List of Marvel Comics characters: B

Bakuto

Bakuto is a fictional ninja in Marvel Comics. The character, created by Andy Diggle, Antony Johnston and Marco Checchetto, first appeared in Daredevil #505 (April 2010).

Bakuto, the head Daimyo of South America, met with the other four Daimyos in Jigoku-Chu Castle in Japan. He showed some doubt in Matt Murdock leading The Hand and especially scoffed at White Tiger's involvement due to her being a woman. Beforehand, Bakuto had killed his master, Izanagi, to showcase "[his] strength of will," even going so far as to not allowing him seppuku.

In the present, while having dinner, Bakuto's food is spiked causing him to hallucinate demons. Matt goes to check on him as Daredevil and are both immediately attacked by ninjas that were secretly sent by the other Daimyos. After defeating them, Matt is led to believe that someone is attempting to take Bakuto's life and ups the security. Despite this Bakuto believes that Matt was the one who sent the ninjas and begins plotting to kill him.[1] He is later confronted by White Tiger, who is actually possessed, and is killed in sword combat.[2]

Bakuto in other media

  • Bakuto appears in Iron Fist, portrayed by Ramón Rodríguez. Bakuto is one of the leaders of The Hand and is Colleen Wing's sensei from before the events of the series.[3] Bakuto at first appears to be a benevolent person, aiding Danny Rand in his abilities and showing him footage of the previous Iron Fist, but soon it becomes apparent that he wishes to use Danny for his own purposes and especially has plans for the Meachums.[4][5] After shooting Joy Meachum, he and his men take Danny, but end up fighting him along with Colleen and Davos. Bakuto battles Colleen with swords, but he is stabbed by his former pupil. Colleen refuses to kill Bakuto, so Davos does it for her. His body then disappears. Colleen assumes that Bakuto's people took it, but Danny recalls that Harold Meachum managed to come back from the dead.[6]
  • Bakuto reappears in The Defenders, revived to full health. He is established to be one of the five Fingers of the Hand, the others being Sowande, Madame Gao, Alexandra, and Murakami. He first appears when he accosts Colleen, Danny and Luke as they are escorting Claire to the 29th Precinct for protective custody, but escapes.[7] He is later present, along with Murakami and Madame Gao, when Elektra kills Alexandra and assumes command of the Hand.[8] The three Fingers express disdain with Elektra for her actions, but she is undeterred, only interested in cultivating the substance so she can have eternal immortality.[9] Nonetheless, the Fingers accost Matt, Luke and Jessica when they break out of the precinct and return to Midland Circle seeking to rescue Danny from Elektra. Bakuto comes very close to finishing off Matt until Colleen shows up to fight him off. Bakuto remains upstairs to fight Colleen, Claire and Misty. Regaining the upper hand, Colleen kills Bakuto, but not before he manages to cut off part of Misty's right arm.[10]

Balder

Bryson Bale

Brian Banner

Rebecca Banner

Banshee

Bantam

Bantam is a fictional mutant. Created by Jim Lee and John Byrne, the character first appeared in Uncanny X-Men #282.

Bantam is an assistant of Trevor Fitzroy who uses his power as a chronal anchor to keep track of his master's time portals. When Fitzroy takes over a future timeline and renames himself the Chronomancer, Bantam accompanies him. Bantam realizes that Fitzroy had been driven mad by his dreams of power, and eventually betrays his master to the rebellion led by Bishop. Bantam assists in the raising of the gate to the Chronomancer's keep, and dies at the hands of Fitzroy's Chronotroopers.

Bantam kept track of all of Fitzroy's time portals still in stasis. He was sensitive to the bioenergy emissions of other superhumans, allowing him to locate the site where the energy was released.

Bantam appears in the two-part X-Men episode "One Man's Worth."

Barbarus

Eli Bard

Baron Blood

John Falsworth

Victor Strange

Kenneth Crichton

Baron Brimstone

Baron Mordo

Baron Strucker

Baron Zemo

Heinrich Zemo

Helmut Zemo

Barracuda

Barrage

Turk Barrett

Breeze Barton

Basilisk

Basil Elks

Mike Columbus

Wayne Gifford

Bast

Bastion

Batroc the Leaper

Battleaxe

Battleaxe (Anita Ehren) is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics Universe. She first appeared in The Thing #33 (March 1986), and was created by Michael Carlin and Ron Wilson.

The character subsequently appears in Captain America #389–392 (July–September 1991), 394–395 (November–December 1991), 411–414 (January–April 1993), and Ms. Marvel (vol. 2) #18 (October 2007).

An unlimited class wrestler, Battleaxe is a massive woman who carries an axe as her weapon of choice. Defeating Titania in a wrestling match, she claims the title as champion of the Grapplers. However, when Titania is slain by the Scourge of the Underworld, Battleaxe vows to avenge her former teammate. She takes out her aggression on the Thing, battling him in a wrestling match. Realizing Battleaxe is taking her anger out on him, the Thing purposely loses the match.[11] She later joins Superia's Femizons and battles Captain America.[12] She also fights BAD Girls, Inc. while in a costumed bar.[13]

Later, in Ms. Marvel's own series, Battleaxe gets fights the titular heroine in front of William Wagner's closed restaurant. Puppet Master's mind-controlled Chilean soldiers catch Battleaxe and try to take her with them. Ms. Marvel defeats them and takes the soldiers and Battleaxe on her minicarrier.[14]

Battleaxe has superhuman strength and durability. She carries a set of two axes which are her weapons of choice.

Battlestar

Batwing

Baymax

Beast

Beautiful Dreamer

Bedlam

Jesse Aaronson

Olisa Kabaki

Beef

Beetle

Abner Jenkins

Leila Davis

Joaquim Robichaux, Elizabeth Vaughn and Gary Quinn

Janice Lincoln

Hobgoblin's Beetle

Bela

Belasco

Bella Donna

Narda Ravanna

Bella Donna Boudreaux

Bengal

Dexter Bennett

Bereet

Berzerker

Beta Ray Bill

Beyonder

Bi-Beast

Big Bertha

Big Man

Frederick Foswell

Janice Foswell

Henry Pym Jr.

Big Wheel

Bird-Brain

Bird-Man

Henry Hawk

Achille DiBacco

Unnamed

Bishop

Bison

Black Ant

Black Bolt

Black Box

Black Cat

Black Crow

Black Dwarf

Black Fox

Raul Chalmers

Dr. Robert William Paine

Black Jack Tarr

Black Knight

Sir Percy

Nathan Garrett

Dane Whitman

Augustine du Lac

Unnamed Woman

Black Mamba

Black Marvel

Black Panther

T'Chaka

T'Challa

Shuri

Black Queen

Black Racer

Black Rider

Black Spectre

Black Swan

Mutant

Yabbat Ummon Turru

Black Talon

Pascal Horta

Desmond Drew

Samuel Barone

Black Tarantula

Black Tom Cassidy

Black Widow

Claire Voyant

Natalia Romanova / Natasha Romanoff

Yelena Belova

Monica Chang

Tania

Blackheart

Blacklash

Mark Scarlotti

Unnamed Man

Unnamed Woman

Blacklight

Blackout

Marcus Daniels

Half-demon

Blackwing

Joseph Manfredi

Heavy Mettle

Barnell Bohusk (Beak)

Blade

Donald Blake

Dr. Donald "Don" Blake is the fictional doctor identity of Marvel Comics character Thor. The character, created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, first appeared in Journey into Mystery #3 (August 1962).

Donald Blake is a construct of Odin, created for the purpose of giving a weak and powerless identity for Thor. After removing his memory, Thor started his life as the crippled Don who chose to be a doctor after sympathizing with the sick. Don finds the hammer Mjolnir and transforms into the God of Thunder. Later, Don regains his memory as Thor and soon learns the whole truth from Odin.[15] The Blake identity has been used here and there before Odin opted to erase him from existence. After Thor was killed by The Serpent, Donald Blake suddenly came into existence as a separate entity fully aware that his whole life had been a lie.

Alternate versions

In the Ultimate Marvel Universe, Donald Blake is the alternate identity of Balder.

Donald Blake in other media

  • Donald Blake appears in The Incredible Hulk Returns played by Steve Levitt. This version is a medical student obsessed with Viking culture. He joined an archaeological expedition where he found Mjolnir and summoned Thor. Despite trying to lose the hammer it always came back to him. He serves as Thor's sidekick.
  • Though Donald Blake does not appear in Thor, he is mentioned by Jane Foster as someone who was, "good with patients and bad with relationships." Thor uses his name when Erik Selvig picks him up from a S.H.I.E.L.D. facility.

Blank

Blastaar

Siena Blaze

Blazing Skull

Blindfold

Blindspot

Mutant

Samuel "Sam" Chung

Bling!

Bliss

Blitzkrieg

Blitzkrieg is a fictional character in the Marvel Universe. He was created by Mark Gruenwald, Bill Mantlo, Steven Grant, and John Romita, Jr., and first appeared in Marvel Super-Heroes: Contest of Champions #1 (June 1982).

Franz Mittelstaedt was born in Backnang, Germany. He was inspecting an electrical power plant when a stray bolt of lightning struck a faulty generator and bathed him in electricity. When he emerged from his coma weeks later, he found that he could summon lightning at will to wield as a weapon. He decided to use his powers in the name of democracy.

Later he was teleported away by the Grandmaster, along with hundreds of other heroes of Earth, so that the Grandmaster and Death could choose champions from among them. Blitzkrieg was chosen for the Grandmaster's team, fighting alongside fellow heroes Captain America, the aboriginal Talisman III, Darkstar, Captain Britain, Wolverine, Defensor, Sasquatch, Daredevil, Peregrine, She-Hulk, and the Thing. When the Grandmaster's team won the contest, the heroes were returned to Earth.

Blitzkrieg later joined the German superhero team Schutz Heiliggruppe, along with Hauptmann Deutschland and Zeitgeist. The team intended to arrest the Red Skull for his World War II war crimes, assaulting Arnim Zola's castle and fighting and defeating the Skeleton Crew.

Blitzkrieg later traveled to Buenos Aires to investigate the deaths of a number of South American superheroes, including his former ally Defensor. Blitzkrieg was confronted by his teammate Zeitgeist, who turned out to be the serial killer Everyman. Everyman killed Blitzkrieg, adding him to his long list of murdered superheroes, but Blitzkrieg was later avenged by Hauptmann Deutschland, now known as Vormund, who killed Everyman.

Blitzkrieg possessed the ability to summon lightning mentally, at up to 15,000,000 volts. He can manipulate all forms of electrical energy, using them to allow him to fly, create electrical energy shields and cages, and electrical tornadoes. He is also immune to electricity, and can sense electrical transmissions and track them to their source.

Blizzard

Gregor Shapanka

Donald Gill

Randy Macklin

Blob

Blockbuster

Michael Baer

Man-Brute

The Man-Brute first appeared in Captain America #121 (January 1970), and was created by Stan Lee and Gene Colan. The character subsequently appears as Blockbuster in Omega the Unknown #7 (March 1977), and #9 (July 1977), in which he is killed.

The man originally known as the Man-Brute was an ex-convict whose strength was boosted by a factor of twelve by Professor Silas X. Cragg. Cragg was an enemy of Captain America from the World War II era who had developed a variant of the Super Soldier Serum which he used to empower the Man-Brute. Cragg sent the Man-Brute to attack Captain America at a charity event, but when the Man-Brute ran into his own estranged son he became upset at what he had become. Man-Brute attacked Cragg, who backed into a high voltage machine and was electrocuted.[16]

Renaming himself Blockbuster, he sought to acquire wealth for his son Robert, to give him a better life and keep him from becoming a criminal like himself. He robbed a bank, leading to conflict with the NYPD and then Omega the Unknown. Omega felt empathy for Blockbuster and his son, and let the man escape with the money. After Blockbuster robbed a diamond store, the owner offered a thousand dollar reward to which Omega responded. After struggling with Omega a few times, Blockbuster was incinerated by the second Foolkiller.[17]

Blockbuster possessed superhuman strength, durability, endurance, etc. He was an experienced street fighter, although he did not demonstrate any advanced fighting skills.

Bloke

Blonde Phantom

Blood Brothers

Bloodaxe

Bloodhawk

Bloodscream

Bloodshed

Cullen Bloodstone

Elsa Bloodstone

Ulysses Bloodstone

Bloodstrike

Blood Spider

The Blood Spider (Michael Bingham) is a fictional supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. He first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man #367 (October 1992). The character was created by writer David Michelinie and artists Mark Bagley and Jerry Bingham.

Blood Spider is a mercenary trained by Taskmaster under contract by the Red Skull to create a team of mercenaries who would be capable of defeating Spider-Man. The trio were patterned after the superheroes Captain America, Hawkeye and Spider-Man, and the characters were called Death-Shield, Jagged Bow and Blood Spider.

Solo joined the fray on the side of the wall-crawler and helps to defeat the three villains and thwart Red Skull's machinations who was using the mercenaries to guard private files sought by Spider-Man in reference to his parents.

Years later, Blood Spider appears with Death-Shield and Jagged Bow among the criminals vying for the multi-million dollar bounty that was placed on Agent Venom's head by Lord Ogre. The trio's attempt on Agent Venom's life is interrupted by competing mercenaries Constrictor and Lord Deathstrike.[18]

Crime Master, with the help of Blood Spider, Death-Shield and Jagged Bow, later tries to steal a damaged Rigellian Recorder from Deadpool and the Mercs for Money.[19]

Of the trio, Blood Spider was the only character who displayed any superhuman abilities. He was able to shatter a solid concrete wall with a very powerful move, indicating he possessed some degree of superhuman strength. He was not as powerful as Spider-Man, and not nearly as fast. He carried a back pack and wrist devices capable of shooting webbing similar to that of Spider-Man, but much weaker. An ordinary human in peak physical condition, such as Solo, was able to tear through it, which would not have been possible with Spider-Man's webbing. Blood Spider's costume has several design elements that Bagley would later incorporate into the redesign of Ben Reilly's Spider-Man costume. The most prominent of the traits is the use of a larger, symmetrical spider emblem on the front and back, the legs of which meet on the shoulders.

Blood Spider in other media

  • Blood Spider makes his animated debut on Ultimate Spider-Man vs. The Sinister Six, voiced by Benjamin Diskin.[20] This version is an alternate universe counterpart of Spider-Man where vampires led by the Lizard King have taken over most of Earth. As seen in "Return to the Spider-Verse" [Pt. 1], he ends up teaming up with Spider-Man and Kid Arachnid in searching for the Siege Perilous shards to free the humans, including his teammates, from Lizard King's control.
  • A variation of Blood Spider is a major antagonist in Spider-Man: Hostile Takeover, a prequel novel to the 2018 video game Marvel's Spider-Man. He was recruited off the streets to undergo experiments in a lab run by Norman Osborn. He shows signs of mental health issues which are further exacerbated by the experiments. Afterwards, he comes to believe that he's the real Spider-Man and that Peter Parker is an imposter. Under his own Spider-Man persona, he shows no interest in protecting and saving lives, stating he is the true Spider-Man as he is willing to get blood on his hands whereas Peter won't. This disregard for human life causes the public to turn against Spider-Man, although a large number of people cite obvious difference to suggest they are not the same person. Eventually, Peter is able to draw him into a public confrontation, which shows the two are separate men. Subsequently, Blood Spider is defeated and incarcerated.[21]

Bloodwraith

Bloodwraith (Sean Dolan) is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. He was created by Mark Gruenwald, Dann Thomas, Roy Thomas and Tony DeZuniga, and first appeared in Black Knight #2 (July 1990).

Bloodwraith is the murderous enemy of Black Knight and the Avengers. While Sean Dolan was known as Bloodwraith, Bloodwraith is made up of the souls of those the Ebony Blade has slain. He is an expert swordsman compelled to take lives, especially innocent lives. The blade is indestructible and able to cut through almost any material. The blade was forged from a meteorite and Merlin's magic. The blade can trap dead souls and absorb or deflect all kinds of energies and mystical power. Bloodwraith can sense the ebony blade and control it like a telekinetic. If separated, Bloodwraith can teleport to the Ebony Blade or teleport the blade to himself. Bloodwraith rides a winged horse named Valinor.

Sean Dolan was an amateur swordsman with no special abilities. When Sean drew the ebony blade, he found himself overwhelmed and controlled by all the souls of those the sword had slain, and became the Bloodwraith. The Bloodwraith was dark black in color and appeared in costume. The sword constantly craved new blood to add, and those it slew found their souls locked in an eternal battle of good vs. evil in a dimension inside the sword. Bloodwraith rides his winged horse, Valinor, and is an expert swordsman. He can control the ebony blade rather like a telekinetic. When separated from the blade, he can sense its presence and instantaneously teleport to its location. The ebony blade could slice through anything and, previously, would curse its wielder with petrification if its wielder used the blade to draw blood. When he wielded Proctor's sword, the Bloodwraith and Valinor appeared much more skeletal and could channel powerful blasts through the sword. When powered by the Slorenian souls, Bloodwraith became composed of an energy unknown to man, and both he and the sword grew to gigantic size.

Blue Blade

Blue Diamond

Blue Eagle

Blue Marvel

Blue Shield

Blue Streak/Bluestreak

Don Thomas

Jonathan Swift

Blue Kelso

Bob, Agent of HYDRA

Elias Bogan

Tito Bohusk

Bolt

Ahura Boltagon

Ahura is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character is usually depicted as a member of the Inhumans species. Ahura was created by Ann Nocenti and Bret Blevins and first makes an appearance in Marvel Graphic Novel: The Inhumans (1988). Ahura was created to be the son of Black Bolt and Medusa. He was banished to a prison since he shared his uncle's, Maximus The Mad, mental instability. Medusa freed him and allowed him to join the Future Foundation, but then Black Bolt allowed Ahura to be taken into the past by Kang the Conqueror.[22] Black Bolt returns him[23] and he becomes the new CEO of Ennilux Corporation.[24] Ahura took a fleet of Ennilux zeppelins to help the Inhumans in their clash with the X-Men, and provided them with a device to destroy the Terrigen cloud.[25] In an alternate timeline, Ahura becomes the new Kang.[26]

Bomblast

Bombshell

Bonebreaker

Alexander Bont

Boom-Boom

Boomerang

Bor

Bor Burison is an Asgardian in the Marvel Universe. The character, created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby and named for Borr from Norse mythology, first appeared in Journey into Mystery #97 (October 1963).

Bor, son of Buri, became the ruler of Asgard where under his rule he created the universe. He eventually married the giantess Bestla and had four sons with her named Cul, Vili, Ve and Odin. Out of all of his sons, Bor paid special attention to Odin, whom he groomed to become the next king. However, Bor was angered by Odin's decision to create humans which he was unable to reverse. Nevertheless, Bor strongly sided with Odin and the two went into battle against the Frost Giants. Bor went up against one giant, who was actually a time traveling Loki in disguise, and battled him, but was killed.[27]

Loki would impersonate Bor's ghost to get Odin to defeat Laufey and adopt the boy that would become Loki. Loki resurrected Bor in modern day, but affected his mind making him think that monsters were everywhere. He encountered his grandson Thor and the two fought in a destructive battle that involved the Dark Avengers. Bor was killed by Thor who only found out about his identity afterwards by Loki and Balder.[28] Hela later brings Bor back to life to lift Mjolnir, but when he was unable to Hela reduces him to dust. She then uses him to battle Thor once again.[29]

Bor once again returns to halt the wedding between Asgardian Sigurd and Valkyrie Dísir, causing much ire with the two as well as Danielle Moonstar, Hela and Loki.[30]

Bor in other media

Bor appears in the 2013 movie Thor: The Dark World. Tony Curran portrays him in a flashback to the Asgardians' battle against the Dark Elf forces of Malekith the Accursed five thousand years ago.

Bova

Melissa Bowen

Melissa Bowen is the mother of Tandy Bowen, the superhero known as Dagger, in Marvel Comics. The character, created by Bill Mantlo and Rick Leonardi, first appeared in Cloak and Dagger #4 (January 1984).

The character, a wealthy socialite, was depicted as being very emotionally distant from her daughter.[31] When Tandy runs away, Melissa is irritated at her due to the cost of hiring people to search for her.[32]

Melissa Bowen in other media

Melissa Bowen appears in the Freeform series Marvel's Cloak & Dagger, played by Andrea Roth.[33] After the car accident that killed Nathan on the night with the Roxxon Gulf Platform collapsed, Melissa struggled to make ends meet while dealing with the fact that Roxxon repossessed some of Nathan's stuff from her home upon his death and posthumously firing with the help of her lawyer boyfriend Greg. While she still loves her daughter, Melissa has since become an alcoholic and a drug pusher and has been working low paying jobs that she keeps getting fired from.[34] Despite her many flaws, she does show genuine concern for her daughter.[35] She further ends up in a relationship with married lawyer Greg Pressfield, but she breaks up with him. She immediately regrets this, but he is murdered by an female hitwoman posing as a water jug delivery person.[36] In "Ghost Stories," Melissa and Tandy celebrate the anniversary of Nathan's death. Tandy and Tyrone later access Melissa's memory where it was shown that he once slapped Melissa for spilling coffee on his paperwork. This led to Tandy taking up Peter Scarborough's offer to pay to get Melissa out of the trailer park.[37] In "Back Breaker," the female hitperson that killed Greg confronts Melissa at her home working under Peter Scarsborough's orders by the time Tandy visits her mother. She tells Tandy that she's got until the count of three to come out before she shoots Melissa.[38] Thanks to a tactic by Tandy, she saved her mother from the hitwoman and left to confront Peter Scarsborough. Following the Terrors crisis, Melissa is cleaning up her house as Tandy comes home showing her a newspaper stating that Roxxon was responsible for the incident.[39]

Box

Roger Bochs

Madison Jeffries

Jamie Braddock

Isaiah Bradley

Brain Drain

Brainchild

Abigail Brand

Ellen Brandt

Ellen Brandt is a supporting character of the Man-Thing (Ted Sallis) in Marvel Comics. The character, created by Roy Thomas, Gerry Conway and Gray Morrow, first appeared in Savage Tales #1 (May 1971).

Ellen Brandt grew up in a loveless, emotionless household which she had hoped to escape from.[40] She met her husband Ted Sallis and she ran away to elope with him. The two visited a fortune teller for fun, but she informed them that tragedy would befall their lives.[41] Ted soon began working for S.H.I.E.L.D. and became lost in his work, causing Ellen to see him as cold as her father. She joined A.I.M. and plotted against her husband. When she revealed her true colors to Ted, she chased him into a swamp where he gave himself an untested super soldier formula and crashed into the swamp becoming Man-Thing. Ellen was frightened of his appearance and thus his abilities burned half her face.[42][43]

Ellen Brandt in other media

The character was adapted for the film Iron Man 3, where she is portrayed by Stéphanie Szostak.[44] In this film, the character is a war veteran who lost an arm and is injected with the Extremis virus by A.I.M. founder Aldrich Killian. She and Eric Savin have a confrontation with Tony Stark, where she's lured into a diner which Stark floods with gas from the stove then explodes by microwaving metal from dog tags before being blown out onto power lines which electrocute her, killing her.

Betty Brant

Bres

G. W. Bridge

Brimstone Love

Broo

Broo is a fictional character from Marvel Comics. He is a mutant from the Brood race, but unlike his feral brethren he is intelligent and compassionate. Broo was born in the lab on a S.W.O.R.D. orbital research station called Pandora's Box.[45] He later joined the X-Men as a student in Wolverine & the X-Men #1.

He has been the object of bullying because of his odd behavior; however he doesn't seem to understand teasing and even takes it as a compliment. He has developed a relationship with Idie,[46] and was at the top in his class behind Quentin Quire.

Kid Omega, who wanted to prove himself to Broo, Idie and Kid Gladiator who told him they never heard of him, reasoned with Krakoa who then joined Wolverine's X-Men.[47]

After discovering a robot placed there by the Hellfire Club in order to manipulate Oya, Kade Kilgore and Max Frankenstein show up and tell Broo about their plans, but he is shot and left for dead before he can tell anyone else.[48]

Although Broo was supposedly killed, Beast had saved his life with assistance by Brand, Peter Parker, Reed Richards and Tony Stark.[49] Broo was treated and put into a coma and once he awoken he had reverted to his feral brood instincts and acted like that of an animal.[50] He spent some time as an unwilling student in Kade Killgore's mutant school.[51] Idie comes with him for supervision and Quentin Quire comes to rescue them both.[52] Quire advances the theory that Idie has fallen in love with Broo pre-trauma.

Broo was often seen attacking fellow students and support staff at Killgore's school, random, brutal violence being fully supported and encouraged by the teachers. He was kidnapped by the genocidal alien Xanto Starblood, who was going to teach Broo the hard sciences and feed him unique beings. While on Xanto's ship, Broo bite a Bamf and was healed, restoring his self-aware, intelligent, and compassionate self, and the staff return him to the school.[53]

During the Battle of the Atom, Broo babysat Shogo Lee.[54]

Broo is a Brood mutant because he can feel compassion and has high intelligence. Like the rest of the Brood, Broo has several powers, including enhanced strength, enhanced speed, enhanced agility, ability to breathe in space, and insect wings that allow him to fly. His increased intelligence has resulted in funding for his beloved school; Broo has developed a line of pastries that cause the consumer to lose weight.[55]

Brother Tode

Brother Voodoo

Brothers Grimm

Jake and William Dolly

Percy and Barton Grimes

Bruiser

Brutacus

Brute

Hank McCoy

Reed Richards

Brynocki

Bucky

James Buchanan Barnes

Fred Davis

Jack Monroe

Rick Jones

Lemar Hoskins

Rikki Barnes

Julia Winters

Paul Budiansky

Bug

Bulldozer

Henry Camp

Marci Camp

Bullet

Bullseye

Bulwark

Nathaniel Bumpo

Sonny Burch

Sonny Burch is a minor character in Marvel Comics. The character, created by writer John Jackson Miller and artist Jorge Lucas, first appeared in Iron Man Vol. 3 #73 (December 2003).

As a weapons company's chairman, Burch acquires Iron Man's technology patents to be sold to various companies, attempting to improve his own political position.[56][57] However, he had neither the knowledge nor care to fully understand that even Iron Man's outdated technology is too sophisticated for adapting; examples of his incompetence include a submarine where Iron Man and Captain America save its military personnel,[56] a missile defense system for the U.S. Government,[58] and Oscorp's imperfect battlesuits and military drones.[56][59] When technological mistakes threaten his cargo plane carrying Iron Man's armors (salvaged after blackmailing Carl Walker[60]) to crash into Washington, D.C., Burch (facing utter ruin) takes a gun and commits suicide.[61] Fortunately, Iron Man saves the personnel from Burch's cargo plane.[62]

Sonny Burch in other media

Sonny Burch appears in Ant-Man and the Wasp (2018), portrayed by Walton Goggins.[63] This version is a black market criminal who trades and sells to big businesses; he has henchmen (including Uzman, Anitolov, Knox and FBI agent Stoltz) and owns a restaurant (presumably as a front). Sonny attempts to buy Hank Pym's quantum technology but gets turned down by Hope van Dyne. Sonny's men subsequently battle the Wasp and Ant-Man. He later manages to get information out of Scott Lang's friends (Luis, Kurt and Dave) via his "truth serum" concoction. Burch and his men fight Ant-Man and the Wasp fighting Ava Starr in a three way battle for the miniaturized technology through San Francisco. Sonny attempts to escape via boat, however, stopped by Giant-Man. Burch and his men catch up to Luis but are tasered by Kurt and Dave. Luis injects Burch and his men with his own "truth serum" out of revenge, forcing confessions to various crimes to federal agents led by Jimmy Woo; Sonny even confesses to his restaurant's various health code violations.

Burglar

Burner

Burstarr

Noah Burstein

Bushman

Bushmaster

Bushwacker

Butterball

Emery Schaub

Emery Schaub is a superhero in the Marvel Comics universe.

The character, created by Christos N. Gage and Steve Uy, first appeared in Avengers: The Initiative #13 (2008).

Within the context of the stories, Emery Schaub was is an overweight fry cook from Morganton, North Carolina who is recruited to the Initiative program and given the codename Butterball. Despite Schaub's invulnerability, his lack of physical strength, skill, and wits make him an inappropriate candidate for the superhero program.[64]

When Norman Osborn takes control of the Initiative, Schaub is part of Henry Peter Gyrich's Shadow Initiative assembled to retake control of Negative Zone Prison Alpha from the forces of Blastaar.[65] In spite of heavy losses, the team completes their mission.[66] Schaub has subsequently been referred to as a hero by Norman Osborn and used as an everyman figure for propaganda purposes by H.A.M.M.E.R., Osborn's military arm.[67] During the Siege on Asgard, Butterball helps the Avengers Resistance.[68] Later, Butterball is a founding member of a new superteam in North Carolina.[69] He later joins the Avengers Academy.[70]

Emery Schaub in other media

Butterball appears in Lego Marvel's Avengers, voiced by Patrick Seitz.

Butterfly

Buzz

Byrrah

References

  1. Daredevil #505-506
  2. Daredevil #507
  3. Blackburn, Farren (director); Ian Stokes (writer) (March 17, 2017). "Felling Tree with Roots". Marvel's Iron Fist. Season 1. Episode 7. Netflix.
  4. Hoar, Peter (director); Quinton Peeples (writer) (March 17, 2017). "Black Tiger Steals Heart". Marvel's Iron Fist. Season 1. Episode 10. Netflix.
  5. Chow, Deborah (director); Ian Stokes (writer) (March 17, 2017). "Lead Horse Back to Stable". Marvel's Iron Fist. Season 1. Episode 11. Netflix.
  6. Goddard, Andy (director); Scott Reynolds (writer) (March 17, 2017). "Bar the Big Boss". Marvel's Iron Fist. Season 1. Episode 12. Netflix.
  7. Briesewitz, Uta (director); Lauren Schmidt Hissrich & Douglas Petrie & Marco Ramirez (writer) (August 18, 2017). "Take Shelter". Marvel's The Defenders. Season 1. Episode 5. Netflix.
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  13. Captain America #394–395
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  17. Omega the Unknown #9 (July 1977)
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  23. Uncanny Inhumans #0
  24. Uncanny Inhumans #7
  25. IVX #6
  26. Uncanny Inhumans #3-4
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  28. Thor #600
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  30. New Mutants Vol. 3 #43
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  32. Strange Tales Vol. 2 #12
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  41. Giant-Size Man-Thing #5
  42. Savage Tales #1
  43. Man-Thing Vol. 5 #1
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  47. Wolverine & The X-Men #1
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  49. Wolverine & the X-Men #19
  50. Wolverine & the X-Men #14
  51. Wolverine & the X-Men #29
  52. Wolverine & the X-Men #30
  53. Wolverine & the X-Men #35
  54. X-Men Volume 4 #6
  55. Wolverine and the X-Men #20 (2012)
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  57. Iron Man Vol. 3 #74
  58. Iron Man Vol. 3 #75
  59. Iron Man Vol. 3 #76
  60. Iron Man Vol. 3 #82
  61. Iron Man Vol. 3 #77
  62. Iron Man Vol. 3 #78
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  65. Avengers: The Initiative #26
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  67. Avengers: The Initiative #29 (December 2009)
  68. Avengers: The Initiative #34
  69. Avengers: The Initiative #35
  70. Avengers Academy #20-21
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