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[[WMG:[[center:[-''ComicBook/TheAvengers'' '''[[Characters/TheAvengers Main Character Index]]'''\\
'''The Avengers'''\\
[[Characters/AvengersFoundingMembers Founding Members]] | [[Characters/Avengers60sMembers '60s Members]] | [[Characters/Avengers70sMembers '70s Members]] | [[Characters/Avengers80sMembers '80s Members]] | [[Characters/Avengers90sMembers '90s Members]] | '''2000s Members''' | [[Characters/Avengers2010sMembers 2010s Members]] | [[Characters/Avengers2020sMembers 2020s Members]] | [[Characters/AvengersHonoraryMembers Honorary Members]]\\
'''Other Teams'''\\
[[Characters/AvengersUnsanctionedMembers Unsanctioned Teams Members]] | [[Characters/AvengersInfiltrators Infiltrators]] | [[Characters/AvengersOtherTeams Other Teams]]\\
'''Supporting Characters'''\\
[[Characters/AvengersSupportStaff Support Staff]]\\
'''Rogues Gallery'''\\
Characters/MastersOfEvil | Characters/LethalLegion | [[Characters/AvengersEnemies Other Enemies]]-]]]]]

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Triathlon]]
!!Triathlon
[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/triathlon_marvel_comics_avengers.jpg]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' Delroy Garrett, Jr.
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' 3-D Man
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/SecretAvengers, ComicBook/DoctorDoom's Avengers, ComicBook/AgentsOfAtlas
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Avengers'' Vol. 3 #8 (September, 1998)

Delroy Garrett Jr. was an Olympic sprinter destined for the gold. So driven was he to win, he started taking steroid supplements. Soon after he was discovered and banned from competing, and was stripped of all his medals. Distraught and directionless, he wandered aimlessly through life until happening upon a religious group called the Triune Understanding. They gave Delroy the direction he so desperately sought, while also mysteriously helping unlock the amazing power within him. He became Triathlon, and soon after joined the Avengers.
----
* AffirmativeActionLegacy: Of the first 3-D Man, who was white.
* DudeWheresMyRespect: None of the new/younger heroes he meets (including fellow former Avengers like Rage) show him any of the "respect for seniority" that he feels he deserves post-Avengers.
* GogglesDoSomethingUnusual: They initially assisted him in detecting Skrull impostors. Now, he doesn't need them anymore, learning to rely solely on his own abilities.
* JackOfAllStats: He has abilities three times what a human in peak condition would have, however, none of it matches the top-tier guys in each of those areas (Say, Hulk, Quicksilver, Wolverine, Daredevil, etc.) but putting it all together makes him pretty potent.
* LegacyCharacter: He's the second 3-D Man. He eventually starts going by that actual name when he joins the Comicbook/AgentsOfAtlas.
* SmallNameBigEgo: Whilst a member of [[Comicbook/AvengersTheInitiative The Initiative]].
* SpiderSense
* TheStrengthOfTenMen: He has three times the physical abilities of a man in peak physical condition.
* SuperSenses: His senses are enhanced by three.
* SuperSpeed
* TheUnapologetic: Feels absolutely no remorse for killing Crusader simply because he was a Skrull.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Silverclaw]]
!! Silverclaw
[[quoteright:230:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/2940056_silverclaw.jpg]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' Maria De Guadalupe "Lupe" Santiago
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' La Garra Argentado, Daughter of the Volcano God
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Avengers'' Vol. 3 #8 (September, 1998)

With the ability to transform herself into the form of animals native to her homeland, Silverclaw was a close friend of the Avengers' butler Jarvis and later became an Avenger herself.
----
* {{Animorphism}}: Can turn into any animal from the Amazonian rainforest.
* CaptainEthnic: She's essentially an Amazonian version of Snowbird.
* ChromeChampion: Her name comes from her skin becoming silvery when using her powers.
* ColorCharacter: ''Silver''claw.
* DivineParentage: He mother is the volcano god of Costa Verde.
* HalfHumanHybrid: Half human, half-goddess, making her a {{Demi God}}dess.
* LeotardOfPower: Either that or she wears a MiniDressOfPower.
* OverlyLongName: Maria de Guadalupe Santiago.
* SizeShifter: When she transforms into a giant sloth.
* TwoferTokenMinority: She's both Latina and part goddess.
* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: She hasn't reappeared since 2012, with no mention of her whereabouts.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Jack of Hearts]]
!!Jack of Hearts
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/1781632_023fy.jpg]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' Jonathan "Jack" Hart
%%!!! '''Notable Aliases:'''
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Deadly Hands of Kung Fu'' #22 (March, 1976)

The son of the scientist Philip Hart who created an energy source called "zero fluid" and Marie, an alien humanoid woman of the Contraxian race.
----
* AppliedPhlebotinum: The "Zero Fluid"
* BackFromTheDead: [[spoiler:He's revived (not as a zombie) in the ''ComicBook/MarvelZombies Supreme'' miniseries. The trade paperback collection of ''Avengers Infinity'' includes a background description on Jack which supports his revival.]]
* BatmanCanBreatheInSpace: Jack can survive in the vacuum of space without oxygen. He is not affected by the cold of space nor by the intense heat of a sun.
* BlessedWithSuck: He was a very powerful hero, but he never had full control over them, wearing special armor to contain them. In addition, half of his body turned purplish-black from direct exposure to "Zero Fluid".
* ComboPlatterPowers: {{Flight}}, [[HandBlast Concussive Blasts]], HealingFactor, NighInvulnerability, SuperIntelligence, SuperStrength.
* FreakLabAccident: How he got his powers.
* HalfHumanHybrid: His father was human while his mother was a Contraxian.
* LastStand: Due to Blessed With Suck above and being contained in one room 14 hours a day, he decides to [[ExplosionsInSpace go into space and explode]] killing himself and a murderer he takes along with him.
* PersonOfMassDestruction: DependingOnTheWriter
* PowerIncontinence
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Ant-Man II]]
!!Ant-Man II
[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/4153674_ant_man_1_cover_mark_brooks_7eb38.jpg]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' Scott Edward Harris Lang
%%!!! '''Notable Aliases:'''
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''The Avengers'' #181 (March, 1979) [[note]]As Scott Lang[[/note]]; ''Marvel Premiere'' #47 (April 1979) [[note]]As Ant-Man[[/note]]

Scott Lang is the second man to take up the mantle of Ant-Man. He has been a member of the Avengers and the Fantastic Four. He was notably killed during the events of Avengers: Disassembled and has struggled to get back on his feet ever since coming back from the dead.
----
-> See Characters/AntManHeroes
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Lionheart]]
!!Lionheart
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lionheart_marvel_comics.jpg]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' Kelsey Leigh Kirkland
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Captain Britain, Lionheart of Avalon
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Avengers'' Vol. 3 #77 (March, 2004)

Kelsey was killed by Thunderball and resurrected by Captain Britain. She then had a brief stint with the Avengers.
----
-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsCaptainBritainCorps Captain Britain]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Luke Cage]]
!!Luke Cage
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/LukeCageOrigin_2891.jpg]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' Carl Lucas
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Power Man
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/NewAvengers, ComicBook/DarkAvengers, ComicBook/SecretAvengers, ComicBook/MightyAvengers (leader)
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Luke Cage, Hero For Hire'' #1 (June, 1972)

Luke Cage, wrongly convicted and unjustly imprisoned, was altered in a failed prison experiment that granted him unbreakable skin and superhuman strength. With his street smarts, and unending determination to do right, he fights for the common man! He eventually married Jessica Jones and had a daughter with her. Luke was also a member of The Avengers and the Leader of Thunderbolts for a time.
----
See Characters/LukeCage
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Wolverine]]
!!Wolverine
[[quoteright:320:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/death_of_wolverine_4_land_final_wolverine_variant.png]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' James "Logan" Howlett
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Logan, Jeremiah Logan, Patch, Weapon X, Death, Mutate #9601, Emilio Garra, Weapon Chi, Experiment X, Agent 10, Peter Richards, Mai' keth, Black Dragon, Captain Canada, Captain Terror, John Logan, Jim Logan
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/NewAvengers, ComicBook/UncannyAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''The Incredible Hulk'' #180 (October, 1974) [[note]]Cameo appearance[[/note]]; ''The Incredible Hulk'' #181 (November, 1974) [[note]]Full appearance[[/note]]

A long-lived mutant with the rage of a beast and the soul of a Samurai, James "Logan" Howlett's once mysterious past is filled with blood, war, and betrayal. Possessing an accelerated healing factor, keenly enhanced senses, and bone claws in each hand (along with his skeleton) that are coated in adamantium; Wolverine is, without question, the ultimate weapon.
----
-> See Characters/{{Wolverine|JamesLoganHowlett}}
[[/folder]]

[[folder:The Sentry]]
!!The Sentry
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sentry_vol_3_1_textless.jpg]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' Robert "Bob" Reynolds
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' The Void, Death
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/NewAvengers, ComicBook/DarkAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''The Sentry'' #1 (July, 2000)

After ingesting an experimental super-soldier formula, the lowly Robert Reynolds became the Sentry. At least in his mind. In constant battle with his dark side known as the Void, the Sentry has been forgotten and dead, he has resurected an vanished. Even if he is one of earth's greatest hero, he is more the world's greatest danger.
----
-> See Characters/TheSentry
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Echo]]
!!Echo
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/maya_lopez_earth_616_from_daredevil_vol_2_10_cover.jpg]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' Maya Lopez
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Ronin
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Daredevil'' #9 (December, 1999) [[note]]As Echo[[/note]]; ''The New Avengers'' #11 (November, 2005) [[note]]As Ronin[[/note]]
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/NewAvengers

The daughter of the Kingpin's one-time partner, Maya Lopez was raised as Fisk's daughter following his murder of her father. Although she is deaf, she possesses the ability to memorize actions by sight alone, making her a formidable fighter. She also became part of the ''ComicBook/NewAvengers'' with the identity of Ronin.
----
-> See Characters/{{Daredevil}}
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Ares]]
!!Ares
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/chaos_war_ares_vol_1_1_textless.jpg]]

%%!!! '''Alter Ego:'''
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Mars, Mister Talon, John Aaron, God of War, The Warhawk
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/DarkAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Thor'' Vol. 1 #129 (June, 1966)

Ares is the son of Zeus and the Olympian God of War. After years of fighting against The Avengers, Thor, and mostly his own brother Hercules, Ares joined the ranks of the Avengers. He was a member of Tony Stark's official Avengers team and later Norman Osborn's Dark Avengers. After he attacked Osborn for tricking him in starting Siege on Asgard, he was stopped and killed by the Sentry.
----
-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsOlympians Olympians]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Amadeus Cho]]
!!Amadeus Cho
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/amadeus_cho.jpg]]

%%!!! '''Alter Ego:'''
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Mastermind Excello, Prince of Power, Iron Spider, Hulk, Kid Hulk, Amadeus Hulk, Brawnhammer, Chulk, Brawn
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/Champions2016, ComicBook/AgentsOfAtlas
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Amazing Fantasy'' Vol. 2 #1 (January, 2006) [[note]]As Amadeus Cho[[/note]]; ''Totally Awesome Hulk'' #1 (February, 2016) [[note]]As Hulk[[/note]]; ''Champions'' Vol. 2 #22 (September, 2018) [[note]]As Brawn[[/note]]

The eighth smartest person on the planet, Amadeus Cho has a hypermind which allows him to run a virtually limitless amount of calculations in his head. Recently, he shouldered Banner's burden of being the Hulk, granting himself the power he always wanted and having to deal with his own monster. After a climactic fight in the heart of Manhattan where he reconciled his personalities, he's now a slimmed down Hulk with a new superhero identity, Brawn, who leads the Agents of Atlas in defending Asia.
----
-> See Characters/IncredibleHulkSupportingCharacters
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Jocasta]]
!!Jocasta
[[quoteright:180:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/92503_60833_jocasta.jpg]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' Jocasta Vi Quitéria
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Bride of Ultron
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/AvengersAI
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''The Avengers'' Vol. 1 #162 (August, 1977)

Once the Bride of Ultron, Jocasta has become an honorary member of the Avengers after years of loyalty and sacrifice. She had until most recently held a position at The Avengers Academy.
----
* ChromeChampion: Her bodies are usually silver colored.
* ComboPlatterPowers
* EnergyWeapon: One of her many abilities is shooting lasers.
* GoodCounterpart: She's pretty much the good version of Ultron. She has her own EvilCounterpart in Alkhema.
* MeaningfulName: Named after the mythical Jocasta, wife and mother of Oedipus. The robotic version has Ultron in a similar role - she was his 'daughter' but created as his wife (and Janet Van Dyne, the template for her mind, was perceived as his mother, of sorts). Her relationship with Hank Pym has a hint of this as well.
* NonHumansLackAttributes: While she doesn't wear clothes, she doesn't have the human attributes that would make her indecent.
* RidiculouslyHumanRobots: Not only does she have a ridiculously human personality, but Jocasta can actually alter her physical appearance to look completely indistinguishable from an actual human.
* RobotGirl
* RobotHair: She's a robotic copy of [[ComicBook/TheWasp Janet Van Dyne]], and thus has a head shaped like her hairstyle.
* RobotMe: Of Janet Van Dyne.
* RoboticSpouse: Briefly with Hank Pym.
* TangledFamilyTree: She's technically both Ultron's daughter and intended bride.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Cassie Lang]]
!!Cassie Lang
[[quoteright:320:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cassie_lang.png]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' Cassandra Eleanor "Cassie" Lang
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Stature, Stinger, Ant-Girl, Giant-Girl
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/SecretAvengers, ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/YoungAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Marvel Premiere'' #47 (April, 1979) [[note]]As Cassie Lang[[/note]]; ''Young Avengers'' #6 (May, 2006) [[note]]As Stature[[/note]]; ''The Astonishing Ant-Man'' #6 (May, 2016) [[note]]As Stinger[[/note]]

The daughter of Scott Lang and a member of the Young Avengers. She has the same ability to shrink and grow in size as her father, gained through utilizing Pym Particles.
----
-> See Characters/AntManHeroes
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Vision II]]
!!Vision II
[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Vision_1686.jpg]]

%%!!! '''Alter Ego:'''
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Jonas
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/SecretAvengers, ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/YoungAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Young Avengers'' #5 (August, 2005)

While exploring the destroyed Avengers mansion, Iron Lad found the remains of the original Vision and downloaded his operating system into his armor. When Kang attacked the Young Avengers, Nate took his armor off in order to avoid being tracked, and the Vision's OS activated the armor into becoming sentient. He remained in the custody of the Avengers for a time, during which he concluded that this new, advanced Vision had all the potential but none of the experience of the old Vision. After Civil War he spent some time Walking the Earth and adopted the name "Jonas" for himself, declaring himself a completely different individual from Iron Lad and the original Vision.
----
-> See Characters/YoungAvengersTitleTeam
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Bucky Barnes]]
!!Bucky Barnes
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/winter_soldier_3.jpg]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' James Buchanan "Bucky" Barnes
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Bucky, Winter Soldier, Captain America
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/NewAvengers, ComicBook/TheAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Captain America Comics'' #1 (March, 1941) [[note]]As Bucky[[/note]]; ''Captain America'' #1 (January, 2005) [[note]]As Winter Soldier[[/note]]; ''Captain America'' #34 (January, 2008) [[note]]As Captain America[[/note]]

Believed dead near the end of World War II only to have been found and brainwashed by the Soviets for the next 50 years, Captain America's former sidekick now continues to defend his country from the shadows against those who would threaten it as legendary spy and assassin, the Winter Soldier. He became the new Captain America to honor his friend Steve and he joined the Avengers. When Steve returned as Captain America, Bucky took on the identity of the Winter Soldier once again.
----
-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsBuckyBarnes Bucky Barnes]]
[[/folder]]

----

to:

[[WMG:[[center:[-''ComicBook/TheAvengers'' '''[[Characters/TheAvengers Main Character Index]]'''\\
'''The Avengers'''\\
[[Characters/AvengersFoundingMembers Founding Members]] | [[Characters/Avengers60sMembers '60s Members]] | [[Characters/Avengers70sMembers '70s Members]] | [[Characters/Avengers80sMembers '80s Members]] | [[Characters/Avengers90sMembers '90s Members]] | '''2000s Members''' | [[Characters/Avengers2010sMembers 2010s Members]] | [[Characters/Avengers2020sMembers 2020s Members]] | [[Characters/AvengersHonoraryMembers Honorary Members]]\\
'''Other Teams'''\\
[[Characters/AvengersUnsanctionedMembers Unsanctioned Teams Members]] | [[Characters/AvengersInfiltrators Infiltrators]] | [[Characters/AvengersOtherTeams Other Teams]]\\
'''Supporting Characters'''\\
[[Characters/AvengersSupportStaff Support Staff]]\\
'''Rogues Gallery'''\\
Characters/MastersOfEvil | Characters/LethalLegion | [[Characters/AvengersEnemies Other Enemies]]-]]]]]

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Triathlon]]
!!Triathlon
[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/triathlon_marvel_comics_avengers.jpg]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' Delroy Garrett, Jr.
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' 3-D Man
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/SecretAvengers, ComicBook/DoctorDoom's Avengers, ComicBook/AgentsOfAtlas
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Avengers'' Vol. 3 #8 (September, 1998)

Delroy Garrett Jr. was an Olympic sprinter destined for the gold. So driven was he to win, he started taking steroid supplements. Soon after he was discovered and banned from competing, and was stripped of all his medals. Distraught and directionless, he wandered aimlessly through life until happening upon a religious group called the Triune Understanding. They gave Delroy the direction he so desperately sought, while also mysteriously helping unlock the amazing power within him. He became Triathlon, and soon after joined the Avengers.
----
* AffirmativeActionLegacy: Of the first 3-D Man, who was white.
* DudeWheresMyRespect: None of the new/younger heroes he meets (including fellow former Avengers like Rage) show him any of the "respect for seniority" that he feels he deserves post-Avengers.
* GogglesDoSomethingUnusual: They initially assisted him in detecting Skrull impostors. Now, he doesn't need them anymore, learning to rely solely on his own abilities.
* JackOfAllStats: He has abilities three times what a human in peak condition would have, however, none of it matches the top-tier guys in each of those areas (Say, Hulk, Quicksilver, Wolverine, Daredevil, etc.) but putting it all together makes him pretty potent.
* LegacyCharacter: He's the second 3-D Man. He eventually starts going by that actual name when he joins the Comicbook/AgentsOfAtlas.
* SmallNameBigEgo: Whilst a member of [[Comicbook/AvengersTheInitiative The Initiative]].
* SpiderSense
* TheStrengthOfTenMen: He has three times the physical abilities of a man in peak physical condition.
* SuperSenses: His senses are enhanced by three.
* SuperSpeed
* TheUnapologetic: Feels absolutely no remorse for killing Crusader simply because he was a Skrull.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Silverclaw]]
!! Silverclaw
[[quoteright:230:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/2940056_silverclaw.jpg]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' Maria De Guadalupe "Lupe" Santiago
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' La Garra Argentado, Daughter of the Volcano God
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Avengers'' Vol. 3 #8 (September, 1998)

With the ability to transform herself into the form of animals native to her homeland, Silverclaw was a close friend of the Avengers' butler Jarvis and later became an Avenger herself.
----
* {{Animorphism}}: Can turn into any animal from the Amazonian rainforest.
* CaptainEthnic: She's essentially an Amazonian version of Snowbird.
* ChromeChampion: Her name comes from her skin becoming silvery when using her powers.
* ColorCharacter: ''Silver''claw.
* DivineParentage: He mother is the volcano god of Costa Verde.
* HalfHumanHybrid: Half human, half-goddess, making her a {{Demi God}}dess.
* LeotardOfPower: Either that or she wears a MiniDressOfPower.
* OverlyLongName: Maria de Guadalupe Santiago.
* SizeShifter: When she transforms into a giant sloth.
* TwoferTokenMinority: She's both Latina and part goddess.
* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: She hasn't reappeared since 2012, with no mention of her whereabouts.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Jack of Hearts]]
!!Jack of Hearts
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/1781632_023fy.jpg]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' Jonathan "Jack" Hart
%%!!! '''Notable Aliases:'''
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Deadly Hands of Kung Fu'' #22 (March, 1976)

The son of the scientist Philip Hart who created an energy source called "zero fluid" and Marie, an alien humanoid woman of the Contraxian race.
----
* AppliedPhlebotinum: The "Zero Fluid"
* BackFromTheDead: [[spoiler:He's revived (not as a zombie) in the ''ComicBook/MarvelZombies Supreme'' miniseries. The trade paperback collection of ''Avengers Infinity'' includes a background description on Jack which supports his revival.]]
* BatmanCanBreatheInSpace: Jack can survive in the vacuum of space without oxygen. He is not affected by the cold of space nor by the intense heat of a sun.
* BlessedWithSuck: He was a very powerful hero, but he never had full control over them, wearing special armor to contain them. In addition, half of his body turned purplish-black from direct exposure to "Zero Fluid".
* ComboPlatterPowers: {{Flight}}, [[HandBlast Concussive Blasts]], HealingFactor, NighInvulnerability, SuperIntelligence, SuperStrength.
* FreakLabAccident: How he got his powers.
* HalfHumanHybrid: His father was human while his mother was a Contraxian.
* LastStand: Due to Blessed With Suck above and being contained in one room 14 hours a day, he decides to [[ExplosionsInSpace go into space and explode]] killing himself and a murderer he takes along with him.
* PersonOfMassDestruction: DependingOnTheWriter
* PowerIncontinence
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Ant-Man II]]
!!Ant-Man II
[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/4153674_ant_man_1_cover_mark_brooks_7eb38.jpg]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' Scott Edward Harris Lang
%%!!! '''Notable Aliases:'''
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''The Avengers'' #181 (March, 1979) [[note]]As Scott Lang[[/note]]; ''Marvel Premiere'' #47 (April 1979) [[note]]As Ant-Man[[/note]]

Scott Lang is the second man to take up the mantle of Ant-Man. He has been a member of the Avengers and the Fantastic Four. He was notably killed during the events of Avengers: Disassembled and has struggled to get back on his feet ever since coming back from the dead.
----
-> See Characters/AntManHeroes
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Lionheart]]
!!Lionheart
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lionheart_marvel_comics.jpg]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' Kelsey Leigh Kirkland
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Captain Britain, Lionheart of Avalon
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Avengers'' Vol. 3 #77 (March, 2004)

Kelsey was killed by Thunderball and resurrected by Captain Britain. She then had a brief stint with the Avengers.
----
-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsCaptainBritainCorps Captain Britain]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Luke Cage]]
!!Luke Cage
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/LukeCageOrigin_2891.jpg]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' Carl Lucas
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Power Man
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/NewAvengers, ComicBook/DarkAvengers, ComicBook/SecretAvengers, ComicBook/MightyAvengers (leader)
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Luke Cage, Hero For Hire'' #1 (June, 1972)

Luke Cage, wrongly convicted and unjustly imprisoned, was altered in a failed prison experiment that granted him unbreakable skin and superhuman strength. With his street smarts, and unending determination to do right, he fights for the common man! He eventually married Jessica Jones and had a daughter with her. Luke was also a member of The Avengers and the Leader of Thunderbolts for a time.
----
See Characters/LukeCage
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Wolverine]]
!!Wolverine
[[quoteright:320:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/death_of_wolverine_4_land_final_wolverine_variant.png]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' James "Logan" Howlett
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Logan, Jeremiah Logan, Patch, Weapon X, Death, Mutate #9601, Emilio Garra, Weapon Chi, Experiment X, Agent 10, Peter Richards, Mai' keth, Black Dragon, Captain Canada, Captain Terror, John Logan, Jim Logan
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/NewAvengers, ComicBook/UncannyAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''The Incredible Hulk'' #180 (October, 1974) [[note]]Cameo appearance[[/note]]; ''The Incredible Hulk'' #181 (November, 1974) [[note]]Full appearance[[/note]]

A long-lived mutant with the rage of a beast and the soul of a Samurai, James "Logan" Howlett's once mysterious past is filled with blood, war, and betrayal. Possessing an accelerated healing factor, keenly enhanced senses, and bone claws in each hand (along with his skeleton) that are coated in adamantium; Wolverine is, without question, the ultimate weapon.
----
-> See Characters/{{Wolverine|JamesLoganHowlett}}
[[/folder]]

[[folder:The Sentry]]
!!The Sentry
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sentry_vol_3_1_textless.jpg]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' Robert "Bob" Reynolds
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' The Void, Death
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/NewAvengers, ComicBook/DarkAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''The Sentry'' #1 (July, 2000)

After ingesting an experimental super-soldier formula, the lowly Robert Reynolds became the Sentry. At least in his mind. In constant battle with his dark side known as the Void, the Sentry has been forgotten and dead, he has resurected an vanished. Even if he is one of earth's greatest hero, he is more the world's greatest danger.
----
-> See Characters/TheSentry
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Echo]]
!!Echo
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/maya_lopez_earth_616_from_daredevil_vol_2_10_cover.jpg]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' Maya Lopez
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Ronin
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Daredevil'' #9 (December, 1999) [[note]]As Echo[[/note]]; ''The New Avengers'' #11 (November, 2005) [[note]]As Ronin[[/note]]
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/NewAvengers

The daughter of the Kingpin's one-time partner, Maya Lopez was raised as Fisk's daughter following his murder of her father. Although she is deaf, she possesses the ability to memorize actions by sight alone, making her a formidable fighter. She also became part of the ''ComicBook/NewAvengers'' with the identity of Ronin.
----
-> See Characters/{{Daredevil}}
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Ares]]
!!Ares
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/chaos_war_ares_vol_1_1_textless.jpg]]

%%!!! '''Alter Ego:'''
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Mars, Mister Talon, John Aaron, God of War, The Warhawk
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/DarkAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Thor'' Vol. 1 #129 (June, 1966)

Ares is the son of Zeus and the Olympian God of War. After years of fighting against The Avengers, Thor, and mostly his own brother Hercules, Ares joined the ranks of the Avengers. He was a member of Tony Stark's official Avengers team and later Norman Osborn's Dark Avengers. After he attacked Osborn for tricking him in starting Siege on Asgard, he was stopped and killed by the Sentry.
----
-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsOlympians Olympians]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Amadeus Cho]]
!!Amadeus Cho
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/amadeus_cho.jpg]]

%%!!! '''Alter Ego:'''
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Mastermind Excello, Prince of Power, Iron Spider, Hulk, Kid Hulk, Amadeus Hulk, Brawnhammer, Chulk, Brawn
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/Champions2016, ComicBook/AgentsOfAtlas
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Amazing Fantasy'' Vol. 2 #1 (January, 2006) [[note]]As Amadeus Cho[[/note]]; ''Totally Awesome Hulk'' #1 (February, 2016) [[note]]As Hulk[[/note]]; ''Champions'' Vol. 2 #22 (September, 2018) [[note]]As Brawn[[/note]]

The eighth smartest person on the planet, Amadeus Cho has a hypermind which allows him to run a virtually limitless amount of calculations in his head. Recently, he shouldered Banner's burden of being the Hulk, granting himself the power he always wanted and having to deal with his own monster. After a climactic fight in the heart of Manhattan where he reconciled his personalities, he's now a slimmed down Hulk with a new superhero identity, Brawn, who leads the Agents of Atlas in defending Asia.
----
-> See Characters/IncredibleHulkSupportingCharacters
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Jocasta]]
!!Jocasta
[[quoteright:180:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/92503_60833_jocasta.jpg]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' Jocasta Vi Quitéria
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Bride of Ultron
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/AvengersAI
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''The Avengers'' Vol. 1 #162 (August, 1977)

Once the Bride of Ultron, Jocasta has become an honorary member of the Avengers after years of loyalty and sacrifice. She had until most recently held a position at The Avengers Academy.
----
* ChromeChampion: Her bodies are usually silver colored.
* ComboPlatterPowers
* EnergyWeapon: One of her many abilities is shooting lasers.
* GoodCounterpart: She's pretty much the good version of Ultron. She has her own EvilCounterpart in Alkhema.
* MeaningfulName: Named after the mythical Jocasta, wife and mother of Oedipus. The robotic version has Ultron in a similar role - she was his 'daughter' but created as his wife (and Janet Van Dyne, the template for her mind, was perceived as his mother, of sorts). Her relationship with Hank Pym has a hint of this as well.
* NonHumansLackAttributes: While she doesn't wear clothes, she doesn't have the human attributes that would make her indecent.
* RidiculouslyHumanRobots: Not only does she have a ridiculously human personality, but Jocasta can actually alter her physical appearance to look completely indistinguishable from an actual human.
* RobotGirl
* RobotHair: She's a robotic copy of [[ComicBook/TheWasp Janet Van Dyne]], and thus has a head shaped like her hairstyle.
* RobotMe: Of Janet Van Dyne.
* RoboticSpouse: Briefly with Hank Pym.
* TangledFamilyTree: She's technically both Ultron's daughter and intended bride.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Cassie Lang]]
!!Cassie Lang
[[quoteright:320:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cassie_lang.png]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' Cassandra Eleanor "Cassie" Lang
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Stature, Stinger, Ant-Girl, Giant-Girl
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/SecretAvengers, ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/YoungAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Marvel Premiere'' #47 (April, 1979) [[note]]As Cassie Lang[[/note]]; ''Young Avengers'' #6 (May, 2006) [[note]]As Stature[[/note]]; ''The Astonishing Ant-Man'' #6 (May, 2016) [[note]]As Stinger[[/note]]

The daughter of Scott Lang and a member of the Young Avengers. She has the same ability to shrink and grow in size as her father, gained through utilizing Pym Particles.
----
-> See Characters/AntManHeroes
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Vision II]]
!!Vision II
[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Vision_1686.jpg]]

%%!!! '''Alter Ego:'''
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Jonas
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/SecretAvengers, ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/YoungAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Young Avengers'' #5 (August, 2005)

While exploring the destroyed Avengers mansion, Iron Lad found the remains of the original Vision and downloaded his operating system into his armor. When Kang attacked the Young Avengers, Nate took his armor off in order to avoid being tracked, and the Vision's OS activated the armor into becoming sentient. He remained in the custody of the Avengers for a time, during which he concluded that this new, advanced Vision had all the potential but none of the experience of the old Vision. After Civil War he spent some time Walking the Earth and adopted the name "Jonas" for himself, declaring himself a completely different individual from Iron Lad and the original Vision.
----
-> See Characters/YoungAvengersTitleTeam
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Bucky Barnes]]
!!Bucky Barnes
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/winter_soldier_3.jpg]]

!!! '''Alter Ego:''' James Buchanan "Bucky" Barnes
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Bucky, Winter Soldier, Captain America
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/NewAvengers, ComicBook/TheAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Captain America Comics'' #1 (March, 1941) [[note]]As Bucky[[/note]]; ''Captain America'' #1 (January, 2005) [[note]]As Winter Soldier[[/note]]; ''Captain America'' #34 (January, 2008) [[note]]As Captain America[[/note]]

Believed dead near the end of World War II only to have been found and brainwashed by the Soviets for the next 50 years, Captain America's former sidekick now continues to defend his country from the shadows against those who would threaten it as legendary spy and assassin, the Winter Soldier. He became the new Captain America to honor his friend Steve and he joined the Avengers. When Steve returned as Captain America, Bucky took on the identity of the Winter Soldier once again.
----
-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsBuckyBarnes Bucky Barnes]]
[[/folder]]

----
[[redirect:Characters/TheAvengers]]


* AngryBlackMan: Initially
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-> See Characters/TheIncredibleHulkSupportingCharacters

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-> See Characters/TheIncredibleHulkSupportingCharactersCharacters/IncredibleHulkSupportingCharacters
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-> See ComicBook/AmadeusCho

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-> See ComicBook/AmadeusChoCharacters/TheIncredibleHulkSupportingCharacters
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-> See [[Characters/CaptainBritainCorps Captain Britain]]

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-> See [[Characters/CaptainBritainCorps [[Characters/MarvelComicsCaptainBritainCorps Captain Britain]]

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* JackOfAllStats: He has abilities three times what a human in peak condition would have, however, none of it matches the top-tier guys in each of those areas (Say, Hulk, Quicksilver, Wolverine, Daredevil, etc.) but putting it all together makes him pretty potent.



* TheStrengthOfTenMen: He has three times the physical abilities of a man in peak physical condition. His senses are enhanced by three as well.
* SuperSenses

to:

* TheStrengthOfTenMen: He has three times the physical abilities of a man in peak physical condition.
* SuperSenses:
His senses are enhanced by three as well.
* SuperSenses
three.
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* MeaningfulName: Named after the mythical Jocasta, wife and mother of Oedipus. The robotic version has Ultron in a similar role - she was created as his wife and Janet Van Dyne was perceived as his mother, of sorts. Her relationship with Hank Pym has a hint of this as well.

to:

* MeaningfulName: Named after the mythical Jocasta, wife and mother of Oedipus. The robotic version has Ultron in a similar role - she was his 'daughter' but created as his wife and (and Janet Van Dyne Dyne, the template for her mind, was perceived as his mother, of sorts.sorts). Her relationship with Hank Pym has a hint of this as well.
Mrph1 MOD

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* MeaningfulName: Named after the mythical Jocasta, wife and mother of Oedipus. The robotic version has Ultron in a similar role - she was created as his wife and Janet Van Dyne was perceived as his mother, of sorts. Her relationship with Hank Pym has a hint of this as well.

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* HalfHumanHybrid: Half human, half-Contraxian
* HumanMomNonHumanDad: Inverted. His father was human while his mother was a Contraxian.

to:

* HalfHumanHybrid: Half human, half-Contraxian
* HumanMomNonHumanDad: Inverted.
His father was human while his mother was a Contraxian.
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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/2474597_avengers_v3_81___lionheart_of_avalon_05___301.jpg]]

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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/2474597_avengers_v3_81___lionheart_of_avalon_05___301.jpg]]
org/pmwiki/pub/images/lionheart_marvel_comics.jpg]]
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** BackFromTheDead: [[spoiler:He's revived (not as a zombie) in the ''ComicBook/MarvelZombies Supreme'' miniseries. The trade paperback collection of ''Avengers Infinity'' includes a background description on Jack which supports his revival.]]

to:

** * BackFromTheDead: [[spoiler:He's revived (not as a zombie) in the ''ComicBook/MarvelZombies Supreme'' miniseries. The trade paperback collection of ''Avengers Infinity'' includes a background description on Jack which supports his revival.]]

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** BackFromTheDead: [[spoiler:He's revived (not as a zombie) in the ''ComicBook/MarvelZombies Supreme'' miniseries. The trade paperback collection of ''Avengers Infinity'' includes a background description on Jack which supports his revival.]]



* KilledOffForReal / LastStand: Due to Blessed With Suck above and being contained in one room 14 hours a day, he decides to [[ExplosionsInSpace go into space and explode]] killing himself and a murderer he takes along with him.
** [[spoiler: BackFromTheDead: He's revived (not as a zombie) in the ''ComicBook/MarvelZombies Supreme'' miniseries. The trade paperback collection of ''Avengers Infinity'' includes a background description on Jack which supports his revival.]]

to:

* KilledOffForReal / LastStand: Due to Blessed With Suck above and being contained in one room 14 hours a day, he decides to [[ExplosionsInSpace go into space and explode]] killing himself and a murderer he takes along with him.
** [[spoiler: BackFromTheDead: He's revived (not as a zombie) in the ''ComicBook/MarvelZombies Supreme'' miniseries. The trade paperback collection of ''Avengers Infinity'' includes a background description on Jack which supports his revival.]]
him.
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[[Characters/AvengersFoundingMembers Founding Members]] | [[Characters/Avengers60sMembers '60s Members]] | [[Characters/Avengers70sMembers '70s Members]] | [[Characters/Avengers80sMembers '80s Members]] | [[Characters/Avengers90sMembers '90s Members]] | '''2000s Members''' | [[Characters/Avengers2010sMembers 2010s Members]] | [[Characters/AvengersHonoraryMembers Honorary Members]]\\

to:

[[Characters/AvengersFoundingMembers Founding Members]] | [[Characters/Avengers60sMembers '60s Members]] | [[Characters/Avengers70sMembers '70s Members]] | [[Characters/Avengers80sMembers '80s Members]] | [[Characters/Avengers90sMembers '90s Members]] | '''2000s Members''' | [[Characters/Avengers2010sMembers 2010s Members]] | [[Characters/Avengers2020sMembers 2020s Members]] | [[Characters/AvengersHonoraryMembers Honorary Members]]\\
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!! Vision II

to:

!! Vision !!Vision II



-> See Characters/YoungAvengersLaterMembers

to:

-> See Characters/YoungAvengersLaterMembersCharacters/YoungAvengersTitleTeam
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-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsAmadeusCho Amadeus Cho]]

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-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsAmadeusCho Amadeus Cho]]ComicBook/AmadeusCho

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!!! '''Joined In:''' New Avengers #11 (November, 2005)

->''First, I will bury the worst parts of my memory, the dead parts of my heart, in the hole. Then I will cover it up and plant something inside it. Something that will grow. But I'm not sure if the dead parts will stay buried. I'm done with them. But I don't think they are done with me.''
-->-- '''Maya Lopez''', ''ComicBook/{{Daredevil}}'' vol. 2 #51

Maya was a Native American girl who was born deaf. Her father, Willie "Crazy Horse" Lincoln, was secretly a mob enforcer for [[ComicBook/TheKingpin Wilson Fisk]], the Kingpin of Crime, but was killed under Fisk's orders. Impressed and intrigued by Maya's skills and photographic reflexes, the Kingpin adopted her and sent her to the best schools, gaining her trust. Finally, he "revealed" to her that Daredevil killed her father and sent her to kill him in return.

Despite the Kingpin's lies, Maya learned the truth and shot the Kingpin, leaving him blind for a while. She left New York to have visit her father's tribe and have a vision quest. This motivated her to return to New York and start performing theater using sign language, dance, and music.

Maya was next seen in the pages of ''ComicBook/NewAvengers'', where she showed up as the masked ninja Ronin. (The writer of the book, Creator/BrianMichaelBendis, originally had planned for Daredevil to be Ronin, but changed his mind.) She fought alongside the New Avengers against the Hand, before being killed by the Hand's new leader, ComicBook/{{Elektra}}. (This Elektra turned out to be a Skrull imposter, however.) Elektra and the Hand then resurrected her and tried to brainwash her to be evil, but were thwarted by the New Avengers and ''another'' Ronin (who ended up being [[ComicBook/{{Hawkeye}} Clint Barton]]). Echo remained with the New Avengers at their headquarters in ComicBook/DoctorStrange's Sanctum Santorum and fought with them against the [[ComicBook/SecretInvasion secret Skrull invasion]].

She next appeared in ''ComicBook/MoonKnight'' vol 6, also written by Bendis, where she began helping Marc Spector, the Moon Knight, with his fight against the so-called "Kingpin of LA," which turned out to be Count Nefaria. Unfortunately, during a fight, Nefaria killed her with his optic blasts.

[[UnexplainedRecovery She next showed up]] a few years later in ''ComicBook/{{Daredevil}} Annual'' vol 4 #1, where she helped Daredevil stop Klaw, a supervillain made of sound, from taking over New York City.

Her latest appearance was as part of ComicBook/JasonAaronsAvengers, where she took part in the "Enter the Phoenix" TournamentArc. Maya was one of a number of individuals summoned to the White Hot Room by the Phoenix to determine its next host. While empowered by the Phoenix, she fought a similarly-empowered [[ComicBook/SubMariner Namor the Sub-Mariner]], who left her at the bottom of the ocean. However, that did not stop her and she rose from the sea, pulling the rest of the Phoenix into her and becoming the next host of the Phoenix Force.

Maya will make her Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse entrance in the Creator/DisneyPlus show ''Hawkeye'', where she will be played by Alaqua Cox, a Native American actress who is deaf. Reports in March of 2021 [[https://variety.com/2021/tv/news/hawkeye-disney-plus-echo-spinoff-1234934667/ have indicated]] that an ''Echo'' spin-off is in early development, with Cox reprising her role.

to:

!!! '''Joined In:''' New Avengers #11 (November, 2005)

->''First, I will bury the worst parts

The daughter
of my memory, the dead parts of my heart, in the hole. Then I will cover it up and plant something inside it. Something that will grow. But I'm not sure if the dead parts will stay buried. I'm done with them. But I don't think they are done with me.''
-->-- '''Maya Lopez''', ''ComicBook/{{Daredevil}}'' vol. 2 #51

Maya was a Native American girl who was born deaf. Her father, Willie "Crazy Horse" Lincoln, was secretly a mob enforcer for [[ComicBook/TheKingpin Wilson Fisk]], the Kingpin of Crime, but was killed under Fisk's orders. Impressed and intrigued by Maya's skills and photographic reflexes, the Kingpin adopted her and sent her to the best schools, gaining her trust. Finally, he "revealed" to her that Daredevil killed her father and sent her to kill him in return.

Despite
the Kingpin's lies, one-time partner, Maya learned Lopez was raised as Fisk's daughter following his murder of her father. Although she is deaf, she possesses the truth and shot the Kingpin, leaving him blind for ability to memorize actions by sight alone, making her a while. formidable fighter. She left New York to have visit her father's tribe and have a vision quest. This motivated her to return to New York and start performing theater using sign language, dance, and music.

Maya was next seen in the pages of ''ComicBook/NewAvengers'', where she showed up as the masked ninja Ronin. (The writer
also became part of the book, Creator/BrianMichaelBendis, originally had planned for Daredevil to be Ronin, but changed his mind.) She fought alongside the New Avengers against the Hand, before being killed by the Hand's new leader, ComicBook/{{Elektra}}. (This Elektra turned out to be a Skrull imposter, however.) Elektra and the Hand then resurrected her and tried to brainwash her to be evil, but were thwarted by the New Avengers and ''another'' Ronin (who ended up being [[ComicBook/{{Hawkeye}} Clint Barton]]). Echo remained ''ComicBook/NewAvengers'' with the New Avengers at their headquarters in ComicBook/DoctorStrange's Sanctum Santorum and fought with them against the [[ComicBook/SecretInvasion secret Skrull invasion]].

She next appeared in ''ComicBook/MoonKnight'' vol 6, also written by Bendis, where she began helping Marc Spector, the Moon Knight, with his fight against the so-called "Kingpin
identity of LA," which turned out to be Count Nefaria. Unfortunately, during a fight, Nefaria killed her with his optic blasts.

[[UnexplainedRecovery She next showed up]] a few years later in ''ComicBook/{{Daredevil}} Annual'' vol 4 #1, where she helped Daredevil stop Klaw, a supervillain made of sound, from taking over New York City.

Her latest appearance was as part of ComicBook/JasonAaronsAvengers, where she took part in the "Enter the Phoenix" TournamentArc. Maya was one of a number of individuals summoned to the White Hot Room by the Phoenix to determine its next host. While empowered by the Phoenix, she fought a similarly-empowered [[ComicBook/SubMariner Namor the Sub-Mariner]], who left her at the bottom of the ocean. However, that did not stop her and she rose from the sea, pulling the rest of the Phoenix into her and becoming the next host of the Phoenix Force.

Maya will make her Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse entrance in the Creator/DisneyPlus show ''Hawkeye'', where she will be played by Alaqua Cox, a Native American actress who is deaf. Reports in March of 2021 [[https://variety.com/2021/tv/news/hawkeye-disney-plus-echo-spinoff-1234934667/ have indicated]] that an ''Echo'' spin-off is in early development, with Cox reprising her role.
Ronin.



!! Echo appears in:

[[AC:Comic Books]]
* ''ComicBook/{{Daredevil}}'' vol. 2
* ''ComicBook/NewAvengers'' vol. 1
* ''ComicBook/MoonKnight'' vol. 6
* ''ComicBook/{{Daredevil}} Annual'' vol. 4 #1
* ''ComicBook/JasonAaronsAvengers''

[[AC:Live-Action TV]]
* ''Hawkeye'' (2021)

[[AC:Western Animation]]
* ''WesternAnimation/UltimateSpiderMan: Web Warriors'' (cameo appearances)

to:

!! Echo appears in:

[[AC:Comic Books]]
* ''ComicBook/{{Daredevil}}'' vol. 2
* ''ComicBook/NewAvengers'' vol. 1
* ''ComicBook/MoonKnight'' vol. 6
* ''ComicBook/{{Daredevil}} Annual'' vol. 4 #1
* ''ComicBook/JasonAaronsAvengers''

[[AC:Live-Action TV]]
* ''Hawkeye'' (2021)

[[AC:Western Animation]]
* ''WesternAnimation/UltimateSpiderMan: Web Warriors'' (cameo appearances)
-> See Characters/{{Daredevil}}
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Ares]]
!!Ares
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/chaos_war_ares_vol_1_1_textless.jpg]]

%%!!! '''Alter Ego:'''
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Mars, Mister Talon, John Aaron, God of War, The Warhawk
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/DarkAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Thor'' Vol. 1 #129 (June, 1966)

Ares is the son of Zeus and the Olympian God of War. After years of fighting against The Avengers, Thor, and mostly his own brother Hercules, Ares joined the ranks of the Avengers. He was a member of Tony Stark's official Avengers team and later Norman Osborn's Dark Avengers. After he attacked Osborn for tricking him in starting Siege on Asgard, he was stopped and killed by the Sentry.



!! Echo provides examples of:

* ActionGirl: Thanks to her ability, she became a strong martial artist. She has gained Bullseye's uncanny aim and Daredevil's acrobatic abilities after watching tapes of their fights.
* AffirmativeActionLegacy: A deaf, Native American woman becomes the new host to the Phoenix, whose most famous (or infamous) previous host was a [[ComicBook/JeanGrey white woman]].
* AntiVillain: Briefly. She was pitted against Daredevil by the Kingpin, but had no idea that she was working for a criminal (or at least, how bad a criminal he was) and mistakenly believed that Daredevil killed her father. A solid [[SlidingScaleOfAntiVillains Type 4.]]
* BareYourMidriff: As Echo, her costume exposes her abs.
* BoxingBattler: In ''Vision Quest'' she states she was "a natural" at boxing when starting to learn martial arts, implying innate talent independent of her mimic ability. The same comic also implies she won an Olympic gold medal in the sport.[[note]]This would be ArtisticLicense if so, as the comic was published over a decade before women's boxing debuted at the Olympics.[[/note]]
* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: After being a member of the ''New Avengers'' for five issues following ''Civil War'', she disappears without a word after ''ComicBook/SecretInvasion''. {{Lampshade|Hanging}}d by Spider-Man asking if anyone knew where she'd gone; and again with her reappearance when Luke Cage and Jessica Jones were looking for a Nanny, as she angrily asks if Cage even remembers that she used to be on the team.
* ClarkKenting: While operating on her own in Japan, she pretended to be a ditzy socialite to gain access to her targets. Then, as Ronin, she comes back and unleashes Hell on them.
* CListFodder: Just narrowly avoided being replaced by Skrull infiltrators, Hawkeye noting she'd be an easy person to replace because she's so low down the totem pole, barely anyone knows her, and therefore wouldn't notice if her replacement slipped up.
* DatingCatwoman: Like Typhoid Mary, she dates Matt Murdock while trying to kill Daredevil. Unlike her, she only does so because she was tricked.
* DeathIsCheap: In ''New Avengers'', Elektra ([[spoiler:or more accurately a Skrull impersonating Elektra]]) runs her through with a sword, so the Hand can resurrect her as a brainwashed minion.
* DeceptiveLegacy: The Kingpin murdered her father, but honored the dying man's wish that he take care of her and raise her as his own. [[ManipulativeBastard Then he told her that Daredevil killed her father.]]
* DroppedABridgeOnHim / StuffedIntoTheFridge: Echo was killed by Count Nefaria in the ''ComicBook/MoonKnight'' series. However, a few years later, she [[UnexplainedRecovery showed up alive and well]] again.
* FacialMarkings: A white handprint, in the same place her father placed his hand on her while he was dying.
* FightClubbing: When she was still associated with Kingpin, she competed in underground boxing matches.
* FightsLikeANormal: Played with. Echo's martial arts skill is almost entirely due to her mimic ability, but she's also limited by her own strength, agility, durability, etc., which are only those of a peak human and not a superhuman.
* {{Foil}}: Daredevil's a blind man with super acute hearing, smell, touch, and taste. She's a deaf woman with super acute eyesight and a photographic memory.
* HandicappedBadass: While Matt Murdock is blind, Echo is deaf. A deaf who posses "photographic reflexes" that allow her to mimic the feats of those around her.
* MagicalNativeAmerican: Subverted with her father, who was Native American, but also a mob enforcer. Maya herself straddles the line, often subverting it by being a well-rounded and nuanced character...but one who also went on a "vision quest" and met an "animal spirit" in order to find out what to do next in life.
* MultiEthnicName: [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_(given_name) "Maya"]] is a name common to various religions and ethnicities and could be used to indicate a connection to the [[{{Mayincatec}} Mayan]] people. [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L%C3%B3pez "Lopez,"]] on the other hand, is of Spanish origin and could indicate one of her ancestors was Latinx or Spanish.
* OneManArmy: As Ronin, she carves through the Japanese criminal underworld... until the Hand come after her.
* PayEvilUntoEvil / LaserGuidedKarma: Once she finds out what ''really'' happened to her father, she responds by putting a bullet between Kingpin's eyes. He survives, but was blinded, just like Matt, except without the super-senses.
* PhotographicMemory: Maya possess "photographic reflexes" or the uncanny ability to perfectly copy other people's movements, similar to that of the ComicBook/{{Taskmaster}}. Just by watching other people, she has become a concert-level pianist, a strong martial artist, a highly skilled acrobat, and a gifted ballerina (and on one occasion even piloted a Quinjet for a few minutes).
* PutOnABus: She was written out from ''ComicBook/NewAvengers'' and eventually joined the cast of ''ComicBook/MoonKnight''. [[StuffedIntoTheFridge And then died]]. [[DeathIsCheap She came back a few years later, alive and well]].
* RealAwardFictionalCharacter: She's won at least three gold medals from the Special Olympics and the Olympics, though it's not entirely clear what the events were.
* SpannerInTheWorks: The Skrull infiltration of Earth would've gone off a lot easier had she not shaken off the Hand brainwashing and ran their Elektra impersonator through. At the very least, the Avengers wouldn't have known about it until it was too late.
* TwoferTokenMinority: Deaf, part-Hispanic, part-Native American.
* UnexplainedRecovery: Despite apparently being killed by Count Nefaria during the ''Moon Knight'' series in 2012, she would reappear to help Matt in 2016, without explaining how or why she survived or came back.
* YouKilledMyFather: Believed this to be Daredevil, but later learnt it was actually the Kingpin.

to:

!! Echo provides examples of:

* ActionGirl: Thanks to her ability, she became a strong martial artist. She has gained Bullseye's uncanny aim and Daredevil's acrobatic abilities after watching tapes of their fights.
* AffirmativeActionLegacy: A deaf, Native American woman becomes the new host to the Phoenix, whose most famous (or infamous) previous host was a [[ComicBook/JeanGrey white woman]].
* AntiVillain: Briefly. She was pitted against Daredevil by the Kingpin, but had no idea that she was working for a criminal (or at least, how bad a criminal he was) and mistakenly believed that Daredevil killed her father. A solid [[SlidingScaleOfAntiVillains Type 4.]]
* BareYourMidriff: As Echo, her costume exposes her abs.
* BoxingBattler: In ''Vision Quest'' she states she was "a natural" at boxing when starting to learn martial arts, implying innate talent independent of her mimic ability. The same comic also implies she won an Olympic gold medal in the sport.[[note]]This would be ArtisticLicense if so, as the comic was published over a decade before women's boxing debuted at the Olympics.[[/note]]
* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: After being a member of the ''New Avengers'' for five issues following ''Civil War'', she disappears without a word after ''ComicBook/SecretInvasion''. {{Lampshade|Hanging}}d by Spider-Man asking if anyone knew where she'd gone; and again with her reappearance when Luke Cage and Jessica Jones were looking for a Nanny, as she angrily asks if Cage even remembers that she used to be on the team.
* ClarkKenting: While operating on her own in Japan, she pretended to be a ditzy socialite to gain access to her targets. Then, as Ronin, she comes back and unleashes Hell on them.
* CListFodder: Just narrowly avoided being replaced by Skrull infiltrators, Hawkeye noting she'd be an easy person to replace because she's so low down the totem pole, barely anyone knows her, and therefore wouldn't notice if her replacement slipped up.
* DatingCatwoman: Like Typhoid Mary, she dates Matt Murdock while trying to kill Daredevil. Unlike her, she only does so because she was tricked.
* DeathIsCheap: In ''New Avengers'', Elektra ([[spoiler:or more accurately a Skrull impersonating Elektra]]) runs her through with a sword, so the Hand can resurrect her as a brainwashed minion.
* DeceptiveLegacy: The Kingpin murdered her father, but honored the dying man's wish that he take care of her and raise her as his own. [[ManipulativeBastard Then he told her that Daredevil killed her father.]]
* DroppedABridgeOnHim / StuffedIntoTheFridge: Echo was killed by Count Nefaria in the ''ComicBook/MoonKnight'' series. However, a few years later, she [[UnexplainedRecovery showed up alive and well]] again.
* FacialMarkings: A white handprint, in the same place her father placed his hand on her while he was dying.
* FightClubbing: When she was still associated with Kingpin, she competed in underground boxing matches.
* FightsLikeANormal: Played with. Echo's martial arts skill is almost entirely due to her mimic ability, but she's also limited by her own strength, agility, durability, etc., which are only those of a peak human and not a superhuman.
* {{Foil}}: Daredevil's a blind man with super acute hearing, smell, touch, and taste. She's a deaf woman with super acute eyesight and a photographic memory.
* HandicappedBadass: While Matt Murdock is blind, Echo is deaf. A deaf who posses "photographic reflexes" that allow her to mimic the feats of those around her.
* MagicalNativeAmerican: Subverted with her father, who was Native American, but also a mob enforcer. Maya herself straddles the line, often subverting it by being a well-rounded and nuanced character...but one who also went on a "vision quest" and met an "animal spirit" in order to find out what to do next in life.
* MultiEthnicName: [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_(given_name) "Maya"]] is a name common to various religions and ethnicities and could be used to indicate a connection to the [[{{Mayincatec}} Mayan]] people. [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L%C3%B3pez "Lopez,"]] on the other hand, is of Spanish origin and could indicate one of her ancestors was Latinx or Spanish.
* OneManArmy: As Ronin, she carves through the Japanese criminal underworld... until the Hand come after her.
* PayEvilUntoEvil / LaserGuidedKarma: Once she finds out what ''really'' happened to her father, she responds by putting a bullet between Kingpin's eyes. He survives, but was blinded, just like Matt, except without the super-senses.
* PhotographicMemory: Maya possess "photographic reflexes" or the uncanny ability to perfectly copy other people's movements, similar to that of the ComicBook/{{Taskmaster}}. Just by watching other people, she has become a concert-level pianist, a strong martial artist, a highly skilled acrobat, and a gifted ballerina (and on one occasion even piloted a Quinjet for a few minutes).
* PutOnABus: She was written out from ''ComicBook/NewAvengers'' and eventually joined the cast of ''ComicBook/MoonKnight''. [[StuffedIntoTheFridge And then died]]. [[DeathIsCheap She came back a few years later, alive and well]].
* RealAwardFictionalCharacter: She's won at least three gold medals from the Special Olympics and the Olympics, though it's not entirely clear what the events were.
* SpannerInTheWorks: The Skrull infiltration of Earth would've gone off a lot easier had she not shaken off the Hand brainwashing and ran their Elektra impersonator through. At the very least, the Avengers wouldn't have known about it until it was too late.
* TwoferTokenMinority: Deaf, part-Hispanic, part-Native American.
* UnexplainedRecovery: Despite apparently being killed by Count Nefaria during the ''Moon Knight'' series in 2012, she would reappear to help Matt in 2016, without explaining how or why she survived or came back.
* YouKilledMyFather: Believed this to be Daredevil, but later learnt it was actually the Kingpin.
-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsOlympians Olympians]]



[[folder:Ares]]
!!Ares
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/chaos_war_ares_vol_1_1_textless.jpg]]

to:

[[folder:Ares]]
!!Ares
[[folder:Amadeus Cho]]
!!Amadeus Cho
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/chaos_war_ares_vol_1_1_textless.org/pmwiki/pub/images/amadeus_cho.jpg]]



!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Mars, Mister Talon, John Aaron, God of War, The Warhawk
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/DarkAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Thor'' Vol. 1 #129 (June, 1966)

Ares is the son of Zeus and the Olympian God of War. After years of fighting against The Avengers, Thor, and mostly his own brother Hercules, Ares joined the ranks of the Avengers. He was a member of Tony Stark's official Avengers team and later Norman Osborn's Dark Avengers. After he attacked Osborn for tricking him in starting Siege on Asgard, he was stopped and killed by the Sentry.

to:

!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Mars, Mister Talon, John Aaron, God Mastermind Excello, Prince of War, The Warhawk
Power, Iron Spider, Hulk, Kid Hulk, Amadeus Hulk, Brawnhammer, Chulk, Brawn
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/DarkAvengers
ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/Champions2016, ComicBook/AgentsOfAtlas
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Thor'' ''Amazing Fantasy'' Vol. 1 #129 (June, 1966)

Ares is
2 #1 (January, 2006) [[note]]As Amadeus Cho[[/note]]; ''Totally Awesome Hulk'' #1 (February, 2016) [[note]]As Hulk[[/note]]; ''Champions'' Vol. 2 #22 (September, 2018) [[note]]As Brawn[[/note]]

The eighth smartest person on
the son planet, Amadeus Cho has a hypermind which allows him to run a virtually limitless amount of Zeus calculations in his head. Recently, he shouldered Banner's burden of being the Hulk, granting himself the power he always wanted and the Olympian God of War. After years of fighting against The Avengers, Thor, and mostly having to deal with his own brother Hercules, Ares joined the ranks of the Avengers. He was a member of Tony Stark's official Avengers team and later Norman Osborn's Dark Avengers. monster. After he attacked Osborn for tricking him a climactic fight in starting Siege on Asgard, he was stopped and killed by the Sentry.heart of Manhattan where he reconciled his personalities, he's now a slimmed down Hulk with a new superhero identity, Brawn, who leads the Agents of Atlas in defending Asia.



-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsOlympians Olympians]]

to:

-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsOlympians Olympians]][[Characters/MarvelComicsAmadeusCho Amadeus Cho]]



[[folder:Amadeus Cho]]
!!Amadeus Cho
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/amadeus_cho.jpg]]

%%!!! '''Alter Ego:'''
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Mastermind Excello, Prince of Power, Iron Spider, Hulk, Kid Hulk, Amadeus Hulk, Brawnhammer, Chulk, Brawn
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/Champions2016, ComicBook/AgentsOfAtlas
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Amazing Fantasy'' Vol. 2 #1 (January, 2006) [[note]]As Amadeus Cho[[/note]]; ''Totally Awesome Hulk'' #1 (February, 2016) [[note]]As Hulk[[/note]]; ''Champions'' Vol. 2 #22 (September, 2018) [[note]]As Brawn[[/note]]

The eighth smartest person on the planet, Amadeus Cho has a hypermind which allows him to run a virtually limitless amount of calculations in his head. Recently, he shouldered Banner's burden of being the Hulk, granting himself the power he always wanted and having to deal with his own monster. After a climactic fight in the heart of Manhattan where he reconciled his personalities, he's now a slimmed down Hulk with a new superhero identity, Brawn, who leads the Agents of Atlas in defending Asia.
----
-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsAmadeusCho Amadeus Cho]]
[[/folder]]

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Removed: 34765

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First seen in ''The Sentry #1'' (September, 2000), Robert Reynolds was an overweight, middle aged alcoholic until one day he awakens and realizes that he is the Sentry, a superhero with the power of '''one million exploding suns''', who must once again take the mantle of the hero to fight his archnemesis the Void, whom he fears is returning soon.

This rather strange origin story began via a hoax that was perpetuated by Creator/StanLee himself, stating that there was a golden age superhero whom he just forgot about and wanted to weave into the continuity. Through a series of recursive flashbacks Robert Reynolds is seen fighting alongside Marvel's most popular superheroes, including the ComicBook/FantasticFour, the [[ComicBook/IncredibleHulk Hulk]], and ComicBook/SpiderMan, and all of the Sentry's first miniseries revolves around figuring out why everyone has LaserGuidedAmnesia surrounding his existence.

His actual powers were bestowed upon him when a young Robert, while working in a physics lab, drank a serum that "moved his molecules 1 second ahead of the current timeline." It was later revealed that this was a newer version of the Super Soldier serum that transformed Captain America.

Seen as somewhat of an AlternateCompanyEquivalent of Franchise/{{Superman}} due to his [[SuperpowerLottery seemingly limitless powers]], including: energy blasts, super strength, flight, and of course a hefty dose of NewPowersAsThePlotDemands.

The Sentry, while seeming like an InvincibleHero, actually has many weaknesses due to his being AxCrazy (this is not expunged when Robert becomes the Sentry). Robert Reynolds is an agoraphobic, anxiety-ridden schizophrenic who relies on his robot sidekick CLOC to calculate the severity of problems that need his help, and solves them in order based on CLOC's input.

Despite his death at the end of Dark Reign, the Sentry was resurrected by the Apocalypse Twins' new Horsemen in ''ComicBook/UncannyAvengers'', though Thor convinces him to help stop Exitar the Executioner. Sentry, having fully succumbed to his insanity and believing himself to be the successor of Apocalypse, agreed to do so... after he rid the world of the "cancerous" mutants. Having survived the incident, the Sentry was put into exile until he was called back by Dr. Strange in a terrible attempt to stop Loki, who had become Sorcerer Supreme and was looking for a spell that could potentially doom all, only for it to restore magic to the world. Upset, the Sentry told Dr. Strange never to call on him again and disappeared. He returned in his own miniseries by Jeff Lemire as part of the ''ComicBook/MarvelAFreshStart'' initiative, taking place some time after this appearance, where he was living essentially on parole as Bob Reynolds, fry cook extraordinaire, and spending time as the Sentry in a pocket dimension via a machine constructed by Tony Stark and Reed Richards called the Confluctor, to keep both the Sentry and the Void in check. [[spoiler: This was derailed by his former sidekick and friend, Scout, who had had his arm torn off by the Void and was secretly resentful that Bob could be the Sentry in his spare time. He discovered the Sentry's power-granting formula, and conspired with one of the Sentry's old enemies to recreate it and steal the Confluctor, trapping Bob inside and the Sentry outside. The Sentry and Scout fought, while Bob survived by merging the Void and the Sentry and himself to create a new, somewhat morally ambiguous black-haired Sentry dressed in red and black, who killed Scout and went to space, resuming his mission to protect humanity by any means necessary]].

In terms of VideoGames, The Sentry was a playable character in ''VideoGame/MarvelUltimateAlliance 2'' for UsefulNotes/NintendoDS, ''Marvel VideoGame/SuperHeroSquadOnline'', and ''Videogame/MarvelPuzzleQuest''.

to:

First seen in ''The Sentry #1'' (September, 2000), After ingesting an experimental super-soldier formula, the lowly Robert Reynolds was an overweight, middle aged alcoholic until one day he awakens and realizes that he is became the Sentry, a superhero Sentry. At least in his mind. In constant battle with the power of '''one million exploding suns''', who must once again take the mantle of the hero to fight his archnemesis dark side known as the Void, whom he fears is returning soon.

This rather strange origin story began via a hoax that was perpetuated by Creator/StanLee himself, stating that there was a golden age superhero whom he just forgot about and wanted to weave into the continuity. Through a series of recursive flashbacks Robert Reynolds is seen fighting alongside Marvel's most popular superheroes, including the ComicBook/FantasticFour, the [[ComicBook/IncredibleHulk Hulk]], and ComicBook/SpiderMan, and all of the Sentry's first miniseries revolves around figuring out why everyone has LaserGuidedAmnesia surrounding his existence.

His actual powers were bestowed upon him when a young Robert, while working in a physics lab, drank a serum that "moved his molecules 1 second ahead of the current timeline." It was later revealed that this was a newer version of the Super Soldier serum that transformed Captain America.

Seen as somewhat of an AlternateCompanyEquivalent of Franchise/{{Superman}} due to his [[SuperpowerLottery seemingly limitless powers]], including: energy blasts, super strength, flight, and of course a hefty dose of NewPowersAsThePlotDemands.

The Sentry, while seeming like an InvincibleHero, actually has many weaknesses due to his being AxCrazy (this is not expunged when Robert becomes the Sentry). Robert Reynolds is an agoraphobic, anxiety-ridden schizophrenic who relies on his robot sidekick CLOC to calculate the severity of problems that need his help, and solves them in order based on CLOC's input.

Despite his death at the end of Dark Reign,
the Sentry was resurrected by the Apocalypse Twins' new Horsemen in ''ComicBook/UncannyAvengers'', though Thor convinces him to help stop Exitar the Executioner. Sentry, having fully succumbed to his insanity has been forgotten and believing himself to be the successor of Apocalypse, agreed to do so... after dead, he rid the world of the "cancerous" mutants. Having survived the incident, the Sentry was put into exile until has resurected an vanished. Even if he was called back by Dr. Strange in a terrible attempt to stop Loki, who had become Sorcerer Supreme and was looking for a spell that could potentially doom all, only for it to restore magic to the world. Upset, the Sentry told Dr. Strange never to call on him again and disappeared. He returned in his own miniseries by Jeff Lemire as part of the ''ComicBook/MarvelAFreshStart'' initiative, taking place some time after this appearance, where he was living essentially on parole as Bob Reynolds, fry cook extraordinaire, and spending time as the Sentry in a pocket dimension via a machine constructed by Tony Stark and Reed Richards called the Confluctor, to keep both the Sentry and the Void in check. [[spoiler: This was derailed by his former sidekick and friend, Scout, who had had his arm torn off by the Void and was secretly resentful that Bob could be the Sentry in his spare time. He discovered the Sentry's power-granting formula, and conspired with is one of earth's greatest hero, he is more the Sentry's old enemies to recreate it and steal the Confluctor, trapping Bob inside and the Sentry outside. The Sentry and Scout fought, while Bob survived by merging the Void and the Sentry and himself to create a new, somewhat morally ambiguous black-haired Sentry dressed in red and black, who killed Scout and went to space, resuming his mission to protect humanity by any means necessary]].

In terms of VideoGames, The Sentry was a playable character in ''VideoGame/MarvelUltimateAlliance 2'' for UsefulNotes/NintendoDS, ''Marvel VideoGame/SuperHeroSquadOnline'', and ''Videogame/MarvelPuzzleQuest''.
world's greatest danger.



!!Tropes:

* AddedAlliterativeAppeal: The ''Age of the Sentry'' has a number of characters with alliterative E names the recurrence of which he finds suspicious. [[spoiler:It turns out that the E-E's are referents to Destroyer Darkmass, a being from the original universe the Sentry originated from (as E's can be shifted over to D's).]]
* AllegoricalCharacter: A recurring enemy of Sentry, even appearing more than the Void, in the ''Age of the Sentry'' mini is a villain named Cranio who has three brains. He always boasts of being [[{{Catchphrase}} three steps ahead of him]] and is a recurring figure in hallucinations. Given Sentry normally has three personalities in conflict he might be a representation of Bob being his own greatest enemy and the greatest threat to others.
* AlliterativeName: Robert Reynolds, though he usually goes by Bob.
* AntiChrist: The Void generally functions as this. Hiroim refers to him as a "Worldbreaker", in contrast to "[[MessianicArchetype The Sakaarson]]".
* AxCrazy: As the Void. Also, possibly, as [[spoiler: his 2019 Merged Sentry persona]].
* BackFromTheDead: While he's been resurrected several times, his most recent revival was when the Apocalypse Twins revived him as one of their Four Horsemen of Death. It's not known if the Void has been revived as well. It appears, going by Bob's word, the Void ''[[CompleteImmortality never died]]''. It simply got tired of being imprisoned in the sun and shuttled itself off to the White Hot Room. As of his later reappearance in ''ComicBook/DoctorStrange'', it might be back... though the context leaves it somewhat ambiguous. [[spoiler: Jeff Lemire's miniseries confirms that the Void is indeed back]].
* BackstoryInvader: A modern character retconned in as an inverted example, a hero from the Silver Age who happened to save the world in a way that erased everyone's memories of him. Leading up to the series that introduced the Sentry, Marvel got comic news sources in on the joke; they ran stories about how he really was a Silver Age hero who was created back then but never used and promptly forgotten.
* BadassBoast:
** Gives a brief one during the events of World War Hulk. The Hulk contends that the Sentry doesn't want to fight him. The response (paraphrased): "God help me, I do... because you're the only one I can hit like ''[[MegatonPunch this]]''."
** From ''ComicBook/{{Siege}}'':
--> '''Sentry[=/=]Void''': How many gods will I have to kill today?
* BalanceBetweenGoodAndEvil: The Void's initial logic: for each act of good the Sentry performs, the Void commits an equivalent act of evil.
* BearsAreBadNews: One of the Sentry's Silver Age foes was a giant bear. The Sentry couldn't defeat it, just convince it to hibernate.
* BeenThereShapedHistory: The Void may have caused [[Literature/TheBible the Plagues of Egypt]].
* BewareTheSuperman: Being powerful to such a degree is more than dangerous when also having such serious mental problems. As seen in ''Dark Reign'', he is very easily manipulated. And not to talk about what happens when the Void breaks out - breaking literally every bone of the freakin' '''Hulk''', rampaging through New York or levelling the whole city of Asgard (the reputation accrued by the latter feat is one Doctor Strange later exploits when [[spoiler: he needs a distraction and points Bob at Asgardia.]]) And that's by far not everything that this psycho has unleashed during his life.
** After he survives being disintegrated, Bullseye wonders if, when he finally goes over the edge, they'll actually be able to kill him. The answer is no, not unless he lets you. And even ''that'' seems to have stopped working, to the point where the Sentry exiled himself into space, in a coma, just to try and keep the universe safe from himself. In the end, even ''that'' didn't work. Now, as [[spoiler: the Merged Sentry, he's arguably even more dangerous]].
* BodyHorror: When he transforms into the Void, the results are usually monstrous.
* BrainsEvilBrawnGood: Shows both sides. He's a super-genius, but usually defaults to trying to smash things or throw them into the sun.
* BroughtToYouByTheLetterS: He has an S-shaped sigil on his waist.
* BulletCatch: The Sentry once stopped an assassination attempt in this manner. Since he has super speed, catching bullets is nothing.
* CareBearStare: The Sentry can emit a calming aura to help the Hulk manage his rage. Reed Richards tries to simulate this aura during ''ComicBook/WorldWarHulk'', but it doesn't work.
* CharacterShilling: Prior to ''Siege''. Some of it's a consequence of him being a walking CosmicRetcon, the rest is just there for the usual reason. After that, he's generally been depicted as a potentially evil/insane Superman, which most people seem to agree is much more interesting.
* CivvieSpandex: In the original miniseries, the Sentry's costume upon returning into action was just a gray jacket with a small cape held in place with clothespins. As the series progresses, it began to look more and more like attire appropriate for a superhero. By the end of the fourth issue, it finally became a proper superhero uniform.
* ColorCodedForYourConvenience: The Sentry's eyes glow yellow when he uses most of his powers, blue when he's using his psychic powers, and red when the Void is about to emerge. Most recently, they glow black-edged white when he's [[spoiler: the Merged Sentry]].
* CombatTentacles: Part of the Void's physical makeup, the tentacles are strong enough to restrain the Hulk and break his bones.
** In ''Siege'', they ''ripped Loki in half'' (and then maybe a few more pieces).
* ComicBooksAreReal: Like other Marvel characters, the Sentry has in-universe comics about him, which serve as the FramingDevice for ''The Age of the Sentry''. (As it turns out, there's a universe out there where ''[=AotS=]'' actually happened, Earth-1611.)
* ConspicuousTrenchcoat: The Void's wardrobe of choice throughout the second mini.
* TheCorrupter: ComicBook/NormanOsborn, who thoroughly abuses Bob's fragile mental state. It wasn't until Osborn provided the Sentry with another dose of the serum that the Void became the dominant personality.
* CurbStompBattle: Sentry has multiple examples of being the one issuing these out. Name a Marvel character and odds are Sentry has used his or her ass as a footstool before. Notable exceptions are his draw with the Worldbreaker Hulk and his loss to Extremis ComicBook/{{Ultron}} until she was infected with a virus, allowing him to defeat her.
** His "battle" with Morgan Le Fay was probably the worst example of this. Norman Osborn gives him the go-ahead, Sentry flies down, and literally the ''very next panel'' is him [[OffWithHerHead ripping her head clean off.]]
** His fight with [[spoiler: Scout]] in Lemire's miniseries is absolutely brutal, and, once he stops trying to talk the other man down, very short.
* DarkSecret: The truth behind the origin of the Sentry, kept between Bob and his wife, Lindy. [[spoiler: Bob was just a drug addict looking for a fix, not an innocent young man working in a physics lab. The Void is the manifestation of the part of him that is still that junkie.]]
* DeconstructedCharacterArchetype: Sentry's essentially a thorough deconstruction of the idea of Superman, the Lois Lane-Superman relationship dynamic, and his IdealHero image. Basically his presentation demonstrates the lesson that a single person with such unbelievable godlike power would be universally seen as TheDreaded especially when that person has mental issues or the same mental weaknesses as every other person. The Lois Lane-Superman relationship is inherently toxic as the Lois expy in question is more attracted to the Sentry superhero side than his flawed human side and eventually becomes more horrified by the Sentry's inhuman power as he grows stronger, especially after he brings her back from death. As the final nail in the coffin, the only reason the Sentry is hailed as some ideal hero is because of a SuperpoweredEvilSide that exists to make him seem more heroic than he actually is. In short, instead of an admirable Superman figure that inspires hope, you have a mentally ill godlike timebomb that puts the world on the edge of a panic attack and whose own LoveInterest lives in terror of him.
* DeathIsCheap: Sentry had died and returned within the confines of a single issue, usually as a result of the Void's intervention.
* DemonSlaying: Does this on occasion.
* DependingOnTheWriter: Sentry has something like eight different origins, and the level and type of his mental psychosis fluctuates from issue to issue. Even the Void seems to change from split personality to separate entity on alternating weekends. His level of power also goes up and down, from "stronger than Thor, but it'd still be a fair enough fight" to "could smash the entire planet into gravel with a single pushup." Even his "power of many exploding suns" comment varies, going from just thousand to a million suns.
* DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu: The Sentry has supposedly defeated Galactus either on his own or with the help of [[ComicBook/XMan Nate 'I use the Multiverse as my personal stepladder and create entire planes of existence with a thought' Grey]]. Debatable given never really shown even in a flashback, the Sentry's unreliable history and [[ManipulativeBastard the fact that Nate is very much his father's son]], but Nate's comment afterwards, when Norman Osborn implies that he was manipulating the Sentry ("Cleverness be* damned, I just told him the truth."), and Nate's own colossal raw power, suggests that it might actually have happened.
* DisproportionateRetribution: Bob finds out that a yoga instructor is putting some moves on his wife; sometime later, the Sentry saves 152 people from a crashing boat, while the Void hurls a jet airliner into a building and kills 152 people. Ramón the yoga instructor was in that building.
* TheDreaded: Bob is a feared figure due to the combination of mental illness and overwhelming power, but in the pages of Doctor Strange, The Void has proven to be one of the few things that truly horrifies ComicBook/{{Loki}}, likely thanks to the events of ''Siege''. Even as the new Sorcerer Supreme, Loki is visibly shaken and out of sorts throughout the confrontation. The heroes aren't immune to this, with the high end of the superhero community keeping a hawk-like watch on Bob in Lemire's miniseries, even when they're sure the Sentry can't return (let alone the Void) and have contingencies in case he even accidentally violates his parole.
* DrivenToSuicide: He's tried more than once. When he returned in ''Doctor Strange'', his attitude was to live in a hallucination constructed by Strange while his body floated in deep space, on the grounds that it was safer for everyone. He was deeply unhappy when Strange not only brought him back (which he was willing to do, in order to help), but ended up unleashing the Void again.
* DrugsAreBad: Sentry tries his best to [[spoiler:hide his drug-filled past from everyone he can]].
* EldritchAbomination: The Void is hinted to be an angel of death from Biblical times.
* ElementalPowers: The Void can control the weather.
* EnemyWithout: The Void is capable of manifesting separately from the Sentry, and there have been occasions when the two have fought.
* {{Expy}}: His original series seems to be heavily inspired by Creator/AlanMoore's rework of ''Marvelman''/''ComicBook/{{Miracleman}}''. Both feature middle-aged guys who are vaguely haunted by their past as the most powerful person on the planet, even down to details like being jealous of their super selves, their wives being more attracted to their other selves and their origins in a secret government program. Which makes the Sentry an {{Expy}} of a reworked DarkerAndEdgier CaptainErsatz of a CaptainErsatz, as Marvelman was a British copy of [[ComicBook/{{Shazam}} Captain Marvel]], who was himself a copy of Superman. So he's like Franchise/{{Superman}}'s fifth cousin twice removed.
** He's also ''very'' similar to Triumph, an extremely powerful Creator/DCComics hero who was {{Retcon}}ned into being a founding member of the Franchise/JusticeLeagueOfAmerica during ''Comicbook/ZeroHourCrisisInTime''. He even fell victim to a TimeyWimeyBall that forced his comrades to forget about his existence.
** The ''Age of The Sentry'' miniseries manages to take the Superman comparisons further. He's got the Sentress (otherwise known as ComicBook/CarolDanvers), who's a Supergirl / Wonder Woman mash-up (the DistaffCounterpart but with a Wonder Woman-esque supporting cast), the ''ComicBook/GuardiansOfTheGalaxy'' are the ComicBook/LegionOfSuperheroes, and even some of the Sentry's unseen villains resemble Superman's.
* EyeBeams: One of his myriad powers.
* FallenHero: If the rest of the page is no indication.
* {{Flight}}: He has the ability to fly.
* {{Foreshadow}}: In the first issue of ''The Age of Sentry'', when Scout, Watchdog, and Lindy begin travelling through the timestream, [[spoiler:the silhouette of Destroyer Darkmass can be seen in the background, tearing apart an alternate Earth. This foreshadows the Sentry's true origin as revealed in the final issue]].
* FramingDevice: The ''Age of Sentry'' series is framed as Reed telling Franklin stories about the Sentry but with a comic book flourish.
* FromASingleCell: The Sentry has been blown into pieces by powerful enemies like Morgan Le Fey and the Molecule Man but his body always reconstitutes itself.
* FromNobodyToNightmare: [[spoiler:Was a meth addict before getting his superpowers.]]
* FusionDance: The end result of ''Fresh Start'' - specifically, [[spoiler: Bob, the Sentry, and the Void merged to create the Merged Sentry]]. The result is arguably even more powerful than either the Void or the Sentry, and exponentially more dangerous.
* GroinAttack: On the receiving end of this by [[SuperHeroGods Her]][[ComicBook/TheIncredibleHercules cules]] in ''ComicBook/DarkReign''.
* GoodIsNotNice: The end result of his [[spoiler:merger with the Void]] in ''Fresh Start''. A champion firmly on the side of good who nonetheless does some morally dubious acts to see justice done and refuses to kowtow to others or limit himself.
* HandBlast: One of his more potent ways of projecting his power.
* HealingFactor: A pretty powerful one which puts even Wolverine and Hulk to shame.
* HeroKiller: Especially in Siege.
* HeroicSacrifice: Parodied during his team-up with Doctor Strange against Loki. Some of Stephen's most powerful spells require heavy mental, physical, and spiritual agony lavished upon either himself or a willing vassal. As the Sentry is an absurdly mighty metaphysical being, all the requisite suffering barely fazes him and he ''naps'' through the entire fight, allowing Strange to cast reality-altering spells with impunity.
* HomeBase: The Sentry has the Watchtower, while the Void has the "hidey-hole" in Antarctica.
* HumanoidAbomination: On a good day, the Sentry can rewrite reality and it's implied he's only as human as he believes himself to be. On a bad day... well, [[SuperPoweredEvilSide there's]] [[OurAngelsAreDifferent the]] [[EldritchAbomination Void]].
* HurlItIntoTheSun: After defeating the Void in the second mini, Bob hurls it into the sun after giving it [[ScrewYourself a kiss]].
** Lampshaded in-comic: "I don't throw ''everything'' into the sun."
* IChooseToStay: At the end of ''Annihilation: Scourge", he chooses to remain in the Negative Zone to contemplate the universe he almost destroyed. Understandably, no one who lives there is all too enthused, but he's too powerful to kick out.
* IdealHero: The second miniseries reveals that the Sentry persona is actually Bob Reynolds' idealized version of himself: the handsome, invincible champion of the entire planet.
* InexplicablyAwesome: It's never really explained how Bob became one of the most powerful beings in the universe after taking a drug that was basically a slightly jacked-up version of the Super Soldier Serum.
* InsaneEqualsViolent: Very much so for him! Generally he's (mentally speaking) like a young child, often asking if what he did was right, so it makes sense that he would lash out when he's angry/upset.
* IntangibleMan: Part of the Void's power set.
* InvoluntaryShapeshifting: Bob forcibly transforms into the Void after he loses control.
* LaserGuidedAmnesia: Imposed this on everyone, including himself, before the events of the first mini, [[spoiler:courtesy of a transmitter he and Reed created]].
* MadeOfIron: [[http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_39-VfFoO9u0/TNoAmZQjnAI/AAAAAAAACew/CHcpYpVx22o/s1600/sentry_thing_1.jpg The Thing throws his best punch at Sentry]]. There was probably more pain in Thing's hand than in Sentry's body.
* MercyKill: A reluctant Thor puts Bob out of his misery at the end of ''Siege''. Thanks to the Apocalypse Twins, it didn't stick.
** In his 2018 series, Bob himself has to do this to [[spoiler:Scout]] who was wracked with ceaseless pain from a corrupted facsimile of his own powers that rendered him virtually invincible while melting him from the inside-out.
* MindRape: If beating an opponent to a pulp with fists won't do the trick, Bob will resort to this. [[http://media.comicvine.com/uploads/10/101644/2033272-71222830_super.jpg He'll even make the victim see him as the Void and not the Sentry.]]
** What if a foe has Wolverine's healing factor and unbreakable bones and Luke Cage's unbreakable skin? Sentry won't even blink.
* MoodWhiplash: The Age of The Sentry issue 2 has a story about the Sentry's birthday. Typical Silver Age nonsense, with Jean Grey fawning over the Sentry's dog, and two Nick Furies in one place, and then the art changes to a more modern style, as one of the Sentry's villains arrives, with images of planets exploding behind him... phew, good thing Bob just zoned out for a minute there, folks!
* MultipleChoicePast: In truth, it is still not clear ''exactly'' what the relationship is between Bob Reynolds, the Sentry and the Void (Is the Void the real Bob Reynolds, or is the Sentry, or is neither, or are they both?), exactly what the serum was he took or even whether it actually ''did'' anything, what the exact nature and source of his powers is (I am a superhuman! I am actually the angel of Death! I am a refugee from another universe! I am Galactus!), how the Void really came into existence and whether he is really dead. This, of course, fits in very nicely with the notion that the Sentry is bugnuts insane, and genuinely does not know what happened, being a RealityWarper of undefined limits, subconsciously even altering reality to suit whatever his psychosis says is the real story that day. Or perhaps reality warps ''itself'' around the Sentry to accommodate him, creating things from nothing to enable him to exist. Suffice to say, take ''nothing'' for granted when it comes to anything about the Sentry's origin and nature.
** The last issue of ''The Age of the Sentry'', framed as an "Imaginary Story", puts forth the idea that the Void was once a separate person, a gangster named Eddie Emmerick who got his light absorption and shadow projection abilities through a neutrino ray accident, then -- on the day Rob Reynolds became the Sentry -- transformed into a HumanoidAbomination, a negative force to balance out the Sentry's positive. Eventually, in collaboration with Cranio, the Void absorbed the Sentry's power via the brain of Gorax, until he was no longer Emmerick, but a doppelganger of Reynolds, while the real Reynolds died.
* NeckSnap: Thor snapped the Sentry's neck in a ''What If?'' centered around ''ComicBook/SecretInvasion''.
* TheNeedless: Becomes this as the Void.
* NighInvulnerability: To an absolutely ''insane'' degree. He was bodily disintegrated by both Morgana leFay and Molecule Man, and simply ''re-appeared with no explanation''. When he tried to commit suicide by flying into the sun, he was already swimming in superheated solar plasma when his evil self basically said "Don't be silly, kiddo".
* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: To Thor, after he returns as a Horseman of Apocalypse.
* OffWithHisHead: The Sentry killed ComicBook/SubMariner villain Attuma [[http://marvel.wikia.com/wiki/File:Attuma_(Earth-616)_killed_by_the_Sentry_from_Sentry_Vol_2_1.jpg in this manner]].
** Sentry rips the head off things quite a bit. Not just fodder opponents either. [[http://media.comicvine.com/uploads/2/24463/456049-sen_rips_u_super.jpg Even Ultron's head isn't safe from the Golden Guardian of Good]].
** And [[https://readcomicbooksonline.site/reader/Dark_Avengers_2009/Dark_Avengers_2009_Issue_02/18 Morgan Le Fey]].
* OurAngelsAreDifferent: The Void might have been around since Biblical times as the Angel of Death.
* PlayingWithFire: And what powerful fire it is.
* PowerCreepPowerSeep: In his miniseries, the Sentry actually bled after being bitten by a dog. By the time ''Siege'' rolled around, Bob was shrugging off blows from Thor's hammer without a scratch on him.
** This could be something to do with his psychosis, as his strength levels yo-yo almost as much as Gladiator's.
* PowerMakesYourHairGrow: Bob's hair is of average length, but becomes quite long when he's the Sentry. This wasn't present in the original miniseries, but was added when the Sentry was introduced to the main Marvel Universe to distinguish him from other blonde heroes when unmasked. This was such a late change that the cover of New Avengers 3 [[CoversAlwaysLie has a short-haired Sentry.]]
* PowerGlows: He's not called the "Golden Guardian of Good" for nothing.
* PsychicPowers: The Sentry has shown psychic powers strong enough to give Comicbook/DoctorStrange pause.
* PsychoSerum: The serum that gave Bob his powers was a new version of the Super Soldier serum [[UpToEleven amplified 100,000 fold]]. According to the second mini, Bob became the insane Void persona from the moment he injested the serum.
* RapidFireFisticuffs: See [[http://static.comicvine.com/uploads/original/11/110794/2411960-what_if___secret_invasion_019.jpg here]] for example.
* RedEyesTakeWarning: Sentry's pupils start to glow red when the Void is about to emerge, while the rest of his eyes turn [[BlackEyesOfCrazy pitch black]].
* {{Retcon}}: Sentry is retconned into having been an important person to many [[CharacterTitle title characters]] in the [[UsefulNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks silver age]].
* {{Retraux}}: The ''Age of The Sentry'' mini-series, focusing on the Sentry's supposed Silver Age era exploits.
* SamaritanSyndrome: A sad Deconstruction. He can't prioritize where his help is needed the most and thus often falls into despair.
* SanityHasAdvantages: He's insanely effective once he stabilises his psyche vis-a-vis [[spoiler:merging with the Void]] in ''Fresh Start'', creating a godlike vigilante who is, for better or worse, his own man.
* SealedBadassInACan: He is both SealedGoodInaCan and SealedEvilinaCan, so he's had to be either eliminated or contained to keep the world safe.
** The Sentry was voluntarily imprisoned at the start of the 2005 ''New Avengers'' series, sporting a scraggly BeardOfSorrow.
** Post his stint as Death in ''Uncanny Avengers'', he's cured, but voluntarily inside one constructed by Doctor Strange, inside his own mind, while his body is floating in deep space. A desperate Strange lets him out. He willingly went along with this, but was deeply unhappy when [[spoiler: Strange unleashed the Void]]. This resulted in the Lemire miniseries, which had Bob willing limit himself on a kind of parole use a device to periodically visit an alternate universe where he can be both Sentry and the Void. [[spoiler: Things start to go wrong when the device, a one-of-a-kind gadget Tony Stark and Dr Strange made for Bob, gets stolen by Scout, his bitter ex-sidekick who ended up being driven AxeCrazy by the Sentry's powers. The result was a merger of Bob, the Sentry, and the Void, with the new Merged Sentry]] decidedly ''not'' being in the mood to be imprisoned.
* SexierAlterEgo: Bob's wife, Lindy, prefers sleeping with him while he's in Sentry form.
* ShapingYourAttacks: A rarer skill, the Sentry can create yellow HardLight constructs similar to ComicBook/{{Quasar}}'s quantum constructs. In a fight against Terrax, Sentry created a bubble construct to block the Herald's HandBlast.
* ShockwaveClap: One of the Sentry's attacks. He uses this one against a bunch of the Void's attack drones in ''The Sentry'' v2 #8.
** He may have picked it up from or taught it to his buddy, the ComicBook/IncredibleHulk.
* SpeechBubbles: The Void's speech bubbles are black with white lettering, the exact opposite of the Sentry's and most other characters.
* SpeedBlitz: Usually does this when making an entrance.
* SplitPersonality: The Sentry (good) and the Void (evil). The relationship between them is described as a [[AGodAmI god complex]]: every time Sentry did something good, Void did something equally evil.
* SplitPersonalityMerge: At the end of the 2018 miniseries, Bob and the Void merge turning into a black-haired, red-costumed being with the powers and personality of the Sentry and Void combined.
* StrongAsTheyNeedToBe: Sentry only gets stronger with time. He cannot be completely destroyed (see his invulnerability trope entry) and can exchange punches with Hulk and Thor. Sentry can impress even Doctor Strange, the Sorcerer Supreme, with his psychic and telepathic abilities and possesses molecular manipulation on the same level as Molecule Man. Moving faster than the speed of light is a simple matter for Sentry and he can travel distances in seconds that even the speedier characters require minutes for. The only weakness Bob has is his unstable mind but making use of this weakness is a huge gamble even for master manipulators because they risk releasing the Void.
** Sentry while either completely stable mentally or Voided out is a true monster to behold. Sentry's strength depends on his mental stability and Sentry managed to fight World War Hulk after being consumed by his agoraphobia for 29 hours, showing even a weakened Sentry is a force to be reckoned with. The Void managed to [[spoiler: rampage through Asgard and topple foes such as Thor and Ares]] in ''Siege'', and he was just getting started. When Void was not as powerful, he was still able to break every single bone in the Hulk's body.
*** Proof of this is when, as the Horseman of Death (and thereby even crazier than usual), he manages to temporarily stop Exitar, a Celestial, from descending to destroy the Earth long enough for Thor to kill him with Jarmbjorn, when Rogue, who'd taken powers from quite literally all the Avengers and all the X-Men, including the full power of Wonder Man, and a machine powered by the Hulk hadn't managed it (though she didn't stop her effort so it is not known how much either of them contributed).
* SupermanSubstitute: Down to having a huge "S" in his costume.
* SuperReflexes: Catching bullets is quite easy for him.
* SuperSenses: Which can be a real pain factor for him, as he can't prioritize whom to save first.
* SuperSpeed: Sentry can fly to the Sun and back in seconds, and after his resurrection as a Horseman of Apocalypse, cross light years in moments. The narrative acknowledges the impossibility of this, as his moving so fast as Death actually disoriented [[ComicBook/TheMightyThor Thor]], who himself is able to move at lightspeed.
* SuperStrength: The Sentry is one of the strongest heroes in the Franchise/MarvelUniverse, capable of matching strength with the Hulk, [[ComicBook/TheMightyThor Thor]], and [[ComicBook/TheIncredibleHercules Hercules]]. The Void's strength is enough to break almost every bone in the Hulk's body. Much like Superman, his upper limits are subject to change. See StrongAsTheyNeedToBe
* SuperheroesWearCapes: Well, he ''is'' a Superman expy....
* SuperheroesWearTights: Duh!
* SuperpoweredEvilSide: He and The Void are this trope taken to its extreme. They manifested as alter-egos of a single person, representing the good and dark sides of humanity, respectively. The Sentry is a superhero and the Void is a supervillain, and in a slight variation on this trope, the Void is exactly as powerful as the Sentry, and occasionally kills someone for every person the Sentry saves.
** Also, his persona as Death, Horseman of Apocalypse.
* SuperWeight: He is often said to be Level 6. He supposedly stalemated Galactus, has often been compared to ''the power of a million exploding suns'', defeated a Molecule Man without beliefs about his abilities and therefore at full power (Post-Retcon however), and was said to be a Biblical angel of death, capable of causing greater destruction than the multi-universal damage of the Scarlet Witch, but we never actually see anything concrete, beyond easily overloading the Absorbing Man, who has had no trouble copying {{Mjolnir}} in the past. As it is, he is a powerful Level 5.
* {{Teleportation}}: Has done it on occasion.
* TomatoInTheMirror: Compounding his issues with the Void being a part of him, Robert was devastated to find out that the serum he took [[spoiler:would have worked on ''anyone''. He wasn't special, he was just there to take it, leading to those who made the serum destroying all their research because one lunatic with godlike powers was bad enough as is.]]
* TookALevelInBadass: The Void began taking on larger, more powerful forms leading up to ''Siege'', possibly due to the second dose of serum provided by Norman Osborn. Before, during the ''Sentry'' miniseries, the Void seemed to be limited to humanoid size at best.
** Following his becoming a Horseman of Apocalypse, he's even more of a beast than usual, quite capable of handling Thor alone and delaying a Celestial.
* UnskilledButStrong: With the Mighty Avengers, Sentry is stated outright to be the strongest member, but held back by his lack of skill.
** Hercules once hilariously exploited this weakness and [[CurbStompBattle made a complete fool of Robert]] in a very comedic [[GroinAttack and painful]] way.
--> '''Hercules''': Learn to fight like you ''mean'' it, pretty boy.
* VoluntaryShapeshifting: Unlike the Sentry, the Void can shapeshift at will, sometimes taking the form of whatever its opponents fear most.
* WillfullyWeak: Possessing incredible power, the Sentry holds back because he's afraid of losing control.
* WithGreatPowerComesGreatInsanity: A poster boy. It was suggested by characters that Sentry is addicted to his power, which stems from his past [[spoiler:as a junkie]].
* WorldsStrongestMan: The Sentry is without question a heavy contender for this title and Marvel has no problem with making characters say so. [[http://media.comicvine.com/uploads/10/101644/2057926-silentwar002016.jpg Karnak calls him "Earth's most powerful warrior."]]
** During ''ComicBook/DarkReign'', he's often used as a yard-stick for power, with Osborn specifically stating that Nate Grey is too dangerous to run loose precisely because he could go toe to toe with the Sentry.
* WouldHitAGirl: And kill a girl, too.
* YouCouldHaveUsedYourPowersForGood: Basically his entire character in a nutshell. Could have been Earth's greatest defender, but turned out to be a deadly disappointment.
* YourMindMakesItReal: The Void isn't a second personality in the traditional sense but a delusion Bob gets due to his schizophrenia. He believes he is the Void and, due to his powers, he ''becomes'' the Void.

to:

!!Tropes:

* AddedAlliterativeAppeal: The ''Age of the Sentry'' has a number of characters with alliterative E names the recurrence of which he finds suspicious. [[spoiler:It turns out that the E-E's are referents to Destroyer Darkmass, a being from the original universe the Sentry originated from (as E's can be shifted over to D's).]]
* AllegoricalCharacter: A recurring enemy of Sentry, even appearing more than the Void, in the ''Age of the Sentry'' mini is a villain named Cranio who has three brains. He always boasts of being [[{{Catchphrase}} three steps ahead of him]] and is a recurring figure in hallucinations. Given Sentry normally has three personalities in conflict he might be a representation of Bob being his own greatest enemy and the greatest threat to others.
* AlliterativeName: Robert Reynolds, though he usually goes by Bob.
* AntiChrist: The Void generally functions as this. Hiroim refers to him as a "Worldbreaker", in contrast to "[[MessianicArchetype The Sakaarson]]".
* AxCrazy: As the Void. Also, possibly, as [[spoiler: his 2019 Merged Sentry persona]].
* BackFromTheDead: While he's been resurrected several times, his most recent revival was when the Apocalypse Twins revived him as one of their Four Horsemen of Death. It's not known if the Void has been revived as well. It appears, going by Bob's word, the Void ''[[CompleteImmortality never died]]''. It simply got tired of being imprisoned in the sun and shuttled itself off to the White Hot Room. As of his later reappearance in ''ComicBook/DoctorStrange'', it might be back... though the context leaves it somewhat ambiguous. [[spoiler: Jeff Lemire's miniseries confirms that the Void is indeed back]].
* BackstoryInvader: A modern character retconned in as an inverted example, a hero from the Silver Age who happened to save the world in a way that erased everyone's memories of him. Leading up to the series that introduced the Sentry, Marvel got comic news sources in on the joke; they ran stories about how he really was a Silver Age hero who was created back then but never used and promptly forgotten.
* BadassBoast:
** Gives a brief one during the events of World War Hulk. The Hulk contends that the Sentry doesn't want to fight him. The response (paraphrased): "God help me, I do... because you're the only one I can hit like ''[[MegatonPunch this]]''."
** From ''ComicBook/{{Siege}}'':
--> '''Sentry[=/=]Void''': How many gods will I have to kill today?
* BalanceBetweenGoodAndEvil: The Void's initial logic: for each act of good the Sentry performs, the Void commits an equivalent act of evil.
* BearsAreBadNews: One of the Sentry's Silver Age foes was a giant bear. The Sentry couldn't defeat it, just convince it to hibernate.
* BeenThereShapedHistory: The Void may have caused [[Literature/TheBible the Plagues of Egypt]].
* BewareTheSuperman: Being powerful to such a degree is more than dangerous when also having such serious mental problems. As seen in ''Dark Reign'', he is very easily manipulated. And not to talk about what happens when the Void breaks out - breaking literally every bone of the freakin' '''Hulk''', rampaging through New York or levelling the whole city of Asgard (the reputation accrued by the latter feat is one Doctor Strange later exploits when [[spoiler: he needs a distraction and points Bob at Asgardia.]]) And that's by far not everything that this psycho has unleashed during his life.
** After he survives being disintegrated, Bullseye wonders if, when he finally goes over the edge, they'll actually be able to kill him. The answer is no, not unless he lets you. And even ''that'' seems to have stopped working, to the point where the Sentry exiled himself into space, in a coma, just to try and keep the universe safe from himself. In the end, even ''that'' didn't work. Now, as [[spoiler: the Merged Sentry, he's arguably even more dangerous]].
* BodyHorror: When he transforms into the Void, the results are usually monstrous.
* BrainsEvilBrawnGood: Shows both sides. He's a super-genius, but usually defaults to trying to smash things or throw them into the sun.
* BroughtToYouByTheLetterS: He has an S-shaped sigil on his waist.
* BulletCatch: The Sentry once stopped an assassination attempt in this manner. Since he has super speed, catching bullets is nothing.
* CareBearStare: The Sentry can emit a calming aura to help the Hulk manage his rage. Reed Richards tries to simulate this aura during ''ComicBook/WorldWarHulk'', but it doesn't work.
* CharacterShilling: Prior to ''Siege''. Some of it's a consequence of him being a walking CosmicRetcon, the rest is just there for the usual reason. After that, he's generally been depicted as a potentially evil/insane Superman, which most people seem to agree is much more interesting.
* CivvieSpandex: In the original miniseries, the Sentry's costume upon returning into action was just a gray jacket with a small cape held in place with clothespins. As the series progresses, it began to look more and more like attire appropriate for a superhero. By the end of the fourth issue, it finally became a proper superhero uniform.
* ColorCodedForYourConvenience: The Sentry's eyes glow yellow when he uses most of his powers, blue when he's using his psychic powers, and red when the Void is about to emerge. Most recently, they glow black-edged white when he's [[spoiler: the Merged Sentry]].
* CombatTentacles: Part of the Void's physical makeup, the tentacles are strong enough to restrain the Hulk and break his bones.
** In ''Siege'', they ''ripped Loki in half'' (and then maybe a few more pieces).
* ComicBooksAreReal: Like other Marvel characters, the Sentry has in-universe comics about him, which serve as the FramingDevice for ''The Age of the Sentry''. (As it turns out, there's a universe out there where ''[=AotS=]'' actually happened, Earth-1611.)
* ConspicuousTrenchcoat: The Void's wardrobe of choice throughout the second mini.
* TheCorrupter: ComicBook/NormanOsborn, who thoroughly abuses Bob's fragile mental state. It wasn't until Osborn provided the Sentry with another dose of the serum that the Void became the dominant personality.
* CurbStompBattle: Sentry has multiple examples of being the one issuing these out. Name a Marvel character and odds are Sentry has used his or her ass as a footstool before. Notable exceptions are his draw with the Worldbreaker Hulk and his loss to Extremis ComicBook/{{Ultron}} until she was infected with a virus, allowing him to defeat her.
** His "battle" with Morgan Le Fay was probably the worst example of this. Norman Osborn gives him the go-ahead, Sentry flies down, and literally the ''very next panel'' is him [[OffWithHerHead ripping her head clean off.]]
** His fight with [[spoiler: Scout]] in Lemire's miniseries is absolutely brutal, and, once he stops trying to talk the other man down, very short.
* DarkSecret: The truth behind the origin of the Sentry, kept between Bob and his wife, Lindy. [[spoiler: Bob was just a drug addict looking for a fix, not an innocent young man working in a physics lab. The Void is the manifestation of the part of him that is still that junkie.]]
* DeconstructedCharacterArchetype: Sentry's essentially a thorough deconstruction of the idea of Superman, the Lois Lane-Superman relationship dynamic, and his IdealHero image. Basically his presentation demonstrates the lesson that a single person with such unbelievable godlike power would be universally seen as TheDreaded especially when that person has mental issues or the same mental weaknesses as every other person. The Lois Lane-Superman relationship is inherently toxic as the Lois expy in question is more attracted to the Sentry superhero side than his flawed human side and eventually becomes more horrified by the Sentry's inhuman power as he grows stronger, especially after he brings her back from death. As the final nail in the coffin, the only reason the Sentry is hailed as some ideal hero is because of a SuperpoweredEvilSide that exists to make him seem more heroic than he actually is. In short, instead of an admirable Superman figure that inspires hope, you have a mentally ill godlike timebomb that puts the world on the edge of a panic attack and whose own LoveInterest lives in terror of him.
* DeathIsCheap: Sentry had died and returned within the confines of a single issue, usually as a result of the Void's intervention.
* DemonSlaying: Does this on occasion.
* DependingOnTheWriter: Sentry has something like eight different origins, and the level and type of his mental psychosis fluctuates from issue to issue. Even the Void seems to change from split personality to separate entity on alternating weekends. His level of power also goes up and down, from "stronger than Thor, but it'd still be a fair enough fight" to "could smash the entire planet into gravel with a single pushup." Even his "power of many exploding suns" comment varies, going from just thousand to a million suns.
* DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu: The Sentry has supposedly defeated Galactus either on his own or with the help of [[ComicBook/XMan Nate 'I use the Multiverse as my personal stepladder and create entire planes of existence with a thought' Grey]]. Debatable given never really shown even in a flashback, the Sentry's unreliable history and [[ManipulativeBastard the fact that Nate is very much his father's son]], but Nate's comment afterwards, when Norman Osborn implies that he was manipulating the Sentry ("Cleverness be* damned, I just told him the truth."), and Nate's own colossal raw power, suggests that it might actually have happened.
* DisproportionateRetribution: Bob finds out that a yoga instructor is putting some moves on his wife; sometime later, the Sentry saves 152 people from a crashing boat, while the Void hurls a jet airliner into a building and kills 152 people. Ramón the yoga instructor was in that building.
* TheDreaded: Bob is a feared figure due to the combination of mental illness and overwhelming power, but in the pages of Doctor Strange, The Void has proven to be one of the few things that truly horrifies ComicBook/{{Loki}}, likely thanks to the events of ''Siege''. Even as the new Sorcerer Supreme, Loki is visibly shaken and out of sorts throughout the confrontation. The heroes aren't immune to this, with the high end of the superhero community keeping a hawk-like watch on Bob in Lemire's miniseries, even when they're sure the Sentry can't return (let alone the Void) and have contingencies in case he even accidentally violates his parole.
* DrivenToSuicide: He's tried more than once. When he returned in ''Doctor Strange'', his attitude was to live in a hallucination constructed by Strange while his body floated in deep space, on the grounds that it was safer for everyone. He was deeply unhappy when Strange not only brought him back (which he was willing to do, in order to help), but ended up unleashing the Void again.
* DrugsAreBad: Sentry tries his best to [[spoiler:hide his drug-filled past from everyone he can]].
* EldritchAbomination: The Void is hinted to be an angel of death from Biblical times.
* ElementalPowers: The Void can control the weather.
* EnemyWithout: The Void is capable of manifesting separately from the Sentry, and there have been occasions when the two have fought.
* {{Expy}}: His original series seems to be heavily inspired by Creator/AlanMoore's rework of ''Marvelman''/''ComicBook/{{Miracleman}}''. Both feature middle-aged guys who are vaguely haunted by their past as the most powerful person on the planet, even down to details like being jealous of their super selves, their wives being more attracted to their other selves and their origins in a secret government program. Which makes the Sentry an {{Expy}} of a reworked DarkerAndEdgier CaptainErsatz of a CaptainErsatz, as Marvelman was a British copy of [[ComicBook/{{Shazam}} Captain Marvel]], who was himself a copy of Superman. So he's like Franchise/{{Superman}}'s fifth cousin twice removed.
** He's also ''very'' similar to Triumph, an extremely powerful Creator/DCComics hero who was {{Retcon}}ned into being a founding member of the Franchise/JusticeLeagueOfAmerica during ''Comicbook/ZeroHourCrisisInTime''. He even fell victim to a TimeyWimeyBall that forced his comrades to forget about his existence.
** The ''Age of The Sentry'' miniseries manages to take the Superman comparisons further. He's got the Sentress (otherwise known as ComicBook/CarolDanvers), who's a Supergirl / Wonder Woman mash-up (the DistaffCounterpart but with a Wonder Woman-esque supporting cast), the ''ComicBook/GuardiansOfTheGalaxy'' are the ComicBook/LegionOfSuperheroes, and even some of the Sentry's unseen villains resemble Superman's.
* EyeBeams: One of his myriad powers.
* FallenHero: If the rest of the page is no indication.
* {{Flight}}: He has the ability to fly.
* {{Foreshadow}}: In the first issue of ''The Age of Sentry'', when Scout, Watchdog, and Lindy begin travelling through the timestream, [[spoiler:the silhouette of Destroyer Darkmass can be seen in the background, tearing apart an alternate Earth. This foreshadows the Sentry's true origin as revealed in the final issue]].
* FramingDevice: The ''Age of Sentry'' series is framed as Reed telling Franklin stories about the Sentry but with a comic book flourish.
* FromASingleCell: The Sentry has been blown into pieces by powerful enemies like Morgan Le Fey and the Molecule Man but his body always reconstitutes itself.
* FromNobodyToNightmare: [[spoiler:Was a meth addict before getting his superpowers.]]
* FusionDance: The end result of ''Fresh Start'' - specifically, [[spoiler: Bob, the Sentry, and the Void merged to create the Merged Sentry]]. The result is arguably even more powerful than either the Void or the Sentry, and exponentially more dangerous.
* GroinAttack: On the receiving end of this by [[SuperHeroGods Her]][[ComicBook/TheIncredibleHercules cules]] in ''ComicBook/DarkReign''.
* GoodIsNotNice: The end result of his [[spoiler:merger with the Void]] in ''Fresh Start''. A champion firmly on the side of good who nonetheless does some morally dubious acts to see justice done and refuses to kowtow to others or limit himself.
* HandBlast: One of his more potent ways of projecting his power.
* HealingFactor: A pretty powerful one which puts even Wolverine and Hulk to shame.
* HeroKiller: Especially in Siege.
* HeroicSacrifice: Parodied during his team-up with Doctor Strange against Loki. Some of Stephen's most powerful spells require heavy mental, physical, and spiritual agony lavished upon either himself or a willing vassal. As the Sentry is an absurdly mighty metaphysical being, all the requisite suffering barely fazes him and he ''naps'' through the entire fight, allowing Strange to cast reality-altering spells with impunity.
* HomeBase: The Sentry has the Watchtower, while the Void has the "hidey-hole" in Antarctica.
* HumanoidAbomination: On a good day, the Sentry can rewrite reality and it's implied he's only as human as he believes himself to be. On a bad day... well, [[SuperPoweredEvilSide there's]] [[OurAngelsAreDifferent the]] [[EldritchAbomination Void]].
* HurlItIntoTheSun: After defeating the Void in the second mini, Bob hurls it into the sun after giving it [[ScrewYourself a kiss]].
** Lampshaded in-comic: "I don't throw ''everything'' into the sun."
* IChooseToStay: At the end of ''Annihilation: Scourge", he chooses to remain in the Negative Zone to contemplate the universe he almost destroyed. Understandably, no one who lives there is all too enthused, but he's too powerful to kick out.
* IdealHero: The second miniseries reveals that the Sentry persona is actually Bob Reynolds' idealized version of himself: the handsome, invincible champion of the entire planet.
* InexplicablyAwesome: It's never really explained how Bob became one of the most powerful beings in the universe after taking a drug that was basically a slightly jacked-up version of the Super Soldier Serum.
* InsaneEqualsViolent: Very much so for him! Generally he's (mentally speaking) like a young child, often asking if what he did was right, so it makes sense that he would lash out when he's angry/upset.
* IntangibleMan: Part of the Void's power set.
* InvoluntaryShapeshifting: Bob forcibly transforms into the Void after he loses control.
* LaserGuidedAmnesia: Imposed this on everyone, including himself, before the events of the first mini, [[spoiler:courtesy of a transmitter he and Reed created]].
* MadeOfIron: [[http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_39-VfFoO9u0/TNoAmZQjnAI/AAAAAAAACew/CHcpYpVx22o/s1600/sentry_thing_1.jpg The Thing throws his best punch at Sentry]]. There was probably more pain in Thing's hand than in Sentry's body.
* MercyKill: A reluctant Thor puts Bob out of his misery at the end of ''Siege''. Thanks to the Apocalypse Twins, it didn't stick.
** In his 2018 series, Bob himself has to do this to [[spoiler:Scout]] who was wracked with ceaseless pain from a corrupted facsimile of his own powers that rendered him virtually invincible while melting him from the inside-out.
* MindRape: If beating an opponent to a pulp with fists won't do the trick, Bob will resort to this. [[http://media.comicvine.com/uploads/10/101644/2033272-71222830_super.jpg He'll even make the victim see him as the Void and not the Sentry.]]
** What if a foe has Wolverine's healing factor and unbreakable bones and Luke Cage's unbreakable skin? Sentry won't even blink.
* MoodWhiplash: The Age of The Sentry issue 2 has a story about the Sentry's birthday. Typical Silver Age nonsense, with Jean Grey fawning over the Sentry's dog, and two Nick Furies in one place, and then the art changes to a more modern style, as one of the Sentry's villains arrives, with images of planets exploding behind him... phew, good thing Bob just zoned out for a minute there, folks!
* MultipleChoicePast: In truth, it is still not clear ''exactly'' what the relationship is between Bob Reynolds, the Sentry and the Void (Is the Void the real Bob Reynolds, or is the Sentry, or is neither, or are they both?), exactly what the serum was he took or even whether it actually ''did'' anything, what the exact nature and source of his powers is (I am a superhuman! I am actually the angel of Death! I am a refugee from another universe! I am Galactus!), how the Void really came into existence and whether he is really dead. This, of course, fits in very nicely with the notion that the Sentry is bugnuts insane, and genuinely does not know what happened, being a RealityWarper of undefined limits, subconsciously even altering reality to suit whatever his psychosis says is the real story that day. Or perhaps reality warps ''itself'' around the Sentry to accommodate him, creating things from nothing to enable him to exist. Suffice to say, take ''nothing'' for granted when it comes to anything about the Sentry's origin and nature.
** The last issue of ''The Age of the Sentry'', framed as an "Imaginary Story", puts forth the idea that the Void was once a separate person, a gangster named Eddie Emmerick who got his light absorption and shadow projection abilities through a neutrino ray accident, then -- on the day Rob Reynolds became the Sentry -- transformed into a HumanoidAbomination, a negative force to balance out the Sentry's positive. Eventually, in collaboration with Cranio, the Void absorbed the Sentry's power via the brain of Gorax, until he was no longer Emmerick, but a doppelganger of Reynolds, while the real Reynolds died.
* NeckSnap: Thor snapped the Sentry's neck in a ''What If?'' centered around ''ComicBook/SecretInvasion''.
* TheNeedless: Becomes this as the Void.
* NighInvulnerability: To an absolutely ''insane'' degree. He was bodily disintegrated by both Morgana leFay and Molecule Man, and simply ''re-appeared with no explanation''. When he tried to commit suicide by flying into the sun, he was already swimming in superheated solar plasma when his evil self basically said "Don't be silly, kiddo".
* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: To Thor, after he returns as a Horseman of Apocalypse.
* OffWithHisHead: The Sentry killed ComicBook/SubMariner villain Attuma [[http://marvel.wikia.com/wiki/File:Attuma_(Earth-616)_killed_by_the_Sentry_from_Sentry_Vol_2_1.jpg in this manner]].
** Sentry rips the head off things quite a bit. Not just fodder opponents either. [[http://media.comicvine.com/uploads/2/24463/456049-sen_rips_u_super.jpg Even Ultron's head isn't safe from the Golden Guardian of Good]].
** And [[https://readcomicbooksonline.site/reader/Dark_Avengers_2009/Dark_Avengers_2009_Issue_02/18 Morgan Le Fey]].
* OurAngelsAreDifferent: The Void might have been around since Biblical times as the Angel of Death.
* PlayingWithFire: And what powerful fire it is.
* PowerCreepPowerSeep: In his miniseries, the Sentry actually bled after being bitten by a dog. By the time ''Siege'' rolled around, Bob was shrugging off blows from Thor's hammer without a scratch on him.
** This could be something to do with his psychosis, as his strength levels yo-yo almost as much as Gladiator's.
* PowerMakesYourHairGrow: Bob's hair is of average length, but becomes quite long when he's the Sentry. This wasn't present in the original miniseries, but was added when the Sentry was introduced to the main Marvel Universe to distinguish him from other blonde heroes when unmasked. This was such a late change that the cover of New Avengers 3 [[CoversAlwaysLie has a short-haired Sentry.]]
* PowerGlows: He's not called the "Golden Guardian of Good" for nothing.
* PsychicPowers: The Sentry has shown psychic powers strong enough to give Comicbook/DoctorStrange pause.
* PsychoSerum: The serum that gave Bob his powers was a new version of the Super Soldier serum [[UpToEleven amplified 100,000 fold]]. According to the second mini, Bob became the insane Void persona from the moment he injested the serum.
* RapidFireFisticuffs:
-> See [[http://static.comicvine.com/uploads/original/11/110794/2411960-what_if___secret_invasion_019.jpg here]] for example.
* RedEyesTakeWarning: Sentry's pupils start to glow red when the Void is about to emerge, while the rest of his eyes turn [[BlackEyesOfCrazy pitch black]].
* {{Retcon}}: Sentry is retconned into having been an important person to many [[CharacterTitle title characters]] in the [[UsefulNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks silver age]].
* {{Retraux}}: The ''Age of The Sentry'' mini-series, focusing on the Sentry's supposed Silver Age era exploits.
* SamaritanSyndrome: A sad Deconstruction. He can't prioritize where his help is needed the most and thus often falls into despair.
* SanityHasAdvantages: He's insanely effective once he stabilises his psyche vis-a-vis [[spoiler:merging with the Void]] in ''Fresh Start'', creating a godlike vigilante who is, for better or worse, his own man.
* SealedBadassInACan: He is both SealedGoodInaCan and SealedEvilinaCan, so he's had to be either eliminated or contained to keep the world safe.
** The Sentry was voluntarily imprisoned at the start of the 2005 ''New Avengers'' series, sporting a scraggly BeardOfSorrow.
** Post his stint as Death in ''Uncanny Avengers'', he's cured, but voluntarily inside one constructed by Doctor Strange, inside his own mind, while his body is floating in deep space. A desperate Strange lets him out. He willingly went along with this, but was deeply unhappy when [[spoiler: Strange unleashed the Void]]. This resulted in the Lemire miniseries, which had Bob willing limit himself on a kind of parole use a device to periodically visit an alternate universe where he can be both Sentry and the Void. [[spoiler: Things start to go wrong when the device, a one-of-a-kind gadget Tony Stark and Dr Strange made for Bob, gets stolen by Scout, his bitter ex-sidekick who ended up being driven AxeCrazy by the Sentry's powers. The result was a merger of Bob, the Sentry, and the Void, with the new Merged Sentry]] decidedly ''not'' being in the mood to be imprisoned.
* SexierAlterEgo: Bob's wife, Lindy, prefers sleeping with him while he's in Sentry form.
* ShapingYourAttacks: A rarer skill, the Sentry can create yellow HardLight constructs similar to ComicBook/{{Quasar}}'s quantum constructs. In a fight against Terrax, Sentry created a bubble construct to block the Herald's HandBlast.
* ShockwaveClap: One of the Sentry's attacks. He uses this one against a bunch of the Void's attack drones in ''The Sentry'' v2 #8.
** He may have picked it up from or taught it to his buddy, the ComicBook/IncredibleHulk.
* SpeechBubbles: The Void's speech bubbles are black with white lettering, the exact opposite of the Sentry's and most other characters.
* SpeedBlitz: Usually does this when making an entrance.
* SplitPersonality: The Sentry (good) and the Void (evil). The relationship between them is described as a [[AGodAmI god complex]]: every time Sentry did something good, Void did something equally evil.
* SplitPersonalityMerge: At the end of the 2018 miniseries, Bob and the Void merge turning into a black-haired, red-costumed being with the powers and personality of the Sentry and Void combined.
* StrongAsTheyNeedToBe: Sentry only gets stronger with time. He cannot be completely destroyed (see his invulnerability trope entry) and can exchange punches with Hulk and Thor. Sentry can impress even Doctor Strange, the Sorcerer Supreme, with his psychic and telepathic abilities and possesses molecular manipulation on the same level as Molecule Man. Moving faster than the speed of light is a simple matter for Sentry and he can travel distances in seconds that even the speedier characters require minutes for. The only weakness Bob has is his unstable mind but making use of this weakness is a huge gamble even for master manipulators because they risk releasing the Void.
** Sentry while either completely stable mentally or Voided out is a true monster to behold. Sentry's strength depends on his mental stability and Sentry managed to fight World War Hulk after being consumed by his agoraphobia for 29 hours, showing even a weakened Sentry is a force to be reckoned with. The Void managed to [[spoiler: rampage through Asgard and topple foes such as Thor and Ares]] in ''Siege'', and he was just getting started. When Void was not as powerful, he was still able to break every single bone in the Hulk's body.
*** Proof of this is when, as the Horseman of Death (and thereby even crazier than usual), he manages to temporarily stop Exitar, a Celestial, from descending to destroy the Earth long enough for Thor to kill him with Jarmbjorn, when Rogue, who'd taken powers from quite literally all the Avengers and all the X-Men, including the full power of Wonder Man, and a machine powered by the Hulk hadn't managed it (though she didn't stop her effort so it is not known how much either of them contributed).
* SupermanSubstitute: Down to having a huge "S" in his costume.
* SuperReflexes: Catching bullets is quite easy for him.
* SuperSenses: Which can be a real pain factor for him, as he can't prioritize whom to save first.
* SuperSpeed: Sentry can fly to the Sun and back in seconds, and after his resurrection as a Horseman of Apocalypse, cross light years in moments. The narrative acknowledges the impossibility of this, as his moving so fast as Death actually disoriented [[ComicBook/TheMightyThor Thor]], who himself is able to move at lightspeed.
* SuperStrength: The Sentry is one of the strongest heroes in the Franchise/MarvelUniverse, capable of matching strength with the Hulk, [[ComicBook/TheMightyThor Thor]], and [[ComicBook/TheIncredibleHercules Hercules]]. The Void's strength is enough to break almost every bone in the Hulk's body. Much like Superman, his upper limits are subject to change. See StrongAsTheyNeedToBe
* SuperheroesWearCapes: Well, he ''is'' a Superman expy....
* SuperheroesWearTights: Duh!
* SuperpoweredEvilSide: He and The Void are this trope taken to its extreme. They manifested as alter-egos of a single person, representing the good and dark sides of humanity, respectively. The Sentry is a superhero and the Void is a supervillain, and in a slight variation on this trope, the Void is exactly as powerful as the Sentry, and occasionally kills someone for every person the Sentry saves.
** Also, his persona as Death, Horseman of Apocalypse.
* SuperWeight: He is often said to be Level 6. He supposedly stalemated Galactus, has often been compared to ''the power of a million exploding suns'', defeated a Molecule Man without beliefs about his abilities and therefore at full power (Post-Retcon however), and was said to be a Biblical angel of death, capable of causing greater destruction than the multi-universal damage of the Scarlet Witch, but we never actually see anything concrete, beyond easily overloading the Absorbing Man, who has had no trouble copying {{Mjolnir}} in the past. As it is, he is a powerful Level 5.
* {{Teleportation}}: Has done it on occasion.
* TomatoInTheMirror: Compounding his issues with the Void being a part of him, Robert was devastated to find out that the serum he took [[spoiler:would have worked on ''anyone''. He wasn't special, he was just there to take it, leading to those who made the serum destroying all their research because one lunatic with godlike powers was bad enough as is.]]
* TookALevelInBadass: The Void began taking on larger, more powerful forms leading up to ''Siege'', possibly due to the second dose of serum provided by Norman Osborn. Before, during the ''Sentry'' miniseries, the Void seemed to be limited to humanoid size at best.
** Following his becoming a Horseman of Apocalypse, he's even more of a beast than usual, quite capable of handling Thor alone and delaying a Celestial.
* UnskilledButStrong: With the Mighty Avengers, Sentry is stated outright to be the strongest member, but held back by his lack of skill.
** Hercules once hilariously exploited this weakness and [[CurbStompBattle made a complete fool of Robert]] in a very comedic [[GroinAttack and painful]] way.
--> '''Hercules''': Learn to fight like you ''mean'' it, pretty boy.
* VoluntaryShapeshifting: Unlike the Sentry, the Void can shapeshift at will, sometimes taking the form of whatever its opponents fear most.
* WillfullyWeak: Possessing incredible power, the Sentry holds back because he's afraid of losing control.
* WithGreatPowerComesGreatInsanity: A poster boy. It was suggested by characters that Sentry is addicted to his power, which stems from his past [[spoiler:as a junkie]].
* WorldsStrongestMan: The Sentry is without question a heavy contender for this title and Marvel has no problem with making characters say so. [[http://media.comicvine.com/uploads/10/101644/2057926-silentwar002016.jpg Karnak calls him "Earth's most powerful warrior."]]
** During ''ComicBook/DarkReign'', he's often used as a yard-stick for power, with Osborn specifically stating that Nate Grey is too dangerous to run loose precisely because he could go toe to toe with the Sentry.
* WouldHitAGirl: And kill a girl, too.
* YouCouldHaveUsedYourPowersForGood: Basically his entire character in a nutshell. Could have been Earth's greatest defender, but turned out to be a deadly disappointment.
* YourMindMakesItReal: The Void isn't a second personality in the traditional sense but a delusion Bob gets due to his schizophrenia. He believes he is the Void and, due to his powers, he ''becomes'' the Void.
Characters/TheSentry
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** He's also ''very'' similar to Triumph, an extremely powerful Creator/DCComics hero who was {{Retcon}}ned into being a founding member of the Franchise/JusticeLeagueOfAmerica during ''Comicbook/ZeroHour''. He even fell victim to a TimeyWimeyBall that forced his comrades to forget about his existence.

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** He's also ''very'' similar to Triumph, an extremely powerful Creator/DCComics hero who was {{Retcon}}ned into being a founding member of the Franchise/JusticeLeagueOfAmerica during ''Comicbook/ZeroHour''.''Comicbook/ZeroHourCrisisInTime''. He even fell victim to a TimeyWimeyBall that forced his comrades to forget about his existence.
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Characters/MastersOfEvil | Characters/LethalLegion | [[Characters/AvengersVillains Other Villains]]-]]]]]

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Characters/MastersOfEvil | Characters/LethalLegion | [[Characters/AvengersVillains [[Characters/AvengersEnemies Other Villains]]-]]]]]
Enemies]]-]]]]]
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-> See [[Characters/CaptainBritainTitleCharacter Captain Britain]]

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-> See [[Characters/CaptainBritainTitleCharacter [[Characters/CaptainBritainCorps Captain Britain]]
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See [[Characters/MarvelComicsLukeCage Luke Cage]]

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See [[Characters/MarvelComicsLukeCage Luke Cage]]Characters/LukeCage

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After ingesting an experimental super-soldier formula, the lowly Robert Reynolds became the Sentry. At least in his mind. In constant battle with his dark side known as the Void, the Sentry has been forgotten and dead, he has resurected an vanished. Even if he is one of earth's greatest hero, he is more the world's greatest danger.

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After ingesting an experimental super-soldier formula, the lowly First seen in ''The Sentry #1'' (September, 2000), Robert Reynolds became was an overweight, middle aged alcoholic until one day he awakens and realizes that he is the Sentry. At least in his mind. In constant battle Sentry, a superhero with the power of '''one million exploding suns''', who must once again take the mantle of the hero to fight his dark side known as archnemesis the Void, whom he fears is returning soon.

This rather strange origin story began via a hoax that was perpetuated by Creator/StanLee himself, stating that there was a golden age superhero whom he just forgot about and wanted to weave into the continuity. Through a series of recursive flashbacks Robert Reynolds is seen fighting alongside Marvel's most popular superheroes, including the ComicBook/FantasticFour, the [[ComicBook/IncredibleHulk Hulk]], and ComicBook/SpiderMan, and all of the Sentry's first miniseries revolves around figuring out why everyone has LaserGuidedAmnesia surrounding his existence.

His actual powers were bestowed upon him when a young Robert, while working in a physics lab, drank a serum that "moved his molecules 1 second ahead of the current timeline." It was later revealed that this was a newer version of the Super Soldier serum that transformed Captain America.

Seen as somewhat of an AlternateCompanyEquivalent of Franchise/{{Superman}} due to his [[SuperpowerLottery seemingly limitless powers]], including: energy blasts, super strength, flight, and of course a hefty dose of NewPowersAsThePlotDemands.

The Sentry, while seeming like an InvincibleHero, actually has many weaknesses due to his being AxCrazy (this is not expunged when Robert becomes the Sentry). Robert Reynolds is an agoraphobic, anxiety-ridden schizophrenic who relies on his robot sidekick CLOC to calculate the severity of problems that need his help, and solves them in order based on CLOC's input.

Despite his death at the end of Dark Reign,
the Sentry has been forgotten was resurrected by the Apocalypse Twins' new Horsemen in ''ComicBook/UncannyAvengers'', though Thor convinces him to help stop Exitar the Executioner. Sentry, having fully succumbed to his insanity and dead, believing himself to be the successor of Apocalypse, agreed to do so... after he has resurected an vanished. Even if rid the world of the "cancerous" mutants. Having survived the incident, the Sentry was put into exile until he is was called back by Dr. Strange in a terrible attempt to stop Loki, who had become Sorcerer Supreme and was looking for a spell that could potentially doom all, only for it to restore magic to the world. Upset, the Sentry told Dr. Strange never to call on him again and disappeared. He returned in his own miniseries by Jeff Lemire as part of the ''ComicBook/MarvelAFreshStart'' initiative, taking place some time after this appearance, where he was living essentially on parole as Bob Reynolds, fry cook extraordinaire, and spending time as the Sentry in a pocket dimension via a machine constructed by Tony Stark and Reed Richards called the Confluctor, to keep both the Sentry and the Void in check. [[spoiler: This was derailed by his former sidekick and friend, Scout, who had had his arm torn off by the Void and was secretly resentful that Bob could be the Sentry in his spare time. He discovered the Sentry's power-granting formula, and conspired with one of earth's greatest hero, he is more the world's greatest danger.Sentry's old enemies to recreate it and steal the Confluctor, trapping Bob inside and the Sentry outside. The Sentry and Scout fought, while Bob survived by merging the Void and the Sentry and himself to create a new, somewhat morally ambiguous black-haired Sentry dressed in red and black, who killed Scout and went to space, resuming his mission to protect humanity by any means necessary]].

In terms of VideoGames, The Sentry was a playable character in ''VideoGame/MarvelUltimateAlliance 2'' for UsefulNotes/NintendoDS, ''Marvel VideoGame/SuperHeroSquadOnline'', and ''Videogame/MarvelPuzzleQuest''.



-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsTheSentry The Sentry]]

to:

-> !!Tropes:

* AddedAlliterativeAppeal: The ''Age of the Sentry'' has a number of characters with alliterative E names the recurrence of which he finds suspicious. [[spoiler:It turns out that the E-E's are referents to Destroyer Darkmass, a being from the original universe the Sentry originated from (as E's can be shifted over to D's).]]
* AllegoricalCharacter: A recurring enemy of Sentry, even appearing more than the Void, in the ''Age of the Sentry'' mini is a villain named Cranio who has three brains. He always boasts of being [[{{Catchphrase}} three steps ahead of him]] and is a recurring figure in hallucinations. Given Sentry normally has three personalities in conflict he might be a representation of Bob being his own greatest enemy and the greatest threat to others.
* AlliterativeName: Robert Reynolds, though he usually goes by Bob.
* AntiChrist: The Void generally functions as this. Hiroim refers to him as a "Worldbreaker", in contrast to "[[MessianicArchetype The Sakaarson]]".
* AxCrazy: As the Void. Also, possibly, as [[spoiler: his 2019 Merged Sentry persona]].
* BackFromTheDead: While he's been resurrected several times, his most recent revival was when the Apocalypse Twins revived him as one of their Four Horsemen of Death. It's not known if the Void has been revived as well. It appears, going by Bob's word, the Void ''[[CompleteImmortality never died]]''. It simply got tired of being imprisoned in the sun and shuttled itself off to the White Hot Room. As of his later reappearance in ''ComicBook/DoctorStrange'', it might be back... though the context leaves it somewhat ambiguous. [[spoiler: Jeff Lemire's miniseries confirms that the Void is indeed back]].
* BackstoryInvader: A modern character retconned in as an inverted example, a hero from the Silver Age who happened to save the world in a way that erased everyone's memories of him. Leading up to the series that introduced the Sentry, Marvel got comic news sources in on the joke; they ran stories about how he really was a Silver Age hero who was created back then but never used and promptly forgotten.
* BadassBoast:
** Gives a brief one during the events of World War Hulk. The Hulk contends that the Sentry doesn't want to fight him. The response (paraphrased): "God help me, I do... because you're the only one I can hit like ''[[MegatonPunch this]]''."
** From ''ComicBook/{{Siege}}'':
--> '''Sentry[=/=]Void''': How many gods will I have to kill today?
* BalanceBetweenGoodAndEvil: The Void's initial logic: for each act of good the Sentry performs, the Void commits an equivalent act of evil.
* BearsAreBadNews: One of the Sentry's Silver Age foes was a giant bear. The Sentry couldn't defeat it, just convince it to hibernate.
* BeenThereShapedHistory: The Void may have caused [[Literature/TheBible the Plagues of Egypt]].
* BewareTheSuperman: Being powerful to such a degree is more than dangerous when also having such serious mental problems. As seen in ''Dark Reign'', he is very easily manipulated. And not to talk about what happens when the Void breaks out - breaking literally every bone of the freakin' '''Hulk''', rampaging through New York or levelling the whole city of Asgard (the reputation accrued by the latter feat is one Doctor Strange later exploits when [[spoiler: he needs a distraction and points Bob at Asgardia.]]) And that's by far not everything that this psycho has unleashed during his life.
** After he survives being disintegrated, Bullseye wonders if, when he finally goes over the edge, they'll actually be able to kill him. The answer is no, not unless he lets you. And even ''that'' seems to have stopped working, to the point where the Sentry exiled himself into space, in a coma, just to try and keep the universe safe from himself. In the end, even ''that'' didn't work. Now, as [[spoiler: the Merged Sentry, he's arguably even more dangerous]].
* BodyHorror: When he transforms into the Void, the results are usually monstrous.
* BrainsEvilBrawnGood: Shows both sides. He's a super-genius, but usually defaults to trying to smash things or throw them into the sun.
* BroughtToYouByTheLetterS: He has an S-shaped sigil on his waist.
* BulletCatch: The Sentry once stopped an assassination attempt in this manner. Since he has super speed, catching bullets is nothing.
* CareBearStare: The Sentry can emit a calming aura to help the Hulk manage his rage. Reed Richards tries to simulate this aura during ''ComicBook/WorldWarHulk'', but it doesn't work.
* CharacterShilling: Prior to ''Siege''. Some of it's a consequence of him being a walking CosmicRetcon, the rest is just there for the usual reason. After that, he's generally been depicted as a potentially evil/insane Superman, which most people seem to agree is much more interesting.
* CivvieSpandex: In the original miniseries, the Sentry's costume upon returning into action was just a gray jacket with a small cape held in place with clothespins. As the series progresses, it began to look more and more like attire appropriate for a superhero. By the end of the fourth issue, it finally became a proper superhero uniform.
* ColorCodedForYourConvenience: The Sentry's eyes glow yellow when he uses most of his powers, blue when he's using his psychic powers, and red when the Void is about to emerge. Most recently, they glow black-edged white when he's [[spoiler: the Merged Sentry]].
* CombatTentacles: Part of the Void's physical makeup, the tentacles are strong enough to restrain the Hulk and break his bones.
** In ''Siege'', they ''ripped Loki in half'' (and then maybe a few more pieces).
* ComicBooksAreReal: Like other Marvel characters, the Sentry has in-universe comics about him, which serve as the FramingDevice for ''The Age of the Sentry''. (As it turns out, there's a universe out there where ''[=AotS=]'' actually happened, Earth-1611.)
* ConspicuousTrenchcoat: The Void's wardrobe of choice throughout the second mini.
* TheCorrupter: ComicBook/NormanOsborn, who thoroughly abuses Bob's fragile mental state. It wasn't until Osborn provided the Sentry with another dose of the serum that the Void became the dominant personality.
* CurbStompBattle: Sentry has multiple examples of being the one issuing these out. Name a Marvel character and odds are Sentry has used his or her ass as a footstool before. Notable exceptions are his draw with the Worldbreaker Hulk and his loss to Extremis ComicBook/{{Ultron}} until she was infected with a virus, allowing him to defeat her.
** His "battle" with Morgan Le Fay was probably the worst example of this. Norman Osborn gives him the go-ahead, Sentry flies down, and literally the ''very next panel'' is him [[OffWithHerHead ripping her head clean off.]]
** His fight with [[spoiler: Scout]] in Lemire's miniseries is absolutely brutal, and, once he stops trying to talk the other man down, very short.
* DarkSecret: The truth behind the origin of the Sentry, kept between Bob and his wife, Lindy. [[spoiler: Bob was just a drug addict looking for a fix, not an innocent young man working in a physics lab. The Void is the manifestation of the part of him that is still that junkie.]]
* DeconstructedCharacterArchetype: Sentry's essentially a thorough deconstruction of the idea of Superman, the Lois Lane-Superman relationship dynamic, and his IdealHero image. Basically his presentation demonstrates the lesson that a single person with such unbelievable godlike power would be universally seen as TheDreaded especially when that person has mental issues or the same mental weaknesses as every other person. The Lois Lane-Superman relationship is inherently toxic as the Lois expy in question is more attracted to the Sentry superhero side than his flawed human side and eventually becomes more horrified by the Sentry's inhuman power as he grows stronger, especially after he brings her back from death. As the final nail in the coffin, the only reason the Sentry is hailed as some ideal hero is because of a SuperpoweredEvilSide that exists to make him seem more heroic than he actually is. In short, instead of an admirable Superman figure that inspires hope, you have a mentally ill godlike timebomb that puts the world on the edge of a panic attack and whose own LoveInterest lives in terror of him.
* DeathIsCheap: Sentry had died and returned within the confines of a single issue, usually as a result of the Void's intervention.
* DemonSlaying: Does this on occasion.
* DependingOnTheWriter: Sentry has something like eight different origins, and the level and type of his mental psychosis fluctuates from issue to issue. Even the Void seems to change from split personality to separate entity on alternating weekends. His level of power also goes up and down, from "stronger than Thor, but it'd still be a fair enough fight" to "could smash the entire planet into gravel with a single pushup." Even his "power of many exploding suns" comment varies, going from just thousand to a million suns.
* DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu: The Sentry has supposedly defeated Galactus either on his own or with the help of [[ComicBook/XMan Nate 'I use the Multiverse as my personal stepladder and create entire planes of existence with a thought' Grey]]. Debatable given never really shown even in a flashback, the Sentry's unreliable history and [[ManipulativeBastard the fact that Nate is very much his father's son]], but Nate's comment afterwards, when Norman Osborn implies that he was manipulating the Sentry ("Cleverness be* damned, I just told him the truth."), and Nate's own colossal raw power, suggests that it might actually have happened.
* DisproportionateRetribution: Bob finds out that a yoga instructor is putting some moves on his wife; sometime later, the Sentry saves 152 people from a crashing boat, while the Void hurls a jet airliner into a building and kills 152 people. Ramón the yoga instructor was in that building.
* TheDreaded: Bob is a feared figure due to the combination of mental illness and overwhelming power, but in the pages of Doctor Strange, The Void has proven to be one of the few things that truly horrifies ComicBook/{{Loki}}, likely thanks to the events of ''Siege''. Even as the new Sorcerer Supreme, Loki is visibly shaken and out of sorts throughout the confrontation. The heroes aren't immune to this, with the high end of the superhero community keeping a hawk-like watch on Bob in Lemire's miniseries, even when they're sure the Sentry can't return (let alone the Void) and have contingencies in case he even accidentally violates his parole.
* DrivenToSuicide: He's tried more than once. When he returned in ''Doctor Strange'', his attitude was to live in a hallucination constructed by Strange while his body floated in deep space, on the grounds that it was safer for everyone. He was deeply unhappy when Strange not only brought him back (which he was willing to do, in order to help), but ended up unleashing the Void again.
* DrugsAreBad: Sentry tries his best to [[spoiler:hide his drug-filled past from everyone he can]].
* EldritchAbomination: The Void is hinted to be an angel of death from Biblical times.
* ElementalPowers: The Void can control the weather.
* EnemyWithout: The Void is capable of manifesting separately from the Sentry, and there have been occasions when the two have fought.
* {{Expy}}: His original series seems to be heavily inspired by Creator/AlanMoore's rework of ''Marvelman''/''ComicBook/{{Miracleman}}''. Both feature middle-aged guys who are vaguely haunted by their past as the most powerful person on the planet, even down to details like being jealous of their super selves, their wives being more attracted to their other selves and their origins in a secret government program. Which makes the Sentry an {{Expy}} of a reworked DarkerAndEdgier CaptainErsatz of a CaptainErsatz, as Marvelman was a British copy of [[ComicBook/{{Shazam}} Captain Marvel]], who was himself a copy of Superman. So he's like Franchise/{{Superman}}'s fifth cousin twice removed.
** He's also ''very'' similar to Triumph, an extremely powerful Creator/DCComics hero who was {{Retcon}}ned into being a founding member of the Franchise/JusticeLeagueOfAmerica during ''Comicbook/ZeroHour''. He even fell victim to a TimeyWimeyBall that forced his comrades to forget about his existence.
** The ''Age of The Sentry'' miniseries manages to take the Superman comparisons further. He's got the Sentress (otherwise known as ComicBook/CarolDanvers), who's a Supergirl / Wonder Woman mash-up (the DistaffCounterpart but with a Wonder Woman-esque supporting cast), the ''ComicBook/GuardiansOfTheGalaxy'' are the ComicBook/LegionOfSuperheroes, and even some of the Sentry's unseen villains resemble Superman's.
* EyeBeams: One of his myriad powers.
* FallenHero: If the rest of the page is no indication.
* {{Flight}}: He has the ability to fly.
* {{Foreshadow}}: In the first issue of ''The Age of Sentry'', when Scout, Watchdog, and Lindy begin travelling through the timestream, [[spoiler:the silhouette of Destroyer Darkmass can be seen in the background, tearing apart an alternate Earth. This foreshadows the Sentry's true origin as revealed in the final issue]].
* FramingDevice: The ''Age of Sentry'' series is framed as Reed telling Franklin stories about the Sentry but with a comic book flourish.
* FromASingleCell: The Sentry has been blown into pieces by powerful enemies like Morgan Le Fey and the Molecule Man but his body always reconstitutes itself.
* FromNobodyToNightmare: [[spoiler:Was a meth addict before getting his superpowers.]]
* FusionDance: The end result of ''Fresh Start'' - specifically, [[spoiler: Bob, the Sentry, and the Void merged to create the Merged Sentry]]. The result is arguably even more powerful than either the Void or the Sentry, and exponentially more dangerous.
* GroinAttack: On the receiving end of this by [[SuperHeroGods Her]][[ComicBook/TheIncredibleHercules cules]] in ''ComicBook/DarkReign''.
* GoodIsNotNice: The end result of his [[spoiler:merger with the Void]] in ''Fresh Start''. A champion firmly on the side of good who nonetheless does some morally dubious acts to see justice done and refuses to kowtow to others or limit himself.
* HandBlast: One of his more potent ways of projecting his power.
* HealingFactor: A pretty powerful one which puts even Wolverine and Hulk to shame.
* HeroKiller: Especially in Siege.
* HeroicSacrifice: Parodied during his team-up with Doctor Strange against Loki. Some of Stephen's most powerful spells require heavy mental, physical, and spiritual agony lavished upon either himself or a willing vassal. As the Sentry is an absurdly mighty metaphysical being, all the requisite suffering barely fazes him and he ''naps'' through the entire fight, allowing Strange to cast reality-altering spells with impunity.
* HomeBase: The Sentry has the Watchtower, while the Void has the "hidey-hole" in Antarctica.
* HumanoidAbomination: On a good day, the Sentry can rewrite reality and it's implied he's only as human as he believes himself to be. On a bad day... well, [[SuperPoweredEvilSide there's]] [[OurAngelsAreDifferent the]] [[EldritchAbomination Void]].
* HurlItIntoTheSun: After defeating the Void in the second mini, Bob hurls it into the sun after giving it [[ScrewYourself a kiss]].
** Lampshaded in-comic: "I don't throw ''everything'' into the sun."
* IChooseToStay: At the end of ''Annihilation: Scourge", he chooses to remain in the Negative Zone to contemplate the universe he almost destroyed. Understandably, no one who lives there is all too enthused, but he's too powerful to kick out.
* IdealHero: The second miniseries reveals that the Sentry persona is actually Bob Reynolds' idealized version of himself: the handsome, invincible champion of the entire planet.
* InexplicablyAwesome: It's never really explained how Bob became one of the most powerful beings in the universe after taking a drug that was basically a slightly jacked-up version of the Super Soldier Serum.
* InsaneEqualsViolent: Very much so for him! Generally he's (mentally speaking) like a young child, often asking if what he did was right, so it makes sense that he would lash out when he's angry/upset.
* IntangibleMan: Part of the Void's power set.
* InvoluntaryShapeshifting: Bob forcibly transforms into the Void after he loses control.
* LaserGuidedAmnesia: Imposed this on everyone, including himself, before the events of the first mini, [[spoiler:courtesy of a transmitter he and Reed created]].
* MadeOfIron: [[http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_39-VfFoO9u0/TNoAmZQjnAI/AAAAAAAACew/CHcpYpVx22o/s1600/sentry_thing_1.jpg The Thing throws his best punch at Sentry]]. There was probably more pain in Thing's hand than in Sentry's body.
* MercyKill: A reluctant Thor puts Bob out of his misery at the end of ''Siege''. Thanks to the Apocalypse Twins, it didn't stick.
** In his 2018 series, Bob himself has to do this to [[spoiler:Scout]] who was wracked with ceaseless pain from a corrupted facsimile of his own powers that rendered him virtually invincible while melting him from the inside-out.
* MindRape: If beating an opponent to a pulp with fists won't do the trick, Bob will resort to this. [[http://media.comicvine.com/uploads/10/101644/2033272-71222830_super.jpg He'll even make the victim see him as the Void and not the Sentry.]]
** What if a foe has Wolverine's healing factor and unbreakable bones and Luke Cage's unbreakable skin? Sentry won't even blink.
* MoodWhiplash: The Age of The Sentry issue 2 has a story about the Sentry's birthday. Typical Silver Age nonsense, with Jean Grey fawning over the Sentry's dog, and two Nick Furies in one place, and then the art changes to a more modern style, as one of the Sentry's villains arrives, with images of planets exploding behind him... phew, good thing Bob just zoned out for a minute there, folks!
* MultipleChoicePast: In truth, it is still not clear ''exactly'' what the relationship is between Bob Reynolds, the Sentry and the Void (Is the Void the real Bob Reynolds, or is the Sentry, or is neither, or are they both?), exactly what the serum was he took or even whether it actually ''did'' anything, what the exact nature and source of his powers is (I am a superhuman! I am actually the angel of Death! I am a refugee from another universe! I am Galactus!), how the Void really came into existence and whether he is really dead. This, of course, fits in very nicely with the notion that the Sentry is bugnuts insane, and genuinely does not know what happened, being a RealityWarper of undefined limits, subconsciously even altering reality to suit whatever his psychosis says is the real story that day. Or perhaps reality warps ''itself'' around the Sentry to accommodate him, creating things from nothing to enable him to exist. Suffice to say, take ''nothing'' for granted when it comes to anything about the Sentry's origin and nature.
** The last issue of ''The Age of the Sentry'', framed as an "Imaginary Story", puts forth the idea that the Void was once a separate person, a gangster named Eddie Emmerick who got his light absorption and shadow projection abilities through a neutrino ray accident, then -- on the day Rob Reynolds became the Sentry -- transformed into a HumanoidAbomination, a negative force to balance out the Sentry's positive. Eventually, in collaboration with Cranio, the Void absorbed the Sentry's power via the brain of Gorax, until he was no longer Emmerick, but a doppelganger of Reynolds, while the real Reynolds died.
* NeckSnap: Thor snapped the Sentry's neck in a ''What If?'' centered around ''ComicBook/SecretInvasion''.
* TheNeedless: Becomes this as the Void.
* NighInvulnerability: To an absolutely ''insane'' degree. He was bodily disintegrated by both Morgana leFay and Molecule Man, and simply ''re-appeared with no explanation''. When he tried to commit suicide by flying into the sun, he was already swimming in superheated solar plasma when his evil self basically said "Don't be silly, kiddo".
* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: To Thor, after he returns as a Horseman of Apocalypse.
* OffWithHisHead: The Sentry killed ComicBook/SubMariner villain Attuma [[http://marvel.wikia.com/wiki/File:Attuma_(Earth-616)_killed_by_the_Sentry_from_Sentry_Vol_2_1.jpg in this manner]].
** Sentry rips the head off things quite a bit. Not just fodder opponents either. [[http://media.comicvine.com/uploads/2/24463/456049-sen_rips_u_super.jpg Even Ultron's head isn't safe from the Golden Guardian of Good]].
** And [[https://readcomicbooksonline.site/reader/Dark_Avengers_2009/Dark_Avengers_2009_Issue_02/18 Morgan Le Fey]].
* OurAngelsAreDifferent: The Void might have been around since Biblical times as the Angel of Death.
* PlayingWithFire: And what powerful fire it is.
* PowerCreepPowerSeep: In his miniseries, the Sentry actually bled after being bitten by a dog. By the time ''Siege'' rolled around, Bob was shrugging off blows from Thor's hammer without a scratch on him.
** This could be something to do with his psychosis, as his strength levels yo-yo almost as much as Gladiator's.
* PowerMakesYourHairGrow: Bob's hair is of average length, but becomes quite long when he's the Sentry. This wasn't present in the original miniseries, but was added when the Sentry was introduced to the main Marvel Universe to distinguish him from other blonde heroes when unmasked. This was such a late change that the cover of New Avengers 3 [[CoversAlwaysLie has a short-haired Sentry.]]
* PowerGlows: He's not called the "Golden Guardian of Good" for nothing.
* PsychicPowers: The Sentry has shown psychic powers strong enough to give Comicbook/DoctorStrange pause.
* PsychoSerum: The serum that gave Bob his powers was a new version of the Super Soldier serum [[UpToEleven amplified 100,000 fold]]. According to the second mini, Bob became the insane Void persona from the moment he injested the serum.
* RapidFireFisticuffs:
See [[Characters/MarvelComicsTheSentry [[http://static.comicvine.com/uploads/original/11/110794/2411960-what_if___secret_invasion_019.jpg here]] for example.
* RedEyesTakeWarning: Sentry's pupils start to glow red when the Void is about to emerge, while the rest of his eyes turn [[BlackEyesOfCrazy pitch black]].
* {{Retcon}}: Sentry is retconned into having been an important person to many [[CharacterTitle title characters]] in the [[UsefulNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks silver age]].
* {{Retraux}}:
The Sentry]]''Age of The Sentry'' mini-series, focusing on the Sentry's supposed Silver Age era exploits.
* SamaritanSyndrome: A sad Deconstruction. He can't prioritize where his help is needed the most and thus often falls into despair.
* SanityHasAdvantages: He's insanely effective once he stabilises his psyche vis-a-vis [[spoiler:merging with the Void]] in ''Fresh Start'', creating a godlike vigilante who is, for better or worse, his own man.
* SealedBadassInACan: He is both SealedGoodInaCan and SealedEvilinaCan, so he's had to be either eliminated or contained to keep the world safe.
** The Sentry was voluntarily imprisoned at the start of the 2005 ''New Avengers'' series, sporting a scraggly BeardOfSorrow.
** Post his stint as Death in ''Uncanny Avengers'', he's cured, but voluntarily inside one constructed by Doctor Strange, inside his own mind, while his body is floating in deep space. A desperate Strange lets him out. He willingly went along with this, but was deeply unhappy when [[spoiler: Strange unleashed the Void]]. This resulted in the Lemire miniseries, which had Bob willing limit himself on a kind of parole use a device to periodically visit an alternate universe where he can be both Sentry and the Void. [[spoiler: Things start to go wrong when the device, a one-of-a-kind gadget Tony Stark and Dr Strange made for Bob, gets stolen by Scout, his bitter ex-sidekick who ended up being driven AxeCrazy by the Sentry's powers. The result was a merger of Bob, the Sentry, and the Void, with the new Merged Sentry]] decidedly ''not'' being in the mood to be imprisoned.
* SexierAlterEgo: Bob's wife, Lindy, prefers sleeping with him while he's in Sentry form.
* ShapingYourAttacks: A rarer skill, the Sentry can create yellow HardLight constructs similar to ComicBook/{{Quasar}}'s quantum constructs. In a fight against Terrax, Sentry created a bubble construct to block the Herald's HandBlast.
* ShockwaveClap: One of the Sentry's attacks. He uses this one against a bunch of the Void's attack drones in ''The Sentry'' v2 #8.
** He may have picked it up from or taught it to his buddy, the ComicBook/IncredibleHulk.
* SpeechBubbles: The Void's speech bubbles are black with white lettering, the exact opposite of the Sentry's and most other characters.
* SpeedBlitz: Usually does this when making an entrance.
* SplitPersonality: The Sentry (good) and the Void (evil). The relationship between them is described as a [[AGodAmI god complex]]: every time Sentry did something good, Void did something equally evil.
* SplitPersonalityMerge: At the end of the 2018 miniseries, Bob and the Void merge turning into a black-haired, red-costumed being with the powers and personality of the Sentry and Void combined.
* StrongAsTheyNeedToBe: Sentry only gets stronger with time. He cannot be completely destroyed (see his invulnerability trope entry) and can exchange punches with Hulk and Thor. Sentry can impress even Doctor Strange, the Sorcerer Supreme, with his psychic and telepathic abilities and possesses molecular manipulation on the same level as Molecule Man. Moving faster than the speed of light is a simple matter for Sentry and he can travel distances in seconds that even the speedier characters require minutes for. The only weakness Bob has is his unstable mind but making use of this weakness is a huge gamble even for master manipulators because they risk releasing the Void.
** Sentry while either completely stable mentally or Voided out is a true monster to behold. Sentry's strength depends on his mental stability and Sentry managed to fight World War Hulk after being consumed by his agoraphobia for 29 hours, showing even a weakened Sentry is a force to be reckoned with. The Void managed to [[spoiler: rampage through Asgard and topple foes such as Thor and Ares]] in ''Siege'', and he was just getting started. When Void was not as powerful, he was still able to break every single bone in the Hulk's body.
*** Proof of this is when, as the Horseman of Death (and thereby even crazier than usual), he manages to temporarily stop Exitar, a Celestial, from descending to destroy the Earth long enough for Thor to kill him with Jarmbjorn, when Rogue, who'd taken powers from quite literally all the Avengers and all the X-Men, including the full power of Wonder Man, and a machine powered by the Hulk hadn't managed it (though she didn't stop her effort so it is not known how much either of them contributed).
* SupermanSubstitute: Down to having a huge "S" in his costume.
* SuperReflexes: Catching bullets is quite easy for him.
* SuperSenses: Which can be a real pain factor for him, as he can't prioritize whom to save first.
* SuperSpeed: Sentry can fly to the Sun and back in seconds, and after his resurrection as a Horseman of Apocalypse, cross light years in moments. The narrative acknowledges the impossibility of this, as his moving so fast as Death actually disoriented [[ComicBook/TheMightyThor Thor]], who himself is able to move at lightspeed.
* SuperStrength: The Sentry is one of the strongest heroes in the Franchise/MarvelUniverse, capable of matching strength with the Hulk, [[ComicBook/TheMightyThor Thor]], and [[ComicBook/TheIncredibleHercules Hercules]]. The Void's strength is enough to break almost every bone in the Hulk's body. Much like Superman, his upper limits are subject to change. See StrongAsTheyNeedToBe
* SuperheroesWearCapes: Well, he ''is'' a Superman expy....
* SuperheroesWearTights: Duh!
* SuperpoweredEvilSide: He and The Void are this trope taken to its extreme. They manifested as alter-egos of a single person, representing the good and dark sides of humanity, respectively. The Sentry is a superhero and the Void is a supervillain, and in a slight variation on this trope, the Void is exactly as powerful as the Sentry, and occasionally kills someone for every person the Sentry saves.
** Also, his persona as Death, Horseman of Apocalypse.
* SuperWeight: He is often said to be Level 6. He supposedly stalemated Galactus, has often been compared to ''the power of a million exploding suns'', defeated a Molecule Man without beliefs about his abilities and therefore at full power (Post-Retcon however), and was said to be a Biblical angel of death, capable of causing greater destruction than the multi-universal damage of the Scarlet Witch, but we never actually see anything concrete, beyond easily overloading the Absorbing Man, who has had no trouble copying {{Mjolnir}} in the past. As it is, he is a powerful Level 5.
* {{Teleportation}}: Has done it on occasion.
* TomatoInTheMirror: Compounding his issues with the Void being a part of him, Robert was devastated to find out that the serum he took [[spoiler:would have worked on ''anyone''. He wasn't special, he was just there to take it, leading to those who made the serum destroying all their research because one lunatic with godlike powers was bad enough as is.]]
* TookALevelInBadass: The Void began taking on larger, more powerful forms leading up to ''Siege'', possibly due to the second dose of serum provided by Norman Osborn. Before, during the ''Sentry'' miniseries, the Void seemed to be limited to humanoid size at best.
** Following his becoming a Horseman of Apocalypse, he's even more of a beast than usual, quite capable of handling Thor alone and delaying a Celestial.
* UnskilledButStrong: With the Mighty Avengers, Sentry is stated outright to be the strongest member, but held back by his lack of skill.
** Hercules once hilariously exploited this weakness and [[CurbStompBattle made a complete fool of Robert]] in a very comedic [[GroinAttack and painful]] way.
--> '''Hercules''': Learn to fight like you ''mean'' it, pretty boy.
* VoluntaryShapeshifting: Unlike the Sentry, the Void can shapeshift at will, sometimes taking the form of whatever its opponents fear most.
* WillfullyWeak: Possessing incredible power, the Sentry holds back because he's afraid of losing control.
* WithGreatPowerComesGreatInsanity: A poster boy. It was suggested by characters that Sentry is addicted to his power, which stems from his past [[spoiler:as a junkie]].
* WorldsStrongestMan: The Sentry is without question a heavy contender for this title and Marvel has no problem with making characters say so. [[http://media.comicvine.com/uploads/10/101644/2057926-silentwar002016.jpg Karnak calls him "Earth's most powerful warrior."]]
** During ''ComicBook/DarkReign'', he's often used as a yard-stick for power, with Osborn specifically stating that Nate Grey is too dangerous to run loose precisely because he could go toe to toe with the Sentry.
* WouldHitAGirl: And kill a girl, too.
* YouCouldHaveUsedYourPowersForGood: Basically his entire character in a nutshell. Could have been Earth's greatest defender, but turned out to be a deadly disappointment.
* YourMindMakesItReal: The Void isn't a second personality in the traditional sense but a delusion Bob gets due to his schizophrenia. He believes he is the Void and, due to his powers, he ''becomes'' the Void.



[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/342339_106834_echo_0.jpg]]

to:

[[quoteright:300:https://static.[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/342339_106834_echo_0.org/pmwiki/pub/images/maya_lopez_earth_616_from_daredevil_vol_2_10_cover.jpg]]



!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Daredevil'' #9 (December, 1999) [[note]]As Echo[[/note]]; ''The New Avengers'' #11 (November, 2005) [[note]]As Ronin[[/note]]



!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Daredevil'' #9 (December, 1999) [[note]]As Echo[[/note]]; ''The New Avengers'' #11 (November, 2005) [[note]]As Ronin[[/note]]

Echo is one of a very few deaf superheroes, as well as being of native American descent. She is the one-time lover of Daredevil and the first person to take the guise of Ronin. She has served as an Avenger and was a one time killer for the Kingpin. She is now the current host of the Phoenix Force.

to:

!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Daredevil'' #9 (December, 1999) [[note]]As Echo[[/note]]; ''The '''Joined In:''' New Avengers'' Avengers #11 (November, 2005) [[note]]As Ronin[[/note]]

Echo is one
2005)

->''First, I will bury the worst parts
of a very few deaf superheroes, as well as being my memory, the dead parts of native my heart, in the hole. Then I will cover it up and plant something inside it. Something that will grow. But I'm not sure if the dead parts will stay buried. I'm done with them. But I don't think they are done with me.''
-->-- '''Maya Lopez''', ''ComicBook/{{Daredevil}}'' vol. 2 #51

Maya was a Native
American descent. She is girl who was born deaf. Her father, Willie "Crazy Horse" Lincoln, was secretly a mob enforcer for [[ComicBook/TheKingpin Wilson Fisk]], the one-time lover Kingpin of Crime, but was killed under Fisk's orders. Impressed and intrigued by Maya's skills and photographic reflexes, the Kingpin adopted her and sent her to the best schools, gaining her trust. Finally, he "revealed" to her that Daredevil killed her father and sent her to kill him in return.

Despite the Kingpin's lies, Maya learned the truth and shot the Kingpin, leaving him blind for a while. She left New York to have visit her father's tribe and have a vision quest. This motivated her to return to New York and start performing theater using sign language, dance, and music.

Maya was next seen in the pages of ''ComicBook/NewAvengers'', where she showed up as the masked ninja Ronin. (The writer of the book, Creator/BrianMichaelBendis, originally had planned for Daredevil to be Ronin, but changed his mind.) She fought alongside the New Avengers against the Hand, before being killed by the Hand's new leader, ComicBook/{{Elektra}}. (This Elektra turned out to be a Skrull imposter, however.) Elektra
and the first person Hand then resurrected her and tried to take brainwash her to be evil, but were thwarted by the guise of Ronin. New Avengers and ''another'' Ronin (who ended up being [[ComicBook/{{Hawkeye}} Clint Barton]]). Echo remained with the New Avengers at their headquarters in ComicBook/DoctorStrange's Sanctum Santorum and fought with them against the [[ComicBook/SecretInvasion secret Skrull invasion]].

She has served next appeared in ''ComicBook/MoonKnight'' vol 6, also written by Bendis, where she began helping Marc Spector, the Moon Knight, with his fight against the so-called "Kingpin of LA," which turned out to be Count Nefaria. Unfortunately, during a fight, Nefaria killed her with his optic blasts.

[[UnexplainedRecovery She next showed up]] a few years later in ''ComicBook/{{Daredevil}} Annual'' vol 4 #1, where she helped Daredevil stop Klaw, a supervillain made of sound, from taking over New York City.

Her latest appearance was
as an Avenger part of ComicBook/JasonAaronsAvengers, where she took part in the "Enter the Phoenix" TournamentArc. Maya was one of a number of individuals summoned to the White Hot Room by the Phoenix to determine its next host. While empowered by the Phoenix, she fought a similarly-empowered [[ComicBook/SubMariner Namor the Sub-Mariner]], who left her at the bottom of the ocean. However, that did not stop her and was a one time killer for she rose from the Kingpin. She is now sea, pulling the current rest of the Phoenix into her and becoming the next host of the Phoenix Force.Force.

Maya will make her Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse entrance in the Creator/DisneyPlus show ''Hawkeye'', where she will be played by Alaqua Cox, a Native American actress who is deaf. Reports in March of 2021 [[https://variety.com/2021/tv/news/hawkeye-disney-plus-echo-spinoff-1234934667/ have indicated]] that an ''Echo'' spin-off is in early development, with Cox reprising her role.



-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsEcho Echo]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Ares]]
!!Ares
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/chaos_war_ares_vol_1_1_textless.jpg]]

%%!!! '''Alter Ego:'''
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Mars, Mister Talon, John Aaron, God of War, The Warhawk
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/DarkAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Thor'' Vol. 1 #129 (June, 1966)

Ares is the son of Zeus and the Olympian God of War. After years of fighting against The Avengers, Thor, and mostly his own brother Hercules, Ares joined the ranks of the Avengers. He was a member of Tony Stark's official Avengers team and later Norman Osborn's Dark Avengers. After he attacked Osborn for tricking him in starting Siege on Asgard, he was stopped and killed by the Sentry.

to:

-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsEcho Echo]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Ares]]
!!Ares
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/chaos_war_ares_vol_1_1_textless.jpg]]

%%!!! '''Alter Ego:'''
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Mars, Mister Talon, John Aaron, God of War, The Warhawk
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/DarkAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Thor'' Vol. 1 #129 (June, 1966)

Ares is the son of Zeus and the Olympian God of War. After years of fighting against The Avengers, Thor, and mostly his own brother Hercules, Ares joined the ranks of the Avengers. He was a member of Tony Stark's official Avengers team and later Norman Osborn's Dark Avengers. After he attacked Osborn for tricking him in starting Siege on Asgard, he was stopped and killed by the Sentry.
!! Echo appears in:

[[AC:Comic Books]]
* ''ComicBook/{{Daredevil}}'' vol. 2
* ''ComicBook/NewAvengers'' vol. 1
* ''ComicBook/MoonKnight'' vol. 6
* ''ComicBook/{{Daredevil}} Annual'' vol. 4 #1
* ''ComicBook/JasonAaronsAvengers''

[[AC:Live-Action TV]]
* ''Hawkeye'' (2021)

[[AC:Western Animation]]
* ''WesternAnimation/UltimateSpiderMan: Web Warriors'' (cameo appearances)



-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsOlympians Olympians]]

to:

-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsOlympians Olympians]]!! Echo provides examples of:

* ActionGirl: Thanks to her ability, she became a strong martial artist. She has gained Bullseye's uncanny aim and Daredevil's acrobatic abilities after watching tapes of their fights.
* AffirmativeActionLegacy: A deaf, Native American woman becomes the new host to the Phoenix, whose most famous (or infamous) previous host was a [[ComicBook/JeanGrey white woman]].
* AntiVillain: Briefly. She was pitted against Daredevil by the Kingpin, but had no idea that she was working for a criminal (or at least, how bad a criminal he was) and mistakenly believed that Daredevil killed her father. A solid [[SlidingScaleOfAntiVillains Type 4.]]
* BareYourMidriff: As Echo, her costume exposes her abs.
* BoxingBattler: In ''Vision Quest'' she states she was "a natural" at boxing when starting to learn martial arts, implying innate talent independent of her mimic ability. The same comic also implies she won an Olympic gold medal in the sport.[[note]]This would be ArtisticLicense if so, as the comic was published over a decade before women's boxing debuted at the Olympics.[[/note]]
* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: After being a member of the ''New Avengers'' for five issues following ''Civil War'', she disappears without a word after ''ComicBook/SecretInvasion''. {{Lampshade|Hanging}}d by Spider-Man asking if anyone knew where she'd gone; and again with her reappearance when Luke Cage and Jessica Jones were looking for a Nanny, as she angrily asks if Cage even remembers that she used to be on the team.
* ClarkKenting: While operating on her own in Japan, she pretended to be a ditzy socialite to gain access to her targets. Then, as Ronin, she comes back and unleashes Hell on them.
* CListFodder: Just narrowly avoided being replaced by Skrull infiltrators, Hawkeye noting she'd be an easy person to replace because she's so low down the totem pole, barely anyone knows her, and therefore wouldn't notice if her replacement slipped up.
* DatingCatwoman: Like Typhoid Mary, she dates Matt Murdock while trying to kill Daredevil. Unlike her, she only does so because she was tricked.
* DeathIsCheap: In ''New Avengers'', Elektra ([[spoiler:or more accurately a Skrull impersonating Elektra]]) runs her through with a sword, so the Hand can resurrect her as a brainwashed minion.
* DeceptiveLegacy: The Kingpin murdered her father, but honored the dying man's wish that he take care of her and raise her as his own. [[ManipulativeBastard Then he told her that Daredevil killed her father.]]
* DroppedABridgeOnHim / StuffedIntoTheFridge: Echo was killed by Count Nefaria in the ''ComicBook/MoonKnight'' series. However, a few years later, she [[UnexplainedRecovery showed up alive and well]] again.
* FacialMarkings: A white handprint, in the same place her father placed his hand on her while he was dying.
* FightClubbing: When she was still associated with Kingpin, she competed in underground boxing matches.
* FightsLikeANormal: Played with. Echo's martial arts skill is almost entirely due to her mimic ability, but she's also limited by her own strength, agility, durability, etc., which are only those of a peak human and not a superhuman.
* {{Foil}}: Daredevil's a blind man with super acute hearing, smell, touch, and taste. She's a deaf woman with super acute eyesight and a photographic memory.
* HandicappedBadass: While Matt Murdock is blind, Echo is deaf. A deaf who posses "photographic reflexes" that allow her to mimic the feats of those around her.
* MagicalNativeAmerican: Subverted with her father, who was Native American, but also a mob enforcer. Maya herself straddles the line, often subverting it by being a well-rounded and nuanced character...but one who also went on a "vision quest" and met an "animal spirit" in order to find out what to do next in life.
* MultiEthnicName: [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_(given_name) "Maya"]] is a name common to various religions and ethnicities and could be used to indicate a connection to the [[{{Mayincatec}} Mayan]] people. [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L%C3%B3pez "Lopez,"]] on the other hand, is of Spanish origin and could indicate one of her ancestors was Latinx or Spanish.
* OneManArmy: As Ronin, she carves through the Japanese criminal underworld... until the Hand come after her.
* PayEvilUntoEvil / LaserGuidedKarma: Once she finds out what ''really'' happened to her father, she responds by putting a bullet between Kingpin's eyes. He survives, but was blinded, just like Matt, except without the super-senses.
* PhotographicMemory: Maya possess "photographic reflexes" or the uncanny ability to perfectly copy other people's movements, similar to that of the ComicBook/{{Taskmaster}}. Just by watching other people, she has become a concert-level pianist, a strong martial artist, a highly skilled acrobat, and a gifted ballerina (and on one occasion even piloted a Quinjet for a few minutes).
* PutOnABus: She was written out from ''ComicBook/NewAvengers'' and eventually joined the cast of ''ComicBook/MoonKnight''. [[StuffedIntoTheFridge And then died]]. [[DeathIsCheap She came back a few years later, alive and well]].
* RealAwardFictionalCharacter: She's won at least three gold medals from the Special Olympics and the Olympics, though it's not entirely clear what the events were.
* SpannerInTheWorks: The Skrull infiltration of Earth would've gone off a lot easier had she not shaken off the Hand brainwashing and ran their Elektra impersonator through. At the very least, the Avengers wouldn't have known about it until it was too late.
* TwoferTokenMinority: Deaf, part-Hispanic, part-Native American.
* UnexplainedRecovery: Despite apparently being killed by Count Nefaria during the ''Moon Knight'' series in 2012, she would reappear to help Matt in 2016, without explaining how or why she survived or came back.
* YouKilledMyFather: Believed this to be Daredevil, but later learnt it was actually the Kingpin.



[[folder:Amadeus Cho]]
!!Amadeus Cho
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/amadeus_cho.jpg]]

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[[folder:Amadeus Cho]]
!!Amadeus Cho
[[folder:Ares]]
!!Ares
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/amadeus_cho.org/pmwiki/pub/images/chaos_war_ares_vol_1_1_textless.jpg]]



!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Mastermind Excello, Prince of Power, Iron Spider, Hulk, Kid Hulk, Amadeus Hulk, Brawnhammer, Chulk, Brawn
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/Champions2016, ComicBook/AgentsOfAtlas
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Amazing Fantasy'' Vol. 2 #1 (January, 2006) [[note]]As Amadeus Cho[[/note]]; ''Totally Awesome Hulk'' #1 (February, 2016) [[note]]As Hulk[[/note]]; ''Champions'' Vol. 2 #22 (September, 2018) [[note]]As Brawn[[/note]]

The eighth smartest person on the planet, Amadeus Cho has a hypermind which allows him to run a virtually limitless amount of calculations in his head. Recently, he shouldered Banner's burden of being the Hulk, granting himself the power he always wanted and having to deal with his own monster. After a climactic fight in the heart of Manhattan where he reconciled his personalities, he's now a slimmed down Hulk with a new superhero identity, Brawn, who leads the Agents of Atlas in defending Asia.

to:

!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Mastermind Excello, Prince Mars, Mister Talon, John Aaron, God of Power, Iron Spider, Hulk, Kid Hulk, Amadeus Hulk, Brawnhammer, Chulk, Brawn
War, The Warhawk
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/Champions2016, ComicBook/AgentsOfAtlas
ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/DarkAvengers
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Amazing Fantasy'' ''Thor'' Vol. 2 #1 (January, 2006) [[note]]As Amadeus Cho[[/note]]; ''Totally Awesome Hulk'' #1 (February, 2016) [[note]]As Hulk[[/note]]; ''Champions'' Vol. 2 #22 (September, 2018) [[note]]As Brawn[[/note]]

1 #129 (June, 1966)

Ares is the son of Zeus and the Olympian God of War. After years of fighting against
The eighth smartest person on the planet, Amadeus Cho has a hypermind which allows him to run a virtually limitless amount of calculations in his head. Recently, he shouldered Banner's burden of being the Hulk, granting himself the power he always wanted Avengers, Thor, and having to deal with mostly his own monster. brother Hercules, Ares joined the ranks of the Avengers. He was a member of Tony Stark's official Avengers team and later Norman Osborn's Dark Avengers. After a climactic fight he attacked Osborn for tricking him in starting Siege on Asgard, he was stopped and killed by the heart of Manhattan where he reconciled his personalities, he's now a slimmed down Hulk with a new superhero identity, Brawn, who leads the Agents of Atlas in defending Asia.Sentry.



-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsAmadeusCho Amadeus Cho]]

to:

-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsAmadeusCho Amadeus Cho]][[Characters/MarvelComicsOlympians Olympians]]


Added DiffLines:

[[folder:Amadeus Cho]]
!!Amadeus Cho
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/amadeus_cho.jpg]]

%%!!! '''Alter Ego:'''
!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Mastermind Excello, Prince of Power, Iron Spider, Hulk, Kid Hulk, Amadeus Hulk, Brawnhammer, Chulk, Brawn
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/Champions2016, ComicBook/AgentsOfAtlas
!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Amazing Fantasy'' Vol. 2 #1 (January, 2006) [[note]]As Amadeus Cho[[/note]]; ''Totally Awesome Hulk'' #1 (February, 2016) [[note]]As Hulk[[/note]]; ''Champions'' Vol. 2 #22 (September, 2018) [[note]]As Brawn[[/note]]

The eighth smartest person on the planet, Amadeus Cho has a hypermind which allows him to run a virtually limitless amount of calculations in his head. Recently, he shouldered Banner's burden of being the Hulk, granting himself the power he always wanted and having to deal with his own monster. After a climactic fight in the heart of Manhattan where he reconciled his personalities, he's now a slimmed down Hulk with a new superhero identity, Brawn, who leads the Agents of Atlas in defending Asia.
----
-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsAmadeusCho Amadeus Cho]]
[[/folder]]
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-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsAres Ares]]

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-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsAres Ares]][[Characters/MarvelComicsOlympians Olympians]]
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-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsCassieLang Cassie Lang]]

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-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsCassieLang Cassie Lang]]Characters/AntManHeroes
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-> See [[Characters/AntManTitleCharacter Ant-Man]]

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-> See [[Characters/AntManTitleCharacter Ant-Man]]Characters/AntManHeroes

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[[Characters/AvengersUnsanctionedMembers Unsanctioned Teams Members]] | [[Characters/AvengersInfiltrators Infiltrators]] | [[Characters/AvengersOtherTeams Other Teams]] | [[Characters/AvengersSupportStaff Support Staff]]-]]]]]

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[[Characters/AvengersUnsanctionedMembers Unsanctioned Teams Members]] | [[Characters/AvengersInfiltrators Infiltrators]] | [[Characters/AvengersOtherTeams Other Teams]] | Teams]]\\
'''Supporting Characters'''\\
[[Characters/AvengersSupportStaff Support Staff]]-]]]]]
Staff]]\\
'''Rogues Gallery'''\\
Characters/MastersOfEvil | Characters/LethalLegion | [[Characters/AvengersVillains Other Villains]]-]]]]]

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!!To return to the main character page, see [[Characters/TheAvengers here]].



!! Triathlon / 3-D Man

to:

!! Triathlon / 3-D Man!!Triathlon



!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/SecretAvengers, ComicBook/DoctorDoom's Avengers, ComicBook/AgentsOfAtlas



!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/SecretAvengers, ComicBook/DoctorDoom's Avengers, ComicBook/AgentsOfAtlas
!!! '''Joined In:''' ''Avengers'' Vol. 3 #27 (April, 2000)

to:

!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/SecretAvengers, ComicBook/DoctorDoom's Avengers, ComicBook/AgentsOfAtlas
!!! '''Joined In:''' ''Avengers'' Vol. 3 #27 (April, 2000)






!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers



!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' ''Avengers'' Vol. 3 #30 (July, 2000)

to:

!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' ''Avengers'' Vol. 3 #30 (July, 2000)



!! Jack of Hearts

to:

!! Jack !!Jack of Hearts



%%!!! '''Notable Aliases:'''
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers



!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' ''Avengers'' Vol. 3 #38 (March, 2001)

to:

!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' ''Avengers'' Vol. 3 #38 (March, 2001)



!! Ant-Man II

to:

!! Ant-Man !!Ant-Man II






%%!!! '''Notable Aliases:'''
!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers



!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' ''Avengers'' Vol. 3 #57 (October, 2002)

See the Characters/AntMan page for more info.

to:

!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' ''Avengers'' Vol. 3 #57 (October, 2002)

See

Scott Lang is
the Characters/AntMan page for more info.second man to take up the mantle of Ant-Man. He has been a member of the Avengers and the Fantastic Four. He was notably killed during the events of Avengers: Disassembled and has struggled to get back on his feet ever since coming back from the dead.



-> See [[Characters/AntManTitleCharacter Ant-Man]]



!! Lionheart

to:

!! Lionheart!!Lionheart






!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers



!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' ''Avengers'' Vol. 3 #81 (June, 2004)

See the Characters/CaptainBritain page for more info.

to:

!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' ''Avengers'' Vol. 3 #81 (June, 2004)

See

Kelsey was killed by Thunderball and resurrected by Captain Britain. She then had a brief stint with
the Characters/CaptainBritain page for more info.Avengers.



-> See [[Characters/CaptainBritainTitleCharacter Captain Britain]]



!! Luke Cage

to:

!! Luke !!Luke Cage






!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/NewAvengers, ComicBook/DarkAvengers, ComicBook/SecretAvengers, ComicBook/MightyAvengers (leader)



!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/NewAvengers, ComicBook/DarkAvengers, ComicBook/SecretAvengers, ComicBook/MightyAvengers (leader)
!!! '''Joined In:''' ''New Avengers'' #3 (March, 2005)

See the [[Characters/MarvelComicsLukeCage Luke Cage]] page for more info.

to:

!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/NewAvengers, ComicBook/DarkAvengers, ComicBook/SecretAvengers, ComicBook/MightyAvengers (leader)
!!! '''Joined In:''' ''New Avengers'' #3 (March, 2005)

See the [[Characters/MarvelComicsLukeCage

Luke Cage]] page Cage, wrongly convicted and unjustly imprisoned, was altered in a failed prison experiment that granted him unbreakable skin and superhuman strength. With his street smarts, and unending determination to do right, he fights for more info.the common man! He eventually married Jessica Jones and had a daughter with her. Luke was also a member of The Avengers and the Leader of Thunderbolts for a time.



See [[Characters/MarvelComicsLukeCage Luke Cage]]



!! Wolverine

to:

!! Wolverine!!Wolverine






!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/NewAvengers, ComicBook/UncannyAvengers



!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/NewAvengers, ComicBook/UncannyAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' New Avengers #6 (June, 2005)

See the Characters/{{Wolverine|JamesLoganHowlett}} page for more info.

to:

!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/NewAvengers, ComicBook/UncannyAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' New Avengers #6 (June, 2005)

See

A long-lived mutant with
the Characters/{{Wolverine|JamesLoganHowlett}} page for more info.rage of a beast and the soul of a Samurai, James "Logan" Howlett's once mysterious past is filled with blood, war, and betrayal. Possessing an accelerated healing factor, keenly enhanced senses, and bone claws in each hand (along with his skeleton) that are coated in adamantium; Wolverine is, without question, the ultimate weapon.



-> See Characters/{{Wolverine|JamesLoganHowlett}}



!! The Sentry

to:

!! The !!The Sentry






!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/NewAvengers, ComicBook/DarkAvengers



!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/NewAvengers, ComicBook/DarkAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' New Avengers #10 (October, 2005)

See the ComicBook/TheSentry page for more info.

to:

!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/NewAvengers, ComicBook/DarkAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' New Avengers #10 (October, 2005)

See

After ingesting an experimental super-soldier formula,
the ComicBook/TheSentry page for lowly Robert Reynolds became the Sentry. At least in his mind. In constant battle with his dark side known as the Void, the Sentry has been forgotten and dead, he has resurected an vanished. Even if he is one of earth's greatest hero, he is more info.the world's greatest danger.



-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsTheSentry The Sentry]]



!! Echo

to:

!! Echo!!Echo






!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/NewAvengers



!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/NewAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' New Avengers #11 (November, 2005)

See the ComicBook/{{Echo|MarvelComics}} page for more info.

to:

!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/NewAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' New Avengers #11 (November, 2005)

See

Echo is one of a very few deaf superheroes, as well as being of native American descent. She is
the ComicBook/{{Echo|MarvelComics}} page one-time lover of Daredevil and the first person to take the guise of Ronin. She has served as an Avenger and was a one time killer for more info.the Kingpin. She is now the current host of the Phoenix Force.



-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsEcho Echo]]



!! ComicBook/{{Ares}}

to:

!! ComicBook/{{Ares}}!!Ares




%%!!! '''Alter Ego:'''



!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/DarkAvengers



!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/DarkAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' Mighty Avengers #1 (May, 2007)

See the ComicBook/{{Ares}} page for more info.

to:

!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/DarkAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' Mighty

Ares is the son of Zeus and the Olympian God of War. After years of fighting against The Avengers, Thor, and mostly his own brother Hercules, Ares joined the ranks of the Avengers. He was a member of Tony Stark's official
Avengers #1 (May, 2007)

See
team and later Norman Osborn's Dark Avengers. After he attacked Osborn for tricking him in starting Siege on Asgard, he was stopped and killed by the ComicBook/{{Ares}} page for more info.Sentry.



-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsAres Ares]]



!! Amadeus Cho

to:

!! Amadeus !!Amadeus Cho




%%!!! '''Alter Ego:'''



!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/Champions2016, ComicBook/AgentsOfAtlas



!!! '''Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/Champions2016, ComicBook/AgentsOfAtlas

See the ComicBook/AmadeusCho page for more info.

to:

!!! '''Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/Champions2016, ComicBook/AgentsOfAtlas

See

The eighth smartest person on
the ComicBook/AmadeusCho page for more info.planet, Amadeus Cho has a hypermind which allows him to run a virtually limitless amount of calculations in his head. Recently, he shouldered Banner's burden of being the Hulk, granting himself the power he always wanted and having to deal with his own monster. After a climactic fight in the heart of Manhattan where he reconciled his personalities, he's now a slimmed down Hulk with a new superhero identity, Brawn, who leads the Agents of Atlas in defending Asia.



-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsAmadeusCho Amadeus Cho]]



!! Jocasta

to:

!! Jocasta !!Jocasta






!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/AvengersAI



!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/AvengersAI
!!! '''Joined In:''' ''Mighty Avengers'' #21 (March, 2009)

to:

!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/TheAvengers, ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/AvengersAI
!!! '''Joined In:''' ''Mighty Avengers'' #21 (March, 2009)



!! ComicBook/CassieLang

to:

!! ComicBook/CassieLang!!Cassie Lang






!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/SecretAvengers, ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/YoungAvengers



!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/SecretAvengers, ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/YoungAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' ''Mighty Avengers'' #22 (April, 2009)

See the ComicBook/CassieLang page for more info.

to:

!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/SecretAvengers, ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/YoungAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' ''Mighty Avengers'' #22 (April, 2009)

See

The daughter of Scott Lang and a member of
the ComicBook/CassieLang page for more info.Young Avengers. She has the same ability to shrink and grow in size as her father, gained through utilizing Pym Particles.



-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsCassieLang Cassie Lang]]




%%!!! '''Alter Ego:'''



!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/SecretAvengers, ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/YoungAvengers



!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/SecretAvengers, ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/YoungAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' ''Mighty Avengers'' #22 (April, 2009)

See the Characters/YoungAvengers page for more info.
----

to:

!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/SecretAvengers, ComicBook/MightyAvengers, ComicBook/YoungAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' ''Mighty Avengers'' #22 (April, 2009)


While exploring the destroyed Avengers mansion, Iron Lad found the remains of the original Vision and downloaded his operating system into his armor. When Kang attacked the Young Avengers, Nate took his armor off in order to avoid being tracked, and the Vision's OS activated the armor into becoming sentient. He remained in the custody of the Avengers for a time, during which he concluded that this new, advanced Vision had all the potential but none of the experience of the old Vision. After Civil War he spent some time Walking the Earth and adopted the name "Jonas" for himself, declaring himself a completely different individual from Iron Lad and the original Vision.
----
->
See the Characters/YoungAvengers page for more info.
----
Characters/YoungAvengersLaterMembers



!! Bucky Barnes

to:

!! Bucky !!Bucky Barnes






!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/NewAvengers, ComicBook/TheAvengers



!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/NewAvengers, ComicBook/TheAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' ''Avengers'' Vol. 4 #1 (May, 2010)

See the ComicBook/BuckyBarnes page for more info.

to:

!!! '''Team Affiliations:''' ComicBook/NewAvengers, ComicBook/TheAvengers
!!! '''Joined In:''' ''Avengers'' Vol. 4 #1 (May, 2010)

See

Believed dead near
the ComicBook/BuckyBarnes page end of World War II only to have been found and brainwashed by the Soviets for more info.the next 50 years, Captain America's former sidekick now continues to defend his country from the shadows against those who would threaten it as legendary spy and assassin, the Winter Soldier. He became the new Captain America to honor his friend Steve and he joined the Avengers. When Steve returned as Captain America, Bucky took on the identity of the Winter Soldier once again.


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-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsBuckyBarnes Bucky Barnes]]


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[[WMG:[[center:[-'''The Avengers'''\\

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[[WMG:[[center:[-'''The [[WMG:[[center:[-''ComicBook/TheAvengers'' '''[[Characters/TheAvengers Main Character Index]]'''\\
'''The
Avengers'''\\
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[[Characters/AvengersUnsanctionedMembers Unsanctioned Teams Members]] | [[Characters/AvengersInfiltrators Infiltrators]] | [[Characters/AvengersOtherTeams Other Teams]] | [[Characters/AvengersSupportStaff Avengers Support Staff]]-]]]]]

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[[Characters/AvengersUnsanctionedMembers Unsanctioned Teams Members]] | [[Characters/AvengersInfiltrators Infiltrators]] | [[Characters/AvengersOtherTeams Other Teams]] | [[Characters/AvengersSupportStaff Avengers Support Staff]]-]]]]]

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