List of Marvel Comics characters: H

This article lists Marvel characters beginning with the letter "H", with brief descriptions introducing the characters.

Hala the Accuser

Tadashi Hamada

Cockroach Hamilton

Hamir the Hermit

Hamir the Hermit is a fictional sorcerer, created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko, who first appeared in Strange Tales #111.

Hamir was the ancestor Kan who started the tradition of assisting sorcerers who used their magic for good.[1] Hamir brought his son Wong to meet the Ancient One, becoming one of his disciples in the process.[2] Hamir was constantly outdone by evil sorcerers such as Baron Mordo and Kaecilius whenever they came for the Ancient One, nonetheless he continued to serve his master in sickness and in health. When the Ancient One passed away, Hamir stayed at the temple and continued to train newer students.[3]

Hamir the Hermit in other media

Hamir appears in the 2016 film Doctor Strange, played by Topo Wresniwiro. This version of the character is one of the Ancient One's many students, is missing his left hand, and does not appear to be related to Wong in any form whatsoever.[4][5]

Hammer

Boris Lubov

Boris Lubov is a Russian villain who often fights Maverick/Agent Zero. Debut was in Maverick #1 (September, 1997), created by Jorge Gonzalez & Jim Cheung.

Eisenhower Canty

Hammer was an ally to the mutant Cable and a member of the Six Pack. In another version, described as Ultimate Eisenhower Canty, Canty appears as a member of the Six Pack.[6] Debut was in Cable: Blood And Metal #1 (April, 1990); created by Fabian Nicieza and John Romita, Jr..

Caleb Hammer

Caleb Hammer is a fictional character, an Old West Pinkerton detective who debuted in Marvel Premiere 54.

Hammer was one of the characters featured in Blaze of Glory, where he chases after Kid Colt, later teaming with him and other Western heroes to defend the town of Wonderment, Montana. During the battle the bounty hunter Gunhawk shoots Kid Colt in the back despite agreeing to put aside his chase of the Kid to defend Wonderment. Hammer strongly objects to this turn of events and ends up killing Gunhawk.

A flashback in X-Force #37 features an External named Absalom shooting an elderly Hammer in the back after Caleb refuses to participate in a duel with him.

Justin Hammer

Justine Hammer

Sasha Hammer

Sasha Hammer
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance The Invincible Iron Man #1 (July 2008)
Invincible Iron Man #511 (February 2012) (as Detroit Steel)
Created by Matt Fraction
Salvador Larocca
In-story information
Alter ego Sasha Hammer
Notable aliases Detroit Steel
Abilities Advanced technology embedded in her skin, allowing her to fly; energy threads/whips that come from her hands; superhuman durability

Sasha Hammer is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. She first appeared in The Invincible Iron Man #1 (July 2008), and was created by Matt Fraction and Salvador Larroca. She is the daughter of Justine Hammer and the Mandarin,[7] a relative of Justin Hammer and Temugin, and an enemy of Iron Man (Tony Stark).

Sasha is Justine's and the Mandarin's daughter. Raised by her mother, they both harbor a desire for revenge against Tony Stark for the financier's loss, and see Stark as an obstacle to their success.[7] She first appeared as the girlfriend/assistant to tech-terrorist Ezekiel "Zeke" Stane, providing support to Zeke's attacks on Stark Industries buildings around the world. When Zeke is apprehended by Iron Man and S.H.I.E.L.D., Sasha is able to go underground, having never been discovered.[8]

Following Norman Osborn's fall from power, Hammer reappears out in the open alongside Justine as Hammer Industries' heads and purchases numerous de-commissioned H.A.M.M.E.R. technologies to create a large suit of powered armor that they wish to market globally as a new soldier for the post-9/11 world.[7] Justine and Sasha embark on a campaign to discredit Stark in the industrial market, conspiring with the corrupt Pentagon general Babbage and staging civilian attacks in which Detroit Steel is arranged to intervene before Stark. When confronted by Stark about her operations, Sasha attacks with her own biotech weapons with which Zeke augmented her body before being arrested, revealing her criminal intent to both Stark and Rescue.[7] Shortly after, Detroit Steel launches a surprise attack on Stark Resilient by orchestrating a remote-server air-strike unwittingly piloted by young gamers on phones-unaware these actions were actually taking place in the real world. The combined efforts of Iron Man, War Machine, Rescue and Maria Hill are able to stop the strike and shut down Detroit Steel.[7] When the Hammers then use their connections to arrange Zeke's secret release, Sasha introduces Zeke to her father's employ.[7]

After Lt. Doug Johnson is turned into stone by the Asgardian demon Mokk: Breaker of Faith and believed dead, Justine makes her the new pilot of the Detroit Steel armor.[9] However, Johnson is later revealed to be alive and kidnaps his replacement. Johnson brings Sasha bound and gagged to Justine, threatening to kill her unless the armor is returned. Johnson releases Hammer after regaining the suit's possession. Sasha and the Steelcorps battle Johnson, resulting in Sasha decapitating her predecessor with her whips.[10]

Sasha Hammer's powers and abilities

Sasha Hammer has been augmented by advanced technology, enabling her body to generate powerful energy of an unspecified type. She can project this energy from her hands in the form of whips and swords that she can use in physical combat. Her enhancements also give her ability to fly. These abilities' limits have not been explicitly given, but she can use them to destroy an automobile and can prove a considerable opponent to Iron Man.[7]

When operating Detroit Steel armor suits, she has at her disposal that full range of armaments and other features with which the suits were designed, as well as modifications with which the suit can be customized to a particular pilot. According to Hammer Industries, the suit incorporates technology, such as C.N.S. (Controlled Exo-Enhanciles), that would eventually be used to end paralysis caused by cervical, thoracic or corticospinal injuries. Weighing four and a half tons,[7] the "oversized"[11] Detroit Steel towers over Iron Man,[7] at approximately twice her opponent's height.[7] The suit affords its occupant considerable protection from automatic weapons and explosives,[7] though the magically-powered Mokk was able to easily rip open the armor.[12]

The suit allows its users to fly (though she has this aforementioned ability without the suit), and usually is seen with a rotary cannon mounted on its right arm, and a specialized chainsaw on its left,[7] which can penetrate Iron Man's Bleeding Edge Armor.[7] There are rocket-powered munitions on the suit's shoulders.[7] The rotary cannon can be dismounted so that the soldier can carry and fire it as a traditional handheld weapon,[12] and users of the armor have been seen outfitted with other types of weapons in this manner, including both directed-energy weapons and scaled-up rifles.[12] Sasha's armor has also been observed to have a directed-energy weapon in palm of its hands.[12] Those who pilot the armor are required to undergo considerable surgical modifications, which leave implants visible on the pilot's chest, which Lt. Johnson, who first piloted the Mark One, felt "turned him into a monster", though Hammer, who already had undergone a number of enhancements by Zeke Stane, regards herself as Stane's "masterpiece".[7] As an executive of Hammer Industries, she has access to a wide range of armors that come in varying sizes and designs,[13][10] with different models designed for different environments and hot zones, including arctic climates and urban encounters.[7]

Sasha Hammer in other media

Hammerhead

Victoria Hand

Hangman

Harlan Krueger

Harlan Krueger was created by Marv Wolfman and Gil Kane and first appeared in Werewolf by Night #11.

After being court-martialed from the army for torturing prisoners of war, Krueger resolved to take the law into his own hands and became the masked vigilante the Hangman. His modus operandi involves executing male criminals while leaving female ones alive but imprisoned to 'protect them' from corruption (many died of starvation while in captivity). After years of stalking criminals with a noose and scythe, he comes into conflict with the Werewolf by Night.[15][16]

Hangman next stalks one of the Brothers Grimm, who had been stealing from diamond merchants. Mistaking one Brother Grimm (Jake) for his target (William), he pursued him to a pyrotechnics building and saw him seemingly die in an explosion.[17] He was later one of the criminals captured by the Locksmith and Tiktok.[18]

Hangman later kills a disguised woman, thus inadvertently violating his own code. As he knelt over the corpse in remorse, he was apparently fatally stabbed in the back by film reviewer Matthew O'Brien, who had been trying to stop the Hangman from his latest killing spree, impaling the Hangman on his own scythe.[19]

Jason Roland

Roland was created by Roy Thomas and Barry Smith, and first appeared in Tower of Shadows #5. He was an actor who made a deal with the demon Satannish) to make his career successful, but was instead trapped in a monstrous form. He fought with the West Coast Avengers on several occasions.[20][21]

As Hangman, he possesses magically enhanced strength and durability; he has gone head-to-head with Wonder Man. His rope is also magically enhanced, making it virtually indestructible. He can also levitate his rope and climb it without it being attached to anything. He is in almost constant communication with Satannish, who can enhance his powers as needed.

Maya Hansen

Harbinger of Apocalypse

Hardball

HardDrive

Hardshell

Felicity Hardy

Hargen the Measurer

Quincy Harker

Quincy Harker is a fictional character in the Marvel Universe based on a character in Bram Stoker's Dracula. He first appeared in Tomb of Dracula #7-8 (March, May 1973), and was adapted by Marv Wolfman and Gene Colan.

Quincy is the son of Jonathan and Mina Harker, major characters in Stoker's novel. He was trained as a vampire hunter by Abraham Van Helsing, becoming his successor. In retaliation Dracula kills Quincy's wife and cripples him, requiring him to use a wheelchair. Despite this, Quincy continues the fight, converting his house into a veritable vampire death-trap and his wheelchair into a personal anti-vampire arsenal.

When Abraham Van Helsing's granddaughter Rachel was still a child, Dracula slew her parents before her eyes. Harker then took her under his protection and trained her to become a vampire hunter as well. Harker employed a number of other agents, including Taj Nital and Frank Drake, and formed alliances with Blade and Hannibal King.

Ultimately, Quincy Harker confronted Dracula at Castle Dracula itself in Transylvania. Knowing that he would die soon, as he had recently suffered a heart attack, he activated a time bomb in his wheelchair. Harker plunged a silver stake into Dracula's heart and was about to sever the vampire's head when the explosives went off, killing Harker and demolishing the castle.[22] However, Dracula ultimately resurfaced.[23]

Quincy leaves a last will and testament to turn his remains into a safeguard against vampires for the United Kingdom, ensuring all vampires need to be invited to enter the country. Dracula apparently destroys said remains, but it is revealed that MI:13 tricked him into destroying fake ones.

Agatha Harkness

Harness

Harold H. Harold

Harold H. Harold is a fictional character in the Marvel Universe. He first appeared in Tomb of Dracula #37 (October 1975), and was created by Marv Wolfman and Gene Colan. Harold is a writer for the magazine True Vampire Stories who happens upon an injured and unconscious Dracula, and steals blood to revive him so he can get an interview.

Harold goes on to aid Quincy Harker's team of vampire hunters against Dracula on numerous occasions. This inspires him to write a novel, The Vampire Conspiracy, which is later adapted into a motion picture.

Harold tracks Dracula to Cleveland and finds him impaled by a wooden fence post courtesy of Howard the Duck. The vampire persuades Harold to free him, then bites him and turns him into a vampire.[24] Despite this turn of events, Harold goes on to become a successful Hollywood movie and television producer.

Like all other vampires on Earth, Harold H. Harold is eventually destroyed when Doctor Strange casts the vampire removal spell.[25]

Harpoon

Harrier

Stephanie Harrington

Jonas Harrow

Hate-Monger

Adolf Hitler clone

National Force

Edmund Heidler

Josh Glenn

Hauptmann Deutschland (Captain Germany)

Haven

Created by J.M. DeMatteis, Greg Luzniak
Species Human (fetus is human mutant)

Haven (Radha Dastoor) is a fictional mutant character, created by J.M. DeMatteis and Greg Luzniak, who first appeared in X-Factor #96. She was the best-selling author of a book about the new humanity that would result from humans and mutants evolving into one race. She planned to bring this 'new humanity' about by destroying three quarters of the world in a Mahapralaya, or 'Great Destruction', as foretold in her Hindu teachings.[26]

X-Factor opposes her, but she is able to sway Wolfsbane by curing her of the genetic engineering that had turned her into a mindless Genoshan mutate, allowing her to once again assume human form. X-Factor shuts down her entire operation with the help of her brother Monsoon. She attempts to cure Jamie Madrox (not the original, although no one knows that) from the Legacy Virus, but she fails and he dies, leaving X-Factor to believe the original Madrox is dead.[27]

Haven herself has no powers, but is carrying a mutant fetus, with various abilities ranging from healing to telepathy to opening dimensional portals into personal pocket dimensions. The fetus acts through Haven, leaving the true nature of the situation unknown to the general populus. The fetus was the product of an old affair that never came to term, instead remaining a sentient embryo.[28] Haven's efforts to cause destruction attract the attention of the Adversary, who uses her fetus to return himself to the world, consuming Haven in the process.[29]

Havok

Hawkeye

Clint Barton

Kate Bishop

Pamela Hawley

Pamela Hawley is a character in the Marvel Comics universe. The character, created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, first appeared in Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #4 (November 1963).

Hawley was a Red Cross medic who helped soldiers during World War II. Nick Fury meets her, falling in love with her because of her determined and "stubborn" attitude, but not thinking she would return these feelings. Her father Lord Hawley asked Fury to search for her brother Percy Hawley after being kidnapped by Nazis. Unfortunately, Percy was a Nazi sympathizer and Fury was forced to kill the man. To keep her from grief, Fury told Hawley that Percy died a hero.

Hawley would go on to date Fury who, despite getting ridiculed and poked fun at by the Howling Commandos, ensured that she was loved. Despite Fury's overall character, Hawley considered Fury a "gentleman".[30][31]

At one point, the time-displaced Morgana Blessing and Doctor Strange arrive, with the former discovering that she is Hawley's spiritual descendant. Along with Fury and Dum Dum Dugan, they battle Baron Mordo's minion, Sir Baskerville, using the power of Fury and Hawley's love. Doctor Strange then erases everyone's memories of the event.[32]

Fury planned on proposing to Hawley, but discovers through her father that she died in an air raid, her last words being "Tell my wonderful American sergeant how much I love him..."[33]

Pamela Hawley in other media

A character named Councilwoman Hawley appears in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, played by Jenny Agutter. She is a member of the World Security Council who oversees S.H.I.E.L.D.'s activities. She first appears in The Avengers (2012) where she wants to use the Cosmic Cube's power to create weapons rather than approve the Avengers Initiative. She also agrees to New York City's nuking during the Chitauri invasion. Hawley reappears in Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014) to approve Project Insight but unaware that Alexander Pierce works with HYDRA. She is later impersonated by Black Widow.

Gene and Alice Hayes

Haywire

Hazmat

Hazmat (Jennifer Takeda) first appeared in Avengers Academy #1 (June 2010); she was a series regular through its final issue. Created by Christos Gage and Mike McKone, the character Takeda discovers that her body naturally generates radiation when her boyfriend goes into a seizure while making out with her, an event that leads her family to all but abandon her, said boyfriend to dump her, and Takeda to have to wear a containment suit on a regular basis. Norman Osborn offers to cure her, but is just exploiting her.

During the Heroic Age storyline, Hazmat is recruited into the Avengers Academy, along with five other students affected by Osborn. The group is led to believe that they are among those most likely to become heroes, but quickly uncover files stating they are in fact most likely to become villains.[34] Hazmat later enters a romantic relationship with Mettle, one of the only people who can physically touch her.[35] Desiring normal lives, the two consume a substance that removes their powers;[36] but later take an antidote to regain them to fight the substance's villainous creator,[37] and then proceed to consummate their relationship.[38]

As part of the Marvel NOW!, in Avengers Arena Hazmat, Reptil, Mettle, X-23, and a dozen others are kidnapped by Arcade. Arcade takes them to Murderworld, where Hazmat watches Mettle die to save her. She later becomes injured and begins to lose control over her radiation.[39] The resulting explosion leads to complete control of her radiation so that she no longer has to wear her containment suit.[40]

When Cammi and Anachronism reveal Bloodstone has gone missing, everyone heads to Bagalia to find him. Once they do, he reveals that he enjoys life among the villains, and the others, minus Cammi, start to enjoy it as well. When Cammi tries to tell the others to leave, Bloodstone instead has Daimon Hellstrom teleport the group to Arcade's latest party so they can kill him,[41] which Hazmat does, blowing him to bits with a concentrated radiation burst.[42] The group is invited to join with Baron Zemo.[43] Hazmat, along with Anachronism and Cammi, are brought to be trained by Madame Masque, and the team plans to infiltrate the Masters of Evil and destroy them from within.[44] Over the next few months, Hazmat and Anachronism grow close, eventually kissing. Hazmat contacts Hank Pym and informs him of the plans that the team has uncovered. She also tries to contact Death Locket, but later learns that Death Locket has betrayed the group and put Chase in a coma. She bests Death Locket and the Young Masters.[45]

Hazmat constantly emits harmful radiation, forcing her to wear a protective suit at all times when around others. The suit serves the additional purpose of enabling her to focus her radiation into energy bolts. Although her abilities manifested during her teens without obvious explanation, it has been confirmed that she is not a mutant.[46]

Hazmat in other media

Hazmat appears as a playable character in Lego Marvel's Avengers.

Mark Hazzard

Headlok

Headsman

Hebe

Hecate

Hector

Heimdall

Hela

Helix

Hellcat

Hellcow

Hellfire

Elementals

J.T. Slade

Hellion

Hellrazor

Daimon Hellstrom

Hemingway

Hephaestus

Hephaestus first appeared in Thor #129 (June 1966), and was adapted from mythology by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby. He is the weaponmaker of the Olympian pantheon. He is not to be confused with the Eternal Phastos. Immortal and possessing superhuman physical attributes similar to those of the other Olympians, Hephaestus is a master weapons maker and inventor, able to make weapons which could kill even Hercules, but lacks the ability to project any form of energy, mystical or non-mystical. He made Hercules's mace, Ares' armor, and Zeus' chariot.

Hepzibah

Hera

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

Hercules

Gregory Herd

Hermes

Hermod

Hex

High Evolutionary

Hijack

Hijacker

Howard Mitchell

Unnamed

Hildegarde

Hildegarde was created by Gerry Conway and John Buscema, and first appeared in Thor #195 (Jan. 1972). Hildegarde is one of the Valkyries. Odin sent Sif and Hildegarde to Blackworld.[47] There, they came upon a town where people were fleeing in blind terror from Ego-Prime, which was created accidentally from Ego the Living Planet by Tana Nile. Sif and Hildegarde joined forces with Tana Nile, and escaped with her to Earth.[48] Ego-Prime came to Earth, and the Asgardians battled him, and Odin sacrificed Ego-Prime to transform three people into Young Gods. The Asgardians, including Thor, Sif, and Hildegarde, were banished to Earth for a time for questioning Odin's actions during these events. Hildegarde accompanied Thor for a while before returning to Asgard.

Hildegund

Hildegund is a fictional character in Marvel Comics. She was created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby and first appeared in Journey into Mystery #120 (September 1965).

Hildegund, sometimes called Gudrun, is the wife of Volstagg of the Warriors Three. She is an excellent cook and it is because of this that her husband is large and fat, something that makes Hildegund and Volstagg very happy. Together the happy couple had ten sons (Alaric, Arngrim, Einar, Gunnar, Hrolf, Leif, Rolfe, Svein, Sigfod, Thakrad), four daughters (Flosi, Gudrun, Gunnhild, Jargsa) and numerous unnamed children. At some point, twins, Mick and Kevin Mortensen were orphaned when their mother, Ruby, was killed by Zaniac.[49] Thor took the twins to Asgard where Volstagg and Hildegund lovingly accepted them with open arms.[50] When Loki returned, albeit as a child, everyone in Asgard turned him away except for Volstagg and Hildegund, the latter feeling that he just needed motherly love and affection.[51]

Hildegund in other media

Hildegund briefly appears in Thor: The Dark World played by Claire Brown. She has no dialogue and the credits simply list her as Volstagg's Wife. She is seen with Volstagg and three of their children celebrating one of their victories with Thor. Unlike her comic book counterpart, she is rather slim and not obese like her husband.

Maria Hill

Carol Hines

Carol Hines is a technician who works for the Weapon X project. When soldiers working for the Weapon X project brought in their captive Logan, Carol Hines reviewed the medical records of Logan. Carol Hines was present when the adamantium-bonding process was used on Logan where she was at the side of Professor Thorton and Abraham Cornelius.[52] When he went berserk upon breaking free, Carol Hines was a witness to this as Logan slaughtered many soldiers and scientists while escaping.[53]

At the time when Wolverine is planning to confront Professor Thorton, Carol Hines was present when Professor Thorton tells her that Wolverine is playing right into his hands. He tells Carol Hines that they are to book a flight to Canada immediately. When Wolverine enters a warehouse in Windsor, Ontario, Professor Thorton and Carol Hines watch alongside some HYDRA Agents. Then Professor Thortorn and Carol Hines enter a room to continue monitoring Wolverine as Professor Thorton activates the Shiva program. As Wolverine fights the Shiva robot, Carol Hines and Professor Thorton are attacked by Silver Fox who knocks out Carol Hines. When the X-Men catch up to where Professor Thorton was, they find Carol Hines with the Professor Thorton's dead body where she tells them that the Shiva robots have escaped the building chanting Sabretooth's name.[54]

HYDRA later had Carol Hines in their clutches at the time when Wolverine and Wraith arrived at the HYDRA hover ship. Silver Fox has the HYDRA Agents torture the classified information of the Weapon X Program out of Carol Hines. Wolverine and Wraith don't agree with Carol Hines' torture and knock out the HYDRA Agents. After Mastodon liquifies in Jubilee's hands, Carol Hines states that it's the foreseen side effect of his age suppressor giving out.[55] When Wolverine, Silver Fox, Wraith, and Maverick confront Aldo Ferro, Carol Hines tells Wolverine that Aldo Ferro is a "Psi-Borg." Aldo Ferro then mutates and kills Carol Hines by snapping her neck. When Maverick checks on Carol Hines, he finds that her neck-snapping was an illusion and that she died of fright at the sight of Aldo Ferro's Psi-Borg form.[56]

Carol Hines appears in a flashback scene in the "Wolverine" segment of Hulk Vs. She is seen in a flashback working on the adamantium-bonding process on Logan.

Carol Hines appears in X2: Wolverine's Revenge, voiced by Jennifer Hale. She is seen as a Weapon X employee alongside Abraham Cornelius. Both of them are sent on their way when Logan confronts Professor Thorton. When Wolverine returns to the Weapon X facility to find the cure for the Shiva Strain Virus (which acts as a failsafe implanted in Weapon X test subjects), he manages to find Carol Hines and Abraham Cornelius at the Void (a maximum security detention center for mutant criminals similar to the Vault) where they end up giving Wolverine the Part A info for the Shiva Strain Virus cure.

Hindsight

Hippolyta

Hiro-Kala

Hiroim

Hit-Monkey

Hitman

Burt Kenyon

Jimmy Pierce

Unnamed

Toni Ho

Anne Marie Hoag

Hobgoblin

Roderick Kingsley

Arnold "Lefty" Donovan

Ned Leeds

Jason Macendale

Daniel Kingsley

Phil Urich

Others

Hoder

Hoder first appeared in Thor #274-275 (August–September 1978), and was adapted from mythology by Roy Thomas and John Buscema. He is a totally blind, elder Asgardian god. At one point, Loki, God of Mischief, tricks Hoder into nearly killing Balder by shooting him with an arrow made of mistletoe wood (the only substance to which Balder is vulnerable). As well as possessing the superhuman abilities shared by all the Gods of Asgard, such as superhuman strength, Hoder can also receive visions of a far distant future or of events that will occur in other realities.

His dealings with Balder are detailed in the 'Trials of Loki' four part story.[57]

Cameron Hodge

Happy Hogan

Jeryn Hogarth

Hogun

Holocaust

Lilly Hollister

Hollywood

Honey Lemon

Hood

Hornet

Scotty McDowell

Peter Parker

Eddie McDonough

Phineas Horton

Horus

Howard the Duck

George Howe

Hrimhari

Hub

Heather Hudson

Jimmy Hudson

Hugin and Munin

Hulk

Hulk 2099

Hulk Robot

Hulkling

Human Cannonball

Human Fly

Richard Deacon

Unnamed

Human Top

Bruce Bravelle

David Mitchell

Human Torch

Jim Hammond

Johnny Storm

Humbug

Hummingbird

Humus Sapien

Amber Hunt

Amber Hunt is a pyrokinetic superhero in the Marvel Comics universe.

The character, created by Steve Gerber and R.R. Phipps, first appeared in Malibu Comics' Exiles #1 (August 1993).

Within the context of the stories, Hunt was an average American teenager in the Ultraverse before being exposed to the alien Theta Virus, which gave her super powers. Under the alias En Flame, she has been a team member of the Exiles and Ultraforce.

Huntara

Henrietta Hunter

Stevie Hunter

Hunter the White Wolf

Huntsman

Hurricane

Harry Kane

Makkari

Albert Potter

Dark Riders

Civil War

Husk

Faiza Hussain

Hussar

Hybrid

Jimmy Marks

Scott Washington

Hydro-Man

Hyperion

Zhib-Ran

Mark Milton (Earth-712)

Supreme Power

Marcus Milton

Hyperstorm

Hyperstorm is a mutant supervillain from an alternate future. The character, created by Tom DeFalco, Paul Ryan, and Dan Bulanadi, first appeared in Fantastic Four #406 (November 1995). Within the context of the stories, Hyperstorm is Jonathan Richards, the son of Franklin Richards and Rachel Summers from an alternate future reality designated Earth-967 by Marvel Comics. With his ability to manipulate reality and his psionic abilities, he conquers most of his home reality and turns to extend his rule to other timelines.

Hypno-Hustler

Hypnotia

References

  1. Doctor Strange Vol. 2 #43-44
  2. Doctor Strange Vol. 2 #75
  3. Doctor Strange: Shamballa
  4. "Doctor Strange Character Descriptions" (PDF). Marvel Studios. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 14, 2016. Retrieved October 13, 2016.
  5. Krupa, Daniel (October 26, 2016). "13 Coolest Doctor Strange Easter Eggs, References, and Trivia". IGN. Archived from the original on October 28, 2016. Retrieved October 28, 2016.
  6. Ultimate X-Men #76
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Fraction, Matt (w), Larocca, Salvador (a). "Stark Resilient" The Invincible Iron Man 25-32 (June 2010-January 2011), Marvel Comics
  8. Fraction, Matt (w), Larocca, Salvador (a). "The Five Nightmares" The Invincible Iron Man 1-5 (July - November 2008), Marvel Comics
  9. Fraction, Matt (w), Larocca, Salvador (a). The Invincible Iron Man 514-518 (May-August 2012), Marvel Comics
  10. 1 2 Fraction, Matt (w), Larocca, Salvador (a). "Long Way Down" The Invincible Iron Man 516-520 (July-September 2012), Marvel Comics
  11. Callahan, Timothy (July 18, 2010). Review of "Invincible Iron Man #28". Comic Book Resources.
  12. 1 2 3 4 Fraction, Matt (w), Larocca, Salvador (a). "Fear Itself" The Invincible Iron Man 504-509 (July-December 2011), Marvel Comics
  13. Fraction, Matt (w), Larocca, Salvador (a). "Demon Part 2: Exposure" The Invincible Iron Man 511 (February 2012), Marvel Comics
  14. Harvey, James "Iron Man: Rise of Technovore Feature Review". Marvel Anime Age. Retrieved May 8, 2013.
  15. Werewolf by Night #11
  16. Werewolf by Night #26
  17. Spider-Woman #4-5
  18. Spider-Woman #50
  19. Bizarre Adventures #31
  20. West Coast Avengers #79
  21. Avengers West Coast #98-100
  22. The Tomb of Dracula #70
  23. Uncanny X-Men Annual #6
  24. Howard the Duck Magazine #5 (1980)
  25. Doctor Strange #62
  26. X-Factor #98
  27. X-Factor #99-100
  28. X-Factor Annual #9
  29. X-Factor #117
  30. Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #5-7
  31. Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #9-10
  32. Doctor Strange Vol. 2 #50-51
  33. Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #18
  34. Avengers Academy 1
  35. Avengers Academy 13
  36. Avengers Academy Vol. 1 #26
  37. Avengers Academy Vol. 1 #35
  38. Avengers Academy Vol. 1 #39
  39. Avengers Arena #17
  40. Avengers Arena #18
  41. Avengers Undercover #2
  42. Avengers Undercover #3
  43. Avengers Undercover #4
  44. Avengers Undercover #5
  45. Avengers Undercover #8
  46. Avengers Academy #30
  47. Thor #195, Jan. 1972
  48. Thor #198, April 1972
  49. Thor #371
  50. Thor #374
  51. Journey into Mystery #630
  52. Marvel Comics Presents #72
  53. Marvel Comics Presents #76
  54. Wolverine Vol. 2 #50
  55. Wolverine Vol. 2 #62
  56. Wolverine Vol. 2 #63
  57. "Thor: The Trials of Loki" #2 (Feb. 1 2011)
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