Mind-Wave

Mind-Wave
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance Daredevil #133 (May 1976)
Created by Marv Wolfman, Bob Brown and Jim Mooney
In-story information
Alter ego Erik Gelden
Species human
Team affiliations Esper-Ts
Abilities Psionic powers

Mind-Wave is a fictional character in Marvel Comics.

Publication history

Mind-Wave first appeared in Daredevil #133 (May 1976), and was created by Marv Wolfman, Bob Brown and Jim Mooney. The character subsequently appears in Captain America #319 (July 1986), in which he was killed by the Scourge of the Underworld.

Fictional character biography

Erik Gelden

Mind-Wave was a megalomaniac criminal possessing mental abilities heightened by his own inventions. He robbed banks in Europe and America until stopped by Daredevil and Uri Geller. At the time he utilized his 'think tank', capable of firing various weapons.[1]

Mind-Wave's mental abilities failed to warn him about the Scourge of the Underworld, who killed him in the "Bar With No Name" massacre.[2]

Mind-Wave was later among the eighteen criminals, all murdered by the Scourge, to be resurrected by Hood using the power of Dormammu as part of a squad assembled to eliminate the Punisher.[3] Mirage disguises himself, Mind-Wave, Cheetah, and some of the other criminals as a team of Avengers trying to kill the Punisher. After the Punisher uncovers the ruse, he captures Mirage, kills Mind-Wave with a grenade, and leaves him with a grenade as a booby trap for Letha, Titania and Black Abbot to find.[4]

Second Mind-Wave

A new Mind-Wave appeared as a Superhuman Registration Act violator. He amused the officers of a Las Vegas, Nevada police precinct by claiming he was there to officially protest the Registration Act and stating that his codename was different from the man who was called "Mind Hyphen Wave." He then used his telekinetic powers to destroy the station and kill the officers present before calmly surrendering to the Thunderbolts.[5]

Mind-Wave was escorted to a cell in Thunderbolts Mountain. When the guards walked away, he began a telepathic conversation with fellow prisoners Caprice, Bluestreak and Mirage. He suggested that it would be fun to interfere with the surgery scheduled to be performed on Bullseye.[6] However, Bullseye recovered from his surgery while Mindwave was focusing on the other Thunderbolts, and killed Mind-Wave and his allies in their cells using thrown scalpels.[7]

Powers and abilities

The first Mind-Wave wore a helmet of his own design that boosted his natural mind powers particularly ESP, with which he could blindside a non-telepathic opponent at will. His helmet also enabled him to communicate mentally with others wearing similar helmets, with his "Think Tank" or with other ESPers. Mind-Wave's "Think Tank" was a large, heavily armed vehicle control by his mental powers which he used to rob banks. It had heat-ray cannons. He also carried hand-held versions of the heat ray.

The second Mind-Wave was primarily a very powerful telekinetic, with the ability to destroy structures and halt and redirect hails of bullets in mid-flight. He also had some measure of telepathic ability, which he used to converse with his fellow prisoners and combine his power with theirs, in an attempt to destroy Thunderbolts by driving them insane. He wore a costume composed of dark body armor and a helmet resembling a gas mask.

References

  1. Daredevil #133
  2. Mark Gruenwald (w), Paul Neary (p), Dennis Janke (i). "Overkill" Captain America 319 (July 1986), Marvel Comics
  3. Punisher Vol. 7 #5
  4. Punisher Vol. 7 #8
  5. Thunderbolts #116
  6. Thunderbolts #117
  7. Thunderbolts #121
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