List of fictional scientists and engineers

In addition to the archetypical mad scientist, fictional characters of scientists and engineers who go above and beyond the regular demands of their professions to use their skills and knowledge for the betterment of others, often at great personal risk. In this list of fictional scientists and engineers, an annotated alphabetical overview is given of notable characters in this category.

In literature

  • Bertrand Zobrist
  • Professor Shonku (Byomjatrir Diary, Professor Shonku o Robu, Professor Shonku o Khoka, Professor Shonku o Corvus, Ek Sringo Obhijaan, Swarnaparni and many more by the legendary Satyajit Ray) – world's most respected scientist, inventor and Physics professor in Scottish Church College. He had a bunch of incredible inventions and a series of adventures which he had written in his diary.
  • Martin Arrowsmith (Arrowsmith)
  • Dr. Claire Deller (I, Robot and other stories by Isaac Asimov) – chief robot genius of San Diego Robots and Mechanical Men
  • Joseph Cavor (The First Men in the Moon) – inventor of the "Cavorite" anti-gravity material
  • Captain Hagbard Celine (Illuminatus trilogy) – fights the Illuminati from his submarine and with his computer, both designed by himself
  • Norma Cenva (Legends of Dune) – inventor of the space folding engine
  • Captain Jaylen Cresida (The Lost Fleet) – captain in the Alliance Navy under the command of Captain John "Black Jack" Geary, and an expert on hypernet gates.
  • Leonid Gorbovsky (Noon Universe) – genius scientist, progressor and spaceship captain who is known for his ability to land on even the most dangerous planets, to survive planet-wide catastrophes and easily making contact with any non-human civilization
  • Leo Graf (Falling Free) – space engineer who leads a group of genetically engineered four-armed humans known as "quaddies" to freedom
  • Otto Hantzen (Les Mystères de Demain from Paul Féval, fils and H. J. Magog) – German mad scientist, with female accomplice Hindu mystic Yogha, battles his former colleague Oronius from Mount Everest to Atlantis
  • William Harper "Johnny" Littlejohn (Doc Savage) – archaeologist, associate of Doc Savage
  • Gennady Komov (Noon Universe) – xenopsychologist whose main occupation is engaging contact with and studying alien (especially, non-human) civilizations
  • Pardot Kynes (Prelude to Dune) – planetologist
  • Liet-Kynes (Prelude to Dune and Dune) – planetologist
  • Lt Col Andrew Blodgett "Monk" Mayfair (Doc Savage) – chemist, associate of Doc Savage
  • Dr. Morel (The Invention of Morel) – invented a machine that records and reproduces reality
  • Captain Nemo (Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, The Mysterious Island) – ambiguous-to-villainous figure, who later took on a heroic role
  • Leonard of Quirm (Discworld) – super-intelligent clockpunk engineer
  • Col John "Renny" Renwick (Doc Savage) – civil engineer, associate of Doc Savage
  • Maj Thomas J. "Long Tom" Roberts (Doc Savage) – electrical engineer, associate of Doc Savage
  • Dr. Clark Savage, Jr., a.k.a. Doc Savage (Doc Savage) – surgeon, scientist, adventurer, inventor, explorer and musician
  • Arne Saknussemm (Journey to the Center of the Earth) – 16th-century Icelandic naturalist, alchemist, and traveler whose messages guide a group of 19th-century adventurers
  • Hari Seldon (Foundation Series) – mathematician who invents psychohistory
  • Cyrus Smith (The Mysterious Island) – great literary example of a 19th-century engineer
  • Dr. Phineas Waldolf Steel – roboticist, transhumanist and industrial/steampunk musician
  • Franny K. Stein – child scientist who frequently invents monsters to combat various danger
  • Tom Swift and Tom Swift, Jr. (children's stories) – father-and-son team of inventors
  • Crawford Tillinghast (short story "From Beyond") – inventor of a machine which allows perception of normally imperceptible things
  • Professor Abraham Van Helsing (Dracula) – nemesis of Bram Stoker's Dracula; in later incarnations, the professor has not fared so well, and, in some adaptations, is himself a villain
  • Other Mother (Coraline)
  • Mark Watney (The Martian (Weir novel)) - botanist, mechanical engineer, astronaut

Mad scientists and evil geniuses

In live-action films

Individual scientist/engineers

Mad scientists

In live-action television

Individual scientist/engineers

Mad scientists

In television animation

Mad scientists

  • Dr. Claw (Inspector Gadget series)
  • Dr. Arkeville (The Transformers TV series) – self-proclaimed evil genius who allies himself with the Decepticons
  • Professor Bug (The Backyardigans) – pseudo-steampunk mad scientist portrayed by Pablo who bugs all the robots in Mega City
  • Professor Finbarr Calamitous (The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius)
  • Dexter (Dexter's Laboratory) – child genius who whips up dazzling, world-saving inventions in his secret laboratory
  • Mandark (Dexter's Laboratory) – Dexter's rival, an evil genius who wants to destroy Dexter's laboratory and take over the world
  • Dr. Heinz Doofenshmirtz (Phineas & Ferb) – mad scientist whose goal is to take over the tri-state area
  • Dr. Drakken (Kim Possible) – blue-skinned mad scientist determined to take over the world in order to prove his genius
  • Dr. Alphonse Mephesto, a.k.a. Dr. Mephesto (South Park) – mad scientist who specializes in genetic engineering; creates things like animals with multiple buttocks; performs experiments ranging from simple DNA tests to creating a genetic clone of Stan Marsh for his son's science project
  • Professor Hubert Farnsworth (Futurama) – creator of an atomic monster, various inventions, and the engines that allow space travel
  • Dr. Fritz Huhnmorder (Robot Chicken) – scientist who revives a road-killed chicken with cybernetic technology and forces the chicken to watch various stop motion comedy sketches
  • Hange Zoe (Attack on Titan) – quirky scientist in charge of studying titans and inventing new weapons for the Survey Corps.
  • Mane-iac (My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic) – mad scientist in chemical engineering, specializing in the production of detergents
  • Dr. Alphonse Mephesto (South Park) – mad scientist who specializes in genetic engineering; creates strange creatures with his talents; also performs experiments ranging from simple DNA tests to creating a genetic clone of Stan Marsh for his son's science project
  • Lisa Loud (The Loud House)
  • Mojo Jojo (Powerpuff Girls) – mad scientist's chimpanzee that plots to take over the world and destroy the Powerpuff Girls; he was also Professor Utonium's former pet and partially responsible for the creation of the Powerpuff Girls
  • Plankton (SpongeBob SquarePants) – evil genius who specializes in building robotic inventions, including his sidekick Karen
  • Rick Sanchez (Rick and Morty) – sociopathic, alcoholic genius who travels various dimensions with his grandson Morty
  • Dr. Weird (Aqua Teen Hunger Force) – smartest, madest, and scientistest scientist in the universe whose experiments often cause problems for the Aqua Teens.
  • Jack Spicer (Xiaolin Showdown) – evil boy genius
  • Professor Venomous (OK KO!: Let's be Heroes) – international terrorist and evil inventor
  • Lord Boxman (OK KO!: Let's be Heroes) – evil robotics engineer and CEO of Boxmore.

In animated films

In comics and graphic novels

DC Comics

  • Barry Allen, a.k.a. The Flash (The Flash) – police scientist and superhero
  • Querl Dox, a.k.a. Brainiac 5 (Legion of Super-Heroes) – reputed to have a brain exponentially more powerful than a normal human
  • Jay Garrick, a.k.a. The Flash (The Flash) – research scientist, superhero and founding member of the Justice Society of America
  • Dr. Pamela Lillian Isley, a.k.a. Poison Ivy (Batman) – supervillain scientist with an affinity towards poisonous plant.
  • Ted Knight, a.k.a. Starman (Starman) – astronomer, expert scientist and superhero
  • Dr. Jon Osterman, a.k.a. Dr. Manhattan (Watchmen) – nuclear physicist transformed by accident into a godlike super-being; while publicized as a superhero, he functions as the ultimate weapon for the United States military
  • Ray Palmer, a.k.a. Atom (The Atom) – professor of physics at Ivy University; able to shrink his body to varying degrees, even to sub-atomic level, and able to alter his mass to near infinite levels
  • Doctor Poison (Wonder Woman) – DC Comics supervillain, a mad scientist who specializes in chemistry and poisons
  • Alan Scott (Green Lantern) – engineer and the first Green Lantern
  • Doctor Sivana, full name Thaddeus Bodog Sivana – world's wickedest scientist; arch-enemy of Captain Marvel (DC Comics)
  • Angela Spica, a.k.a. Engineer II (The Authority)
  • Tom Strong (Tom Strong) – science hero
  • Bruce Wayne, a.k.a. Batman (Detective Comics, Batman) – world's greatest detective (reputedly), with incredible scientific knowledge and forensic and memory skills that are second to none
  • Carter Hall, a.k.a. Hawkman (Hawkman) – archaeologist who has been reborn many times, using his knowledge acquired through centuries to aid him on his anthropological studies

Mad scientists

Marvel Comics

  • Dr. Bruce Banner, a.k.a. The Incredible Hulk (Hulk) – scientist who developed the "Gamma Bomb" for the US government; an accident at the site of a test led to his becoming the Hulk; for a long period after, while in the form of Bruce Banner, he looked for scientific ways to rid himself of the transformation
  • Forge (X-Men) – mutant engineering genius
  • Dr. Henry (Hank) Philip McCoy, a.k.a. Beast (X-Men) – world-renowned biochemist and mutant superhero
  • Peter Parker, a.k.a. Spider-Man (Spider-Man) – superhero with great knowledge of advanced sciences; now teaches at the high school he formerly attended
  • Reed Richards, a.k.a. Mister Fantastic (Fantastic Four) – scientist and inventor, regarded as one of the most intelligent people on Earth, leader of the Fantastic Four
  • Ted Sallis – duplicator of the serum that created Captain America; transformed into The Man-Thing;although he had serious problems with his personal ethics when it came to women and girls, he abandoned Operation Sulfer on moral grounds, and elected to remain as Man-Thing rather than allow innocents to be killed by the demon Thog
  • Tony Stark, a.k.a. Iron Man (Iron Man) – industrialist and mechanical engineer of incredible ingenuity and inventive genius, whose technology to fight crime keeps him alive as well; he suffers from alcoholism
  • Victor and Janet Stein (Runaways) – founding members of the Pride; parents of Chase Stein
  • Victor Von Doom, a.k.a. Doctor Doom (Doctor Doom) – evil scientist, engineer, genius, conqueror; like Mister Fantastic, he is regarded as one of the most intelligent people on Earth, even though he is a villain
  • Professor Charles Francis Xavier, a.k.a. Professor X (X-Men) – founder, mentor, and sometime leader of the X-Men
  • Dr. Henry "Hank" Pym biochemist, discovers an unusual set of subatomic particles he labels "Pym particles". Entrapping these within two separate serums, he creates a size-altering formula and a reversal formula, testing them on himself. Becomes original Ant-Man.

Mad scientists

Other

In anime and manga

Individual scientist/engineers

  • Jotaro Kujo (JoJo's Bizarre Adventure) – marine biologist, while unrelated to his role in the various plot arcs he appears in, Jotaro earns a doctorate in marine biology sometime before 1999 in the series' original timeline; dolphin and anchor motifs were added to his clothing designs to reflect his new occupation
  • Lloyd Asplund (Code Geass) – Britannian scientist who designed the Lancelot Knightmare Frame, a bipedal, humanoid superweapon entrusted to Japanese pilot Suzaku Kururugi
  • Professor Brown
  • Bulma (Dragon Ball) – creator of the Dragon Radar and a time machine allowing Trunks to avert the conquest of the world by evil androids
  • Kiranin Colbock (Space Runaway Ideon) – member of a science academy
  • Caesar Clown (One Piece) – former marine scientist and former partner of Doctor Vegapunk; he created mass destruction weapons and human experimentation but was fired and arrested due to his unethical research methods
  • The Doctor (Hellsing) – lead scientist of Millennium who created the Nazi vampires and the catboy Schrödinger
  • Professor Kouzou Fuyutsuki (Neon Genesis Evangelion) – right-hand man to Supreme Commander Gendo Ikari and second in command of Nerv
  • Szayelaporro Grantz (Bleach)
  • Heaven Canceller (A Certain Magical Index) – doctor and medical scientist
  • Doctor Hogback (One Piece) – doctor of Gecko Moria's crew who modified dead bodies to create a zombie army with the help of his captain
  • Ri Kohran (Sakura Wars)
  • Jonathan Joestar (JoJo's Bizarre Adventure) – archaeologist
  • Harumi Kiyama (A Certain Scientific Railgun) – creator of the Level Upper
  • Son Gohan (Dragon Ball), not properly a scientist, but an estimated university professor
  • Mayuri Kurotsuchi (Bleach) – head of the Shinigami Research Institute; performs extensive bodily modifications on himself and his subordinates
  • Dr. Emil Lang (Robotech) – responsible for much of the Earth-based Robotechnology; briefly seen in the original series, he played a much larger role in the aborted series Robotech II: The Sentinels, which was adapted as a comic book series
  • Professor Ochanomizu – surrogate father of Osamu Tezuka's Astro Boy
  • Orochimaru (Naruto) – obsessed with immortality and obtaining all knowledge, conducted many illegal unethical experiments that resulted in his becoming a wanted criminal
  • Tochiro Oyama (Captain Harlock) – designer and some say the soul of Harlock's spaceship Arcadia
  • Dr. Tem Ray (Mobile Suit Gundam) – father of Amuro Ray; led the design team that created the RX-78 Gundam
  • Dr. Aki Ross (Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within) – biologist vowing to stop the aliens that plague the Earth
  • Shiro Sanada (Star Blazers) – chief technician or chief mechanic of the Space Battleship Yamato, called Sandor in Star Blazers
  • Hanji Zoe (Attack on Titan) – head scientist in the survey corps, performs experiments on captured titans hoping to find a new way to save humanity
  • Professor Noriyasu Seta (Love Hina)
  • Skuld (Oh My Goddess!) – goddess who has the ability to build robots and machines from scrap material
  • James Ray Steam (Steamboy) – boy genius who helps his father and grandfather save Victorian London from a greedy corporation's superweapons
  • Franken Stein (Soul Eater)
  • Precia Testarossa
  • Doctor Vegapunk (One Piece) – leading scientist in the employment of the Marines; his work includes discovering the secrets and uses of Seastone as well as the secrets of how Devil Fruit powers work
  • Wu Tomoki (JoJo's Bizarre Adventure) – orthopedic surgeon and cosmetic dermatologist employed at the T.G. University Hospital, notable for his research of the Rokakaka fruit

Mad scientists

  • Kaolla Su (Love Hina) – exchange student who is princess of the island of Molmol. She frequently invents dangerous devices, and wants to turn her kingdom into a technological powerhouse that will conquer Japan.
  • Bondrewd The Novel (Made in Abyss) – White Whistle of ill repute, "Bondrewd the Novel" is in charge of Idofront, the Cave Riders' forward Operating Base in the fifth layer. He was the one responsible for several unethical experiments on children, including the one which transformed Nanachi and Mitty into Hollows.
  • Dr. Hiroshi Agasa (Case Closed) – absent-minded professor who invents several devices to help out Jimmy Kudo
  • Naoko Akagi (Neon Genesis Evangelion)
  • Dr. Ritsuko Akagi (Neon Genesis Evangelion) – daughter of the above
  • Desty Nova (Battle Angel Alita) – wicked genius whose work is fueled by philosophy; highly skilled at nanotechnology
  • Ujiko Daruma (My Hero Academia) – mad scientist associated with the series' main antagonists, League of Villains.

In video games

Scientists

  • Albert Wesker (Resident Evil) – microbiologist working for the pharmaceutical enterprise Umbrella and co-creator of the T-virus; he was killed in the first Resident Evil game by Tyrant T-002, a powerful biological weapon, and was resurrected with super-human powers after self-injecting the T-virus
  • Catherine Elizabeth Halsey, MD, PhD (Halo series) – scientist of the Office of Naval Intelligence, best known as the creator of the SPARTAN-II Program and Mjolnir Powered Assault Armor
  • Dr. Alphys (Undertale) – stout Lizard monster, and Asgore's royal scientist; extremely timid; the creator of the robot Mettaton and the Amalgamates; has a crush on Undyne, captain of the Royal Guard
  • Dr. Andonuts (EarthBound) – father of Jeff, one of the Chosen Four
  • Dr. Bosconovitch (Tekken series)
  • Cave Johnson (Portal 2) – eccentric former owner of Aperture Science, and creator of the portal gun
  • Ciel (Mega Man Zero) – young human scientist who awakens Zero in order to save the world[2]
  • Daro'Xen vas Moreh (first appeared in Mass Effect 2) – quarian admiral and scientist who believes that the geth, a synthetic race created by the quarians, who subsequently rebelled and drove their masters from their homeworld, should be controlled by the quarians once again; Admiral Xen also performed surgery on her childhood toys, much to the quarian squadmate Tali'Zorah's disgust
  • Egon Stetmann (Starcraft II) – creator of the Mecha Swarm, paranoid, and prone to terrazine-induced hallucinations, he was once chief science adviser aboard the Hyperion.
  • Professor E. Gadd (Nintendo games)
  • Dr. Gast (Final Fantasy VII) – former head of the Shinra Company's science department; has a much stronger moral compass than his successor
  • Dr. Gordon Freeman, Ph.D. (Half-Life) – theoretical physicist who fights a one-man battle against invading aliens, US Marines and Combine forces with a crowbar and other weapons; his associates are Drs. Isaac Kleiner, Eli Vance, Judith Mossman and Arne Magnusson
  • Dr. Krieger (Far Cry) – renowned scientist and creator/controller of the Trigens in the first Far Cry game
  • Kurisu Makise (Steins;Gate) – famous Japanese neuroscientist who lives in the United States, builds a machine that allows the user's memories to be converted into data.
  • Dr. Light (Mega Man) – creator of the revolutionary robot Mega Man
  • Love Lab scientists (Rhythm Heaven) – male and female scientist pass ingredients to each other to make love potions to the rhythm of the music
  • Lucrecia Crescent (Final Fantasy VII) – Shinra scientist and lover of Vincent Valentine
  • Grimoire Valentine (Final Fantasy VII) – Shinra scientist and father of Vincent Valentine
  • Hojo (Final Fantasy VII) – Head of the Shinra Company's science department; a sociopathic, amoral bioengineer whose experiments drive the game's plot forward
  • The Medic (Team Fortress 2) – one of nine playable classes who is able to heal other characters and make them invincible (Übercharge them) for a limited time with his Medigun. He previously had a medical licence, but lost it due to misplacing a patient's skeleton.
  • Mei (Overwatch and Heroes of the Storm) – climatologist, and one of the heroes in both games and comic series
  • Moira (Overwatch) – geneticist, and one of the playable heroes in the game
  • Mordin Solus (first appeared in Mass Effect 2) – member of fictional alien species known as salarians (who have fast metabolisms, talk fast, walk fast and think fast); a brilliant biologist and a tech specialist
  • Neuron (City of Heroes)
  • Dr. Otto Wolfgang Ort-Meyer (Hitman) – creator of Agent 47 and other clone assassins
  • Pieter Van Eckhardt (Tomb Rider: The Angel of Darkness)
  • Plague Knight (Shovel Knight), rouge member of the Order of No Quarter, tries to harvest their Essence for the Ultimate Potion to win over someone's heart.
  • Reed Wahl (BioShock 2)
  • Rikako Asakura (Touhou Project) – titled "Scientist Searching for Dreams", she is one of the few people in Gensokyo to value using science over magic. While she still uses magic in order to enhance her science at times, she tries to refrain from using magic due to a natural distaste of it.
  • Dr. Samuel Hayden (Doom (franchise)) – Head of the UAC, physicist.
  • Tobias Planck (Pirate Galaxy) – named after Max Planck, he is a theoretical physicist and field scientist with a parietal lobe 15% larger than average
  • Dr. W.D. Gaster (Undertale) – former royal scientist; only appears a few times while the player visits the CORE; speaks in the Wingdings font
  • William Birkin (Resident Evil 2) – microbiologist working for the pharmaceutical enterprise Umbrella Corporation; creator of the G-virus; he was wounded and injected himself with his G-virus, mutating him into a monster
  • Dr. Zed (Borderlands) – "Doctor" from the –Borderlands– series

Mad scientists

  • Dr. Ivo "Eggman" Robotnik (Sonic the Hedgehog) – mad scientist who specializes in robotics and other fields of engineering, who invents various kinds of aircraft, robots and vehicles in various sizes; he imprisoned animals in the inside of working robotic shells, and experimented with kinds of mutations. He aims to capture the chaos emeralds
  • Dr. "Mundo" Edmundo (League of Legends) – sociopath medical doctor who only specializes in one field: the study of the pain response and how to inflict pain;his experiments have caused him to take on a monstrous form reminiscent of Frankenstein's Monster and a deceptively dimwitted speech pattern; out of all the scientists in the game, Dr. Mundo stands out as the only one who is a danger to both himself and others, evident in his self experiments
  • Dr. Muto (video game of the same name)
  • Doctor Neo Cortex (Crash Bandicoot) – evil doctor with an oversized head, who has plans using Power Crystals
  • Doctor Nitrus Brio (Crash Bandicoot) – timid and meek scientist who assisted Doctor Neo Cortex in the first game, often using beakers of chemicals.
  • Doctor N. Gin (Crash Bandicoot) – masochistic scientist who assists Neo Cortex in the second game onward.
  • Dr. Wily (Mega Man) – primary antagonist of the original Mega Man series.
  • Dr. Nefarious (‘’Ratchet and Clank’’) – A recurring adversary to Ratchet, Clank and Captain Qwark.
  • Vexen/Even (Kingdom Hearts) – A founding member of Organization XIII. A brilliant scientist who carries out research on various Organization projects. He was in charge of the Replica Program at Castle Oblivion, but someone disposed of him.
  • Dr. M – He is the main antagonist of Sly 3: Honor Among Thieves is mad scientists and the brains of Sly's father's gang he felt he was being held back so, he set up a fortress on Kaine Island to break into the Cooper Vault and claim the wealth.
  • Professor Monkey-For-A-Head (Earthworm Jim)
  • Professor Von Kriplespac (Conker's Bad Fur Day)
  • Rintarō Okabe, a.k.a. Kyōma Hōōin (Steins;Gate) – self proclaimed mad scientist in his Kyōma Hōōin persona (which in reality is taken from a television show he watched as a child).
  • Yuri (Red Alert 2, and expansion pack) – Soviet psychic and founder of the Psychic Corps. During the Second World War, he took part in Stalin's secret project, whose aim was to create a mind control technology, and army which specialized in psychic warfare.
  • Victor Donovan (Dead or Alive), main antagonist of Dead or Alive series.

Engineers

Other

  • Dr. Baron von Kluckinstein (The Radioactive Chicken Heads)
  • Morgus the Magnificent was a horror host of late-night science fiction and horror movies and television shows that originated in the New Orleans, Louisiana market.
  • Professor Nebulous (Nebulous) – leader of an eco-troubleshooting team
  • Prof. Jocelyn Peabody (Dan Dare) – scientific brains behind many of the team's most inventive ideas

Teams of scientists/engineers

References

  1. Peter Swirski, The Art and Science of Stanislaw Lem, 2006, ISBN 0773575073, p.50
  2. Tracy, Tim (2002-10-01). "Mega Man Zero Review". GameSpot. Retrieved 2017-10-13.
  3. "He Has Finally Done It—World of Final Fantasy's Cid Is A Robot - Siliconera". Siliconera. 2016-03-18. Retrieved 2017-10-13.
  4. Farokhmanesh, Megan (2015-03-20). "The changing looks of Final Fantasy's Cid: fashion experts weigh in". Polygon. Retrieved 2017-10-13.
  5. Bramwell, Tom (2007-09-12). "Meet the TF2 Engineer". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2017-10-13.
  6. Schiesel, Seth (2011-02-01). "Dead Space 2 Revives Isaac Clarke - Review". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2017-10-13.
  7. "Dead Space 3's Isaac Clarke as 'the reluctant participant'". Engadget. Retrieved 2017-10-13.
  8. Hwang, Kaiser (2003-03-03). "Metal Gear Solid 2: Substance". IGN. Retrieved 2017-10-13.
  9. "BlizzCon 2008: Starcraft II lore panel". Engadget. Retrieved 2017-10-13.
  10. "PS2 RPG HD Collections We'd Like To See". Game Informer. Retrieved 2017-10-13.
  11. Parkin, Simon (2005-11-20). "Xenosaga Episode II: Jenseits von Gut und Bose". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2017-10-13.
  12. Williams, Mike (2017-05-22). "Overwatch - How to Play Torbjorn". USgamer. Retrieved 2017-10-13.
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