the belief that he could save the world by taking it over.[volume & issue needed] Zemo now seems to be motivated by a twisted altruism rather than his original selfish desires; he feels he has grown beyond his father in that regard.[volume & issue needed] However, the Avengers foiled his scheme, his teammate Moonstone went berserk, Zemo's new body was blasted while he attempted to protect Captain America, and he left the team and went into hiding after obtaining Moonstone's twin alien gems, two artifacts of great power.[volume & issue needed]
Zemo had been manipulating the United States government, the New Thunderbolts, the Purple Man, the Squadron Sinister, and a host of other relatively obscure Marvel characters.[volume & issue needed] His goals are unknown, but he is clearly still motivated by a desire to save the world by taking it over, or at least manipulating it towards what he perceives as a beneficial future. Zemo has also, apparently through trial and error, learned how to use the power of the moonstones in various ways, from simply generating raw energy, to transporting himself and others through time, space, and dimensions, to viewing possible future events through dimensional rifts—and, apparently, to repair his damaged face (or, at least to create the illusion that it was undamaged).[volume & issue needed] He has also recruited members of both his original and subsequent incarnations of the Thunderbolts to his cause, as well as eventually bringing the current team of Thunderbolts around to joining him.[volume & issue needed] The group resides in what Zemo calls his "Folding Castle", a structure that he has connected to various other places around the world by dimensional portals.[volume & issue needed]
As a result of The Civil War storyline, Iron Man asked Zemo to begin recruiting villains to his cause, which Zemo had already been doing, unknown to Iron Man.[18] However, he met up with Captain America and informed him that he really had reformed. He showed Captain America his face, once again scarred, to remind him of his earlier sacrifice, and gave him a key that would allow him to escape from the super-human prison being constructed if Captain America would allow his Thunderbolts to fight the Squadron Sinister.[volume & issue needed] He also gave Captain America all his old mementos, destroyed by Zemo in 'Avengers Under Siege', which he had gone back in time and rescued with the help of the Moonstones. Finally, Captain America agreed.[volume & issue needed]
Zemo, was always told as a child that he was superior, he now believes his father's Nazi ideals to be untrue, and that the only way to become superior is through righteousness. After helping Captain America, he remarked to his father's portrait that the man would be displeased with today's good deeds. Zemo—once again wearing his unscarred face—then revealed that Songbird was going to betray him and he was going to sacrifice himself in their upcoming battle with the Squadron Sinister. He told her that he would not die, but that he would become superior through his sacrifice "by living forever".[volume & issue needed]
Zemo revealed his true nature when he saved the Wellspring of Power from the Grandmaster planning to use it for his own ends. Believing that all of his visions were subject to the flow of time, and that nothing was set in stone, Zemo defeated the Grandmaster, and boasted to his teammates that the power was now all his—and theirs. He insisted that he would use it to help the world, despite the consequences of doing so. Songbird, having temporarily lost her own powers during the final battle, was told by Zemo "...now is when your betrayal would have come". However, the vision of Songbird's betrayal turned out to be true after all. Using a simple opera note to crack the moonstones, Songbird sent Zemo into a whirlwind of cosmic space/time. Just before he was completely sucked into the vacuum, he screamed out that he "would never have hurt a world he worked so hard to save".[volume & issue needed]
The limited series Thunderbolts Presents: Zemo - Born Better (2007), written by Fabian Nicieza and drawn by Tom Grummett, explores the history of the Zemo barony. Helmut, sucked into the vacuum, wakes up in medieval Germany (1503), witnessing Harbin Zemo's death and his succession, while in the present academic Wendell Volker and Reed Richards deduce that Helmut has traveled in time. Captured and taken prisoner as a leper, Helmut manages to inspire Harbin's twelve year old grandson Heller Zemo to kill his own father Hademar Zemo and fulfill his destiny as the third (and most enlightened and progressive) Baron Zemo. Heller goes to the hidden cell to free his "muse", discovering that Helmut has somehow disappeared. Helmut makes a jump to 1556 where he fights alongside Heller's son Herbert Zemo, then later jumps to 1640 where he slays Herbert's son Helmuth Zemo, and later arrives in 1710 where he narrowly escapes being killed by Helmuth's son Hackett Zemo.[volume & issue needed]
Meanwhile, in the present, Volker reveals that the Zemo bloodline is not just limited to Helmut's immediate family. In fact Harbin's descendants are spread out all over the world. Wendell visits Miss Klein, a descendant of a bastard child of Hilliard Zemo, the eighth Baron Zemo and Jewish lover Elsbeth Kleinenshvitz. Hilliard becomes baron after the death of his father Hartwig Zemo in the Seven Years' War. In the past Helmut sees Hilliard and Elsbeth in love, realizing that the residual energy of the Moonstone is drawing him into the present, but forcing him to stop and live every key moment of Zemo's lineage. Helmut manages to save Elsbeth, who is sentenced to die by the Diet because of her Jewish ancestry and her wealthy family, but in the present Volker kills her distant descendant, convinced that his actions can pull Helmut to his proper place in the time stream.[volume & issue needed]
Helmut next ends up in 1879 where he stays for several weeks working his way up to be part of the travelling guard of Hobart Zemo, the tenth Baron Zemo. Hobart is killed during a civilian uprising shortly after German Emperor William passes legislation to curb the Socialist party. Helmut jumps forward in time before he can save his own great-grandfather. Helmut arrives during World War I in a battle between British forces led by the original Union Jack and German forces led by his own grandfather Baron Herman Zemo, the eleventh Baron Zemo. Helmut witnesses Herman's men slaughter the majority of the British forces with mustard gas. Later, Helmut goes with Herman and his men to find Castle Zemo reduced to rubble by the war. Helmut travels forward in time again to his father's tenure as a Nazi during World War II.[volume & issue needed]
Back in the present, Volker discovers that Castle Zemo has been restored in the present. Wendell tours the castle with a local German police man and Interpol agent Herr Fleischtung, Wendell murders both men. Wendell has apparently murdered several Zemo relations in the belief that this spilling of Zemo blood would bring Helmut back to the present.[volume & issue needed]
After battling his own father in the past, giving him the inspiration to take up the Zemo mantle, Helmut returns to the present and manages to convince Wendell not to kill him as well, instead taking what is discovered to be his cousin under his wing, as he sets out to do something new for the world.[volume & issue needed]
Following the events of The Siege crossover as seen in the Heroic Age storyline, Luke Cage assumes control over the Thunderbolts and has Fixer impersonate Zemo as a test to see which of his new teammates would betray the team if offered a chance to escape.[19] Later on, it was revealed that Fixer was keeping in secret contact with Zemo while working on the Raft.[20] During the Fear Itself event, Zemo gave Fixer key info on the mutant army threatening Chicago.[volume & issue needed]
Having spent his time on the sidelines, watching Norman Osborn's rise to power with the intent of waiting to see what Norman would do with control over the Thunderbolts and later S.H.I.E.L.D., Zemo reappeared following the events of the Siege when Osborn was ultimately defeated by The Avengers. A chance encounter at the Thunderbolts' former base in Colorado with the Ghost led to him learning Bucky Barnes was the current iteration of Captain America. Zemo confronted his rival and discovered how the man had survived his father's death trap only to become the Winter Soldier, a trained Soviet assassin who killed scores of people for several Russian handlers. But most alarming was the fact that Zemo discovered the original Captain America had not only forgiven his successor for the crimes, but had actively covered them up even after Winter Soldier blew up a huge chunk of New York, killing several dozen S.H.I.E.L.D. agents in order to restore power to a Cosmic Cube fragment.[21]
Zemo recruited Jurgen "Iron-Handed" Hauptmann (of Red Skull's Exiles), as well as Fixer and a new female version of Beetle to expose the current Captain America's sins to the world. This included drugging Bucky with nanites that caused Captain America to behave irrationally and attack police officers and leaking to the media, not only detailed files revealing Winter Soldier's acts of terrorism committed as a mind-controlled pawn of the Russians, but video footage as well of him being trained by handlers. Zemo ultimately kidnapped Bucky and took his father's victim to Heinrich's island which is where Bucky's original "death" occurred. There Zemo confessed that he did what he did, not out of a desire to finish the job his father started, but out of jealousy over how Captain America and his allies quickly forgave Bucky for his crimes, yet continue to scorn the reformed Helmut who had saved the world on numerous occasions.[22] Zemo then forced Bucky into a similar deathtrap as the one his father put Bucky in, modified though in order to allow Bucky a chance to escape. Zemo then escaped from the island unharmed.[23]
Zemo has since turned his eye towards Hawkeye, who he blames for usurping control over the Thunderbolts from him. Zemo makes a deal with Hawkeye’s former mentor Trick Shot (whose cancer had returned) to train Zemo’s mystery acquaintance to become a master archer in exchange for medical care. When the training was complete, Zemo reneged on the deal. Trick Shot (on the brink of death) was delivered to Avengers Tower to serve as a message to Hawkeye. Before he died in his former pupil's arms, Trick Shot warns Hawkeye of the threat he will soon face.[24]
In the pages of Avengers Undercover, Zemo has become the new leader of The Shadow Council's Masters of Evil following the death of Max Fury.[25]
Zemo later becomes the new leader of Hydra and enters into conflict with Sam Wilson, the new Captain America.[26] Using the toxic blood of an Inhuman boy named Lucas, Zemo plans to sterilize the human race and distribute a cure to only a small portion of those infected, thus forcibly solving the planet's problems with overpopulation and lack of resources. He later kills Ian Rogers, the new Nomad and Captain America's partner, by slashing his throat and sends a photo to Steve Rogers.[27] He later fights Wilson to a standstill until Lucas escapes via jet plane to spread his blood in the world.[28]
During the Avengers: Standoff! storyline, Zemo appears as a prisoner of the S.H.I.E.L.D. established gated community called Pleasant Hill where the technology Kobik that was derived from the Cosmic Cube turned him into an amnesiac man named Jim who later discovered that Pleasant Hill is surrounded by a forcefield. He briefly witnessed an eerie girl bring a bird back to life until she is taken away by some adults. Then he encounters a mechanic named Phil who arranges a meet-up following his arson activity. On Day 40, Jim met Phil who had created a device that enabled people to return to their true selves. Phil also stole a training video where Mayor Maria Hill gave a video tour of Pleasant Hill describing to the S.H.I.E.L.D. cadets watching this to be the future of supervillain incarceration where they are turned into mild-mannered civilians using reality-warping technology derived from the Cosmic Cube called "Kobik". A demonstration was shown when Graviton was turned into a Pleasant Hill inhabitant named Howie Howardson. As Phil uses the device on himself and Jim to restore their true selves, Jim was restored back to Zemo while Phil was Fixer once again. Both of them vow to use the device on the other brainwashed supervillain prisoners and reduce Pleasant Hill to dust.[29] Zemo and Fixer started working on restoring the memories of the inmates one by one. Then Zemo led a coordinated assault on a S.H.I.E.L.D. outpost that serves as the Pleasant Hill City Hall.[30] After Kraven the Hunter captures Kobik, he loads her into Fixer's machine where Baron Zemo plans to control Kobik. During the Avengers' fight with Baron Zemo's villain allies, both Zemo and Erik Selvig tried to get Kobik to come with them. Kobik ended up teleporting Zemo and Selvig away from Pleasant Hill. They were last seen in the Himalayas trying to make their way back to civilization. Zemo brings Selvig with him as he's crucial to his next plan.[31]
After leaving the Himalayas, Zemo begins to form his "New Masters" group, he starts by recruiting Firebrand, Flying Tiger, and Plantman II. They later encounter Steve Rogers, the original Captain America, Free Spirit and Jack Flag. Zemo then tries to escape with Doctor Selvig until Captain America enters his plane. Before he could kill Steve Rogers, Zemo is defeated by Jack Flag.[32] After Rogers pushes Jack Flag out of the plane, he makes the plane crash into a building to kill Doctor Selvig and Zemo.[33] However, it is later revealed that Rogers kept Zemo in a cell.[34] Rogers then manages to convince Zemo that they were best friends since childhood, since Rogers's reality was rewritten by Kobik to believe he has been a Hydra double agent since childhood, and recruits him in his mission to kill the Red Skull. Zemo then starts to recruit all the supervillains who escaped from Pleasant Hill.[35]
After Rogers kills the Red Skull's clone in his mansion during the "Opening Salvo" part of the Secret Empire storyline, Zemo arrives with his team of supervillains called the Army of Evil.[36] After the Army of Evil disappears after attacking Manhattan, Helmut Zemo uses the Darkhold to enhanced a brainwashed Blackout into covering Manhattan in a Darkforce dome while trapping the heroes there.[37] During the Underground's battle with Hydra in Washington DC, Zemo goes to awaken the Army of Evil from their stasis as Winter Soldier arrives in time to free Black Panther. Both of them apprehend Zemo before he can awaken the Army of Evil.[38]
Helmut Zemo leads Hydra into occupying Bagalia. In his shared plot with Dario Agger and Roxxon Energy Corporation to have the United Nations recognize Bagalia as an independent nation, Helmut Zemo selects Mandarin as the public face for Bagalia where Mandarin uses the alias of Tem Borjigen. As part of his revenge on Hydra for manipulating him, Punisher finds Mandarin making a speech at the United Nations and fires a special bullet. After using his rings to slow down the bullet while trying to deflect it, Mandarin is struck in the head with the bullet which is witnessed by Baron Zemo and anyone watching his speech.[39]
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Avengers / Thunderbolts 1 (2004) by Kurt Busiek & Barry Kitson
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killypool · 4 years
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xMs. Marvel (2006) #40an amalgamation of everything relating to comics in one big place. including but not limited to headcanons / takeaways regarding individual comics, the list of comics i’ve read and would be comfortable referencing when plotting / writing in any sort of capacity within the comics, and just general comics shenanigans. may occasionally reblog as deemed necessary for substantial updates to list of comics read, headcanons, etc.
comics i’ve finished: 
deadpool (1994) 
short run, only 4 issues. favorite takeaways include the discovery of my absolute love of wade’s reaction to anyone reaching to take off his mask. the kink for wade losing his regeneration abilities and continuing to take bullets continues. god fucking bless. decent art, love wade’s dialogue. not big on how his costume is designed - gotta love him having black gloves. too much red. 
black panther vs deadpool (2018) 
again, short run. when i say my kink for wade losing his regeneration abilities, i say my fuckin kink for wade losing his regeneration abilities. really love how much this comic highlights wade just constantly being misunderstood and incapable of explaining himself and his beliefs to others. coulda saved a whole lot of problems if he just ‘fessed up. not too big on the art style on wade, but 10/10 emotional moments. “every time i get blown to pieces, i think “okay wade, you’re a new man - literally! don’t fuck it up this time. and then i fuck it up. it’s just so hard to actually change. after all these things i’ve done... they say you really can see people’s souls, t’challa, and... i guess i just wanna know... can you still see mine? cuz i’m worried it’s the one part of me that won’t grow back.” 
deadpool v gambit (2016)
i just reread this like last month but i gotta reread it. not my favorite art style, but you gotta appreciate the friendship between remy and wade. just chef kiss content here. not too many emotional moments, and not full of headcanon fodder, but the image of wade in spider-man’s costume? beautiful. stunning. incredible. blessed. 
hawkeye vs. deadpool (2014)
ellie and wade? incredible. wade and clint? fantastic. wade taking a bullet for clint? showstopping. wade pulling up his mask so clint can read his lips? blessed fucking content. has some decent emotional moments, i love the art style of it. really really love how wade behaves in it.
secret agent deadpool
honestly, this was such a short, sweet, funny run. there was a ton of indulgent shots of wade naked, a cute little romance, a hilarious plot. i gotta love the scenes of wade apologizing for his grotesque appearance and offering to wear gloves. definitely indulgent and cute. not much in the way of headcanons or plot i want to adopt, but it was definitely cute and fun. and this is sounding very repetitive. woops.
the new mutants #98 
ah, baby’s first comic. pretty boring, honestly, especially since i have zero interest in reading the 97 comics that came before to have a crumb of context. but it’s still nice to see. nothing to pull from in terms of plot, characterixation, art, etc. but still cool.
comics i’m in the process of reading:
spider-man/deadpool
i could literally talk about this for fucking years. there are a lot - and i do mean a lot - of things i have issues with in this comic. i don’t like peter being as old as he is. i don’t like peter being a ceo. while the last thing i want is a spideypool interpretation where peter is early 20s ( or god forbid younger ) and wade is in his late 30s, early 40s and wade is still shown to have romantic feelings for peter, seeing peter as a ceo in his 30s is just such a far change from my established views of peter. i’ve already annoyed plenty of people talking about this already, but i think the way they had peter treat wade is out of character and sets peter up to be this massive asshole for no reason. it makes him appear immature, standoffish, and irritable in a way i don’t agree with. still definitely has a lot of content that i do love and do want to pull inspiration from. i really really want to read other comics in whatever universe this is just to get a better idea of wade’s relationship with the other avengers. art is pretty fantastic, a+ emotional moments and quotes and pretty decent plot considering my already established reservations. 
x-force (1991) - issues 2, 4, 5, 10
nomad (1994) issue 4
x-men premium addition (1993)
deadpool: the circle chase
avengers (1963) #366
secret defenders
silver sable and the wild pack
deadpool (1994)
wolverine (1988) #88
wolverine (1995)
deadpool (1997)
daredevil/deadpool (1997)
heroes for hire (1997)
deadpool/death annual (1998)
deadpool team up (1998)
wolverine (1999) #1, #154, #155
contest of champions II (1999)
Black Panther (1998) #23
Gambit (1999) #17 #18
X-Men Unlimited (1993) #28
Agent X (2002) #13, #14, #15
Cable and Deadpool (2004)
Identity Disc (2004) 
X-Force (2004) #4 #5 #6
Marvel Team-Up (2005) #25
White Tiger (2007) #5
Deadpool/GLI: Summer Fun Spectacular (2007) #1
Wolverine: Origins (2006) #20-#25 #45
Marvel Comics Presents (2007) #10 [C Story]
Deadpool (2008) #1
Wolverine (2003) #73 [A Story]
Weapon X: First Class (2009) #2 [B Story]
Deadpool: Suicide Kings (2009) #1
Thunderbolts (2006) #131
Deadpool: Games of Death (2009) #1
Ms. Marvel (2006) #40 #41
Hulk (2008) #14-#17 #21
Deadpool: Merc with a Mouth (2009) #1
Prelude to Deadpool Corps (2010) #1
Deadpool Corps (2010) #1 [A Story]
X-Force Annual (2010) #1 [B Story]
Shang-Chi: Master of Kung Fu (2009) #1 [A Story]
Marvel Digital Holiday Special (2008) #2 [B Story]
Amazing Spider-Man (1999) #611
X-Men Origins: Deadpool (2010) #1
Fall of the Hulks: Red Hulk (2010) #2
World War Hulks (2010) #1 [F Story]
Hulked-Out Heroes (2010) #1 #2
Doomwar (2010) #4 #5 #6
X-Men: Second Coming (2010) #2
Cable (2008) #25 #26
Vengeance of the Moon Knight (2009) #7 #8
New Avengers (2010) #7 [A Story]
Wolverine: Road to Hell (2010) #1 [C Story]
Uncanny X-Force (2010) #1 - #5.1 - #16 #19-#36
Wolverine (2010) #5.1
Deadpool Family (2011) #1 [B Story]
Wolverine/Deadpool: The Decoy (2011) #1
Amazing Spider-Man Annual (1964) #38
Deadpool Annual (2011) #1
Incredible Hulks Annual (2011) #1
Fear Itself: Deadpool (2011) #1
Fear Itself: Uncanny X-Force (2011) #1
Battle Scars (2012) #3 #4
Wolverine (2010) #16
X-Men (2010) #25 #26
Wolverine and the X-Men (2011) #4 #17 #19 
Avenging Spider-Man (2012) #12 #13
Deadpool (2013) #1
A+X (2012) #8 [B Story]
Thunderbolts (2013) #1 - #11
Deadpool Kills Deadpool (2013) #1
Deadpool vs. Carnage (2014) #1
Thunderbolts Annual (2014) #1
Deadpool Annual (2014) #1
Deadpool: The Gauntlet Infinite (2014) #1
Deadpool Bi-Annual (2014) #1
Rocket Raccoon (2014) #5
Hawkeye vs. Deadpool (2014) #0
Death of Wolverine: Deadpool and Captain America (2014) #1
Avengers and X-Men: Axis (2014) #2 #3 #7 #8 #9
Magneto (2014) #11 #12
Secret Avengers (2014) #6 #7 #9 #10 #12 #13 #15
Hulk (2014) #12 #13 #14
Deadpool's Secret Secret Wars (2015) #1 [A Story]
Howard the Duck (2015) #4 [A Story]
Guardians Team-Up (2015) #10
Wolverines (2015) #12
Mrs. Deadpool and the Howling Commandos (2015) #1
Deadpool and Cable: Split Second Infinite Comic (2015) #1
Avengers (2015) #0
Uncanny Avengers (2015) #1
Black Knight (2016) #1
Deadpool vs. Thanos (2015) #1
Deadpool (2016) #1
Squadron Supreme (2016) #1
Uncanny Avengers Annual (2016) #1
Gwenpool Special (2016) #1 [A Story]
Spider-Man/Deadpool (2016) #1
Deadpool and the Mercs for Money (2016) #1
All-New, All-Different Avengers (2016) #7
Captain America: Sam Wilson (2015) #8
Avengers Standoff: Assault on Pleasant Hill Omega (2016) #1
Uncanny X-Men (2016) #6 [B Story]
The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl Beats Up the Marvel Universe (2016) #1
Rocket Raccoon and Groot (2016) #4
Deadpool: Bad Blood (2017) #1
Deadpool v. Gambit (2016) #1
Deadpool: Too Soon? Infinite Comic (2016) #1
Marvel New Year's Eve Special Infinite Comic (2016) #1
Deadpool: Back In Black (2016) #1
Amazing Spider-Man (2015) #14
Civil War II (2016) #1
New Avengers (2015) #12
Deadpool and the Mercs for Money (2016) #1
Spider-Man (2016) #8
Nova (2016) #8
The Fallen (2016) #1
Power Man and Iron Fist (2016) #10
Deadpool: Last Days of Magic (2016) #1
Invincible Iron Man (2017) #5
Foolkiller (2016) #4
Deadpool the Duck (2017) #1
Gwenpool Holiday Special: Merry Mix-Up (2016) #1 [A Story]
Power Man and Iron Fist: Sweet Christmas (2016) #1
Great Lakes Avengers (2016) #7
Monsters Unleashed (2017) #2
Unbelievable Gwenpool (2016) #12
U.S. Avengers (2017) #4
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fyeahinvaders · 5 years
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Invaders Comic Rec
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[Namor, Jim Hammond, Steve Rogers, Toro Raymond, Bucky Barnes]
Invaders Art by Alex Ross
An Invaders comic guide, the ones that are in bold are best to start with since it gives you a better idea of the team:
All Winners Comics (1941)
Giant Size Invaders (1975)
Invaders (1975)
Invaders (1993)
Thunderbolts (1997) #163-165
Captain America: Sentinel of Liberty (#2-4) (1998)
New Invaders (2004)
Winter Solider: Winter Kills (2007)
Avengers/Invaders (2008)
The Torch (2009)
Young Allies Comic 70th Anniversary Special (2009)
All Winners Comics 70th Anniversary Special (2009)
The Marvels Project (2009)
Invaders Now (2010)
Captain America and Bucky (#622) (2011)
Captain America and Namor  (#635.1) (2012)
All New Invaders (2014)
Invaders (2019)
There will be a new Invaders comic created by the original co-creator and writer of the Invaders team, Roy Thomas, Captain America & The Invaders: The Bahamas Triangle coming out in July 2019.
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imperiuswrecked · 5 years
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Invaders Comic Rec
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[Namor, Jim Hammond, Steve Rogers, Toro Raymond, Bucky Barnes]
Invaders Art by Alex Ross
An Invaders comic guide, the ones that are in bold are best to start with since it gives you a better idea of the team:
All Winners Comics (1941)
Giant Size Invaders (1975)
Invaders (1975)
Invaders (1993)
Thunderbolts (1997) #163-165
Captain America: Sentinel of Liberty (#2-4) (1998)
New Invaders (2004)
Winter Solider: Winter Kills (2007)
Avengers/Invaders (2008)
The Torch (2009)  
Young Allies Comic 70th Anniversary Special (2009)
All Winners Comics 70th Anniversary Special (2009)
The Marvels Project (2009)
Invaders Now (2010)
Captain America and Bucky (#622) (2011)
Captain America and Namor  (#635.1) (2012)
All New Invaders (2014)
The newest Invaders (2019) will be released on January 16th, 2019
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agentxthirteen · 2 years
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On this day (March 3) in Sharon Carter history, Sharon appeared in:
Avengers #322 (1990)
Avengers/Thunderbolts TPB (Reprint Avengers V3 #32) (2004)
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griffonfarm · 6 years
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Full Eddie/Venom Comics List
I was asked to provide a more comprehensive list of the Eddie Brock/Venom comics that includes the earlier stuff. So here it is. I deliberately left out random one-shot appearances and those that served as generic “villain of the week” appearances that didn’t do much to advance either character. I probably inadvertently missed a few things too. There are a million Spider-Man books and I've never kept up with them all.
If I missed anything important or I have something out of order, please feel free to let me know so I can fix it!
Please note: The stuff prior to Venom Vol 3 has a different tone than after the reunion (vol 3 onwards) & movie Eddie and Venom. If you’re just looking for cute and loving Eddie/Venom, vol 3 onward is for you. If you’re looking for the whole story—when they were both villains, when they were dicks to each other, when Anne commits suicide because she can’t deal with having briefly bonded with the symbiote—then this list is for you. 
Deadpool: Back In Black - #5 (shows Deadpool orchestrating the meeting between Eddie and the symbiote)
Amazing Spider-Man (1963) - #299-300, #315-317
Avengers: Deathtrap - The Vault - one-shot
Venom: Deathtrap - The Vault - one-shot
Amazing Spider-Man (1963) - #330-333, #344-347, #361-363, #373-375
Venom: Lethal Protector - #1-6
Venom: Funeral Pyre - #1-3
Venom: The Madness - #1-3
Venom: Enemy Within - #1-3
Venom: The Mace - #1-3
Venom: Nights of Vengeance - #1-4
Maximum Carnage: (collected as Maximum Carnage)
1. Spider-Man Unlimited #1
2 .Web of Spider-Man #101
3. Amazing Spider-Man #378
4. Spider-Man (1990) #35
5. Spectacular Spider-Man #201
6. Web of Spider-Man #101
7. Amazing Spider-Man #379
8. Spider-Man (1990) #36
9. Spectacular Spider-Man #202
10. Web of Spider-Man #103
11. Amazing Spider-Man #380
12. Spider-Man (1990) #37
13. Spectacular Spider-Man #203
14. Spider-Man Unlimited #2
Venom: Separation Anxiety - #1-4
Planet of the Symbiotes: (also collected as Venom: Planet of the Symbiotes)
1. Amazing Spider-Man Super Special #1
2. Spider-Man Super Special #1
3. Venom Super Special #1
4. Spectacular Spider-Man Super Special #1
5. Web of Spider-Man Super Special #1
Venom: Carnage Unleashed - #1-4
Venom: Tooth and Claw - #1-3
Venom: Sinner Takes All - #1-5
Venom: Along Came a Spider - #1-4
Venom: The Hunted - #1-3
Venom: On Trial - #1-3
Venom: License to Kill - #1-3
Venom: Sign of the Boss - #1-2
Venom: The Finale - #1-3
Peter Parker: Spider-Man - #10, 12-13, 16-18
Amazing Spider-Man Vol 2 (1999) - #19 (Anne's suicide), 22-23
Venom vol 1 (2003) - #1-18
Venom: The Hunger - #1-4
Venom vs Carnage (2004) - #1-4
Sensational Spider-Man vol 2 (2004) [called Marvel Knights Spider-Man up to #22] - #5-8, 38-39
{ This is where Eddie and Venom split up. Eddie becomes Anti-Venom and the Venom symbiote bonds with Mac Gargan. }
Gargan, commonly known as the Scorpion, is afraid of the symbiote. It doesn’t speak with Gargan in the books the way it did with Eddie. After the Civil War, Gargan-Venom becomes one of the Thunderbolts. Later, after Norman Osborn comes to power, Gargan-Venom becomes the Spider-Man of his Dark Avengers. After Osborn falls, Gargan goes back to being the Scorpion and the symbiote passes on to Flash Thompson. 
( Some Gargan-Venom books: Marvel Knights Spider-Man #9-12, Beyond, Civil War, Thunderbolts 110-127, Secret Invasion, Dark Avengers, Dark Reign, Siege )
Flash Thompson teaches the symbiote about being a hero, helps to heal all the emotional damage that had been done to it by past hosts, and uncovers its personality. It begins speaking to him in Space Knight.
( The main Thompson-Venom books:
1. Venom vol 2 - #1-42
2. Guardians of the Galaxy vol 2 (Free Comic Book Day GotG #1 + #14-27 : note, Thompson's Venom is a side-character for the majority of this)
3. Venom: Space Knight #1-13 )   
{ The list continues with Eddie as Anti-Venom and later bonded with Toxin and Venom with Gargan and later Thompson. }
Amazing Spider-Man (1963) - #568-573
Amazing Spider-Man Extra - #2
Amazing Spider-Man Presents: Anti-Venom - New Ways to Live - #1-3
Amazing Spider-Man (1963) - #662-664, #668-671
Venom vol 2 (2011) - #7 (Eddie, as Anti-Venom, encounters Thompson-Venom), #15-35 (Eddie becomes bonded to his grandson, Toxin and has some run-ins with Thompson-Venom)
Carnage (2016) - #1-16 (Eddie-Toxin taking on his son, Carnage)
{ Eddie and the Venom symbiote are reunited. Now they love each other. } 
Venom vol 3 (2016) - #1-6, then the numbering system changes to #150-158
Amazing Spider-Man: Venom Inc Alpha
Amazing Spider-Man (2015) - #792
Venom vol 3 (2016) - #159
Amazing Spider-Man (2015) - #793
Venom vol 3 (2016) - #160
Amazing Spider-Man: Venom Inc Omega
Venom vol 3 (2016) - #161
Venomverse - #1-5
X-Men Blue - Annual #1
X-Men Blue - #21
Venom vol 3 (2016) - #162
X-Men Blue - #22
Venom vol 3 (2016) - #163
Venomized - #1-5
Venom vol 3 (2016) - #164-165
Amazing Spider-Man (2015) - #797-800
Venom First Host - #1-5
Venom vol 4 (2018) - #1-ongoing (currently up to #7) + Annual #1 
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jaymber · 6 years
Text
Venom Reading Order VI (2010-2014)
(masterpost and annotations)
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2010
o Siege: The Cabal (2010) #1 {c}
o Siege (2010) #1
o Siege: Embedded (2010) #3
o Dark Avengers (2009) #14 {c}
o Dark Avengers (2009) #15 {c}
o Dark Avengers (2009) #16 {c} > jailed
o New Avengers (2004) #63
o Siege: Spider-Man (2010) #1 > bonds with Ms.Marvel momentarily
o Dark X-Men (2010) #3
o Spider-Man & the Secret Wars (2009) #3 (reboot)
o Spider-Man & the Secret Wars (2009) #4 (reboot)
o Spider-Man / Fantastic Four (2010) #2 (reboot)
o Amazing Spider-Man (1963) #647 {c} (flashback)
o Amazing Spider-Man (1963) #648 > unbonds
2011
o Revenge of the Spider-Slayer
Amazing Spider-Man (1963) #652
Amazing Spider-Man (1963) #653
Amazing Spider-Man (1963) #654 > bonds with Flash Thompson
Amazing Spider-Man (1963) #654.1
o Venom (2011) #1
o Venom (2011) #2
o Venom (2011) #3
o Venom (2011) #4
o Venom (2011) #5
o Amazing Spider-Man (1963) #665
o Spider-Island
Amazing Spider-Man (1963) #666
Amazing Spider-Man (1963) #667
Venom (2011) #6
Amazing Spider-Man (1963) #668
Amazing Spider-Man (1963) #669
Venom (2011) #7 > bonds back with Eddie Brock for an instant; death of Harrison Thompson
Amazing Spider-Man (1963) #670
Amazing Spider-Man (1963) #671 > end of Anti-Venom
Venom (2011) #8
Amazing Spider-Man (1963) #672
Amazing Spider-Man (1963) #673
o Venom (2011) #9
o Road Trip
Venom (2011) #10 > goes AWOL
Venom (2011) #11
Venom (2011) #12 > hits rockbottom
2012
o Circle of Four 1st
Venom (2011) #13
Venom (2011) #13.1
Venom (2011) #13.2
Venom (2011) #13.3 > becomes a Hell Lord
Venom (2011) #13.4
Venom (2011) #14 > bonds with Red Hulk momentarily
o Venom (2011) #15 > joins the Avengers
o Venom (2011) #16
o The Descendents
Secret Avengers (2010) #22
Secret Avengers (2010) #23
Secret Avengers (2010) #24
Secret Avengers (2010) #25
o Carnage, U.S.A. (2012) #1; #2; #3 — #5
o Savage Six
Venom (2011) #17 > Eddie Brock becomes Toxin
Venom (2011) #18
Venom (2011) #19
Venom (2011) #20
Venom (2011) #21 > apparent death of Eddie Brock
Venom (2011) #22
o Secret Avengers (2010) #29
o Secret Avengers (2010) #30
o Secret Avengers (2010) #31
o Secret Avengers (2010) #32
o Monsters of Evil
Venom (2011) #23
Venom (2011) #24
Venom (2011) #25
o Minimum Carnage
Minimum Carnage: Alpha (2012) #1
Scarlet Spider (2012) #10
Venom (2011) #26
Scarlet Spider (2012) #11
Venom (2011) #27
Minimum Carnage: Omega (2012) #1
o Secret Avengers (2010) #33
o Secret Avengers (2010) #34
o Secret Avengers (2010) #35
o Venom (2011) #27.1
o Venom (2011) #28
2013
o No Quarter
Thunderbolts (2012) #1 > joins the Thunderbolts
Thunderbolts (2012) #2
Thunderbolts (2012) #3
Thunderbolts (2012) #4
Thunderbolts (2012) #5
Thunderbolts (2012) #6
o Secret Avengers (2010) #36
o Secret Avengers (2010) #37
o Venom (2011) #29
o Venom (2011) #30
o Venom (2011) #31
o Thunderbolts (2012) #7
o Thunderbolts (2012) #8
o Thunderbolts (2012) #9
o Thunderbolts (2012) #10
o Thunderbolts (2012) #11
o Venom (2011) #32
o Venom (2011) #33
o Venom (2011) #34
o Venom (2011) #35
o Venom (2011) #36
o Venom (2011) #37
o Venom (2011) #38 > creation of Mania II
o Venom (2011) #39
o Superior Carnage (2013) #1; 4-5
o Thunderbolts (2012) #13
o Thunderbolts (2012) #14
o Thunderbolts (2012) #15
o Thunderbolts (2012) #16
o Thunderbolts (2012) #17
o Thunderbolts (2012) #18
o Thunderbolts (2012) #19
o Fearless Defenders (2013) #9
o Mania
Venom (2011) #40
Venom (2011) #41
Venom (2011) #42
2014
o No Mercy
Thunderbolts (2012) #20
Thunderbolts (2012) #21
Thunderbolts (2012) #22
Thunderbolts (2012) #23 > leaves the Thunderbolts
o Guardians of the Galaxy (2013) #14 > has joined the Guardians of the Galaxy
o Guardians of the Galaxy (2013) #15
o Guardians of the Galaxy (2013) #16 > bonds with a Skrull for an instant
o Guardians of the Galaxy (2013) #17 {c}
o Guardians of the Galaxy (2013) #21 Guardians of the Galaxy (2013) #22 > bonds with Groot, then Rocket, then Drax momentarily
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bobbimorses · 4 years
Note
Where did the scar across Clints face come from? (Its across the corner of his mouth) It only appears someone.
in thunderbolts #34 (2000), clint leads the team in an attempt to track and contain the hulk. it doesn’t exactly go smoothly:
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the impact of this hit breaks clint’s wrist and cuts his lip
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he’s thereafter portrayed with a lip scar (by artists who are aware of it/remember) until his death in avengers #502 (2004)
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but some artists do bring it back! i particularly remember seeing it quite a few times when he was ronin, so it’s entirely plausible it’s still there
as another fun bit of trivia, a throwaway line established that he also has an appendectomy scar:
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