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* NamesakeInstitution: In the Framework arc of Season Four, the S.H.I.E.L.D. agents are sent to a virtual reality where [[NebulousEvilOrganisation HYDRA]] has taken over the world. Phil Coulson becomes a school teacher who works at the "Alexander Pierce High School", named in honor of HYDRA leader [[Film/CaptainAmericaTheWinterSoldier Alexander Pierce]].
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** Someone can fight crowds and detech hidden objects with their eyes closed? Telepathy! [[spoiler:X-ray vision.]]

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** Someone can fight crowds and detech detect hidden objects with their eyes closed? Telepathy! [[spoiler:X-ray vision.]]
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Fixed a greenlink.


** Increasingly played straight with Simmons, who after protesting her lack of surgical knowledge in "Eye-Spy" is nevertheless frequently shown acting as TheMedic, despite the fact that her doctorates are supposed to be in obscure fields of biology and chemistry, not medicine. This is {{Justified}} by how she's capable enough to perform advanced first aid, which makes sense given the rest of her character and her general dedication to knowing everything about her field. However, events in "The Well", "Seeds" and "T.R.A.C.K.S." demonstrate that she can't do much more than attempt to stabilise a critically injured patient. The scene showing her crying in the supply room after [[spoiler:Skye gets shot]] seems to indicate that the writers haven't forgotten that she lacks the formal training to cope with medical emergencies. By Season 2 and 3, though, she's shown acting as the medic and doing scientific research completely outside the field of biology or chemistry, though this could be explained as having to broaden her skills when she went undercover in HYDRA, as well as picking up skills from Fitz.

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** Increasingly played straight with Simmons, who after protesting her lack of surgical knowledge in "Eye-Spy" is nevertheless frequently shown acting as TheMedic, despite the fact that her doctorates are supposed to be in obscure fields of biology and chemistry, not medicine. This is {{Justified}} {{Justified|Trope}} by how she's capable enough to perform advanced first aid, which makes sense given the rest of her character and her general dedication to knowing everything about her field. However, events in "The Well", "Seeds" and "T.R.A.C.K.S." demonstrate that she can't do much more than attempt to stabilise a critically injured patient. The scene showing her crying in the supply room after [[spoiler:Skye gets shot]] seems to indicate that the writers haven't forgotten that she lacks the formal training to cope with medical emergencies. By Season 2 and 3, though, she's shown acting as the medic and doing scientific research completely outside the field of biology or chemistry, though this could be explained as having to broaden her skills when she went undercover in HYDRA, as well as picking up skills from Fitz.
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** When Robbie captures Daisy, he says that they're not very different. They're both vigilantes going after the same groups; the difference is that she tries to avoid killing if she can, and [[DetectEvil Robbie doesn't need proof to kill people]]. She turns this around on him when she suggests they work together.
--->'''Daisy:''' We want the same thing.\\
'''Robbie:''' No, we don't.\\
'''Daisy:''' You ''just said'' we're not that different.\\
'''Robbie:''' ''[glares]''\\
'''Daisy:''' I'm sorry, but you did. Like, ten seconds ago.
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Spelling/grammar fix(es)


** Season 5 promos prominently advertised the team being InSpace, with the tagline being "They aren't on Earth anymore". Not only did this effectively hide a much larger spoiler of the team being [[spoiler:send into the future, with a heavy focus on StableTimeLoop TimeTravel, but as it turned out, they have never even left the Earth at all!]]

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** Season 5 promos prominently advertised the team being InSpace, with the tagline being "They aren't on Earth anymore". Not only did this effectively hide a much larger spoiler of the team being [[spoiler:send [[spoiler:sent into the future, with a heavy focus on StableTimeLoop TimeTravel, but as it turned out, they have never even left the Earth at all!]]
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** A big one with consequences spanning almost the entire series; [[spoiler: flashbacks during season 2 reveal that Gonzalez and the other loyal SHIELD agents on board the Iliad aircraft carrier were ordered by Fury to destroy the carrier, in order to prevent the monolith it was carrying, which serves as the portal to Maveth and Hive, from falling into Hydra's hands. Gonzalez, Bobbie, and Mac end up deciding to disobey that order and retake the ship from Hydra instead, turning it into the mobile base of their new SHIELD faction. If they had obeyed this order and sunk the ship, monolith and all, to the bottom of the sea, probably the entire series from season 2 on would have been different.]]
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Updating link


* PsychicPowers: A running gag is that psychic powers don't exist. [[note]]most likely a joking nod to the fact that Franchise/XMen, and therefore mutants in general (which includes the majority of human psychics in the comics) have their film rights held by a different company and therefore unavailable to the Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse[[/note]] In Episode 16, Coulson finally says that meeting an Asgardian obviously gifted with psychic powers opened up his mind on the topic.

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* PsychicPowers: A running gag is that psychic powers don't exist. [[note]]most likely a joking nod to the fact that Franchise/XMen, ComicBook/XMen, and therefore mutants in general (which includes the majority of human psychics in the comics) have their film rights held by a different company and therefore unavailable to the Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse[[/note]] In Episode 16, Coulson finally says that meeting an Asgardian obviously gifted with psychic powers opened up his mind on the topic.
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** As it turned out, [[spoiler:Andrew wasn't killed by Werner and the following explosion; he wasn't even stabbed. He [[JustForPun Lash'd out]] and blew it up himself]].

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** As it turned out, [[spoiler:Andrew wasn't killed by Werner and the following explosion; he wasn't even stabbed. He [[JustForPun [[{{Pun}} Lash'd out]] and blew it up himself]].
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* PlotArchaeology: Gravitonium, a gravity-manipulating plot device first set up in the first season, doesn't appear until Season 5, after which it becomes pivotal to the main conflict of that season.

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* PlotArchaeology: Gravitonium, a gravity-manipulating plot device first set up in the first season, doesn't appear again until Season 5, after which it becomes pivotal to the main conflict of that season.
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* PlotArchaeology: Gravitonium, a gravity-manipulating plot device first set up in the first season, doesn't appear until Season 5, after which it becomes pivotal to the main conflict of that season.
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* Izel bringing Flint to the present turns out to be the reason the team is able to defeat the Chronicoms, since Flint reconstructs some of the Time Monolith to allow Fitz and Simmons to build the time drive and initiate the plan to save both S.H.I.E.L.D. and Earth. In a way, Sibyl and her Hunter team return the favor when they attack the Zephyr on the surface and destroy Izel's temple in the process, as the end result ensures that no one can ever use the Monoliths or open passage to Izel's realm again.
** Nathaniel Malick preventing Kora's suicide is ultimately what allows the Chronicoms to be defeated once and for all in the end. Fitz says that Kora is the instrumental key to saving their timeline.

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* ** Izel bringing Flint to the present turns out to be the reason the team is able to defeat the Chronicoms, since Flint reconstructs some of the Time Monolith to allow Fitz and Simmons to build the time drive and initiate the plan to save both S.H.I.E.L.D. and Earth. In a way, Sibyl and her Hunter team return the favor when they attack the Zephyr on the surface and destroy Izel's temple in the process, as the end result ensures that no one can ever use the Monoliths or open passage to Izel's realm again.
** *** Nathaniel Malick preventing Kora's suicide is ultimately what allows the Chronicoms to be defeated once and for all in the end. Fitz says that Kora is the instrumental key to saving their timeline.
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** Victoria Hand gets bonus points for simultaneously carrying the ConflictBall and the IdiotBall, [[IncrediblyLamePun one in each Hand]], getting in the way of Coulson's team about as much as the [[BigBad Clairvoyant]] himself throughout the season under the guise of "following protocol," even though half the time she's doing anything but.

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** Victoria Hand gets bonus points for simultaneously carrying the ConflictBall and the IdiotBall, [[IncrediblyLamePun [[{{Pun}} one in each Hand]], getting in the way of Coulson's team about as much as the [[BigBad Clairvoyant]] himself throughout the season under the guise of "following protocol," even though half the time she's doing anything but.
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* RescueEquipmentAttack: During the Remoraths' attack on the Lighthouse in the episode "Option Two", Deke Shaw uses a fire extinguisher to spray a Remorath that was chasing Fitz at one point.
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Moved from I-M as part of trope renaming

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* RadiationInducedSuperpowers: It's suggested that Scorch gained his [[PlayingWithFire pyrokinetic]] abilities thanks to a nuclear plant that caught fire near his house.
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trope has is being dewicked and merged


* NoEqualOpportunityTimeTravel: Downplayed but still present in Season 7. It doesn't majorly hinder them (though Mack does get dirty looks for being a black guy im a nice suit in the 30's), except when they have to interrogate a guy from the 50's who's too racist to take [[BaldBlackLeaderGuy Mack]], [[SpicyLatina Yo-Yo]], or [[InscrutableOriental May]] seriously.

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* NoEqualOpportunityTimeTravel: Downplayed but still present in Season 7. It doesn't majorly hinder them (though Mack does get dirty looks for being a black guy im a nice suit in the 30's), except when they have to interrogate a guy from the 50's who's too racist to take [[BaldBlackLeaderGuy Mack]], Mack, [[SpicyLatina Yo-Yo]], or [[InscrutableOriental May]] seriously.
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* RelativeButton:
** Raina uses threats against Mike Peterson's son to get to him. After being captured by the Centipede group, Mike is forced to work for the evil organization when his son is captured by the Clairvoyant.
** [[spoiler:Jiaying: She was greatly concerned that her daughter was with SHIELD, who she believed to have been the ones who subjected her to unspeakable torture. She likewise is terrified when Nathaniel manipulates Kora to turn against her and the comments from Li about putting Kora down.]]
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This is now Just For Fun, and should not be listed as a trope.


* RecycledInSpace: The first arc of season 5 is set somewhere in outer space.
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* PoisonedDrinkDrop: When [[BigBadWannabe Octavian Bloom]] arranges the assassination of the other HYDRA leaders in "[[Recap/AgentsOfSHIELDS2E11Aftershocks Aftershocks]]", he has one of his henchmen put a poison based on the Obelisk in [[TheBaroness the Baroness]]'s drink at the restaurant. After drinking it, she starts coughing and drops her glass, which can be heard breaking on the floor, and then her face [[TakenForGranite turns to stone]].

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* RaceLift: Alphonso "Al" [=MacKenzie=], a white Texan in the comics, joins the cast in Season Two played by Henry Simmons [[note]]who is black[[/note]].

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* RaceLift: Alphonso "Al" [=MacKenzie=], a white Texan in the comics, joins the cast in Season Two played by Henry Simmons [[note]]who is black[[/note]].Black[[/note]].


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* RadarIsUseless: During the last five episodes of Season One, the characters are still able to travel around in the [[CoolPlane 'Bus']] and the [[DropShip Jump-Jet]], including, in the former's case, ''touching down at an [[UsefulNotes/LosAngeles LA]] airport'', despite the fact that HYDRA's schemes have been revealed, with the U.S. military and its allies hunting down any remnants of SHIELD. What's more bizarre is that this explicitly becomes a plot point in Season Two, with Team Coulson having to steal a Quinjet as they can't use the Bus or other non-cloaked aircraft without detection.
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More accurate?


*** Jiaying initially appeared to have the Inhuman ability to remain the same age, which is why Whitehall was eager to discover the secret of her abilities. Cal later reveals that rather than being a biological FountainOfYouth, Jiaying's Inhuman ability is a LifeForce absorption ability. Because of this, the elders willingly allowed her to take their life energy to allow her to live longer and continue the traditions of the Inhumans in Afterlife. Cal told Coulson that Jiaying would cry and beg everytime for the elders not make such a sacrifice for her, but followed through it for the good of her people.

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*** Jiaying initially appeared to have the Inhuman ability to remain the same age, which is why Whitehall was eager to discover the secret of her abilities. Cal later reveals that rather than being a biological FountainOfYouth, Jiaying's Inhuman ability is a LifeForce absorption ability.LifeEnergy-type VampiricDraining. Because of this, the elders willingly allowed her to take their life energy to allow her to live longer and continue the traditions of the Inhumans in Afterlife. Cal told Coulson that Jiaying would cry and beg everytime for the elders not make such a sacrifice for her, but followed through it for the good of her people.

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** Andrew is introduced as May's ex.

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** Andrew Garner is introduced as May's ex.ex.
** In Season 4, Radcliffe had a female assistant named Agnes Kitsworth, who was also his lover and the basis for Aida.



** In Season 3. Wanting revenge for Rosalind's death, Coulson ends up killing Ward when the two are on Maveth. This would lead the Inhuman known as Hive to take control of Ward's corpse and make the trip back to Earth, unleashing the monstrosity upon the Earth. It is later revealed that Hive can only possess bodies that are no longer living, so had Coulson just left Ward stranded on Maveth, Hive would not have had a body to possess and simply would died.
** Robbie's actions in "Lockup", seeking revenge against a gangbanger who was part of the crew that tried to kill him (the man himself was locked up and reformed even before then) and his brother, have not only led to S.H.I.E.L.D. being associated with his former murder-spree and blackmailed, but allowed his uncle to be kidnapped when he was the only one capable of protecting him from the ghosts. The expression he makes at the end showcases that he knows it.
** In the first half of Season 5, the heroes are transported to the future, where they learn that the Earth will be cracked apart and humanity will be enslaved by the Kree. When they go back to the present timeline, they begin to take the steps to prevent that BadFuture from happening. Unfortunately, a combination of distrust among the members, secret agendas, and blurring of morality, the team effectively lays the groundwork for that BadFuture to potentially happen. It is eventually revealed that the end of the world in the alternate timelne happened because Daisy ended up getting absorbed by Talbot, allowing him to gain her powers. He would then use Daisy's quaking abilities to dig into the Earth to get more gravitonium, an act that triggers the earthquake that cracks the Earth apart.



* Izel bringing Flint to the present turns out to be the reason the team is able to defeat the Chronicoms, since Flint reconstructs some of the Time Monolith to allow Fitz and Simmons to build the time drive and initiate the plan to save both S.H.I.E.L.D. and Earth. In a way, Sibyl and her Hunter team return the favor when they attack the Zephyr on the surface and destroy Izel's temple in the process, as the end result ensures that no one can ever use the Monoliths or open passage to Izel's realm again.
** Nathaniel Malick preventing Kora's suicide is ultimately what allows the Chronicoms to be defeated once and for all in the end. Fitz says that Kora is the instrumental key to saving their timeline.



** Enoch's interactions with the team are... awkward to say the least.



** In the time between seasons 2 & 3, [[spoiler:Terrigen has gotten into the Pacific ecosystem, and is activating the powers of any Inhuman who eats the fish (or fish oil pills or get ''caught in a rainstorm'' ). Multiple characters point out that despite S.H.I.E.L.D.'s attempts to contain the outbreak, the rate at which new powered individuals appear is increasing, and most of the secondary plot of season 3 deals with the international community trying to figure out how to deal with Inhumans. Then the Sokovia Accords take affect...]]

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** In the time between seasons 2 & 3, [[spoiler:Terrigen has gotten into the Pacific ecosystem, and is activating the powers of any Inhuman who eats the fish (or fish oil pills or get ''caught in a rainstorm'' ). Multiple characters point out that despite S.H.I.E.L.D.'s attempts to contain the outbreak, the rate at which new powered individuals appear is increasing, and most of the secondary plot of season 3 deals with the international community trying to figure out how to deal with Inhumans. Then the Sokovia Accords take affect...]]]].
** Season 4: A new Director is appointed, which cause a lot of tension within the team, who are no longer assigned to work closely together as before. Daisy is on the run. Due to revealing their base to Talbot, SHIELD is now back in the spotlight, which makes it problematic for the team to go off book when dealing with the more unusual missions. The Sokovia Accords making Inhumans be registered, and preventing certain individuals like Daisy and Yo-Yo from acting.



** The group of scientists who found the Darkhold. They managed to find it when the Red Skull, Daniel Whitehall, and Nick Fury—very intelligent men with extensive resources and networks—could not. So how did they do it?
** May references "the Glasgow assignment," after which she and Coulson vowed to open an expensive bottle of liquor if they ever had a worse assignment.
** Something in Fitz's past has made him hate clowns. And clowns with knives. Not even Simmons knows the circumstances.
** After Robbie and Eli are Dragged Off to Hell, Coulson (rather casually) tells Daisy that he saw Ghost Rider escape from Hell before.
** In "Rewind", Hunter says that he and Bobbi almost got remarried, but the wedding was interrupted. By ninjas.



** Nathaniel? [[spoiler: He doesn't care about Hydra or working for the Chronicoms. He simply wants superpowers and to rule the world.]]



** Antonie Triplett is referred as Trip by his teammates.
** Alphonso Mackenzie is referred as Mack by his teammmates. His nickname with his family is Alfie.



** This is especially the case with non-human characters such as Kasius, Sinara, Faulnak, Taryan, Qovas, AIDA, Hive.



** Deke mentions that his mother was killed by the Kree, which forced his father to carry up the cause she was a part of. It wasn't long before the man disappeared as well.



** May also serves as this to Daisy.
** Coulson and Radcliffe also serve as this to Fitz throughout the show, though the latter ends up becoming a BrokenPedestal to him later in the series.
** John Garrett served as this to a young Grant Ward following the boy being placed in prison for arson [[spoiler: Sadly, Garrett was the more AbusiveParent who molded Ward into a ruthless Hydra agent within SHIELD]]



** Season 2 with the Real SHIELD. Instead of just meeting with Coulson to discuss their concerns about how he was running SHIELD, they planted sleeper agents in his ranks to spy on him. Eventually, their inability to communicate properly leads into a war between the Inhumans.
** Season 5: The team are so focused on their own agendas, it ends up setting up situations that are pushing them closer to the BadFuture they witnessed in the first half of the season.



** For the Inhumans, there is usually a cost for going through the Terrigen Mist and getting their powers.
*** Raina has the most drastic change after going through the mist. Her Inhuman body sprouts thorns everywhere, leaving her in constant pain From her description of her insides feeling "like gravel", it's possible she has quills on the inside. After treatment from the Inhumans in Afterlife, she discovers that she now has the ability to see into the future.
*** Daisy gains the ability to manipulate the vibrations of the frequencies all around her, creating shockwaves. Unfortunately, using these powers too much or without the proper equipment will cause her bones to fracture from the stress. This was also the case for Nathaniel when he harvested her powers for himself.
*** Jiaying initially appeared to have the Inhuman ability to remain the same age, which is why Whitehall was eager to discover the secret of her abilities. Cal later reveals that rather than being a biological FountainOfYouth, Jiaying's Inhuman ability is a LifeForce absorption ability. Because of this, the elders willingly allowed her to take their life energy to allow her to live longer and continue the traditions of the Inhumans in Afterlife. Cal told Coulson that Jiaying would cry and beg everytime for the elders not make such a sacrifice for her, but followed through it for the good of her people.
*** Gordon gained the ability to teleport anywhere he wanted, but his Inhuman transformation caused the loss of his eyes, which was replaced with smoothed out skin. This would cause him to become extremely disoriented after the change, constantly teleporting in and out due to being unable to see where he is going. Somewhat averted when he meets the SHIELD team, which he states that he can indeed see, just not the way normal people do.
*** Yo-Yo has super speed, but has a restriction of only having to snap back to where she runs from, making her vulnerable in certain instances.
** It's clear that Cal's unstable mental state is a result of the formula that gave him super strength.



** Gravitonium, if infused with a human being, will grant that person gravitational powers and the ability to absorb both more Gravitonium and people. However, it will also cause a marked, immediate deterioration in their mental state, especially when it has already absorbed people and if the person infused with it was mentally unstable to begin with.
*** After being infused with 7% of it, Hydra agent Ruby Hale could not handle the voices of Quinn and Hall arguing in the Gravitonium, causing her to go mad with grief and accidentally killing Werner von Strucker.
*** Carl Creel, easily the most stable of the three known to have been infused, eventually managed to resist the voices after his partial infusion; however, this was after attempting to kill Phil Coulson at Hall's urging, and he ended up hospitalized from attempting to smash his own head in to free Hall and Quinn.
*** Glenn Talbot, though seeming to gain control of the voices due to his military background, quickly developed a messiah complex that turned him into an unhinged narcissist and led him to nearly destroy the Earth he believed he was protecting.



** General Hale being a Hydra agent. Daisy even lampshades on it.
--->'''Daisy:''' Hale is Hydra. "Hale Hydra."



** Hunter and Bobbi willingly leave SHIELD after a mission to stop a Russian coup put the confidential of SHIELD at risk.



* RealLifeWritesThePlot: [[spoiler:Ian Quinn was confirmed captured by the Gravitonium in “Inside Voices” thanks to his actor retiring.]]

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* RealLifeWritesThePlot: RealLifeWritesThePlot:
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[[spoiler:Ian Quinn was confirmed captured by the Gravitonium in “Inside Voices” thanks to his actor retiring.]]]]
** Bobbi and Hunter leaving SHIELD to prevent the organization's presence from being known to the world was due to the actors having to get ready to film the pilot for their potential spin-off series that never came to be.
** Fitz not being with the team for a majority of Season 7 is due to his actor being busy with other projects at the time.



* RoguesGalleryTransplant: Given the show largely focuses on fleshing out the Marvel Cinematic Universe outside of the films, they make use of villains from the comics who wouldn't stand a chance making it to film. So far, the show has used Franklin Hall/Graviton (an [[Comicbook/TheAvengers Avengers]] villain), Donnie Gill/Blizzard (an Comicbook/IronMan villain), and Glenn Talbot (a [[Comicbook/TheIncredibleHulk Hulk]] villain) as enemies of the agents. Season 2 also introduces the Absorbing Man (A Hulk and [[ComicBook/TheMightyThor Thor]] villain) and Marcus Scarlotti, who in the comics was the original Whiplash (and a [[JustifiedTrope Justified Example]], given that the MCU focuses on a Tony Stark's modern power set[[note]]in the comics, Iron Man was originally much weaker, until he TookALevelInBadass, while Whiplash was, instead, killed off when said level was being taken, so while he was originally capable of taking Iron Man on, he would not stand a chance in the film universe if he didn't take a ''severe'' AdaptationalBadass upgrade. This is largely why ''Film/{{Iron Man 2}}'' used a CompositeCharacter version of Whiplash merged with Crimson Dynamo, a character who ''could'' believably fight Iron Man nowadays[[/note]]).

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* RoguesGalleryTransplant: Given the show largely focuses on fleshing out the Marvel Cinematic Universe outside of the films, they make use of villains from the comics who wouldn't stand a chance making it to film. So far, the show has
** Season 1
used Franklin Hall/Graviton (an [[Comicbook/TheAvengers Avengers]] villain), Donnie Gill/Blizzard (an Comicbook/IronMan villain), and Glenn Talbot (a [[Comicbook/TheIncredibleHulk Hulk]] villain) as enemies of the agents. agents.
**
Season 2 also introduces the Absorbing Man (A Hulk and [[ComicBook/TheMightyThor Thor]] villain) and Marcus Scarlotti, who in the comics was the original Whiplash (and a [[JustifiedTrope Justified Example]], given that the MCU focuses on a Tony Stark's modern power set[[note]]in the comics, Iron Man was originally much weaker, until he TookALevelInBadass, while Whiplash was, instead, killed off when said level was being taken, so while he was originally capable of taking Iron Man on, he would not stand a chance in the film universe if he didn't take a ''severe'' AdaptationalBadass upgrade. This is largely why ''Film/{{Iron Man 2}}'' used a CompositeCharacter version of Whiplash merged with Crimson Dynamo, a character who ''could'' believably fight Iron Man nowadays[[/note]]). The season also introduces Calvin Johnson/Mister Hyde. Despite being the father of Quake in the comics, he started out as a villain to Thor and the Hulk before becoming a villain of the week to multiple heroes.
** Season 3 introduced Lash, who was a villain for the Inhuman Royal Family in the comics.
** Season 4 introduces the character Eli Morrow, though this is due to the show bringing in the Robbie Reyes iteration of Ghost Rider.


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** Mack's hatred towards robots.
** Everyone calling Daisy "Quake", to which she says she never came up with the name.

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