Follow TV Tropes

Following

Characters / Infinity Crisis Marvel Earths

Go To

A list of the Earths from Infinity Crisis that focus on variations of the Marvel Universe.

    open/close all folders 

Earth-25

The home universe of a version of The Defenders, including a variant of Captain America known as Captain Ireland.

     The Defenders 

Aidan Rogers/Captain Ireland

Elizabeth Twoyoungmen/Talisman

  • Composite Character: She takes on elements of Doctor Strange, such as being the Sorcerer Supreme and being the founder/leader of the Defenders.

Silver Surfer

  • Gender Flip: This Silver Surfer is female. Though it's possible she's someone other than Norrin Radd.

Stingray

     Villains 

Paul Duval

  • Adaptational Villainy: For all of Grey Gargoyle's faults in the comics, he wasn't a Nazi sympathizer and a traitor to France like this version.
  • Irony: Despite loving the Nazis who were occupying France so much that he helps fight their enemies of his own accord, the Nazis arrested (and most likely killed) him due to mistaking him for a Jew.
  • Rogues' Gallery Transplant: He was an enemy of Captain Ireland, an alternate Captain America.

Earth-382

Home to a version of Feral

Earth-616

A variant of the Marvel Universe from the comics.

Earth-713

The home universe of a variant of the Punisher.

     Heroes 

Farouk Khalil/The Punisher

  • Adaptation Name Change: To reflect his different background, he's Farouk Khalil instead of Frank Castle (or Francis Castiglione).
  • Adaptational Nationality: Instead of being American, this version of the Punisher is from Palestine (though its unknown if he was originally from Gaza or the West Bank).
  • Badass Normal: He has no superpowers.
  • The Lost Lenore: His pregnant wife Marwah was gunned by Mark Hazzard, a racist ex-mercenary who assumed Farouk's workplace was a front for a terrorist cell.
  • Race Lift: He goes from being of Italian descent to being Palestinian.
  • Vigilante Man: After years of being a mercenary, he tried to settle down, only for tragedy to drive him to target criminals, particularly copycats of the man who killed his wife,

Robbie Baldwin/Speedball

  • Composite Character: He takes on a role in Khalil's story similar to the one Spider-Man played in the Punisher's first appearance in comics. Which is fitting, considering that he was very reminiscent of Spider-Man in his early days.
  • Wake Up, Go to School & Save the World: He's specifically called a teenage superhero.

Earth-727

Home to a variant of Peggy Carter introduced in New Discoveries and Rogue, introduced in "Backgrounds Vol. 2"

Earth-2011

At least a variation of the world depicted in What If…? (2021) "What If... Thor Were an Only Child?"
     Characters 

Thor Odinson

  • Life of the Party: There is a reason he's called Party Thor, he enjoys throwing huge parties in the galaxy.

Jane Foster

Darcy Lewis

Earth-3010

The home universe of Lady Deadpool

Earth-3457

Home to a Vietnamese version of Captain Marvel.

Earth-4234

Home to a version of Kamala Khan that became Captain Marvel.

Earth-6100

Home to a Native American version of She-Hulk.

Earth-7819

Home to a African-American version of Captain Marvel.

Earth-8096

Home to characters from The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes and Wolverine and the X-Men (2009).
    Avengers 

Anthony "Tony" Stark/Iron Man

  • Arbitrary Skepticism: Tony still doesn't believe in magic even after Doctor Strange once turned him into a frog.
  • Put on the Bus: Iron Man stays behind while the rest of the Avengers accompany Thor and Jane to Asgard, Hawkeye observing that they didn't want him to anger the Asgardians by going on his usual rants about how they're 'just' advanced aliens rather than gods.

Steve Rogers/Captain America

Thor Odinson

  • Be Careful What You Wish For: At the end of Brothers of Thunder he notes that in his youth becoming king had been on his mind constantly, to prove that he could be a better ruler than his father, and now that he actually has the throne, the responsibility makes him want to run back to Earth. He even drops the trope name in his musings.
  • I Thought Everyone Could Do That: Just like his counterpart, he has a bad habit of assuming things like the existence of the Savage Land are "common knowledge" for Earth so never brings them up.
  • One-Steve Limit: While his Earth-199999 counterpart is active on Earth-8096, the local Thor agrees to be known as 'Odinson' while his other self is present.

Hank Pym/Yellowjacket

Janet van Dyne/Wasp

  • Growing Up Sucks: Invoked when Janet is concerned at the idea that her and Hank's counterparts might be "as old as 50" when Jane reveals that the Wasp in her and Thor's world is Hank and Janet's daughter.

Clint Barton/Hawkeye

  • O.O.C. Is Serious Business: When Hawkeye is completely serious when warning Jane not to talk about Banner in front of the Hulk, that makes it clear to Jane that she should take that warning seriously.
  • Other Me Annoys Me: Laughs at the idea of his Earth-19999 counterpart being married with kids.

Bruce Banner/Hulk

  • Berserk Button: Clint warns Thor and Jane not to mention Banner in front of the Hulk.

Carol Danvers/Ms Marvel

  • Leotard of Power: Jane comments on this several times, saying it makes Carol look like a Kardashian and asks if it ever rides up on her.
    Asgardians 

Odin

  • Heroic Sacrifice: Throws himself into a rift with Surtur to keep the fire demon away from Asgard forever.

Sif

  • Sympathy for the Devil: For all she hates Amora, Sif genuinely pities the Enchantress after Skurge's Last Stand, understanding that the other woman just lost a man who truly loved her and whom she truly loved in turn.

Balder

Warriors Three

Beta Ray Bill

    Hydra 

Red Skull

Baron Wolfgang von Strucker

Baron Zemo

Amora the Enchantress

  • Cannot Spit It Out: The end of Brothers of Thunder reveals that she did have feelings for Skurge, but couldn't actually say that she did before his death.
  • Demonic Possession: Suffered this to Surtur's hands.

Skurge The Executioner:

  • Dying Moment of Awesome: His Last Stand holding back Dormammu's hordes was so awesome he was granted a seat in Valhalla.
  • Ignored Enamored Underling: He's utterly devoted to the Enchantress, with his last thought being of her. Heartwrenchingly, she did love him back but acted otherwise.
  • Redemption Equals Death: In Brothers of Thunder, Skurge sacrifices himself to hold back an army of the dead at Gjallerbu, which single-handedly earns him a seat in Valhalla.

Loki

  • Fate Worse than Death: The whole of the Brothers of Thunder story had him impersonated by his Earth-199999 counterpart as part of a plan to defeat the new Hydra, Surtur, and Dormmammu, while he was still getting venom dropped on his face regularly, and since he was supposedly executed, no one is going to be coming looking for him...
  • Exact Words: When Jane speculates Hydra doesn't know Loki is planning on giving Earth to Dormammu, Loki dryly states he told Hydra they could conquer the world. He simply didn't say how long they would have to hold it.
  • Other Me Annoys Me: The idea of a Loki being a hero deeply offends him.

Earth-8107

Home to characters from Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends.
     Spider-Friends 

Peter Parker/Spider-Man

  • Death by Adaptation: He survived the Snap, but was killed during the subsequent chaos.
  • The Hero Dies: Died helping the Blue Marvel save civilians. An Amazing New Year goes a bit more depth into it, revealing that he was attacked and killed by Miles Warren, aka the Jackal.

Angelica Yoshida (née Jones)/Firestar

  • Action Mom: She's still an active superhero as Firestar even while raising Yū.

Bobby Drake/Iceman

  • Adaptational Sexuality: Zig-zagged. In the show, Bobby was presented as being very much a heterosexual man. Here, he's since come out as gay, bringing him in line with the mainstream version from the comics.

     Spider-Friends II 

Miles Morales/Spider-Man II

  • Affirmative-Action Legacy: The original Spider-Man, Peter Parker, was a white man. Miles Morales is Afro-Puerto Rican.
  • Legacy Character: Like most versions of Miles, he's this to Peter Parker.
  • Survivor Guilt: Sort of. Miles was there when Peter died during the Dusting, and feels ashamed of having done nothing to save him. His fellow Spider-Friends, Bobby, and Angelica try to reassure him that it isn't really his fault as there was nothing he could have done.

Jerome "Jerry" Chang/Iceman II

  • Affirmative-Action Legacy: He's an autistic Chinese-American, while Bobby Drake is white.
    • He also zig-zags the trope. Bobby Drake is openly gay, whereas Jerry is straight.
  • Fanboy: Of Sherlock Holmes. He invokes the character's appearance with his costume and even acts quite a lot like some incarnations of the character.
  • Mistaken for Gay: Jerry implies that this has happened to him since the media started referring to him as the new Iceman. He finds it annoying as unlike Bobby, Jerry is heterosexual.
    Jerry: You would be amazed how many people can get a straight Chinese-American confused with a gay white man.
  • Original Character: He was created for the story.
  • One-Steve Limit: Averted. It was the media who dubbed Jerry "Iceman" and it just stuck, to his partial chagrin.

Sandra "Sandy" Vincent/Stratosfire

  • Adaptational Heroism: Stratosfire was a villain in her sole appearance in the comics, where she worked as an agent of Roxxon Oil. Here, she's a victim of the company's experiments who became a teen superheroine.
  • Adaptational Sexuality: She is a lesbian in this story, whereas the character she's based on never had her sexuality firmly disclosed.
  • Ascended Extra: In the comics, she was a One-Shot Character, her only appearance being Iron Man Annual #9 (1987). The story ended with her presumed death.
  • Odd Name Out: Unlike Miles and Jerry, Sandy has an alias that is different from that of her counterpart from the original Spider-Friends. This is because Angelica is still active as Firestar.

    Family and Allies 

Shiro Yoshida/Sunfire

Yū Yoshida

Ralphie

    Villains 

Hydro-Woman

Miles Warren/The Jackal

  • Evil Is Petty: Warren desires to kill Miles Morales simply because he took up the Spider-Man mantle.
  • Hero Killer: An Amazing New Year reveals that he had attacked and killed Peter Parker out of a twisted desire to avenge Gwen Stacy, with whom he shared his mainstream comics counterpart's obsession.
  • One-Steve Limit: Zig-zagged. He shares a first name with Miles Morales, but An Amazing New Year only uses his full name once, and Miles Morales only knows him by his surname.
  • Our Werewolves Are Different: Can assume a were-jackal form, which Miles Morales mistakes for a werewolf due to real life jackals resembling wolves.
  • Would Hurt a Child: Zigzagged. He makes it clear that he wants Miles Morales dead at his own hand, but his appearance in An Amazing New Year is unclear if he's aware that the new Spider-Man is a teenager.

Earth-9919

The home universe of a version of Spider-Man named Peter Park.
     Heroes 

Peter Park/Spider-Man

  • Adaptation Name Change: A slight one; The "er" is dropped from "Parker" to make "Park", reflecting his Race Lift.
  • Animal-Themed Superbeing: As you could probably guess, it's spiders.
  • Bully Magnet: Partially thanks to racism and anti-intellectualism at his school, he was picked on a lot.
  • The Nondescript: Not really, but he has a very basic fashion sense when out of costume. Though it's possible this is intentional, so as to not draw attention to himself.
  • Race Lift: He's a Korean-American version of Peter Park.

The Human Torch

  • Hero of Another Story: He doesn't actually appear, but is referenced in the profile on Peter Park since he attends a school named after his creator.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: In a sense; He's the original, android Human Torch, who never got shut down or dismantled. As a result, he's a celebrated hero in the modern day and it's stated that he's never succeeded by Johnny Storm.

Shadow Shell

     Villains 

Franklin Ha/Graviton

  • Adaptation Name Change: Franklin Hall becomes Franklin Ha. He also doesn't have a doctorate.
  • Age Lift: He's a teenager instead of an older bearded man.
  • Evil Former Friend: To Peter Park, though the exact reason why are unclear and it's unknown if he even known's Park is Spider-Man.
  • Gravity Master: He has power over gravity, as to be expected from a version of Graviton.
  • Inexplicably Awesome: How he became Graviton isn't explained. Justified, since even the people who wrote Peter's profile don't know yet.
  • Only Friend: He was basically Peter's only friend at school before he became Spider-Man.
  • Race Lift: He's Korean American, whereas Franklin Hall is normally white.
  • Rogues' Gallery Transplant: Graviton is usually a foe of the Avengers as a group, but this version is foe Spider-Man's with a significant connection to him.
  • Scarf of Asskicking: He wears a long white and gray striped scarf as Graviton, possibly meant to evoke the traditional version's beard.

     Others 

Glory Grant

Earth-10310

The setting of Deadpool Pulp.

Earth-11052

Home to X-Men: Evolution.
    X-Men 

Scott Summers/Cyclops

Jean Grey

Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler

Anna Marie/Rogue

Kitty Pryde/Shadowcat

Earth-12041

Home to characters from Avengers Assemble
    Superheroes 

Captain America

Iron Man

  • Screw Yourself: Hawkeye is completely bemused to realize that Tony is genuinely hitting on his own female counterpart.

Hulk

  • Ignored Aesop: In Brothers of Thunder, Betsy Banner (a female Hulk) advises the Hulks of Earths 8096 and 12041 to acknowledge Bruce Banner's existence more than they do, but while 8096-Hulk acknowledges the point, 12041-Hulk remains in his transformed state.

Black Widow

Hawkeye

Captain Marvel

Thor

  • One-Steve Limit: This Thor agrees to be called 'Prince', while with his Earth-199999 and Earth-8096 counterparts.

Thunderstrike

Ms. Marvel

    Supervillains 

Helmut Zemo

Fixer

Moonstone

  • Heel–Face Revolving Door: Similarly to the comics, despite once attempting to go straight, unlike Songbird, Atlas and Mach-IV, she's back to villainy alongside Fixer.

Whirlwind

Wrecking Crew

U-Foes

Earth-12101

The setting of Deadpool Kills the Marvel Universe.

    Characters 

Wade Wilson/Dreadpool

  • An Arm and a Leg: He has his right arm and his legs cut off by The Pighead before being killed.
  • Butt-Monkey: When you're openly called the butt of the joke, it's clear you're totally this. He still manages to kill the Earth-838 Illuminati but even that is nullified when it's revealed that they were just used as bait by Pighead. Even when he comes back as a ghost, he still can't manage to escape this status.
  • Killed Off for Real: Pighead cuts off his right arm and his legs, beheads him and spills acid on his body afterwards to make sure he will stay dead. It ends up being subverted when he comes back in How I Stopped Worrying..., as a ghost, to torment She-Hulk.
  • Off with His Head!: What ultimately kills him.
  • Red Herring: When he's introduced in the last scene of Chapter 1 of Another Side of the Glimpses, he looks menacing, determined and serious so it means he's the antagonist of the series, right? Well, here comes Chapter 2, Jack English is introduced as the true main villain and Dreadpool quickly falls into irrelevance, his only two appearances post-Chapter 1 consisting on him being beat up by Travis Touchdown and later, being killed by The Pighead.
  • Straw Nihilist: A trait he has from his original comic-book and carries here. Remember, the man thinks that he's doing everyone a favor by slaughtering them.
  • A Twinkle in the Sky: What ultimately happens when She-Hulk punches him away from her dreams for good.
  • Unstuck in Time: His ultimate fate after Pighead kills him.

Earth-51825

The setting of What If... The World Lost Its Mightiest Heroes?.
    Characters 

Nick Fury

Hogun

Earth-51989

Home universe of a version of Jubilee introduced in The Last Archer and Psylocke introduced in New Discoveries.

    The Hand 

In General

  • Adaptational Heroism: New Discoveries reveals the Earth-51989 Hand was a more heroic organization than many of its other multiversal counterparts.

Kwannon/Psylocke

    Other Characters 

Jubilation "Jubilee" Lee

  • Adaptational Species Change: Played with. While she is a mutant with her mainstream powers, she is also half-vampire, unlike her mainstream counterpart.
  • Adaptational Sexuality: This version of Jubilee is openly bisexual and polyamorous.
  • Sole Survivor: She is the only remaining resident of Earth-51989...until New Discoveries revealed that Psylocke also survived.

Earth-61065

Home universe of a version of Mary Jane Watson that became Spider-Woman.

    Spider-Woman & Allies 

Mary Jane Watson/Spider-Woman

  • Adaptational Sexuality: This MJ is sapphic and has a crush on her female classmate Mariko.
  • Expy Coexistence: She and Michelle Jones - who is essentially a very different adaptation of Mary Jane - exist together in the same universe as cousins.

Michelle Jones

  • Actor Allusion: She's modeled on a character played by Zendaya and gets a quick Ship Tease with a character named Tom.
  • Expy Coexistence: She and Mary Jane - who she's mostly based on in canon - exist together in the same universe as cousins.

Shang-Chi

  • Age Lift: This Shang-Chi is explicitly a teenager.
  • Offscreen Moment of Awesome: He somehow managed to trap Scorpion in a giant, man sized figgy pudding. It isn't shown how he did it and how he even found the pudding, as it's mostly played for a gag.

    The Wolfpack 

Rafael Vega

Sharon Owens-Vega

  • Named by the Adaptation: Her maiden surname was never revealed in the original Wolfpack graphic novel, nor in the twelve-issue maxiseries that followed it up. Heroes and Zero establishes that it's "Owens".

    Other Superheroes 

Nico Minoru

  • Adaptational Badass: She's stated to be the Sorcerer Supreme of her Earth, which certainly suggests she's more powerful than most versions of Nico.

Dr. Ashley Kafka/She-Wolf

  • Adaptational Badass: In the comics, she was a normal human. Heroes and Zero establishes that the Earth-61065 version of her is this universe's Man-Wolf.
  • Foil: To this world's J. Jonah Jameson III. They were both transformed in the same space mission. Whereas Jameson fell into despair and became the villainous Scorpion, she loves her new form and became a heroine.
  • The Tease: She flirts with James-Michael Starling, aka the second Omega the Unknown in Heroes and Zero.

     Super Villains 

Maximus

Jonathan Caesar/Carnage

  • Adaptational Badass: Caesar had no preternatural abilities in the comics, just a lot of money and influence. However, this version of him has the Carnage symbiote.
  • Ascended Extra: Caesar is an obscure character in the comics, first appearing in Amazing Spider-Man #304.
  • Composite Character: Well, yeah. He's an obscure character that is not normally a bearer of the Carnage symbiote.
  • Odd Friendship: While we don't yet know how it came to be, his best friend and closest ally in crime is Musicianteater, an intelligent, talking anteater who plays music gigs at coffee shops.
  • Serenade Your Lover: After becoming Carnage, this was his first plan to get Mary Jane to like him. Even if he got the chance, it definitely wouldn't have worked. This is likely due to Musicianteater's influence.
  • Stalker with a Crush: Just like his comic counterpart, he is obsessed with Mary Jane.

Roberta Reynolds/Sentry

Agatha Harkness/Mysterio

  • Composite Character: She's mostly Agatha Harkness (as seen in the MCU), but goes by Mysterio and wears his costume.
  • Smug Snake: She's a real wisenheimer.

John Jonah Jameson III/Scorpion

  • Adaptational Superpower Change: Instead of being turned into a wolf man who can turn back into a human, he was turned into a hideous humanoid scorpion and is stuck that way.
  • Adaptational Villainy: Unlike most versions of the character, he's a full-on, active villain and has consciously murdered people.
  • Composite Character: Of Col. John Jameson and the Scorpion.
  • Evil Is Petty: After a toy made in his image back when he was a respected astronaut is pulled from the shelves, he attacks a toy store location in a mall, even though no one working there would be the one making that call.
  • Was Once a Man: Very much so.

Musicianteater

Rhino

  • Gender Flip: It's indicated that this is a female Rhino.
  • The Ghost: They're only mentioned in Christmas Cookies.

Big Wheel

Maria Callasantos/Feral

  • Cain and Abel: Heroes and Zero establishes her sister Thornn is a member of this universe's X-Men and is very much a hero.
  • Character Rerailment: Unlike her Earth-382 counterpart that cameoed in New Discoveries, this version of Feral is closer to her 1990s comics portrayal: Hotheaded and violent.
  • Disproportionate Retribution: To underline how much of a monster she is, it was revealed she once slaughtered everyone in a diner simply because she was enraged they had no cake left.
  • Evil Doppelgänger: To Marika Calla Santos, the heroic Feral of Earth-382 who has been seen as an Illuminati agent.
  • I Am a Humanitarian: This version of Feral has eaten people. She-Wolf mocks her for it in Heroes and Zero.
    She-Wolf: Run out of family members to eat?
  • The Sociopath: Like in the comics, this version of Feral remorselessly murdered members of her own family, and outright enjoys killing.

     Students 

Mariko Yashida

Gwen Stacy

Eugene "Flash" Thompson

  • Composite Character: He's of Guatemalan descent like the versions of Flash based on Tony Revolori's portrayal, but is also the traditional big, muscular jock of the comics.

Peter Parker

  • Adaptational Relationship Overhaul: In this universe, his and Mary Jane's relationship is platonic, and no mention is made of his standing with Michelle either. It would be established in Ultimate Spider-Man that he is dating the Gwen Stacy of this universe.
  • Adaptational Wimp: Inverted. Peter Parker isn't the Spider-Totem of this universe, nor does he have any sort of superpowers at all. Heroes and Zero establishes that he is a talented martial artist. In fact, is talent is noticed by his sensei Rafael Vega, who wants to bring him into the Wolfpack.
  • Demoted to Extra: Played with. He isn't the Spider-Totem of this universe, nor is he part of MJ's superheroic clique. However, Ultimate Spider-Man shows that he is part of MJ's civilian circle.

Tom Somchart

Earth-61610

Home universe of a version of Spider-Woman introduced in Into the Multiverse You Go!.

    Characters 

Jessica Riley/Spider-Woman

Earth-61624

A variant Marvel Universe shown in Nightcat and Man-Bull.

Earth-78227

Home to a world where Betty Brant became Spider-Girl.

    Superheroes 

Elizabeth "Betty" Brant/Spider-Girl

  • Adaptational Badass: In the What If? story that introduced the concept of Betty being Spider-Girl, Betty gave up the role very quickly after failing to save Ben Parker from being killed, which convinced her she wasn't cut out to be a superhero. Here, she's still active and just as capable as any version of Spider-Man, and notes that saving Ben Parker was what convinced her to stay active as a hero.
  • Adaptational Modesty: In the original "What If?" story, she wore a skimpy blue leotard with the classic Spider-Man mask. In this adaptation she wears the classic Spidey outfit, the main difference in the costume is that it is orange and purple instead of red and blue.
  • Adaptation Dye-Job: Since she's a counterpart to Angourie Rice's Betty from Earth-199999, she's a blonde instead of a brunette.
  • Deadpan Snarker: She is just as snarky as any other Spidey.
  • For Want Of A Nail: As noted above, saving Ben is what convinced her to stay a hero, unlike her What If? counterpart, who failed and quit being a hero after that.
  • Palette Swap: Her costume is identical to the Stark Suit, except orange and purple instead of red and blue. This is a Mythology Gag referencing some of Steve Ditko's early concept sketches of Spider-Man.
  • Primary-Color Champion / Secondary Color Nemesis: Inverted. Betty wears orange and purple as Spider-Girl and is very much a hero.

    The Aryan Brigade 

In General

  • Hate Sink: Yeah, they're utterly despicable and Spider-Girl lampshades how easy they are to dislike.
  • Politically Incorrect Villain: As expected from a group called the Aryan Brigade, they are racist, homophobic white nationalists who believe in anti-semitic conspiracy theories.
  • Transplant: They are a group originating from DC but are found on a Marvel-based universe.
  • Would Hurt a Child: Tried to murder an innocent baby and his grandmother just because they're Sri Lankan.

Backlash

  • Politically Incorrect Villain: Besides being just as racist and homophobic as his accomplices, he's also seemingly ableist and misogynistic, since he looks down on Heatmonger for being a woman and having no arms. Spider-Girl also strongly suspects that he's just manipulating her and Blind Faith for their abilities and would get rid of the two of them in a heartbeat if he needed to do so to get more useful villains without their handicaps.
  • Rubber Man: He can transform his arms into stretchy tentacles.

Iron Cross

  • The Brute: He's big, strong, and utterly brutish.

Lucia Coolidge/Heatmonger

  • Boomerang Bigot: A Neo-Nazi Evil Cripple, when the Nazis hated cripples. Her seeming genuinely surprised when Spider-Girl mentions that she'd have been killed if she actually had lived in Nazi Germany, it lends support to Spider-Girl's hypothesis that Backlash is manipulating her by being selective about what she knows.
  • Composite Character: She's female like in the comics and her Secret Identity is a gender flipped version of her Arrowverse counterparts real name.
  • Evil Cripple: She was born without arms and joined a Neo-Nazi supervillain team.
  • Named by the Adaptation: In the comics Heatmonger's name was never revealed, but here it's Lucia Coolidge.
  • Unwitting Pawn: Spider-Girl mentions she's probably being manipulated by Backlash into doing what he wants.

Golden Eagle

  • Razor Wings: He has mechanical wings hidden inside a case on his back. Amphibian rips them off before he gets a chance to use them.

Blind Faith

  • Adaptational Wimp: In the comics, she can see (sorta) into the future, there's no mention of such abilities here.
  • Blind Weaponmaster: She's blind but fights as if she's not.
  • Boomerang Bigot: Like Heatmonger, is an Evil Cripple Neo-Nazi when the original Nazis hated the handicapped.
  • Cane Fu: Being blind doesn't make her any less skilled with her cane.
  • Evil Cripple: She's blind and just as racist as the rest of the brigade.

     New York City 

Ned Leeds

Alphonso's Deli Employee

Dr. James Sanders

  • Adaptational Wimp: He never gets the chance to get powers himself before he's killed.
  • Decomposite Character: Instead of being Speed Demon like he is traditionally,
  • Mad Scientist: He created a serum to turn people into speedsters and his reaction to its success indicates his intentions were far from altruistic.
  • Neck Snap: Speed Demon kills him by snapping his neck.

    Super Villains 

Peter Parker/The Grizzly

  • Adaptational Villainy: This version of the Grizzly is actually Peter Parker, a bullying jerk who uses a suit of powered armor.
  • Composite Character: Rather than the ex-wrestler of the comics, this version of the Grizzly is Peter Parker.
  • Mini-Mecha: He pilots a large Iron Man-like armor modeled after a grizzly bear. This is noted to be very much unlike other versions of the Grizzly on other Earths, who are huge, musclebound men. Given that he's actually a skinny teenager, this change makes sense.

Felicia Hardy

  • Adaptational Villainy: This version of her is said to have been willing to kill innocents.
  • Ambiguous Situation: It's unclear if she's actually Black Cat or has any other costumed identity. She's under this "Super Villains" page mostly out of convenience.
  • Composite Character: In this universe, Felicia gets combined with the burglar who traditionally kills Ben Parker in Peter Parker's origin.
  • The Ghost: She's only mentioned by Betty when she's surprised that her name was mentioned at all.

Eugene "Flash" Thompson/Speed Demon

Earth-86315

At least a variation of the world depicted in What If…? (2021) "What if Captain Carter Were the First Avenger?"
    Characters 

Captain Peggy Carter

  • Amazonian Beauty: She bulked up thanks to the Super-Soldier serum and has been described as an Amazon of a woman.
  • Spotting the Thread: In An Avenging Christmas, she notes that the Skrulls can't be responsible for the antimatter wave as they're conquerors and so wouldn't want to destroy territory they were trying to claim.

Steve Rogers

Colonel Nick Fury

Clint Barton/Hawkeye

  • Sole Survivor: He's obviously not, but he understandably believes he is the only survivor of the destruction of Earth-86315, thanks to his being unaware that Captain Carter and Steve Rogers are not only still around, but like him, have become companions of an incarnation of the Doctor.

Earth-88255

Home to a version of Luke Cage that became Thor.

Earth-92131

As in canon, the universe of characters from Spider-Man: The Animated Series and X-Men: The Animated Series, set sometime after both shows ended.
     Superheroes 

Peter Parker/Spider-Man

  • Actor Allusion: When he first meets the Titans, Peter pretends to be a Daily Planet photographer named Eric Barnes. In the series, he was voiced by Christopher Daniel Barnes, who voiced Prince Eric in The Little Mermaid (1989).
  • Bad Liar: When he realizes it would awkward to tell Betty/Spider-Girl he's the counterpart of a guy she hates, Peter tells her his name is Stephen King and that his friends calling him "Stephen Skiing" because he loves to ski. The Next Avengers all cringe at this, and a skeptical Betty only rolls with it because it's easier to do that than press him for the truth.
  • Action Dad: He has an infant daughter with Mary Jane named May.
  • Guilt Complex: He feels partly responsible for Sin-Eater's murder of Jubilee's foster father, since he failed to capture him earlier.
  • Happily Married: To the (non water clone) Mary Jane Watson.

Felicia Hardy/Black Cat

  • Big Damn Heroes: She rescues Spider-Man and Terri Lee from Sin-Eater's poison gas.
  • Ms. Fanservice: She's specifically mentioned to be voluptuous and exposes her cleavage to Peter.
  • The Tease: She likes to tease Peter with offers of sex, even though he's married with a child, just for the fun of it.

Matt Murdock/Daredevil

Steve Rogers/Captain America

Daimon Hellstrom/Hellstorm

Doctor Stephen Strange

  • Killed Off for Real: In Chapter 15 of Glimpses, he's killed by the brainwashed victims of the Skrulls based on Earth-702.
  • Undignified Death: He dies when he's force fed copious amounts of food until he chokes.

Capitã Brasil

Jason Strongbow/American Eagle

  • Magical Native American: Averted, but discussed. His powers aren't magic-based at all, but some people assume they are due to a very poorly researched article that the Daily Bugle put out about him that he complains about.

Harley Davis/Motormouth

  • Hypocritical Humor: She has to tell Speedball to keep quiet during the various heroes' gathering at the Sanctum Sanctorum, while she herself is known for her a superhuman scream. She actually recognizes this and is said to have a laugh about it later.

    X-Men 

Scott Summers/Cyclops

Jubilation Lee/Jubilee

  • Costume Evolution: She's described as wearing something more like her modern looks, rather than her regular look from the show.
  • Heroic B So D: She has this after her foster father is killed by Sin-Eater.
  • It's Personal: She wants to be the one to defeat or even kill Sin-Eater due to him killing Davis, her foster father.

Piotr Rasputin/Colossus

Neal Shaara/Thunderbird

Remy LeBeau/Gambit

Rogue

Leech

Julio Richter/Rictor

Logan/Wolverine

Hank McCoy/Beast

Shilpa Khatri/Trinary

  • Age Lift: Because she's a more recent character in the comics, she's depicted as a young student at Xavier's.

    Fantastic Four 

Ben Grimm/Thing

Susan Storm/Invisible Woman

H.E.R.B.I.E.

    Starjammers 

Christopher Summers/Corsair

Hepzibah

    The Rangers 

William Talltrees/Red Wolf

Victoria Star/Shooting Star

Miguel Santos/Living Lightning

    Supervillains 

Stanley "Stan" Kao/The Sin-Eater

  • Adaptational Badass: He's able to easily fend off Spider-Man, with Spider-Man falling back after kicking him due to him just being that strong. He's later compared to Captain America.
  • Adaptation Name Change: From Stan Carter to Stan Kao, to reflect his Race Lift.
  • Fallen Hero: Lee remembers him as being a good man and a good cop. Clearly something changed.
  • Fantasy Gun Control: He uses a crossbow instead of a gun, likely meant to reflect that lack of real guns in the series.
  • Knight Templar: He wants to kill Terri Lee since she aids Spider-Man, who's a vigilante. He later successfully kills Davis Beverly, Jubilee's foster father, just because of that connection alone.
  • Race Lift: He's white in the comics, but Asian-American here.
  • Silver Fox: He's described as being handsome despite clearly aging and having graying temples.

The Chameleon

  • The Voiceless: Like in the show, he doesn't speak when undisguised. Even then, he only utters one line when disguised as Changeling, and it's to himself.
  • Unwitting Pawn: His mission to kill the Titans at Cyborg's wedding was actually just part of a larger to have them gain possession of Chemo.

Ahmet Abdol/The Living Pharaoh

Victor Von Doom/Dr. Doom

Alistair Smythe

     Others 

Mary Jane Watson-Parker

May "Mayday" Parker

Detective Terri Lee

Davis Beverly

Earth-021023

Home to characters from Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur

Earth-030165

An unseen variant of the Marvel Universe that is home to at least some Inhumans.

     Villains 

Lash

  • Co-Dragons: He's this to the Rani alongside Dark Mercury.

Earth-080918

The setting of Marvel Rising.

Earth-110521

Home to a future version of a universe based on X-Men: Evolution.
    X-Men 
  • The Ghost: They are mentioned in Freedom Force, but not seen.
    Avengers 
  • The Ghost: They are mentioned in Freedom Force, but not seen.
    Freedom Force 

Patrick "Pat" Carney/Yankee Clipper

  • Ascended Extra: Pat Carney is an obscure character, first appearing in Marvel: The Lost Generation #12 (March 2000)
  • The Leader: It's implied in Freedom Force that he's the leader of the titular group.

Todd Tolensky/Toad

Sharra Neramani/Deathcry

Wanda Maximoff/Scarlet Witch

Julia Carpenter/Spider-Woman

  • Mythology Gag: Julia was a member of Freedom Force in the comics, hence her inclusion in Freedom Force.

Earth-191208

Home of a variant Marvel Universe introduced in Neon Genesis Evangelion.

Earth-199691

Home to characters from a variation of Killraven.
     The Freemen 

Jonathan Raven/Killraven

M'Shulla Scott

Carmilla Frost

The Dreamer

  • Ascended Extra: The Dreamer's comic counterpart was a one-off character that Killraven killed at the end of his only appearance.
  • Telepathy: He can talk to people in their minds, which is how he communicates to Killraven in A Flashy Debut.

Earth-199914

Home to characters from a variation of The Shadowline Saga.
     Shadow Dwellers 

Doctor Zero

  • The Cynic: Like his comic counterpart, he has a low opinion of humanity.

The Powerline

  • The Ghost: They are shown on a magazine cover in Heroes and Zero, but they aren't seen.

Earth-199928

Home to characters from a variation of Marvel 2099.

Earth-199999

Home to characters from the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Merlin (2008), The Rocketeer the Indiana Jones films, and Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles with elements of the X-Men Film Series and a few characters originating from The DCU. The events from various Daniel Mullins' games have also happened here.
     Avengers 

Anthony "Tony" Stark/Iron Man

  • Foil: The Mandarin believes they're perfect opposites, the decadent Western capitalist and the enlightened Eastern mystic.
  • The Friend No One Likes: A milder example - while he's egotistical, brash, and almost seems to revel in casually annoying others, his intentions are largely good, and everyone can tell that he's got a heart underneath that abrasive exterior.
  • Mirror Character: Just like Bruce Wayne, he's a rich asshole who needs a more sensible teammate to ground him or he will alienate everyone around him.
  • Reasonable Authority Figure: When Peter decides to leave the team to gain more solo experience in Celestial Navigation (including returning Stark's Spider-Man suit), Tony is initially hurt, but acknowledges that Peter's reasons for wanting to work on himself are valid. He accepts Peter's "resignation" from the team, assuring him that he still has access to Avengers Tower if he needs it. He also advises Peter to not take too much responsibility and that if he needs help, he should ask for it.
  • Take Up My Sword: Parodied - Tony lifts Stormbreaker after Thor is disarmed, only for his enthusiasm to be quashed when Thor clarifies that there is no worthiness enchantment on his new hammer.

Steve Rogers/Captain America

  • Berserk Button: He's quietly infuriated by Red Skull's utter misinterpretation of the American Dream in Infinity Crisis.
  • Cosmic Retcon: Thanks to The Pighead's actions in Another Side of the Glimpses, Captain America is now a former Invader.
  • Humble Hero: Steve Rogers still considers himself that little guy from Brooklyn who was too stubborn to stop fighting.
  • Legacy Character: History Lesson-199999 establishes that during the decades Rogers was frozen, several other men took up the Captain America mantle.
  • It Has Been an Honour: Tells this to Superman for the Justice League helping the Avengers to fight Thanos and restore the Multiverse. Supes returns the compliment.
  • The Leader: Even the heroes of Earth-1 soon have no problem deferring to Rogers as the leader of their united group.
  • Patrick Stewart Speech: He tells the Red Skull that America's true strength is not in its military but in its people sharing a dream, something the Nazi will never be able to understand.

Thor Odinson

  • Amazon Chaser: He had a past with Sif and is visibly impressed by and appreciative of Jane becoming worthy of Mjolnir.
  • I Thought Everyone Could Do That: Tony and Jane both note how Thor (and Sif) have a problem in assuming things like the Morphing Grid or other cosmic events are common knowledge for Earth and thus never feel the need to mention them.

Bruce Banner/Hulk

  • Birds of a Feather: Apparently, the Hulk likes Groot. Well, they're both green, very badass when push comes to shove and kinda limited in vocabulary...
  • O.O.C. Is Serious Business: Hawkeye and Widow are jarred when the Hulk appears and actually talks to them in a semi-intelligent manner before "smashing."
    Hawkeye: Since when does he actually carry on a conversation?!
  • Shipping Torpedo: At some point, Bruce and Natasha decided to end their old near-relationship.

Natasha Romanoff/Black Widow

  • Badass Normal: She may not have any powers, but she's one of the biggest badasses of the six founding members.
  • Better as Friends: With Bruce.
  • Legacy Character: In BAD Girls, Natasha finds herself encountering her Golden Age predecessor as Black Widow: Claire Voyant.
  • Shipping Torpedo: At some point, Bruce and Natasha decided to end their old near-relationship, and when reflecting on it, she notes that it was more like two broken souls leaning on each other for support.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: The story was written before Avengers: Endgame, so Natasha does not sacrifice herself to get the Soul Stone.

Clint Barton/Hawkeye

  • Badass Normal: Barton has no innate superpowers, but he makes up for it with his archery and secret agent skillsets.
  • Circus Brat: Confesses he learned archery there when Oliver disparagingly asks where he was taught.
  • Friendly Rivalry: Has one with Oliver as they argue on who's the better archer and finally try to settle it in a contest (which ends in a tie).
  • Spared by the Adaptation: He mentions he can cope with the Snap because he still has his boys with him. Avengers: Endgame didn't even let him have this.

James "Rhodey" Rhodes/War Machine

  • Legacy Character: Combined with Mythology Gag. According to History Lesson-199999, a possible future involves him taking up the mantle of Iron Man.

Sam Wilson/Falcon

  • Nice Guy: Therapy Session shows him expressing concern for Wanda's mental health, recommending that she discuss her traumas with the Avengers' new psychiatrist Leonard Samson.

Wanda Maximoff/Scarlet Witch

  • Adaptational Relationship Change: History Lesson-199999 reveals that Wanda and Pietro Maximoff were actually the children of Magneto and Natalya Maximoff.
  • Legacy Character: In Infinity Crisis Aftermath: Therapy Session, Agatha Harkness implies Wanda is not the first Scarlet Witch. History Lesson-199999 confirms that her biological mother Natalya Maximoff was the previous Scarlet Witch.
  • Robosexual: Wanda is in love with the Vision, an android she helped create.
  • Stepford Smiler: Therapy Session shows her to be a Type 1 - she's genuinely happy to be restored to life, especially since Pietro and Vision were brought back as well. However, she's still got a good deal of baggage over how she lost them in the first place (along with her other past traumas) and is understandably terrified that they could die again.
    • Therapy Session also shows that Wanda is working to overcome her issues in a healthy manner. Temporal Tete-a-Tete shows Kang the Conqueror observing Wanda during a therapy session and finds it encouraging. After all, a mentally stable and healthy Wanda is much less of a potential threat to the multiverse...

Pietro Maximoff/Quicksilver

  • Adaptational Relationship Change: History Lesson-199999 states that his biological parents are Magneto and Natalya Maximoff.
  • Back from the Dead: Barry and Wally are able to bring him back to life after finding him in the Speed Force.
  • Didn't See That Coming:
    • Naturally, his first words when he returns to life before a stunned Hawkeye and Black Widow.
    • Subverted in the battle with Alpha Flight when the equally fast Northstar actually does see Quicksilver coming.
  • If You Ever Do Anything to Hurt Her...: Pietro acknowledges that the Vision makes Wanda happy but warns him that he will leave the android back in a toolbox if he hurts her.
  • Morality Pet: Kang the Conqueror observes that he and the Vision are good at taming Wanda's potential anger.

Vision

T'Challa/Black Panther

  • The Good King: He's still new at it, but on the whole is well on his way to being this for Wakanda.

Scott Lang/Ant-Man

  • Birds of a Feather: Develops a friendship with Ray Palmer while essentially "infiltrating" the Soul Stone.
  • Ignorance Is Bliss: During the campaign against Thanos, Scott all but explicitly states that he's telling himself that the only reason why his family hasn't contacted him yet is that the current chaos is preventing them from doing so because it's better than facing the possibility that they've probably been killed in the Snap.

Peter Parker/Spider-Man

  • Ascended Fanboy: His status as this is noted when Natasha warns against letting Peter come to Earth-38 as he'd probably spend his time looking at the different movies, such as how the Star Wars sequel trilogy of Earth-38 is based on the novels.
  • Dark and Troubled Past: Peter discusses his indirect role in the death of his uncle Ben to make a point to Johnny Storm about the potential costs of being selfish with his powers.
  • Kid Hero: Very much so.
  • Know When to Fold 'Em: This is basically the reason he decides to withdraw from the Avengers in Celestial Navigation, feeling that the team's recently missions have been too large-scale for his current age and experience, choosing to leave and focus on maintaining a civilian life and training as a hero before he decides to commit to being an Avenger on a full-time basis.
    • Family Time goes more in-depth with Spider-Man's decision to leave the Avengers, revealing that he was told that some in his old neighborhood think that he has forgotten about them due to his helping the Avengers deal with world-ending threats.
  • Motor Mouth: Even when he's busy fighting an alien horde, Peter still finds time to worry about his Aunt May and criticize Batman's whole shtick as freaky.
  • Red Herring: When the vigilante "Spider" goes active in Freeland, Vibe and Caitlyn first seek his Alternate Self before understanding it's a totally different person.

Hope Pym/Wasp

Carol Danvers/Captain Marvel

Hank McCoy/Beast

  • Mythology Gag: Beast was an Avenger in the comics.
  • Those Two Guys: A couple stories have him team up with Steve Rogers.
  • Token Minority: After Cap invites Beast to join the Avengers, he concedes that part of this is to give the Avengers a 'token mutant'.

Jane Foster/Thunderstrike

  • Action Girl: Promoted to this, and in such a style!
  • Passing the Torch: Despite his history with the hammer, when Mjolnir accepts Jane as its wielder after its restoration, Thor assures her that she can keep it.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: Word of God reveals that the original script for Endgame would have positively identified her as one of the victims of the Snap, but here she survives to join the Avengers in their investigation.
  • Take Up My Sword: After being taken prisoner and nearly killed by Hela, Jane Foster proves worthy to hold Mjolnir and becomes a Goddess of Thunder.
  • Took a Level in Badass: Jane goes from dying hostage to the new Goddess of Thunder as soon as she touches Mjolnir.
  • Violently Protective Girlfriend: She would have words with this bitch Hela for hurting her man Thor.
  • Ye Olde Butchered English: Apparently, anyone carrying Mjolnir will speak this way. She's left a mite befuddled over it.

Jennifer Walters/She-Hulk

  • Amazonian Beauty: Her transformation made her into an emerald-skinned, tough-as-nails giantess.
  • Amoral Attorney: Averted, Jennifer is working for a law firm and firmly on the side of the angels.
  • Breaking the Fourth Wall: Celestial Navigation reveals that, much like in the John Byrne Sensational She-Hulk series and the "canon" MCU, she can do this. She notes everything from the Hypothetical Casting of her as Angie Harmon clashing with the real casting of Tatiana Maslany to how "organic" Kate Bishop popping into the story is. It continues in Chapter 2, which starts with her making an entire monologue directed to the audience. Plus, How I Stopped Worrying... gives a reason of why she gained the ability to do it between her first appearances and that time.
  • Cosmic Retcon: Thanks to The Pighead' actions in Another Side of the Glimpses, she became She-Hulk far earlier than she was supposed to.
  • Get Out!: The last thing she says to Dreadpool is to "get out of [her] dreams".
  • In the Blood: She was targeted to recreate the procedure which caused the Hulk to emerge on the grounds she might have the same "quirk" enabling her to survive and gain powers. The assumption was right.
  • A Rare Sentence: Gets this gem in Powers and Marvels:
    She-Hulk: And in this week's entry in "sentences I never thought I'd hear myself say"...Please step out of the giant robot frog with your hands up.
  • Shut Up, Hannibal!: In How I Stopped Worrying, Dreadpool tries to break her spirit when she discovers the entire truth about her fictional nature. Heavy emphasis on "tries", because it doesn't work at all.
  • Tragic Monster: Subverted. When Bruce breaks it to Jennifer Walters that she'll never be able to return to her human form, Jen just relates that she loves now being a green-skinned powerhouse.

Darcy Lewis

  • All Girls Want Bad Boys: Zigzagged; she feels a strong physical attraction for Bruce Wayne, who's a veteran hero... and also constantly terrifying people through his demeanor, finding ways to maim or kill his friends and blunt to the point of being a jerkwad.
  • The Bus Came Back: Returns to help Jane and joins the Avengers support staff.
  • Extreme Omnisexual: If you're an attractive superhero, she will inevitably comment on how she wants a taste of that. Human, physical god, or alien. She mostly comments on the men, but has expressed appreciation for women like Diana Prince.
  • Heterosexual Life-Partners: With Jane, who she's still helping out even after she becomes the new wielder of Mjolnir.
  • Lovable Sex Maniac: Many of her interventions are about sex or her sex life.
  • Noodle Incident: Apparently, she was involved in a threesome once and found the experience really uncomfortable.

Leonard Samson

  • Psycho Psychologist: Averted. In his appearance in Therapy Session, he's shown to act like a rather normal psychiatrist.

     The Guardians of the Galaxy 

General

  • Hero with Bad Publicity: Slightly downplayed as we don't know the public's opinion on them, but to the rest of the superhero community they're a bunch of idiots who can't be trusted with simple tasks. It's hard not to see why.
  • Ragtag Bunch of Misfits: Oh, are they ever...

Peter Quill/Star-Lord

Gamora

  • Amazing Technicolor Population: She is a green-skinned alien woman.
  • Back from the Dead: Constantine is able to restore Gamora to life by performing a complex ritual with the aid of Nebula to draw her soul back to her body.
  • What the Hell, Hero?: Cuts off an argument about their competence with Sara by pointing out that the Legends have invariably caused most of the problems they have to stop, while the Guardians at least always deal with other peoples' problems.

Drax

  • Birds of a Feather: In Tomorrow's Guardians, Drax offers Bortus some tentative advice on coping after the destruction of Moclus based on his own experience of losing his family.
  • Literal-Minded: As usual, metaphors go over his head.
    Quill: Buy me some time!
    Drax: You cannot buy time! It is not a physical commodity!

Rocket Raccoon

  • BFG: Rocket expresses his appreciation for the cold gun when Mick Rory lets him use it.
  • Gadgeteer Genius: Creates a bomb from just various odds and ends he picked up around the ships.
  • Odd Friendship: With Mick Rory. In Tomorrow's Guardians, Leonard Snart notes that he also recognises the appeal of Rocket as an individual.
  • Pink Elephants: Mick Rory and Jessica Jones' reaction when they see the talking, gun-toting raccoon is to believe they're drunk as a skunk, again.

Groot

Mantis

  • Sensor Character: Can sense emotions, and at one point even seems to be aware when the planet Moclus is destroyed some considerable distance from her.

Nebula

  • The Glorious War of Sisterly Rivalry: Any pair of sisters sometimes feel the urge to murder each other. For Nebula, it was unfortunately literal towards Gamora, but she really mellowed nowadays.
  • Only Sane Man: Nebula feels this way when dealing with the quirks of the other Guardians.

     X-Men 
  • Cosmic Retcon: Thanks to The Pighead's actions in Another Side of the Glimpses, the X-Men have debuted far earlier than they were supposed to.

Charles Xavier/Professor X

Scott Summers/Cyclops

Jean Grey

James Howlett/Logan/Wolverine

Ororo Munroe/Storm

Alex Summers/Havok

Robert "Bobby" Drake/Iceman

Anna Marie/Rogue

  • Southern Belle: Gambit immediately identifies her as a fellow Southerner.

Piotr Rasputin/Colossus

Remy LeBeau/Gambit

  • Noodle Incident: Wolverine mentions how Gambit helped him out in New Orleans some time earlier.
  • Ship Tease: Is attracted to Rogue right away while she seems unsure.
  • Third-Person Person: Does this which Rogue finds annoying.

Warren Worthington III/Angel

     Alpha Flight 

James Hudson/Guardian

Narya/Snowbird

Michael Twoyoungmen/Shaman

Walter Langkowski/Sasquatch

  • Friendly Enemy: He spends his fight with Beast respectfully talking about a research paper he recently published and promise to keep in contact once their fight is over to continue their discussions.

Jean-Paul Beaubier/Northstar

Jeanne-Marie Beaubier/Aurora

Eugene Judd/Puck

Heather McNeil/Vindicator

Roger Bochs/Box

     Fantastic Four 
  • Cosmic Retcon: Thanks to The Pighead messing with the Multiverse's history in Another Side of the Glimpses, the Earth-199999 Fantastic Four debuted earlier than they were supposed to.

Reed Richards/Mister Fantastic

  • Absent-Minded Professor: Rather naïve and often needs to be reminded that no, people generally can't whip a futurist invention on a whim.
  • Rubber Man: He possesses the ability to convert the mass of his entire body into a highly malleable state at will.

Sue Storm/Invisible Woman

Johnny Storm/Human Torch

  • Attention Whore: Mostly preoccupied by his followers on Twitter, and the first use he wants to apply to his powers is becoming a celebrity.
  • Hot-Blooded: Like his powers, he's a very temperamental person and it doesn't take much for him to go berserk on things with his powers.
  • Legacy Character: Thanks to The Pighead's actions in Another Side of the Glimpses, Johnny Storm is now the second Human Torch thanks to Jim Hammond, the original Human Torch, being inserted into Earth-199999's history.
  • Jerkass Realization: Johnny has one when, after talking about his own plans to use his powers to improve his celebrity status, Peter Parker talks about his old plans to do the same thing before his actions indirectly led to the death of his uncle.
  • Phoneaholic Teenager: Ben outright read him the riot act when he tried to take his phone on their spaceflight. Johnny mainly uses it because he's addicted to Twitter.

Ben Grimm/The Thing

  • Catchphrase: As always, "It's CLOBBERIN' TIME!".
  • The Nth Doctor: His out-of-universe change in actor from Armie Hammer to John Cena is explained in The Nth Whatsit as The Pighead testing her ability to trigger regenerations on people, with him serving as her first test subject.
  • Rescue Romance: Potentially. His first genuine heroic act was to save a blind woman named Alicia from a panicked stampede — Alicia Masters being his canon love interest.

     Defenders 

Matt Murdock/Daredevil

  • Amoral Attorney: Averted, and he doesn't find this stereotype very funny after hearing every joke about his profession.
  • Evil Lawyer Joke: Daisy Johnson thought he was Inhuman because of his Super-Senses, but hey, a lawyer is some flavour of inhuman, right? Matt himself is rather annoyed because he heard all the jokes.
  • Godzilla Threshold: Decided to come back from the dead when half of New York City vanished into dust.
  • Obfuscating Disability: Invoked as Bullseye states that the Kingpin assumes Matt is faking being blind to cover his secret identity, but Bullseye knows better.
  • Never Heard That One Before: He knows all the lawyer jokes and doesn't care about learning the ones from another world.
  • Refuge in Audacity: Matt bluntly tells Foggy that he and the other Defenders are off to stop a war between two ninja clans with the aid of a group of mutated turtles trained by a mutated rat, and Foggy assumes he's just joking.
  • Reports of My Death Were Greatly Exaggerated: He was laying low until the Snap threw the multiverse into chaos. Jessica is completely pissed off by this and hits him when they meet again.
  • Sensory Overload: It's mentioned how Matt had to train himself not to be overwhelmed by the sounds and smells of New York City. He can be hit by this as Bullseye activates a sonic device which is far more damaging to Matt's hyper-aware ears.

Jessica Jones

  • The Alcoholic: Her past trauma and the sheer zaniness New York sometimes can be drive her to crawl into the bottle.
  • Birds of a Feather: She has a brief fling with Mick Rory, who's just as much of a drunk and a fighter.
  • Girl of the Week: To Mick Rory. He would very much like to see her again.
  • I Need a Freaking Drink: Befitting an alcoholic, her knee-jerk reaction to the Snap was to find the nearest bar. Then again after witnessing Groot return to life.
  • Screw This, I'm Out of Here!: Jessica tries to invoke this after seeing Groot return to life, but decides to keep fighting after Hydra destroys the bar she was about to visit.
  • Surrounded by Idiots: Not surprisingly, her reaction when she takes a trip with the Legends.
  • You Are Better Than You Think You Are: Goliath observes that, for all her talk that she isn't a hero, she reminds him of someone from his Earth (likely Elisa).

Luke Cage

  • Actor Allusion: Castle sarcastically asks him if he's a priest.
  • Slowly Slipping Into Evil: Danny warns him against this, telling him that when you start taking the wrong decisions for a good reason, it's easy to jump onto wrong reasons.
  • Stop Being Stereotypical: He's all for Black Panther and Black Lightning fighting the good fight, but questions the necessity of them having "Black" as part of their monikers? He also ponders about black superheroes being perceived as "angry black men".

Danny Rand/Iron Fist

Doreen Allene Green/Squirrel Girl

     Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. 

Nick Fury

  • Absence of Evidence: After the Snap is undone, Tony and Steve muse that the fact that they haven't heard anything about Fury yet is essentially proof that he's out there.
  • Dark Secret: Played for Laughs, but he ominously hinted he lost his eye in terrible circumstances instead of confessing an alien kitty actually scratched it off.

Phil Coulson

  • Broken Pedestal: Suggested that Coulson has a minor version of this when he's shown to be disappointed after learning the truth about how Fury lost his eye where everyone else just burst out laughing.
  • Cool Uncle: He can be seen as this to Will Payton.
  • Open Secret: Coulson learns that the Avengers have known that he was alive ever since the fall of S.H.I.E.L.D. when all their old secrets went 'public', and have just been waiting for him to tell them himself.
  • Unexplained Recovery: Referenced; when Oliver says that he thought Coulson was dying, Coulson just responds "I got better".

Maria Hill

Daisy Johnson/Skye/Quake

  • Entertainingly Wrong: She admits to Daredevil she thought he too was an Inhuman — after all, it wouldn't be the first time Terrigenesis induced a handicap while granting powers.

Melinda May

  • Action Girl: Manages to take on Amaunet Black and win.

Alphonso "Mac" MacKenzie

Elena "Yo-Yo" Rodriguez

  • Atrocious Alias: Johnson notes that Elena tried using "Slingshot" for a while but it didn't work, observing that all the good speedster names are taken.

James Buchanan "Bucky" Barnes

  • Artificial Limbs: His artificial arm.
  • Put on the Bus: Basically; he decides to remain with Coulson's team rather than the Avengers as he feels his history is too controversial for him to be publicly accepted as a member of Steve's team, particularly after his role in the deaths of Tony's parents.

Sharon Carter

  • Action Girl: Naturally, especially considering she's still working with S.H.I.E.L.D.
  • Broken Pedestal: A much milder example compared to how she is in Falcon and Winter Soldier, but Sharon does feel more than a bit hurt that Steve didn't help her much while she was on the run. To his credit, Steve is a lot more considerate of her here.

     The Inhumans 

Blackagar Boltagon/Black Bolt

  • Deus Exit Machina: The most powerful Inhuman in the Royal Family, finds himself Dusted, leaving his subjects and family in disarray.
  • Telepathy: Since he can't talk, he uses telepathy to communicate with others.

Medusalith Amaquelin-Boltagon/Medusa

  • Most Common Superpower: She fills out her swimsuit pretty nicely.
  • You Are in Command Now: With Black Bolt dusted, she's forced to lead the Inhumans while the Inhumans try to deal with the effects of the Dusting and Maximus's return with a fleet of Kree ships.

Crystalia Amaquelin/Crystal

  • Deadpan Snarker: She has her moments.
    Billy Roberts: Is this how you normally treat guests?
    Crystal: Normally no, but to be fair, we don't often get visitors.
  • Playing with Fire: She can manipulate the four classical Greek elements, including fire.
  • Dishing Out Dirt: She can manipulate earth and rocks.

Karnak Mander-Azur

  • Badass in Distress: Alongside Black Bolt, Auran and Ozel, he's one of the Inhumans who are 'dusted'.

Triton Mander-Azur

Gorgon Petragon

Lockjaw

Ozel Ozlazur/The Flash

  • Adaptational Badass: Her comic counterpart was a One-Shot Character. The Infinity Crisis MCU version is not only established to be a speedster, she's the Flash of Earth-199999.
  • Age Lift: In Infinity Crisis: The Inhumans, she's characterized as being in her late teens. Per Wordof God, she's around 19-21 years old in the story.
  • Ascended Extra: She was literally a One-Shot Character in the comics whose powers were never revealed (if she had any), but here she's friends with Louise Fisher and her power is super speed.
  • The Atoner: She was one of the Attilanian Inhumans who helped Maximus overthrow Black Bolt. She regrets it, as she fell for his promises for freedom for her people.
  • Hair Colors: Ozel has green hair, which is hardly unusual for an Inhuman. As the Flash, her costume includes a blonde wig.
  • Irony: Ozel wanted the freedom to decide her destiny. She admits in Infinity Crisis: The Inhumans that now that she has it, she has no idea what she wants to do with her life.
  • Named by the Adaptation: Infinity Crisis: The Inhumans gives her the full name Ozel Ozlazur.
  • One-Shot Character: Her comic counterpart only made one appearance: Marvel Fanfare #14 (May 1984).
  • Super-Speed: She's an Inhuman speedster, a reference to her interaction with Quicksilver in her only comic appearance. In Infinity Crisis Aftermath: The Brave and the Bold, set after the events of Infinity Crisis: The Inhumans, she's become her Earth's Flash. A Flashy Debut shows her fighting crime for the very first time as the Flash.

     Thunderbolts 

General

  • Anti-Hero Team: Zemo is a terrorist. Sofen, Jenkins and Ebersol are crooks. Ava is a fugitive, and Melissa is a former diva. Tom Foster (and later John Walker and Lemar Hoskins) are the only ones without a doubtful past (and Walker has his issues although his aren't really his own fault).
  • Cosmic Retcon: Thanks to The Pighead, they have debuted earlier than they were supposed to, and with a different roster that is closer to their original comic series from the late 1990s. Chapter 9 of Another Side of the Glimpses shows that she has caught up to that and has sent her own villains for them to fight.
  • Unwitting Pawn: They have no idea they're being used by Norman Osborn as his own personal squad rather than working for the government.

Thaddeus Ross

Helmut Zemo/Citizen V

  • Berserk Button: Don't bring up his family, as he makes it very clear to Sofen.
  • Hidden Depths: According to Songbird, Zemo is fond of Motown.
  • Secretly Wealthy: Turns out he really is the 14th Baron Zemo, and as such he's pretty rich.
  • Pet the Dog: It's implied in Battlestars In Their Eyes that Zemo wants to secure Ghost and Songbird's loyalty to him to not only stymie Sofen, but also because he wants to protect them from her.
  • Teeth-Clenched Teamwork: He and Karla definitely don't like each other. Melissa thinks it's nothing compared to the celebrity feuds she has seen. Battlestars In Their Eyes reveals that he and Sofen are basically at war with each other over control of the Thunderbolts.

Karla Sofen/Meteorite

  • The Cameo: She doesn't get as much focus as the other Thunderbolts in Battlestars In Their Eyes.
  • Control Freak: She's Meteorite, so of course she always needs to be in control. Battlestars In Their Eyes shows that her obsession with control extends far beyond the Thunderbolts...
  • Freudian Excuse: Invoked as she claims her selfish attitude is because her parents wasted their lives working hard for others and is determined to never put anyone's needs before herself. Ross smirks that "it's no surprise a shrink has a Freudian excuse."
  • It's Probably Nothing: Can't help but think Ross is acting more overbearing than how she has seen him on TV, but dismisses it as people simply acting different when away from cameras. She doesn't know Ross is being impersonated by Norman Osborn.
  • Psycho Psychologist: Even Ross lampshades that she's a criminal psychologist in both senses of the word.

Ava Starr/Ghost

  • Intangible Man: Courtesy of her quantum field.
  • Power Incontinence: Ross recruited her for the Thunderbolts with the promise to help her gain control over her intangibility.

Tom Foster/Goliath

  • Afro Asskicker: Has an afro and he's one powerful size shifter.
  • Composite Character: Takes the place of Erik Josten/Atlas as the team's size shifter.
  • Obfuscating Stupidity: Tom is naturally very intelligent, but he is encouraged to present himself as dumb muscle so that the team's enemies will underestimate him. Battlestars In Their Eyes shows that he finds doing this insulting, despite his understanding the reasoning.

Paul Norbert Ebersol/Techno

  • Gadgeteer Genius: He created the MACH-1 armor, the carapace that allows Songbird to create her sound constructs and even a stealth plane he insists on calling the T-Wing.
  • Insufferable Genius: He's unsurprisingly proud of his skill with gadgets.
  • Running Gag: Zemo keeps making him pay for the team's food runs, despite being wealthy himself. Zemo does this simply because he doesn't like Ebersol.

Abe Jenkins/MACH-1

  • I Just Want to Be Special: Being ignored most of his life made him desire to create an armor that allowed him to commit crimes. Ross's offer gave him the chance to become a hero. Battlestars In Their Eyes establishes that this allows him to empathize with Songbird.
  • Ship Tease: Like in the comics, he and Melissa are attracted to each other. In Battlestars In Their Eyes, Ebersol tries to discourage Abe from acting on it as he thinks Songbird would look at him as unworthy of her due to her being a former celebrity.

Melissa Gold/Songbird

  • Attention Whore: She wanted attention, so she became a pop star. Her decision to join the Thunderbolts is mainly to keep being in the spotlight.
  • Dark and Troubled Past: Her mother walked out on her when she was eight, her father turned to drinking (Melissa claims he never physically abused her) and she ran away as a teenager. She realizes that like her father, she is also an addict, only fame is her drug of choice.
  • The Diva: She was a one-time major pop star until a combination of scandals and bad behavior wrecked her career.
  • Mythology Gag: Her pop star stage name was "Mimi" after "Screaming Mimi," her criminal alter ego in the comics.
    • Battlestars In Their Eyes establishes that early in her singing career, Melissa was called "Screaming Mimi" because she had a loud and powerful singing voice.
  • Ship Tease: Much like in the comics, there is an attraction between Mel and Abe.
  • Those Two Guys: Well, those two women. She and Ghost are portrayed as this in Battlestars in Their Eyes.

Bill Foster

  • Cool Uncle: For his nephew Tom. Battlestars In Their Eyes reveals he is also this to Ava.

John Walker/U.S. Agent

  • Country Fried Private: Walker is a Georgia boy, and Melissa teases him for likely Southern rock.
  • Psycho Serum: The Super-Soldier Serum copy he was injected with has mood swings and increased volatility as side effects. History Lesson-199999 revealed that the Super-Soldier Serum variant that empowered Walker was derived from a variant developed and used by William Burnside, which itself was derived from a version created by the Nazis that empowered Master Man.

Lemar Hoskins/Battlestar

  • Adaptational Badass: Unlike the standard costume of the comics or the special uniform of his "canon" MCU counterpart, Hoskins' Battlestar suit is a powered armor like Iron Man's.
  • Black Best Friend: He is this to John Walker. John is thrilled to learn he's joining the Thunderbolts, and the two served together in Afghanistan.
  • Expy: Ebersol mockingly refers to Hoskins as a "wannabe Iron Man" because of his armor.
  • Nice Guy: Ava, Abe, and Melissa seem to think he is one. Sofen believes Hoskins will be difficult to manipulate because unlike many of her teammates, he seemingly has no major psychological weaknesses she can exploit.

     Masters of Evil 

Thanos

  • Big Bad: Of Infinity Crisis.
  • Brought Down to Badass: Invoked when Loki explains that Thanos' use of the Gauntlet has damaged it so that he can't use the Stones again, although he retains enough residual power from the Stones that he's now physically powerful enough to take on a hundred Asgardians if he wanted. During the final battle, Thanos proves able to stand up to the combined efforts of Iron Man, War Machine, Captain Marvel, Supergirl, and Superman all at once even after losing the Gauntlet.
  • Evil Cannot Comprehend Good: As part of his "The Reason You Suck" Speech, Superman notes that Thanos can't contemplate the idea that anyone would try and solve the problems he acknowledged in the universe without resorting to more extreme measures.
  • Fate Worse than Death: When faced with the assembled forces of the Avengers, Team Arrow, Team Flash, the Defenders, the Legends and the Justice League, Thanos is prepared to be killed, but instead the heroes decide to do something worse to him, with Superman sentencing Thanos to the Phantom Zone.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: Thanos styles himself as one, though as the heroes point out, he could've gone about his "save the universe" goal without killing off half of the population.

Johann Schmidt/Red Skull

  • Asshole Victim: No one has much sympathy for him being stuck on Vormir and guarding the Soul Stone all by his lonesome for the last seventy-plus years.
  • Badass Decay: Invoked by him on how HYDRA has gone from an army ready to conquer the world to the equivalent of an American corporation holding board meetings.
    Red Skull: I want...for you fools...to stop destroying my dream!
  • Impaled with Extreme Prejudice: The Red Skull is impaled on an American flagpole after receiving a major beating from Captain America, Phil Coulson and Black Lightning.
  • Karmic Death: A Nazi fanatic meets his end by the hands of a pair of genuine American patriots and a black man. Getting impaled on an American flagpole is just the cherry on top.
  • Politically Incorrect Villain: Calling Black Lightning a "filthy animal" isn't going to give him points on the tolerance front.
  • Sanity Slippage: Characters observe that Schmidt has gone insane after being trapped on Voromir for seventy years, but Steve and Stark note that it would have been a very short trip.

Sinthea Schmidt/Sin

  • Alliterative Name: Sinthea Schmidt, or SS. Fitting, no?
  • Dark Action Girl: The villainous daughter of a Nazi supervillain who's more than willing to get her hands dirty.
  • Distinction Without a Difference: Muses to herself that she appreciates the Nazis' views on control and power without being an explicit follower herself, but even those unaware of her full history dismiss her as another Nazi.
  • Enfant Terrible: Sinthea Schmidt, granddaughter of the Red Skull, made her first kill when she was seven years old.
  • Even Evil Has Loved Ones: Subverted; while Sin admires her grandfather and Johann himself is impressed with her work, neither of them expresses actual affection for each other.
  • Related Differently in the Adaptation: In the comics, Sin is Skull's daughter, while this story makes her his granddaughter instead.

Hela

  • Hoist by His Own Petard: Hela is disintegrated by Thor and Jane using Stormbreaker and Mjolnir to hit her with lightning simultaneously.
  • Ignorant of Their Own Ignorance: Hela has Thanos recreate Mjolnir for her, only to realize after she summons it that she can't actually use it due to the "only the worthy may wield" enchantment.

Malekith

  • Off with His Head!: Is decapitated by Wonder Woman and simultaneously cut in half by Sif.

Mephisto

  • The Chessmaster: He helps Thanos set up The Masters just so he can see them fall.
  • Eviler than Thou: Lucifer observes that Mephisto is the entity responsible for all the really negative things he's meant to have done.
  • O.O.C. Is Serious Business: As Lucifer tells Chloe "the one honest thing about Mephisto is that he's always lying." Thus, the fact Lucifer believes Mephisto is telling the truth about things like the Blackest Night "should scare my domain out of you."
  • Pragmatic Villain: He pushed the Masters towards failure because he really wanted his chance to corrupt more souls, but he couldn't do that with the ones trapped within the Soul Stone.

     Brotherhood of Mutants 

Max Eisenhardt/Erik Lensherr/Magneto

  • Adaptational Name Change: History Lesson-199999 states his birth name is Max Eisenhardt, like in the miniseries X-Men: Magneto Testament.
  • Magnetism Manipulation: He wrote the freaking book about it.
  • Parents Know Their Children: In Gamma Relations, Magneto feels there's something about the Maximoff twins but is unable to define what; by Generation Gaps, he at least suspects that they are his children.
    • History Lesson-199999 confirms that Magneto is Wanda and Pietro's biological father.
  • Superior Species: Holds that mutants are the natural next step of evolution and humans are inferior.
    Magneto: Why should we seek equal rights? You are not our equals.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: Erik's defense of mutants is a laudable enterprise. His means to do this, less so.

Raven Darkholme/Mystique

John Allerdyce/Pyro

     Oscorp 

Nathaniel Essex/Mister Sinister

Samuel Sterns/The Leader

  • Sanity Slippage: Bruce explicitly states that Sterns has gone insane after his transformation into his new state.

Otto Octavius/Doctor Octopus

  • Arch-Enemy: Otto is soon to become one to, who else, Spider-Man.
  • Broken Pedestal: Downplayed. While Peter Parker did admire Otto when he was younger, he only expresses mild disappointment when he finds out Otto's turn to villainy and otherwise doesn't seem too bothered by it.

Norman Osborn

  • Greater-Scope Villain: Is the actual mastermind behind Gamma Relations and the Thunderbolts.
  • Magnificent Bastard: Brilliantly impersonated Ross to form the Thunderbolts and make them think they're working for the American government, so he'll have his own personal team to take on the Avengers.
  • Not Me This Time: During a phone call, he offhandedly admits that he wasn't behind the creation of the Serpent Society.
  • Rogues' Gallery Transplant: A rather interesting example. He's well known as the Green Goblin, the nemesis of Spider-Man in the comics but much like in Secret Invasion onward he's being depicted as an enemy of the Marvel Universe as a whole. However, in his first scene he makes it clear that out of all of the Avengers, the one he has the most interest in is Spider-Man.

Quentin Beck/Mysterio

  • Dude, Where's My Respect?: As in the movies, he's driven by how he was ignored by Tony Stark for his creations.
  • Engineered Heroics: He was responsible for the big splash that the Thunderbolts' public introduction was, giving them the "Elements of Doom" to fight.
  • Fishbowl Helmet: Obviously for him.
  • Master of Illusion: Crafted the "Elements of Doom" which even the Thunderbolts didn't realize were fake.
  • Named by the Adaptation: In Far From Home it was actually fairly ambiguous if "Quentin Beck" was Mysterio's real name or another one of his lies. In Justice Like Lightning, the narration explicitly identifies him as Quentin Beck.

Adrian Toomes/Vulture

     The Hand 

Tomi Shishido/The Gorgon

  • Arc Villain: For the first half of In Hand in Foot.
  • Death Is Cheap: It is rumoured that he has been dead before, to the extent that his permanent demise is doubted even when he's been turned to stone and is lying in pieces on the floor.
  • Handicapped Badass: He demonstrates a lethal skill at hand-to-hand combat even while blindfolded.
  • Hoist by His Own Petard: He dies when Squirrel Girl accidentally-on-purpose uses Shredder's helmet to reflect his own vision back on himself.
  • Noble Demon: May be the reason why he bothers engaging in hand-to-hand combat when he could end any fight in a moment just by taking his glasses off.
  • Taken for Granite: Has the ability to turn people to stone with a glare; uses glasses or a blindfold to avoid simply turning everyone he looks at into statues.
  • Worthy Opponent: He's actually impressed the Shredder is skilled enough to match him in swordsmanship.

Zheng Zu/Fu Manchu

  • Evil Old Folks: Elderly yet leads the Hand and can disappear without anyone noticing.
  • Foreshadowing: A meta example: The Hypothetical Casting for him is Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, which fits when he's revealed as Shang Tsung
  • I Have Many Names: Tells Fisk he's had several names throughout his life, but the most famous one...is Fu Manchu.
  • Pragmatic Villainy: Agrees on a ceasefire with Fisk in order to deal with the Shredder before resuming their conflict; they won't work together, but their forces won't fight each other either. He also leaves the Foot to be dealt with by the heroes, likely intending to send in his own forces only if the Foot win, at which point his remaining enemies will be weakened.
  • The Reveal: He's really Shang Tsung who created the Hand as part of a longer scheme for Shao Khan.

     Eternals 

Sersi

Ikaris

Ajak

Phastos

Makkari

Druig

Thena

Gilgamesh

Kingo

  • Clark Kenting: When Pietro, Wanda and Vision go to collect him, they observe that him going undetected while posing as four generations of an acting family who just happen to look alike is similar to how the Supers can hide their identities with nothing but a pair of glasses.

Sprite

Pixie

  • Ascended Extra: Pixie is an obscure Eternal, first appearing in Marvel: The Lost Generation #12 (March 2000)
  • Sole Survivor: She appears to be the only member of the First Line to survive Selene's massacre, unaware that the Yankee Clipper has returned. She is also the only person on Earth who remembers they existed in the first place.

     Olympians 
The Greek Gods and long-time associates of the Asgardians, who have been out of contact with the surviving Asgardians for some time.

Hercules

  • No-Sell: When Jane attempts to attack him with lightning, Hercules observes that after confrontations with his father there's very little any form of electricity can do to him.
  • O.O.C. Is Serious Business: Thor notes that Ares and Hercules have a strained relationship, so the fact that the two are working together is a sign that things on Olympus are particularly complicated.

Zeus

Hermes

  • Always Someone Better: Hermes is the first entity Pietro has faced that is explicitly faster than he is.

Artemis

Aphrodite

Ares

Athena

Nyx

  • Epic Fail: She's the only member of the Greco-Roman pantheon to fail to capture an Eternal, thanks to the intervention of Pele from the Hawaiian pantheon.

     Skrulls 

General

  • Kill and Replace: It is noted that the Skrulls don't do this most of the time for more pragmatic reasons, as they can draw on the memories of living subjects to ensure they don't make mistakes.
    • The Last Archer delves further into this, revealing that the machines the Skrulls use to read the memories of people they replace require the people they replace to be alive, as a dead brain can't be "hacked" by the machines.
  • No-Sell: Groin Attacks don't work on them, as Captain Carter found out.
  • We Are Everywhere: According to Talos, a common trick of a captured Skrull scout was to invoke this and make the populace believe there were scores of Skrull agents about when, in reality, there were none. The Skrulls would then just sit back and watch the planet tear itself apart in paranoia of "enemies" and leave it weakened for a full-on invasion. However, Talos worries that Paibok's claims of Skrulls in other realities is not a bluff.

Talos

  • Deadpan Snarker: Has this trait.
    Talos: In case it's escaped your notice, I have a unique skill set that allows me access to areas that would normally be difficult to get into.
  • Defends Against Their Own Kind: Talos basically leads the Skrull faction that is attempting to find a world where they can live in peace, in opposition to the faction that want to continue their old ways of conquest.

Lyja

  • Bed Trick: Since she claimed to be Felicity when she married Oliver, she's technically guilty of rape by fraud. He's completely disgusted after learning the truth.
  • Easily Forgiven: Subverted: Although both are affected by Lyja sacrificing herself, neither Oliver nor Felicity can truly forgive her for what she did to both of them.
  • In Love with the Mark: Under Lucifer's "deepest desire" trick, she confesses she really did fall in love with Oliver.
  • In Spite of a Nail: As in Earth-616, she infiltrated the heroes by seducing one of them, in this case posing as Felicity Smoak to seduce Oliver.
  • It Meant Something to Me: She insists that "it wasn't all a lie" right after Taking the Bullet for Oliver.
  • Taking the Bullet: She throws herself between her superior and the man she loves, in spite of the latter hating her for deceiving him.

     Code: Blue 

General

  • Badass Normal: They're a type of SWAT team who use special training and advanced weaponry to help deal with superhuman criminals.
  • Friend on the Force: The two Code:Blue members introduced in Family Time, Rassitano and Ruiz, are rather friendly with Spider-Man.

Julius "Mad Dog" Rassitano

  • Shout-Out: His hairstyle is described as like the hairstyle Mel Gibson had in the first three Lethal Weapon movies.

Margarita "Rigger" Ruiz

    Hamato Clan 

Leonardo

Donatello

Raphael

Michelangelo

Hamato Yoshi/Lou Jitsu/Splinter

April O'Neil

     Other Superheroes 

Valkyrie

  • Amazon Chaser: Literally - she's very interested to hear about Paradise Island, which is home to an entire nation of beautiful, badass warrior chicks.
  • A Threesome Is Hot: States plainly she'd be down for a threesome with Batman and Wonder Woman.

Sif

  • Action Girl: The quintessential one.
  • Boxing Lessons for Superman: Trains Jane on how to fight without just relying on her hammer, and later offers similar lessons to Shazam and his 'siblings'.
  • Drill Sergeant Nasty: Apparently, she has shades of this, and drove the whole Shazam family to beg for mercy when they asked her for training tips.
  • I Thought Everyone Could Do That: Like Thor, she has a bad habit of assuming things like the existence of Atlantis and the appearance of the MCU Martians are "common knowledge" for Earth and never brings them up.
  • Shipping Torpedo: Assures Jane that any feelings she had for Thor are long gone and that he loves Jane in a way he never felt for Sif so has no problem with the two being together.

Frank Castle/The Punisher

  • Heartbroken Badass: He just cannot move on from his family's murders.
  • I Work Alone: Played for Laughs, since he tells this right after being introduced to four talking turtles and a squirrel girl — that's just too weird for poor Frank.
  • Not So Above It All: Despite himself, he not only finds himself listening to Splinter's advice (even if he probably won't follow it), but is also impressed by Goliath's tactical expertise.
  • One-Man Army: He's a ruthlessly efficient soldier who shoots to kill.
  • Pre Ass Kicking One Liner: Faced with the Triceratron invasion, Frank delivers what Michaelangelo considers a badass one-liner:
    "Time to make these things extinct all over again."

Dr. Stephen Strange

The Sorcerer Supreme.
  • Arbitrary Skepticism: Despite being one of the most powerful magic users on his Earth, Dr. Strange refuses to acknowledge his abilities as anything other than "an advanced science". By the time of Powers and Marvels, he has shed this way of thinking and fully embraces the idea of magic.
  • The Anticipator: When Ant-Man, the Wasp, and the Atom make their way into the Soul Stone, Strange notes that he expected someone there a day ago.
  • Big Damn Heroes: Particularly relevant in Powers and Marvels, when he summons a portal to rescue the Rangers just after they have had their Power Coins stolen.
  • Curb-Stomp Battle: Once Strange has had an hour to study his books, he is able to cast a spell that permanently banishes any attempt from Zedd and Rita to return to this world.
  • Refusal of the Call: When he was offered membership into the Avengers, apparently he made a face that wordlessly asked "Are you a moron?" before promptly vanishing.

Roberto "Robbie" Reyes

  • Big Brother Instinct: Right after escaping Hell, he immediately wants to phone home to reassure his younger brother Gabe that he's alright.
  • The Bus Came Back: Like in canon, he was stuck in Hell, but is now able to leave and operate on Earth once again.
  • Curb-Stomp Battle: Due to Michael Langdon losing access to his powers on Earth-199999, Robbie easily wipes the floor with him.

Isaiah Bradley

During Rogers' time in the ice, he was a subject of experimentation by the American government to create more super-soldiers. He would end up a victim of HYDRA experimentation after his imprisonment.
  • Earn Your Happy Ending: With some help from Steve and the rest of Team Cap, he's given a long-overdue pardon by the US government and acknowledgment of his story with an exhibition in the Smithsonian. History Lesson-199999 adds on that Bradley will be regarded as an official holder of the Captain America mantle as he wore a makeshift costume and shield in Korea.
  • Jade-Colored Glasses: He understandably doesn't have a high opinion of the USA due to his own experiences and its history and treatment of black people.
  • When He Smiles: Sam notes that it's a good sight to see Isaiah let go of his old bitterness.

Cassie Lang/Stinger

The daughter of Scott Lang.
  • Daddy's Girl: She adores her dad and he adores her back.
  • Hand Blast: Quantum particles also allow her to shoot energy blasts like Wasp does.
  • Plot-Relevant Age-Up: Goes from 11 to 17 after being trapped in the Quantumverse.
  • Sizeshifter: Exposure to Quantum particles now allow her to shrink and grow at will without a suit.
  • Took a Level in Badass: From a normal girl to having powers that don't need a special suit.

Will Payton/Starman

  • Adaptation Expansion: His debut establishes that a version of the events of the 1984 film Starman occurred on Earth-199999, and that Will was the child that Jenny Hayden and the titular "Starman" conceived during those events.
  • Adaptational Heroism: In the comics, Will's father was a drifter who abandoned his family. Here, he's Will's stepfather, a forest ranger, and presumably a caring husband and father.
  • Adaptational Name Change: In the comics, Will's father was named Raymond Derring. Here, it's Raymond Payton, and he's Will's stepfather.
  • Ascended Extra: Payton is not one of the most famous incarnations of Starman.
  • Canon Immigrant: Payton is originally a DC character.
  • Cosmic Retcon: He exists on Earth-199999 solely because of The Pighead's actions in Another Side of the Glimpses.
  • Flying Brick: Payton has super-strength, super-durability, and can fly.
  • Half-Human Hybrid: Payton is half-human, half-alien. It's the reason he has superhuman powers.
  • Happily Adopted: Has a stepfather and half-sister named Jayne, and he had a happy childhood.

Yelena Belova

  • Hero of Another Story: She is introduced on Earth-38 after having met the Thirteenth Doctor on her Earth of origin during another mission.

Kate Bishop

  • Ascended Fangirl: Started off as a fan of superheroes before applying to become one herself.
  • Just a Kid: The Avengers are initially uncomfortable with accepting her as a member due to her age, regardless of her skills. They reach an agreement where Kate can receive training to further hone her skills before she can officially take part in any battles.

Kamala Khan

  • Ascended Fangirl: Much like with Kate Bishop, she was a fan of superheroes before becoming caught up in a crisis herself.
  • Half-Human Hybrid: Kamala's powers come from her being an Inhuman and a 4th generation member of the Clan Destine.
  • Power Incontinence: According to Rory and Pandora Destine in A Flashy Debut, when Kamala appeared to them after she was un-Dusted, her powers manifested and went out of control. Kamala adds the experience was extremely painful, and if it weren't for the Clan Destine helping her get control of them, she likely would have died.
  • Related in the Adaptation: In the comics, Kamala is not related to the Clan Destine. A Flashy Debut establishes her to be a 4th generation member of the Clan via her maternal line.
  • Younger Than They Look: In A Flashy Debut and Celestial Navigation, Kamala appears to be a 16-year-old teenager, even though Infinity Crisis was set in 2018, and History Lesson-199999 established that Kamala was born in 2009, which means that at the time of Infinity Crisis, she should be nine years old. It's explained in A Flashy Debut that thanks to Kamala's power to shapeshift, she can assume the appearance of a teenager and make herself look like her "proper" age when she is not active as a superhero.

Monica Rambeau

The daughter of Carol Danvers' old friend Maria.

Dane Whitman

Patrick Carney/Yankee Clipper

  • Ascended Extra: Like Pixie, the Yankee Clipper is an obscure character, first appearing in Marvel: The Lost Generation #4 (November 2000).
  • Cosmic Retcon: Temporal Tete-a-Tete reveals that he and the rest of the First Line have been inserted into Earth-199999's history thanks to The Pighead' actions in Another Side of the Glimpses.
  • Sole Survivor: He likely believes he's the only member of the First Line left, not knowing that Pixie is still alive.

Jim Hammond/Human Torch I

  • Cosmic Retcon: Thanks to the actions of The Pighead in Another Side of the Glimpses, he's been inserted into Earth-199999's history as part of the Invaders alongside Captain America and Namor.
  • The Ghost: He is first mentioned in Temporal Tete-a-Tete and a couple other stories. Most notably, Namor mocks Johnny Storm in Celestial Navigation by comparing him to Jim. He makes his first full appearance in Fire vs. Water, which showcased his battle with Namor the Sub-Mariner in 1940.
  • Playing with Fire: Like his more famous successor, he can fly and manipulate fire.

K'ulk'ukan/Namor McKenzie/Namor the Sub-Mariner

  • Cosmic Retcon: Thanks to the actions of The Pighead in Another Side of the Glimpses, he's been inserted into Earth-199999's history as part of the Invaders alongside Captain America and the first Human Torch.
  • Early-Bird Cameo: History Lesson-199999 establishes that like in the comics, he fought Jim Hammond in New York City in 1940. This fight would be shown fully in Fire vs. Water.

Buford Hollis/Razorback

  • Animal Themed Super Being: As in the comics, he wears a large brown hood patterned after the head of a warthog.
  • The Big Guy: He's described as being (just short of) seven feet tall and very, very muscular.
  • Shock and Awe: The mane on his warthog hood can shoot lightning at his opponents.

Ulysses Solomon "US" Archer

  • Car Fu: With Beast along for the ride, he hits the super powered bear that the Avengers and Razorback were battling with his big rig, US-1. A fitting introduction to Marvel Comics' one and only superhero trucker.
    Ulysses: Did we get it?!

Union Jack/Joseph Chapman

  • Legacy Character: History Lesson-199999 and Local Heroes establish that like in the comics, Joey Chapman was not the first Union Jack.

Jacqueline Falsworth/Spitfire

  • Adaptational Species Change: Played with. Like in the comics, Spitfire is shown to be partially vampiric.
  • Kid Hero: She was 19 when she joined the Invaders back in the 1940s.
  • Knight in Sour Armor: Local Heroes shows that she is rather cynical about the current state of Great Britain.
  • Older Than They Look: She was an active heroine back in the 1940s and has seemingly barely aged since then. Her being partially vampiric may have something to do with it.

Artour of Galador/Rom the Spaceknight

  • Chrome Champion: His armor is silver-colored.
  • Cyborg: Like in the comics, he is a cyborg. Per Word of God, Rom's armor is removable as all his cybernetics are inside his body.

Catalina Secord-Salazar/The Rocketeer

  • Heroic Lineage: She's a descendant of Clifford "Cliff" Secord, the original Rocketeer.
  • Legacy Character: Catalina is active as one of Los Angeles's local superheroes as the Rocketeer.

Yuichi Usagi

     Other Supervillains 

The Mandarin

  • An Arm and a Leg: The Mandarin loses his hands when Iron Man seals his rings in a coolant Stark created to contain laboratory experiments that go wrong, resulting in him burning his own hands off when he tries to burn the coolant off and the substance traps the energy on his hands.
  • Arch-Enemy: He sees himself as Iron-Man's. Tony doesn't return the feeling.
  • Arc Villain: Shares this role with Lord Zedd in Powers and Marvel.
  • Noble Demon: Played with. He uses his Mento-Intensifer to control Kim's mind and threatens to have her kill herself unless the Rangers hand over their coins. Once they do, he lives up to his word and lets Kim go. Zedd openly notes how he "could never understand honorable evil." However, he seems to have little issue with Zedd and Rita prepared to destroy the helpless Rangers after he's finished with them.
  • Nostalgia Filter: Shows this in his battle as he claims to be out to "return" Earth to a "pure" time before technology rose and "ruined" things.
    Mandarian: The paradise before your kind came around!
    Iron Man: Oh, yeah. Folks dying from easily treatable diseases. Mass starvation and droughts. Inability to communicate with other nations. Far too easy for a local warlord to crown himself a king and tyrant, it was the pips!
  • Politically Incorrect Villain: He explicitly targets Kimberly with his mind-control device, musing that she's the obvious choice as a woman and an Occidental.
  • Underestimating Badassery: The Power Rangers figure one lone man will be no trouble compared to the monsters they've faced, and so don't go all-out when fighting the Mandarin. Between his rings and martial arts skills, the villain is easily able to manhandle the team and force them to surrender before they have time to adjust their strategy.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: How he presents himself as he's bound and determined to "restore" China to greatness, no matter that it means undoing all of the modern world in the process.

Herbert Edgar Wyndham/High Evolutionary

Victor Von Doom/Doctor Doom

  • At Least I Admit It: His main different with Magneto is Doom shamelessly and openly confessing he wants power because he thinks he was born to rule the world.
  • Card-Carrying Villain: He wants to become the world's prime ruler, he knows he wants it for the power and he refuses to hide it.
  • Noodle Incident: It is stated he has begun his attacks against the Fantastic Four though we don't see them. Carol and Natasha's familiarity with him in Distant Cousins suggest that he also attacked the Avengers.
  • "Not So Different" Remark: He says he and Magneto are much alike in being persecuted in their youth and each feeling the world is best served when they're in charge.
  • Sore Loser: He doesn't enjoy being ribbed about the Fantastic Four managing to foil his terrorist attack.
  • Third-Person Person: He wouldn't be Doctor Doom without this.

Ultron

Harvey Rupert Elder/Mole Man

Wilson Fisk/Kingpin

  • Greater-Scope Villain: He unleashed Bullseye on Daredevil's trail, leading the other villain to commit a bloodbath in the Daily Bulletin building.
  • I Was Beaten by a Girl: Fisk insists Daredevil is only pretending to be handicapped, because he cannot have been beaten by a blind wimp!
  • Morality Pet: It is noted that Vanessa was this to him, but she died in the Snap when her helicopter pilot was one of the victims, and now Fisk no longer cares about trying to put on a publically respectable appearance.
  • Shoot the Messenger: Discussed but defied; despite his more ruthless reputation, when someone brings him bad news, Fisk lets the man confirm that he's just the messenger and asks to talk to the person who made the decisions he's angry about instead.

Benjamin "Dex" Pointdexter/Bullseye

  • Axe-Crazy: The reason why he murdered almost everyone in the building in various gruesome ways? He got bored waiting for Matt to walk into his ambush.
  • Berserk Button: Don't call him by his former name. And do not. Make him. Miss!
  • Combat Pragmatism: He decides to ambush Matt in his civilian identity and force him into Sensory Overload to easily kill him.
  • Genius Bruiser: Psychopathic he may be, Bullseye still managed to peg Daredevil as blind attorney Matt Murdock and extrapolate his Logical Weakness.
  • Improbable Aiming Skills: His trademark gimmick.
  • Mythology Gag: Introduces himself much like in Kevin Smith's "Guardian Devil" arc by flipping a paper clip to smash through a wine glass, bounce off a chair cushion and land right between the pages of A Catcher In the Rye.
  • That Man Is Dead: Tells Fisk that "Benjamin Poindexter died on the operating table" and to only call him Bullseye.

Morgan Le Fey

  • Arc Villain: In Of Kryptonians and Queens.
  • The Bad Guy Wins: Sort of. Her goal is to return to Earth-199999 which she is able to accomplish, only to land in the presence of Victor Von Doom.
  • It's All About Me: Is so certain of her 'destiny' that she tries to draw Excalibur and ends up with a hand that looks like it's been dunked in acid.
  • Literal Split Personality: Kara is able to use black kryptonite to separate Lena and Morgana into different people, with Lena basically the manifestation of Morgana's goodness.
  • Love Is a Weakness: She firmly believes power is the only thing worth living for.
  • Moral Event Horizon: In-Universe. Merlin already knew she was a hopeless case, but seeing her about to kill a helpless Lena just because she wanted to destroy the last remnants of her goodness truly exhausted his reserves of patience.
  • Motive Decay: Where her original motive was to protect other magic uses, she now just wants revenge on Merlin.
  • The Nth Doctor: Arguable; her change in appearance from Katie McGrath to Elizabeth Hurley is explained as her wanting to distance herself from Lena after the two were separated.
  • Used to Be a Sweet Kid: Merlin mourns the genuinely good and compassionate woman she once was, before her hunger for power and bitterness warped her into a monster.

Amora the Enchantress

  • Alpha Bitch: Jane outright states she met cheerleaders less bratty and obnoxious than Amora.
  • Big Bad Wannabe: In her mind, she's a brilliant schemer who's excellent at manipulating others to gain ultimate power. To everyone else, she's an obnoxious, conceited brat who's nowhere near as clever as she thinks she is.
    • Thor openly states that Loki laughed his head off at Amora's pathetic attempts at plotting.
  • Disappointed by the Motive: Jane and Circe both muse that for all her talk, Amora's "grand scheme" of making everyone on Earth fall in love with her was pretty petty.
  • Dumb Blonde: Basically, she's that but fancying herself a world ruler. Needless to say, she's an utter disaster.
  • Evil Is Petty: Thor and Sif explicitly muse that Amora is not so much evil as really annoying.
  • Ignorant of Their Own Ignorance: Has no idea of Asgard's fall until Thor tells her there's nothing for her to rule.
  • Small Name, Big Ego: In spades.
    Amora: I was born to be a queen!
    Circe: You were born a lowly pawn and think you invented the game of chess.
  • Offscreen Moment of Awesome: By the time she returns in Road Trip: Storybrooke she has become Mayor of Storybrooke, using a fragment of the power source of the Purple Ray to subtly enhance her powers to compel the town to vote for her without outright "brainwashing" anyone.
  • Villains Want Mercy: She's not afraid of begging for her life when it looks like she will be killed by the infuriated heroes. Needless to say, Thor is incredulous she would even think it would work, after all the crap she pulled.

Maximus

  • Composite Character: With the Power Prism and the outfit he wears after gaining it, he's essentially become a version of Dr. Spectrum.

Att-Lah

  • Even Evil Has Loved Ones: His main concern is seeking out whoever caused the dusting/blip, since it took half of his crew, who he valued greatly.
  • Meaningful Name: His name is derived from Attila, as in Attila the Hun. Fitting for a military leader with a commanding presence.

Selene

  • The Dreaded: In Infinity Crisis Aftermath: Celestial Navigation, Pixie outright states that she hopes that none of Earth-199999's current superheroes cross her path. Considering she murdered the First Line, it's understandable why Pixie would be terrified of her.
  • The Ghost: She has not been 'seen' yet. History Lesson-199999 reveals that in the future, she will battle the Avengers alongside Doctor Strange, the Yankee Clipper, Pixie, Green Lantern, and Flash. This battle will result in the world remembering the First Line once more.
  • Hero Killer: She slaughtered all of the First Line except for Yankee Clipper and Pixie, and then used her magic to erase the world's memory of them.

Agatha Harkness/Agnes

  • Blasphemous Boast: She calls Asgardians arrogant light weights who were weak compared with some wizards she fought.
  • Greater-Scope Villain: It's revealed in Road Trip: Storybrooke that she's been manipulating the residents of the Enchanted Forest for HUNDREDS of years. Some of her notable acts include...
    • Influencing the installation of Issac as the Author.
    • Helping to turn Rumplestiltskin into The Dark One by corrupting both his parents and giving him the prophecy of him dying in the Ogre War.
    • Killing Cora's mother.
    • Sending Zelena to Oz and then giving her directions to the Emerald City.
    • Influencing Milah and Killian's tryst.
    • Sending Snow White's horse to approach Regina and then pushing her to find Regina and Daniel.
    • Helping to pay for Henry's ticket which STARTS the modern part of Once Upon a Time.
  • Hidden Agenda Villain: Her two appearances so far haven't given a clear sign of her broader agenda, although she is clearly interested in both Chaos magic and the magic of the Enchanted Forest.
  • Paper-Thin Disguise: Invoked; while in Storybrooke, she's posing as the Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe, and observes that it's almost disappointing that nobody's asked about her children yet.

Quicksand/Diana Duong

  • Ascended Extra: She's an obscure villain in the comics, first appearing in Thor #392 (June 1988).
  • Named by the Adaptation: Her real name in the comics was never revealed. Infinity Crisis Aftermath: The Brave and the Bold gives her the name Diana Duong.
  • Rogues' Gallery Transplant: In the comics, she was a Thor villain. On Earth-199999, she's a Flash villain.

Powerhouse

Krang One

     The Hex 

Weasel Kid

Chef Bryce

Chandrelle Stormblaze

Lazarus Bleeze

Rust

???/Coda

Rootbeer Reggie

Sado

     The Clan Destine 
  • Truer to the Text: A Flashy Debut establishes that the ClanDestine in the Infinity Crisis version of the MCU is closer to the original Alan Davis series than the "canon" MCU.

Adam Destine/Adam of Ravencroft

  • The Ghost: He's mentioned by Rory and Pandora in A Flashy Debut, and outside of a holographic image, he is not "seen".
  • The Juggernaut: According to Rory and Pandora, like his comic counterpart, he is immortal and invincible.
  • The Patriarch: He's the father of the Destine line, and as a result, he's Kamala Khan's great-great grandfather.

Rory Destine/The Crimson Crusader

Pandora Destine/Imp

  • Hand Blast: It can be presumed that like her comic counterpart, this version of Pandora can fire energy blasts from her hands.

     Other 

Loki

  • Be Careful What You Wish For: At the end of Brothers of Thunder, the Loki of Earth-199999 tells his Earth-8096 and Earth-911111 counterparts that he dreamed of ruling his Asgard for centuries, but actually trying to run the place wasn't worth it and was ultimately All for Nothing, especially since he could only do it by impersonating Odin, and that Lokia is better off finding her own path rather than trying to rule her Asgard if it still exists.
  • Everyone Has Standards: He's a Trickster God, yet the Legends' utter insanity makes him throw the towel. The Vikings were already bad, but this Beebo thing just took the cake!
  • Even Evil Has Standards:
    • Loki claims he was planning to double-cross Thanos and take away the Tesseract/Space Stone once he'd conquered Earth as, whatever else, he felt wiping out half the universe was sheer insanity.
    • In Sins, Sirens and Strife, the fact that even Loki couldn't stand Amora makes it clear how annoying she really was.
    • In Brothers of Thunder, although it physically pains him to say it, he knows that not only is Thor the better man for the throne of Asgard, he engineers a coming together of three Avengers groups to make sure that the heroes are ready for it, while causing the fall of Surtur, Dormammu, and tricking the new Hydra into the open in the process.
  • Faking the Dead: After appearing to have been a ghost or spirit, it turns out Loki is very much alive, having faked his death at Thanos' hands and seeking a new purpose in life.
  • Other Me Annoys Me: Has a low opinion of Laufeyson, in part because they used to be a lot alike in the past.
  • Surrounded by Idiots: Loki doesn't hold back on how he considers the Legends a pack of idiotic bumblers, and his opinion of the rest isn't much higher.
  • Trickster God: As befits Loki, he always has a plan or is manipulating someone.

Shuri

  • Ship Tease: Shuri is shown basically hovering over Cyborg, but Sam Wilson and T'Challa express uncertainty if she's interested in the man or the tech.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: Unlike canon, she's not taken in the Snap.

Okoye

Wade Wilson/Deadpool

  • Breaking the Fourth Wall: Typical of Deadpool.
  • Cloudcuckoolander: Everyone's reaction to him is basically "the HECK is wrong with that dude?".
  • The Friend Nobody Likes: Courtesy of being... well, himself, Deadpool freaks or annoys everyone he meets. Even Logan uses "friend" very loosely when it comes about him. So far, the only person who is shown to not dislike him is The Pighead, who openly swoons over him and even calls him "my first love".
  • Take That!: Makes a jab at Secret Empire
    Deadpool: How ya doing, Deadpool, used to have about five books a month but still managed to avoid becoming a Nazi.

Merlin

  • Calling the Old Man Out: Nimue (Cursed (2020)) encourages him to consider that he can't spend his life waiting for Arthur to come back and should start exploring other options, particularly in regard to his treatment of Kilgharrah.
  • Did Not Get the Girl: Admits to Kara that he was in love with Morgana back in Camelot and wonders that if he'd ever told her, it would have prevented her fall to darkness.
  • The Gadfly: His answer to Brainy's claims about magic not being real was to turn the cyborg into a fluffy bunny.
  • He Who Fights Monsters: Indicated as he keeps an imprisoned Kilgharrah chained up to use his knowledge with the dragon openly noting Merlin knows it's wrong but still does it.
  • It's All My Fault: Merlin blames himself for Morgana's fall into villainy and Jason Blood being bonded with Etrigan, but while nobody disagrees with him about Etrigan, Kara particularly assures him that he can't blame himself for Morgana as there's no way to know how much influence his lies had on her actions.
  • Never Speak Ill of the Dead: Nimue speculates that he's basically idealized his memories of Arthur and Camelot, and needs to acknowledge that even if Arthur came back things might not work out.
  • Occult Blue Eyes: The legendary warlock from the Arthurian mythos is mentioned having piercing blue eyes.
  • Other Me Annoys Me: He's not impressed to learn his counterpart on Earth-1 was actually an alias for the time-travelling 1940s superheroine Stargirl.
  • Pet the Dog: Merlin is quite aloof and abrasive towards his allies. Yet he's nothing but gentle towards Lena, who's the embodiment of Morgana's lost goodness, encouraging her to live a life she can be proud of.

Jason Blood/Etrigan

  • Canon Immigrant:Originally a DC character.
  • Evil Redhead: Downplayed regarding Jason Blood, as his body is hosting a bonafide demon and he's generally abrasive, but he's otherwise content to live and let live.
  • Jerkass Has a Point: His hatred towards Merlin for bonding him to Etrigan is acknowledged as justified by everyone, even Merlin himself.
  • Loners Are Freaks: An inversion, he isolates himself because he's far from the garden-variety of humans and asks to be left alone.
  • Rhymes on a Dime: Etrigan, alas for everyone. It quickly grows annoying, see.

Balder

  • Brainwashed and Crazy: Balder has spent centuries under the control of Amora the Enchantress until he is released by the Martian Manhunter.
  • Foreshadowing: Thor confesses he thinks of Balder as another brother, and his fictional casting has him being played by Liam Hemsworth, preparing the reveal that Balder is Thor's younger biological brother.
  • Like Brother and Sister: Thor describes Balder as being like a brother to him before Amora reveals that Balder actually is his brother.
  • Long-Lost Relative: Secretly the biological second son of Odin.
  • My God, What Have I Done?: Balder has one after J'onn J'onzz releases him from Amora's control, nearly killing Amora before she escapes.
  • Real-Life Relative: A rather subtle piece of foreshadowing, he's hypothetically cast as Liam Hemsworth, younger brother to Chris Hemsworth.

Foggy Nelson

Claire Temple

  • Seen It All: When she arrives to offer medical treatment and finds herself facing the gargoyles and the Turtles, she takes a moment to remind herself that she can handle this before setting to work.

Virginia "Pepper" Potts

  • Big Damn Kiss: She gave one to Tony when he came back alive in New York. Then she slapped him.
  • But for Me, It Was Tuesday: Invokes this in Distant Cousins when she learns that Astra has been dead for years despite the woman literally just attacking them, Pepper openly reflecting that she misses the days when someone coming back from the dead was actually unusual.
  • Took a Level in Badass: In Distant Cousins, Pepper has received her own armour from Tony, considering the codename 'Rescue'.

Fin Fang Foom

  • Expy: Spider-Man compares him to Smaug - another totally evil Large Ham of a dragon.
  • Large Ham: Completely unable to open his maw without making a boast or taking a piece of the scenery. The Power Rangers quickly grow annoyed with it.

Joseph "Joey" Tallarico

One of the Inhumans' human allies.
  • Most Writers Are Writers: Joey is a science fiction author.
  • Shout-Out: His surname is a nod to video game composer Tommy Tallarico.
  • Ascended Extra: He's the counterpart of a young boy named Joey who traveled with Black Bolt in the 1970s during the Kree-Skrull War storyline in the comics.

Louise Fisher

A scientist who dreams of going to the Moon.
  • Hollywood Atheist: Infinity Crisis: The Inhumans hints that she is an atheist.
    Louise: I've never really had much use for religion. I've had even less use for people like Roberts who use it to justify being bigoted.
  • Omnidisciplinary Scientist: She shows shades of this trope.

Dave Dawson

A surfer, and friend of Crystal.

Tana Moon/Green Lantern

A talk show host in Honolulu, she ends up being part of...an otherworldly legacy.
  • Canon Immigrant: She originally was from DC's 1990s Superman and Superboy comic books. The author of Infinity Crisis: The Inhumans brought her in as a nod to Miles Morales appearing in Freeland at the end of Infinity Crisis, and the story in which she appears in was set in Hawaii, just like the Superboy comics she was a major character in.
  • Foreshadowing: When she's introduced in the story, she's wearing a green outfit.
  • Ring of Power: She becomes the Green Lantern of Earth-199999, thanks to the Phantom Stranger taking a Green Lantern ring from a dusted Corpsman on Earth-51 and sending it through a dimensional rift the Lantern was investigating at the time he was dusted.

Billy Roberts

A prominent preacher in Hawaii, he sees Attilan as something to fear.
  • Condescending Compassion: When in conversation with a young Inhuman who's genuinely curious about Earth, his attempts to explain quickly come as cringeworthy.
  • Fantastic Racism: He exhibits a strong disdain for the Inhumans, as he sees them as unnatural monsters. He's shown to be horrified by Terrigenesis, as he thinks it's used to force Inhumans into becoming freaks. Amusingly, he freaks out about it while he is in Attilan, where Terrigen transformations are not seen as unusual. He also shows disgust at the idea of Captain America being an Inhuman when Crystal suggests it, his thoughts showing he believes Inhumans cannot be heroic like Steve Rogers.
  • Legacy Character: The Inhumans implies that he'll become the next Doctor Spectrum as it's revealed he has the Power Prism.

Trish Walker

Elektra Natchios

Misty Knight

  • Screw This, I'm Out of Here!: She contemplates doing this as she feels that she isn't accomplishing anything in the police considering how crazy the world has become, but Colleen advises her that she can do better trying to reform the system from within rather than giving up on it.
  • Weirdness Magnet: She briefly laments the fact her life completely ceased to make sense, right as she's beating ninjas with her bionic arm alongside a quartet of mutated turtles.

Korg

Power Pack

Rorgg

Ted Kord

  • Age Lift: This version of Ted is in his late 50s.
  • Retired Badass: Defended Honolulu as the first Blue Beetle back in the 1980s, but retired due to an unrevealed heart condition. History Lesson-199999 establishes that he started out as the sidekick of First Line member Firefall, but due to Selene erasing the world's memory of the First Line, Ted doesn't remember her.

Pele

Trevor Slattery

Wan Li/Short Round

Earth-201217

The main setting of Ultimate Spider-Man (2012).

Earth-201718

The home to the characters from Marvel Future Avengers.

     Future Avengers 

Makoto Musashi/Hurricane

Adi Amritraj/Codec

Chloé Carson/Charade

Kamala Khan/Ms. Marvel

  • Team Member in the Adaptation: While she was prominent ally to the Future Avengers in the anime, she never actually joined the team. She's depicted as a proper member of the group here.

Jerome "Jerry" Chang/Iceman II

  • Alternate Self: To the Jerry Chang of Earth-8107, who he's basically identical to.
  • Calling Your Attacks: Appropriate for a world inspired by an anime, he does this when fighting Powerhouse.
    Jerry: Icicle Barrage!
  • Legacy Character: Like his Earth-8107 counterpart, he is this to the original Iceman. He tells Powerhouse that he uses the name with the original's blessing.
  • Original Character: He's L1701E's OC who he has included in other stories both in and outside of Infinity Crisis.

Simon Lasker/Pyro II

     The Avengers 

Captain America

Hulk

Wasp

Iron Man

Thor

Henry Trovaya/Yellowjacket

     Evildoers 

Powerhouse

  • Ascended Extra: Powerhouse is an obscure character, first appearing in Spider-Man #15 (October 1991).
  • Evil Laugh: She opens the one-shot she appears in with letting out a stagy cackle.
  • Fantastic Racism: She's a malevolent Mutant Supremacist who has it in for humans, Inhumans, and etc. She's shown to be disgusted and enraged when she meets Jerry Chang, as she believes that an Inhuman has no right to use a name that was previously used by a mutant hero.

Earth-555326

The home of characters from Next Avengers: Heroes of Tomorrow.

     Next Avengers 

James Rogers

  • Fantastic Racism: In a sense; he immediately assumes that Warren's test-tube kids have to be villains because their parents were villains before he learns anything else about them, such as how they were 'raised' by a clone of Spider-Man.

Torunn

Henry Pym Jr.

Azari

  • Put on the Bus: By the time of Test Tube Troubles, Azari has left the team to assume the throne of Wakanda. He makes his return in Fathers and Daughters so he can help out the others.

Francis Barton/Hawkeye

     Original Avengers 

Tony Stark/Iron Man

  • The Atoner: He feels incredible remorse for helping create Ultron, which is why he has dedicated so much in helping to rebuild the world.

     Friends & Allies 

Gabriela Sepulveda

  • Family Theme Naming: Her name is the female form of "Gabriel", which was the name of her deceased brother, the Argentinean hero Defensor.

Angus O'Connell

  • Heroic Lineage: While his father Ulysses Archer wasn't a famous hero, he still feels proud to be his son.
  • Nom de Mom: Since his parents were never married, he goes by the last name of his mother Taryn O'Connell.

     Masters of Evil 

In General

  • Adaptation Distillation: Their membership is a mix of multiple rosters of the team from the comics.
  • Evil Old Folks: They're contemporaries of Tony, so they've more or less all gone gray and are past their prime.
  • Villainous Friendship: They all seem to genuinely enjoy each others' company and seem fairly tight knit, but it's subverted with Radioactive Man, who views them all as expendable.

Elihas Starr/Egghead

Joseph Manfredi/Blackwing

  • Cry for the Devil: He's left a sobbing emotional wreck after the Melter dies, to the point that Azari hugs him.
  • Feeling Their Age: After his attempt at a hammy entrance is undercut and he falls onto the Mayor's desk, he admits that he's getting a bit too old to be a super-villain.

David Cannon/Whirlwind

Bruno Horgan/Melter

  • Atrocious Alias: He tells the Mayor that he's "Lyle I. Brarian" because he works in a library as part of his cover.
  • Blatant Lies: He got the Mayor of Townsville to agree to meet with him by unconvincingly claiming to be part of a society dedicated to protecting pickles from an evil pickle-hating society. He struggles to not laugh at how easily the man falls for it.
  • Hoist by His Own Petard: His gear backfires on him, resulting in him getting killed by it.

Chen-Lu/Radioactive Man

  • Big Bad: As he's the leader of the Masters of Evil, he counts as this for The New Kids in Townsville.
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing / Faux Affably Evil: He pretends to be nice and cordial as a civilian and to the members of his team, but is the most cruel and evil out of all of them.

Elton Healey/Oddball

  • Beware the Silly Ones: He was the one to get in the killing blow on Doctor Doom, is responsible for Buttercup and Ace's amnesia/mind-wiping, and even manages to help in bringing down Radioactive Man.
  • Due to the Dead: He runs a bowling alley out of memory for his late brother, Tenpin, who used bowling pins to commit crime.
  • Evil vs. Evil: He turns on Radioactive Man, but is still very much a bad guy.

     Villains 

Ultron

Doctor Doom

  • Death by Adaptation: Doom was killed by the Masters of Evil when they used his portal technology to escape Ultron's attack by retreating to another universe.

Miles Warren/Jackal

  • Alien Blood: His new body bleeds yellow blood that melts through web fluid.
  • Body Surf: He's transferred his mind into a younger, super-powered body.
  • Entitled to Have You: Even after Gwen's death, Warren was so fixated with her that he created a 'daughter' for himself using Gwen's DNA as the mother.
  • Not-So-Harmless Villain: Suggested; Warren might have only focused on Spider-Man, but he had such a twisted reputation that Tony is immediately disgusted when Ciara expresses her plans to use 'Jackal' as her codename.
  • Rogues' Gallery Transplant: Posthumously, anyway; his test-tube children immediately attract the attention of the New Avengers, and he apparently had plans to give minor villains genetically-engineered children before his death.
  • Ungrateful Bastard: After the Mad Thinker helped him build a new reality traveling ship, Warren killed the man and stole the Awesome Android for his own use.

Gorgolla the Living Gargoyle

  • Evil Is Hammy: As a villain created during the Silver Age, it sure loves giving grandiose speeches.

     Test-Tube Children 
Created by Miles Warren, AKA the Jackal, using DNA samples taken from various minor villains to create test-tube infants that inherit some of their parents' powers. After Warren's death, they were 'raised' in secret by Pedro, a flawed clone of Spider-Man, but have now emerged to redeem their parents' legacies and follow Pedro's example.

Pedro

  • Gratuitous Spanish: Despite his genetic template being American and speaking English, Pedro apparently spoke Spanish and had a Spanish name.
  • Legacy Character: Basically this for Peter Parker, even if he never had the chance to do anything with it.

Ciara

  • Animal-Eared Headband: She makes herself a black headband reminiscent of Gwen's iconic one, but with fuzzy purple ears modeled after the ears from the original Jackal mask.
  • Femme Fatalons: Her father gave her claws similar to the ones he had on his costume/gave himself. She's entirely heroic, however.
  • Hair of Gold, Heart of Gold: Like her biological mother.
  • Legacy Character: As Miles Warren's 'daughter', Ciara has taken her father's name with the goal of making the Jackal a hero rather than a villain.
  • Redeeming Replacement: For Miles Warren, wanting to turn the moniker into her own.

Sidney

  • Celebrity Resemblance: As mentioned above, Tony insists he's a dead ringer for Neve Campbell.
  • Hell-Bent for Leather: He wears a black leather biker jacket and boots.
  • Pretty Boy: Minor example, but Tony notes that he looks like Neve Campbell as a teenage boy. He's flat out described as being "feminine" and "undeniably pretty" and Pym later even calls him "cutie".
  • Shout-Out: His name, powers, t-shirt design and aforementioned resemblance to Campbell are all references to Scream.
  • Super-Scream: He's Angar the Screamer's son and shares his powerful scream.

Mary

  • Ambiguous Situation: It's not specified whether her father is Curtis or Calvin Carr.
  • Black and Nerdy: She's all about electronics and other mechanical work.
  • Ship Tease: She and Angus hit it off really quickly, as evidenced when everyone walks in on them making out.
  • The Team Normal: Unlike the other children created by Warren, she has no powers. This makes sense when one remembers Chemistro didn't have any powers either, relying on his "alchemy gun" to commit crime.

Chun-hwa

  • Green Thumb: Naturally, given that Plantman is her biological father.
  • Lipstick Lesbian: Her Plantgirl costume's is very feminine and, when asked if she's attracted to James by Torunn, she laughs, clarifies that she doesn't like boys that way, and then makes a pass at Torunn herself.

Iqbal

  • Glowing Eyes: At one point when angered, his eyes are described as flashing with yellow.
  • Real Men Can Cook: Iqbal is a muscular young man with superhuman strength who prides himself on being a capable chef.
  • Super-Strength: He has this super power.
  • Symbol Motif Clothing: He has a golden ringed planet symbol on the back of his top. He also has the same symbol tattooed to his neck. It's unclear what the significance of this is.

Hildegard Fitzgerald-Duong

     Other superheroes 

In General

  • Posthumous Character: Ultron killed most of this world's heroes and kept remnants of their costumes and such as trophies. Most of the following are simply ones Tony mentions while looking over said remnants.

Walter Newell/Stingray

Buford Hollis/Razorback

Peter Parker/Spider-Man

Bonita Juarez/Firebird

Unknown/Arabian Knight

Greg Willis/Gravity

Delroy Garrett Jr./Triathlon

James Rhodes/War Machine

Suzi Endo/Cybermancer

Shang-Chi

Ulysses Solomon Archer

Santo Vaccarro/Rockslide

  • Despair Event Horizon: Suffered from this after seeing so many of his friends to die at Ultron's hands.
  • Face–Heel Turn: Subverted. Despite working with Gorgolla and wanting to get revenge on Tony Stark for creating Ultron, he simply can't go through with it and eventually rejoins the heroes.
  • The Lost Lenore: He appears to have had feelings for Hope Abbott/Trance, and losing her deeply affected him.

Molly Fitzgerald-Duong/Shamrock

  • Promotion to Parent: She's been raising Hildegard as her daughter since escaping to Earth-78227

Alejandro Montoya/El Águila

Earth-911111

An Earth apparently identical to the Marvel Cinematic Universe, save for the fact that all male heroes are female and vice-versa.

     Avengers 

Iron Maiden/Antoni 'Toni' Stark

Captain America/Stephanie Rogers

  • Boyish Short Hair: Presumably, as her hair is described as short and still kept in a military style.
  • Deliberate Values Dissonance: She says she had a tougher time than any male Steve Rogers as a woman in the 1940s and had to fight harder to be accepted in the military.
  • First Love: Percy Carter was this for Stephanie.
  • Straw Feminist: Subverted, since she doesn't really see herself as a symbol for inspiring women. She's glad that she wasn't around during the Women's Liberation Movement, since she stated she wouldn't have handled the bra-burning demonstrations.

Thora

Hawkeye/Chris Barton

  • Only Sane Man: Like most of her male counterparts, she see herself as the 'only sane person' amongst the team.
  • Skewed Priorities: Even in the middle of a fight, Hawkeye still ponders how exactly the Hulk's bra stays on when she transforms.
  • Tomboyish Ponytail
  • Vapor Wear: She doesn't wear a bra.

Black Spider/Nikolia Romanoff

Hulk/Betsy Banner

Quicksilver/Piera Maximoff

Scarlet Warlock/Walther Maximoff

Captain Marvel/Carl Danvers

  • Older Than They Look: Like his Earth-199999 counterpart, he appears much younger than his true age.

     Others 

Nicola Fury

Murray Hill

Peter Potts

  • Crazy Jealous Guy: Implied. When Toni complements Carl, he warns that Peter might get jealous.

Lokia

  • Horny Vikings: She wears a helmet with two long horns, like her male counterparts.
  • It Amused Me: The only reason she's helping the dimensional-hoping heroes, who are opposite genders to the ones in her reality, save "Asgard from a male version of myself".
  • You Are Better Than You Think You Are: After helping Earth-8096 to repel Dormammu and Surtur's combined forces, she accidentally manages to lift Mjollnir. The implication utterly stuns her and she decides to keep quiet about it.

Top