Wonder Man

Marvel Comics character
Comics character
Wonder Man
Cover art of Avengers Two: Wonder Man and Beast - Marvel Tales #1 (January 2023) by Nick Bradshaw.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceThe Avengers #9 (October 1964)
Created byStan Lee (writer)
Jack Kirby (artist)
Don Heck (artist)
In-story information
Alter egoSimon Williams
SpeciesHuman mutate
Team affiliationsAvengers
Williams Innovations
West Coast Avengers
Defenders
Force Works
S.H.I.E.L.D.
Lethal Legion
Masters of Evil
Legion of the Unliving
Revengers[1]
Notable aliasesMr. Muscles
Hal Canutt[2]
Abilities
  • Superhuman strength, speed, agility, stamina and reflexes
  • Ionic-energy physiology
  • Enhanced vision and hearing
  • Electromagnetic manipulation
  • Ionic energy manipulation
  • Energy enhanced Strike
  • Virtual invulnerability
  • Self-sustenance
  • Power recycling
  • Size alteration
  • Healing factor
  • Shapeshifting
  • Teleportation
  • Immortality
  • Flight

Wonder Man (Simon Williams) is a character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by writer Stan Lee and artists Don Heck and Jack Kirby, he first appeared in The Avengers #9 (October 1964).[3] The character, who was initially introduced as a supervillain imbued with "ionic" energy, fought the Avengers, and, after a series of events, was reborn as a superhero, joining the team against which he originally fought.

Williams will make his live-action debut in the upcoming Disney+ original series Wonder Man, set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) and portrayed by Yahya Abdul-Mateen II.[4]

Publication history

Wonder Man debuted in the superhero-team title The Avengers #9 (cover-dated October 1964), and appeared to die in that issue.[5] Four years later, The Avengers #58 (November 1968) revisited the events of #9, explaining that the Avengers had electronically saved Wonder Man's mind in a computer. Wonder Man was not seen again until The Avengers #102 (August 1972), where he made a cameo appearance in a comatose state. Wonder Man's body is revived by the villain Kang in The Avengers #131-132 (January – February 1975), and then again by the Black Talon in The Avengers #152 (October 1976), and finally by the Living Laser in The Avengers Annual #6 (1976). After this last encounter, Wonder Man finally recovers his faculties and joins the Avengers in a full-time capacity in The Avengers #160 (June 1977). Wonder Man and his fellow Avenger the Beast were cast as buddies and lovers of nightlife, which would become a fan-favorite dynamic of The Avengers and continue to be used after the two characters left the series.[6]

Marvel Comics' then-publisher Stan Lee said in 1978, "You know, years ago we brought out Wonder Man, and [DC Comics] sued us because they had Wonder Woman, and... I said okay, I'll discontinue Wonder Man. And all of a sudden they've got Power Girl [after Marvel had introduced Power Man]. Oh, boy. How unfair."[7]

Wonder Man later appeared as a founding member of the spin-off West Coast Avengers first in a four-issue miniseries (September – December 1984), and continuing as one of the primary characters in the series' 102-issue run. After that team disbanded, he joined the team Force Works in a series that debuted with a July 1994 cover-date. After that team splintered, Wonder Man rejoined the Avengers in The Avengers vol. 3 #4 (May 1998). After the collapse of the team in The Avengers #503 (December 2004), Wonder Man joined a new splinter group called the Mighty Avengers, co-starred in that team's series, which premiered with March 2007 cover-date.

Wonder Man starred in a self-titled graphic novel in 1986. He then starred in a 29-issue series, Wonder Man (September 1991 – February 1994), and then the three-issue miniseries Avengers Two: Wonder Man and the Beast (2000). In 2007, he starred in the five-issue miniseries Wonder Man: My Fair Super Hero.

Wonder Man appeared sporadically throughout the 2010-2013 Avengers series, but played an important role in the "End Times" storyline in issue #31 (December 2012) through its final issue #34 (January 2013).

Comic book writer Rick Remender revealed in an interview that Wonder Man would be a member of the Uncanny Avengers, starting with issue #5.[8]

Fictional character biography

Simon Williams is the son of rich industrialist Sanford Williams, owner of Williams Innovations. Simon inherits the munitions factory after his father's death, but the company's profits fall due to its biggest competitor Tony Stark and his company Stark Industries. On the advice of his brother Eric, Simon tries to embezzle funds from his company but is caught and incarcerated. Simon blames Stark for this and accepts the proposition of master villain Baron Heinrich Zemo after the Enchantress pays his bail, as a pawn is required to infiltrate the Avengers. The desperate Simon Williams agrees and is transformed into an ion-powered superhuman. His powers are tested, and he is shown to have great superhuman strength and durability, even defeating the Executioner. Called Wonder Man by Zemo, he is then sent to meet and join the Avengers, with instructions to betray them at a critical moment so that Zemo's Masters of Evil can destroy the Avengers. Zemo ensures Wonder Man's loyalty by advising him that as a result of the treatment his body now requires periodic doses of a serum to survive—a serum that only Zemo can provide. The Avengers are lured into a trap and captured. The plan fails when Wonder Man decides to save the Avengers and aid them against Zemo, apparently at the cost of his own life. Hank Pym records Wonder Man's brain patterns in the hope that one day he can be revived.[9] Unbeknownst to the Avengers, Wonder Man's body has simply entered a catatonic state as it adjusts to the effects of the treatment.[volume & issue needed] Eric Williams becomes distraught over the apparent death of his sibling and, blaming the Avengers, assumes the identity of the Grim Reaper in an effort to destroy them. The Grim Reaper steals Simon's body at one point,[10] and attacks the Avengers three times before Wonder Man finally returns.[11]

Wonder Man remains in suspended animation for years, and it is during this period that Ultron, the evil robot creation of Hank Pym, steals the brain patterns recorded by the Avengers for use as a template for the synthezoid Vision.[12] It is later revealed that Vision is built from the original Human Torch, an android created by Professor Phineas Horton.[13] This only happened in mainstream continuity and other origins were possible due to the Forever Crystal of Immortus.[14]

During this vulnerable time, Wonder Man is used as a pawn on three occasions. Wonder Man is briefly revived by Kang the Conqueror to battle the Avengers as part of his Legion of the Unliving,[15] and later "resurrected" as a zombie by Black Talon and the Grim Reaper to attack the Avengers once more.[16] On the final occasion, the Living Laser hypnotizes a now-awake but still very weak Wonder Man, in an unsuccessful attack on the Avengers.[17] After this encounter, Wonder Man was restored to true life and chooses to remain with the Avengers, aiding them against Attuma and Doctor Doom.[18] He also fought the Vision, and helped the Avengers battle Graviton.[19] He soon after defeats the Grim Reaper, who was intent on destroying the Vision as he was "artificial" and a "mockery" of his brother; Wonder Man at this point is revealed to have become a being of ionic energy.[20]

Wonder Man eventually joins the Avengers in a full-time capacity and becomes close friends with his teammate, the Beast. For several months after his resurrection, Wonder Man suffers from slight claustrophobia and a fear of dying in battle, as he did once before. Wonder Man finally overcomes his fear of death during the final battle with Korvac.[21] Wonder Man invaded his former plant which had been taken over by the Maggia, and fought Madame Masque and the Dreadnought.[22] Developing an interest in acting, Wonder Man stars in minor roles before moving to Hollywood, where fellow Avenger Hercules uses his contacts to establish Wonder Man's career.[23] Wonder Man also works for a time as a stuntman, an ideal vocation since he is invulnerable to virtually all conventional weapons.[24]

Wonder Man helps form the West Coast Avengers,[25] and his new-found confidence begins to become arrogance. He develops a serious rivalry with Iron Man, but sees the error of his ways after a brutal battle with the Abomination.[26] He also foils Doctor Doom's plot to control the world.[27] His acting career rises, and he is cast as the villain in the fourth film in the successful Arkon franchise.[28] Wonder Man eventually accepts the Vision as his "brother", but there is a setback when the Vision is dismantled and rebuilt as an emotionless machine by a global conglomerate. The Scarlet Witch—the Vision's wife—asks Wonder Man to provide his brainwaves once again to rebuild the foundational personality matrix of the original Vision, but Wonder Man refuses, having feelings for her himself. The Wasp further deduces that the Vision's original relationship to the Scarlet Witch may even have been predicated by Wonder Man's initial donation for the original personality matrix; at this, Wonder Man confirms that several of his hesitations about making the attempt arise from these doubts and the subconscious desire he's felt toward the Scarlet Witch since her separation from her husband.[29] He is then ensorcelled by the Enchantress, and battles the Avengers.[30]

Wonder Man battles old foes Goliath[31] and the Enchantress,[32] before meeting his would-be sidekick "Spider" and battling Gamma-Burn, resulting in wrecking his jet-pack.[33] Wonder Man then battles the assassin Splice for the first time.[34] Wonder Man takes part in the Kree/Shi'ar War, and had his powers altered when he and the Vision failed to prevent the Shi'ar Nega-Bomb from detonating.[35] He battled Angkor,[36] and then journeyed to Hades where he battled Mephisto, Blackheart, the Enchantress, and the Grim Reaper; he then learned that he was immortal.[37] When Avengers West Coast (renamed) disbands after a dispute, Wonder Man becomes a founding member of its successor group Force Works, but is disintegrated in an explosion during their first mission against the alien Kree.[38] Many months later, the Scarlet Witch accidentally resurrects Wonder Man in ionic form; while in this form he appears when she is in need.[39] Several months later, the Scarlet Witch is able to fully revive Wonder Man and he now exists in an independent, more human form. It is also discovered later that the Grim Reaper - dead at the time - is also revived.[40] Wonder Man becomes romantically involved with the Scarlet Witch, but ends their affair during the Kang Dynasty saga, due to her residual feelings for the Vision.[41]

Wonder Man is blackmailed into working for S.H.I.E.L.D. during the Civil War storyline. Due to charges of misappropriation of funds in his non-profit organization, Wonder Man is pressured to work for the pro-registration side in the ensuing Civil War drama. In addition to capturing renegade vigilantes and criminals, Wonder Man is instrumental in creating televised messages to educate the public and yet-unregistered superhumans about the specifics of the Registration Act.[42] Wonder Man became a member of the Mighty Avengers.[43]

Wonder Man began a romantic relationship with fellow Mighty Avenger Ms. Marvel warning her not to use her position as leader of the Avengers to keep him out of potentially dangerous situations just because of their relationship.[44]

Following the events of the Secret Invasion, Norman Osborn created a new team of Avengers, effectively retiring Wonder Man during the Dark Reign storyline. Wonder Man later appears on television, lamenting his tenure as an Avenger, claiming it was all a waste of time, and that using violence to uphold justice has caused nothing but heartache and death. He ends his speech by sadly admitting that having Osborn in charge is exactly what the country deserves.[45] After this, Wonder Man is imprisoned as a member of the new Lethal Legion. This group opposes the tyrannical efforts of Osborn; Wonder Man joins to try to keep them from hurting innocents.[46]

Wonder Man has been seen alongside his old West Coast Avengers teammates Ronin, Mockingbird, Tigra and War Machine in battle with a new version of Ultimo.[47]

During the Heroic Age storyline, Simon is approached by Steve Rogers to join the new team of Avengers. Simon refuses stating that the Avengers have caused more problems than they have solved and implies as Rogers leaves that he will make sure his old allies realize the mistake they are making. Simon also mentioned as having been in jail until Steve bailed him out.[48] After learning that Rogers had disregarded his advice, Wonder Man attacks the new team causing some damage to their base before inexplicably disappearing.[49] Thor and Iron Man later contact him to try and reason with him, but Simon refuses to listen to their arguments, stating that the dead heroes that have resulted from the Avengers working together should be a clear sign that the concept is doomed, departing as Thor and Iron Man try to argue that all heroes are aware of the risks when they begin. Significantly, Iron Man notes that Simon is 'leaking' ionic energy, suggesting that his current mental condition may relate to his powers rather than being simply a matter of choice.[50]

Wonder Man put together the Revengers, a team of super-powered people to stop the Avengers because he believes they do more harm than good, blaming the Avengers for Ultron's existence, the damage caused by the Scarlet Witch and the Hulk, the Civil War, and Osborn's Dark Avengers. His team subsequently defeats the New Avengers in a quick attack on the mansion before he moves on to attack Avengers Tower,[51] stating that he will destroy the tower unless the Avengers immediately disband. Although Iron Man manages to trap him in a prison specifically designed to contain his ionic energy with the Revengers being quickly defeated by the combined Avengers teams, Wonder Man has still successfully managed to spread doubt among the population about the merits of the Avengers as a concept particularly since Captain Rogers has yet to officially rebuff any of his arguments, asking Beast to remember his words simultaneously reflecting that he may be able to see the Avengers from the outside as he has not been 'real' since his resurrection before he apparently disappears from his prison.[52]

Wonder Man later reappears to Captain America (Steve Rogers), telling him that he feels sorry for his past actions and that he is trying to redeem himself. Before he can accept help from the Avengers, he is attacked by the Red Hulk. He managed to take him down and looks at Avengers Tower, claiming that he will "earn his way back".[53] He later plays a pivotal role in rescuing the Wasp from the Microverse. After this, Wonder Man is shown celebrating Jan's return alongside the rest of the Avengers at Stark Tower.[54]

At Wasp's urging, Simon later joins the Avengers Unity Squad. During conversations with Jan and Sunfire, he makes it clear has no intentions of fighting, and only wants to help use his PR skills to win over skeptical citizens.[55] He and the Scarlet Witch rekindle their relationship. During the final confrontation with the Celestial Executioner, he allows Rogue to absorb him to give her the power to oppose the Celestial,[56] but his essence remains in Rogue after Wanda expels the other absorbed powers from her,[57] leaving Rogue with Simon's powers and once again unable to touch others.[58]

During the AXIS storyline, Wonder Man's consciousness was still in Rogue at the time when the X-Men and the Avengers were inverted by an inversion spell. Rogue used Wonder Man's powers when helping the X-Men.[59]

At the time when the Avengers Unity Squad traveled to Counter-Earth to find Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch, Rogue was captured by High Evolutionary's right-hand man Master Scientist who removed Wonder Man's consciousness from Rogue.[60]

After Rogue was unable to see or hear Wonder Man, he was still in Rogue's mind. When Rogue kissed Deadpool, Wonder Man was freed from Rogue's body as the result of Deadpool's healing factor acting like a circuit breaker that enabled Wonder Man to escape from Rogue's body.[61]

During the "Secret Empire" storyline, Wonder Man appears as a member of the Underground which is a resistance movement against Hydra ever since they took over the United States.[62]

During the "Empyre" storyline, Wonder Man, Quicksilver, and Mockingbird deal with the Kree and the Skrull's fight with the Cotati near Navojoa. When Quicksilver is hit by special spheres fired by the Cotati magicians, Mockingbird and Wonder Man come to his aid and help the Kree and the Skrull turn the tide against the Cotati.[63]

Powers and abilities

Simon Williams gained his superhuman powers due to chemical and radiation treatments with "ionic" energy by Baron Zemo, giving him superhuman strength, speed, stamina, durability, agility, and reflexes.[64] The process unexpectedly enlaced Pym Particles in the ion ray bombardment.[65] While Zemo's initial aim was to use ionic rad supplemented treatments to make Wonder Man at least "the equal of any Avenger," his treatments surpassed his expectations and endowed Wonder Man with strength comparable to that of Thor.[66] In Avengers: The Children's Crusade #3, Captain America described Wonder Man as having "Sentry-level" strength. Zemo's treatments also granted Wonder Man virtual invulnerability, immortality, enhanced physicality likened to greater stamina, agility, speed, and instantaneous reflexes. Zemo also outfitted Wonder Man with a rocket pack in his belt to achieve flight.[67]

When the Scarlet Witch resurrected him during Kurt Busiek's tenure as head writer, Wonder Man was able to transform into a state of pure ionic energy at will and back again.[68] Following his resurrection and metamorphosis, Wonder Man eventually relearned he is capable of a great many prospects he wasn't aware of beforehand.[69] Due to his self-regenerating ionic energy,[70] Simon has the ability to go without air, food, or water. His eyes also glow a bright red and he usually wears sunglasses to conceal the effect but has since realized he can normalize their appearance as well.[68]

Before his "death" at the hands of the Kree,[38] Wonder Man discovered new abilities. In his beginning years, Williams sometimes wore an ionic energy powered apparatus which allowed him simulated flight.[71][72] Over the course of his career he would gain true flight without need of a thrust system as well as energy projection.[73] Other abilities begotten from manipulating his own ion energies include: emitting force or flame beams from his hands and eyes.;[74][75] alternating his physical shape in undiscovered ways either changing his size (enabling him to grow taller than his adversary Goliath) and morphing his hand into a sickle or transforming into a more demonic semblance;[75] and withholding the energy in hand to increase the impact force of his physical blows.[75] He could potentially even give superpowers to non-powered individuals by imparting his ionic force onto them and can just as easily reabsorb it back into himself as this somewhat weakens his superhuman abilities.[76]

Since his resurrection, he has rarely used most of these powers but can still shift between human and energy states at will.[77] In later issues his ionic form has begun to "leak" energy, allowing Iron Man to track him by following his unique energy signature, the other heroes speculating that his condition is responsible for his currently unstable attitude and anger at the Avengers.[78] In later appearances he appears to have increased in strength and power, having also learned to teleport at will. He has done so several times in recent appearances; once being when he was detained by the Avengers after staging an attack on the mansion,[79] and again while battling and easily winning against the Red Hulk.[80] Wonder Man has some limited effect on Electromagnetic phenomena as was explained to him by Hank and Nadia Pym, to that end he can absorb various forms of energy be it radiological,[81] ionic,[82] even anti-material in nature.[83]

Simon is an exceptional hand-to-hand combatant, having received Avengers training in unarmed combat from Captain America. He has an advanced degree in electrical engineering, is an experienced stuntman, and a talented actor. He is also exceptionally wealthy, being the owner of his own private weapons company as well as a successful movie star.

Reception

Accolades

  • In 2012, IGN ranked Wonder Man 38th in their "The Top 50 Avengers" list.[84]
  • In 2015, Entertainment Weekly ranked Wonder-Man 78th in their "Let's rank every Avenger ever" list.[85]
  • In 2015, Gizmodo ranked Wonder Man 25th in their "Every Member Of The Avengers" list.[86]
  • In 2016, Screen Rant ranked Wonder Man 7th in their "20 Most Powerful Members Of The Avengers" list[87] and 13th in their "15 Physically Strongest Superheroes" list.[88]
  • In 2017, CBR.com ranked Wonder Man 15th in their "The 15 Most Overpowered Avengers" list.[64]
  • In 2018, CBR.com ranked Wonder Man 12th in their "25 Most Powerful Avengers Ever" list.[89]
  • In 2021, CBR.com ranked Wonder Man 7th in their "Marvel: The 10 Strongest Male Avengers" list.[71]
  • In 2021, CBR.com ranked Wonder Man 7th in their "Marvel: 10 Characters Baron Zemo Created In The Comics" list.[90]
  • In 2022, Newsarama ranked Wonder Man 15th in their "Best Avengers members of all time" list.[91]
  • In 2022, Screen Rant ranked Wonder Man 4th in their "9 Strongest West Coast Avengers" list[92] and included him in their "10 Most Powerful Avengers In Marvel Comics" list.[93]
  • In 2022, CBR.com ranked Wonder Man 9th in their "10 Most Iconic Avengers Who Aren't Iron Man, Captain America, Or Thor" list.[94]

Other versions

Earth-818

On Earth-818 which was conquered by Multiversal Masters of Evil member Black Skull, a white-skinned version of Wonder Man is a member of the resistance against Black Skull that is led by Ant-Man (this Earth's version of Tony Stark). He was described to be a "slave of the silver screen". Following Black Skull's defeat, Ant-Man joins Robbie Reyes and his Deathlok companion in their quest to liberate the enslaved Earths from the Multiversal Masters of Evil as he leaves Wonder Man and Infinity Thing to rebuild Earth-818.[95]

Following Ghost Rider's sacrifice to stop the flow of the ancient Multiverse's energies from the other side, Wonder Man and Infinity Thing are shown to be members of the Multiversal Avengers.[96]

Exiles

A version of Wonder Man appears in Exiles on an alternate world ruled by Tony Stark. Simon Williams was 20 feet away when a Gamma Bomb was dropped on the Hulk in an attempt to kill the Hulk. It worked but Simon absorbed the Gamma Radiation and with his already ionic body ended up a whole new monster: Tony Stark killed the Hulk but made another, in Simon Williams, that he described as being "just a little stronger". Simon lives in isolation with the Scarlet Witch and a legless version of Doctor Strange. When Weapon-X member The Spider threatened the Scarlet Witch, Simon "Hulked out" to gigantic size. Eventually the Weapon-X team trapped him and an alternate She-Hulk in the Negative Zone.[97]

Guardians of the Galaxy

In an alternate future, Wonder Man - now with snow white hair and using the alias "Hollywood" - reluctantly aids the Guardians of the Galaxy. He also aids several other heroes, sometimes operating out of the still-standing Avengers Mansion. Hollywood eventually joins the Guardians,[98] and later the "breakaway" team, the Galactic Guardians.[99]

In the 2008 Guardians of the Galaxy series, he is shown as part of the Guardians in a potential 3009 AD. Here he fought under the direction of Killraven and was later allied with a "modern" version of the Guardians.[100]

Heroes Reborn

In the pocket universe created subconsciously by Franklin Richards, following the sacrifice made by the Fantastic Four and the Avengers to defeat Onslaught, Wonder Man was drafted into the Lethal Legion by the Enchantress and sent to Avengers Mansion to distract them long enough to leave them vulnerable to the rest of the Lethal Legion.[101] However, the Lethal Legion were easily defeated by the Avengers and Wonder Man was taken into S.H.I.E.L.D. custody. He was later approached by Loki, who absorbed him during his bid for more power.[102]

House of M

In the House of M reality, Wonder Man is a famous actor who is rumored to be having an affair with Carol Danvers.[103]

Marvel Zombies

In Marvel Zombies vs. The Army of Darkness Wonder Man is one of the many zombies seen attacking Doctor Doom's castle.[volume & issue needed] He is one of the first zombies to get inside along with infected X-Men Nightcrawler, Beast and Storm.[volume & issue needed]

In Marvel Zombies: Dead Days he appears in the S.H.I.E.L.D. Helicarrier as one of the heroes who survived the zombie plague.[volume & issue needed]

MC2

In the MC2 Universe, Wonder Man is never revived after initially dying to save the Avengers, with robotic copies being utilized instead.[104][97]

Old Man Logan

In the pages of Old Man Logan, Wonder Man was among the Avengers who fought an army of supervillains in Connecticut. Wonder Man is ambushed and shot by Crossbones.[105]

Ultimate Marvel

The Ultimate Marvel incarnation of Wonder Man (Simon Williams) has appeared alongside the Black Knight, Quake, Tigra and the Vision as a part of the West Coast Ultimates. In this version, he was a bodybuilder that acquired Hulk-level strength and some mental instability as a side effect. [106]

Wonder Man: My Fair Super Hero

Wonder Man starred in his own miniseries set in a possible distant future. In the story, he was goaded into rehabilitating a newly appeared super-villain, Lady Killer.[107]

In other media

Television

Wonder Man as he appears in The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes.
  • Wonder Man appears in The Avengers: United They Stand, voiced by Hamish McEwan.[citation needed] This version is a member of the Avengers. After being wounded by the Vision, he spends most of the series in a coma while Ant-Man puts his brain patterns into his attacker. After the Scarlet Witch eventually revives him in the episode "The Sorceress' Apprentice", Wonder Man gains his ionic energy form in the episode "Earth and Fire".
  • Wonder Man appears in The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes, voiced by Phil LaMarr.[108] Introduced in the episode "Everything is Wonderful", Simon Williams' company goes out of business and he turns to his brother, the Grim Reaper, as well as MODOK and A.I.M. to become Wonder Man. As a result, he is turned into an ionic energy being, but lacks the ability to revert to his human form. His body starts to destabilize as Iron Man, Captain America and Giant-Man try to get him to the Arc Reactor to save him. They seemingly fail, but unbeknownst to them, Wonder Man survives and is reassembled by the Enchantress, who coerces him into joining the Masters of Evil. Wonder Man battles the Avengers across several episodes before seemingly sacrificing himself to stop a Norn Stone's destruction in the episode "Acts of Vengeance". According to writer Christopher Yost, Wonder Man survived and would have reappeared had the series been renewed.[109]
  • Wonder Man appears in the M.O.D.O.K. episode "This Man... This Makeover!", voiced by Nathan Fillion.[110] This version refers to himself as a "pending Avenger" and works as an actor on the side.

Marvel Cinematic Universe

Video games

Collected editions

Title Material collected Published date ISBN
Avengers West Coast Epic Collection: How The West Was Won Wonder Man (vol. 1) #1 and West Coast Avengers (vol. 1) #1-4, Iron Man Annual #7, Avengers (vol. 1) #250, West Coast Avengers (vol. 2) #1-7, Vision and The Scarlet Witch #1-2 February 2021 978-1302928193
Avengers Epic Collection: Operation Galactic Storm Wonder Man (vol. 2) #7-9 and Avengers (vol. 1) #345-347, Avengers West Coast (vol. 2) #80-82, Quasar #32-34, Iron Man (vol. 1) #278-279, Thor (vol. 1) #445-446, Captain America (vol. 1) #401, material from Captain America (vol. 1) #398-400 May 2022 978-1302946869
Wonder Man: My Fair Super Hero Wonder Man (vol. 3) #1-5 July 2007 978-0785119951

References

  1. ^ The New Avengers vol. 2 Annual #1 (2011)
  2. ^ Marvel Graphic Novel #27: Emperor Doom (1987)
  3. ^ DeFalco, Tom; Sanderson, Peter; Brevoort, Tom; Teitelbaum, Michael; Wallace, Daniel; Darling, Andrew; Forbeck, Matt; Cowsill, Alan; Bray, Adam (2019). The Marvel Encyclopedia. DK Publishing. p. 416. ISBN 978-1-4654-7890-0.
  4. ^ a b Andreeva, Matt Grobar, Nellie; Grobar, Matt; Andreeva, Nellie (2022-10-31). "'Wonder Man': Yahya Abdul-Mateen II Tapped To Lead Marvel Series For Disney+". Deadline. Retrieved 2022-10-31.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ Brevoort, Tom; DeFalco, Tom; Manning, Matthew K.; Sanderson, Peter; Wiacek, Win (2017). Marvel Year By Year: A Visual History. DK Publishing. p. 102. ISBN 978-1465455505.
  6. ^ Boney, Alex (August 2008). "The Beauty of the Beast: Marvel's First Break-Out Mutant". Back Issue! (#29). Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing: 21–22.
  7. ^ "Hello, Culture Lovers: Stan the Man Raps with Marvel Maniacs at James Madison University". The Comics Journal (#42): 55. October 1978.
  8. ^ "Remender Expands The Cast Of "Uncanny Avengers"". 14 November 2012.
  9. ^ The Avengers #9 (October 1964) and #58 (November 1968). Marvel Comics.
  10. ^ The Avengers #102 (August 1972). Marvel Comics.
  11. ^ The Avengers #52 (May 1968); #79 (August 1970); #102 (August 1972); #107-108 (January – February 1973). Marvel Comics.
  12. ^ The Avengers #57-58 (October – November 1968). Marvel Comics.
  13. ^ The Avengers #134-135 (April – May 1975). Marvel Comics.
  14. ^ Avengers Forever #1-12 (December 1998 – February 2000). Marvel Comics.
  15. ^ The Avengers #131-132 (January – February 1975); Giant-Size Avengers #3 (February 1975). Marvel Comics.
  16. ^ The Avengers #151-153 (September – November 1976). Marvel Comics.
  17. ^ The Avengers Annual #6 (1976). Marvel Comics.
  18. ^ The Avengers #154-156 (December 1976 – January 1977). Marvel Comics.
  19. ^ The Avengers #158-159 (April – May 1977). Marvel Comics.
  20. ^ The Avengers #160 (June 1977). Marvel Comics.
  21. ^ The Avengers #177 (November 1978). Marvel Comics.
  22. ^ Marvel Premiere #55 (August 1980). Marvel Comics.
  23. ^ The beginning of this relationship is seen in The Avengers #211 (September 1981).
  24. ^ Mentioned by the Vision at the conclusion of The Avengers #250 (December 1984).
  25. ^ The West Coast Avengers #1 (September 1984). Marvel Comics.
  26. ^ The West Coast Avengers vol. 2 #25 (October 1987). Marvel Comics.
  27. ^ Marvel Graphic Novel #27 ("Emperor Doom - Starring the Mighty Avengers", 1987). Marvel Comics.
  28. ^ The West Coast Avengers vol. 2 #31 (April 1988).
  29. ^ Avengers West Coast #42-45 (March – June 1989). Marvel Comics.
  30. ^ Marvel Comics Presents #38-45 (December 1989 – March 1990). Marvel Comics.
  31. ^ Wonder Man #1 (September 1991)
  32. ^ Wonder Man #2 (October 1991). Marvel Comics.
  33. ^ Wonder Man #3 (November 1991). Marvel Comics.
  34. ^ Wonder Man #4 (December 1991). Marvel Comics.
  35. ^ Avengers West Coast #80-82 (March – May 1992); Quasar #32-33 (March – April 1992); Wonder Man #7-9 (March – May 1992). Marvel Comics.
  36. ^ Wonder Man #11-12 (July – August 1992)
  37. ^ Wonder Man #22-25 (June – September 1993). Marvel Comics.
  38. ^ a b Force Works #1 (July 1994). Marvel Comics.
  39. ^ The Avengers vol. 3 #3 (April 1998). Marvel Comics.
  40. ^ The Avengers vol. 3 #10-11 (November – December 1998). Marvel Comics.
  41. ^ The Avengers vol. 3 #51 (April 2002). Marvel Comics.
  42. ^ Civil War #1-7 (May 2006 – January 2007). Marvel Comics.
  43. ^ The Mighty Avengers #1 (May 2007). Marvel Comics.
  44. ^ The Mighty Avengers #6 (October 2007). Marvel Comics.
  45. ^ The New Avengers #51 (May 2009). Marvel Comics.
  46. ^ Dark Reign: Lethal Legion #1 (August 2009). Marvel Comics.
  47. ^ War Machine #8 (September 2009). Marvel Comics.
  48. ^ The Avengers vol. 4 #1 (July 2010). Marvel Comics.
  49. ^ The Avengers vol. 4 #2 (August 2010). Marvel Comics.
  50. ^ The Avengers vol. 4 #7 (January 2011). Marvel Comics.
  51. ^ The New Avengers Annual vol. 2 #1 (September 2011). Marvel Comics.
  52. ^ The Avengers Annual vol. 4 #1 (January 2012). Marvel Comics.
  53. ^ The Avengers vol. 4 #31 (December 2012). Marvel Comics.
  54. ^ The Avengers #34. Marvel Comics.
  55. ^ Uncanny Avengers #5. Marvel Comics.
  56. ^ Uncanny Avengers #21. Marvel Comics.
  57. ^ Uncanny Avengers #22. Marvel Comics.
  58. ^ Uncanny Avengers #23. Marvel Comics.
  59. ^ Avengers & X-Men: AXIS #4. Marvel Comics.
  60. ^ Uncanny Avengers vol. 2 #1. Marvel Comics.
  61. ^ Uncanny Avengers vol. 3 #22-23. Marvel Comics.
  62. ^ Secret Empire #1. Marvel Comics.
  63. ^ Empyre: Avengers #1. Marvel Comics.
  64. ^ a b Lune, Matt (2017-10-13). "The 15 Most Overpowered Avengers, RANKED". CBR. Retrieved 2022-10-07.
  65. ^ FF vol. 2 #16. Marvel Comics.
  66. ^ Stated by Zemo in The Avengers #9 (October 1964) and confirmed by Wonder Man in The Avengers #176 (October 1978).
  67. ^ The Avengers #9 (October 1964). Marvel Comics.
  68. ^ a b The Avengers Two: Wonder Man and Beast (May – July 2000). Marvel Comics.
  69. ^ Wonder Man vol. 2 #5 (Jun3 2007). Marvel Comics.
  70. ^ Morris, Jeff (2022-06-26). "Marvel's Wonder Man Powers, Enemies & Essential Reading". CBR. Retrieved 2022-10-26.
  71. ^ a b Ashford, Sage (2021-11-22). "Marvel: The 10 Strongest Male Avengers". CBR. Retrieved 2022-10-07.
  72. ^ Wonder Man #1 (September 1991). Marvel Comics.
  73. ^ Wonder Man #26 (October 1993). Marvel Comics.
  74. ^ Wonder Man #23 July 1993
  75. ^ a b c Wonder Man #25 (September 1993). Marvel Comics.
  76. ^ Wonder Man #11-12 (1992). Marvel Comics.
  77. ^ Wonder Man vol. 2 #1 (February 2007). Marvel Comics.
  78. ^ The New Avengers Annual vol. 2 #1. Marvel Comics.
  79. ^ The Avengers Annual vol. 4 #1. Marvel Comics.
  80. ^ The Avengers vol. 4 #31 (2012). Marvel Comics.
  81. ^ The Avengers #680 (2018). Marvel Comics.
  82. ^ The Avengers vol. 3 #34 (1998). Marvel Comics.
  83. ^ The Avengers #347 (1992). Marvel Comics.
  84. ^ "The Top 50 Avengers". IGN. April 30, 2012. Archived from the original on August 31, 2015. Retrieved July 28, 2015.
  85. ^ April 29, Darren Franich Updated; EDT, 2015 at 12:00 PM. "Let's rank every Avenger ever". EW.com. Retrieved 2022-08-30.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  86. ^ "Every Member Of The Avengers, Ranked". Gizmodo. 2015-02-26. Retrieved 2022-10-26.
  87. ^ Blunden, Fred (2016-08-14). "The 20 Most Powerful Members Of The Avengers, Ranked". ScreenRant. Retrieved 2022-10-26.
  88. ^ Zambrano, Mark (2016-09-07). "15 Physically Strongest Superheroes". ScreenRant. Retrieved 2022-10-26.
  89. ^ Wyse, Alex (2018-06-01). "The 25 Most Powerful Avengers Ever, Officially Ranked". CBR. Retrieved 2022-08-30.
  90. ^ Allan, Scoot (2021-11-01). "Marvel: 10 Characters Baron Zemo Created In The Comics". CBR. Retrieved 2022-11-07.
  91. ^ George Marston (2022-08-11). "Best Avengers members of all time". gamesradar. Retrieved 2022-10-07.
  92. ^ Hernandez, Gab (2022-01-31). "The 9 Strongest West Coast Avengers, Ranked". ScreenRant. Retrieved 2022-08-30.
  93. ^ Harn, Darby (2022-06-25). "10 Most Powerful Avengers In Marvel Comics". ScreenRant. Retrieved 2022-10-04.
  94. ^ Harth, David (2022-05-13). "The 10 Most Iconic Avengers Who Aren't Iron Man, Captain America, Or Thor". CBR. Retrieved 2022-08-30.
  95. ^ Avengers: Forever Vol. 2 #1-4. Marvel Comics.
  96. ^ Avengers Assemble Omega #1. Marvel Comics.
  97. ^ a b Harn, Darby (2022-06-23). "10 Most Powerful Wonder Man Variants In Marvel Comics". ScreenRant. Retrieved 2022-10-04.
  98. ^ Guardians of the Galaxy #62 (July 1995). Marvel Comics.
  99. ^ Galactic Guardians #1-4 (July – November 1994). Marvel Comics.
  100. ^ Guardians of the Galaxy vol. 2 #18 (November 2009). Marvel Comics.
  101. ^ The Avengers vol. 2 #7. Marvel Comics.
  102. ^ The Avengers vol. 2 #8. Marvel Comics.
  103. ^ House of M #1 (August 2005). Marvel Comics.
  104. ^ A-Next #1-12 (October 1998 – September 1999). Marvel Comics.
  105. ^ Old Man Logan vol. 2 #8. Marvel Comics.
  106. ^ Ultimate Comics Ultimates 22 (March 2013). Marvel Comics.
  107. ^ Wonder Man: My Fair Super Hero (February – May 2007). Marvel Comics.
  108. ^ Busch, Jenna (February 8, 2010). "Avengers Animated Assembling with Phil Lamarr". Newsarama. Retrieved February 8, 2010.
  109. ^ Yost, Christopher (February 18, 2020). ""simon would have shown in s3 for sure. doughboy can always come back, hard to kill.… "". Archived from the original on February 19, 2020. Retrieved February 19, 2024.
  110. ^ RACHEL PAIGE (March 27, 2021). "'Marvel's M.O.D.O.K.': New Guest Stars Announced for Hulu Series". Marvel Entertainment.
  111. ^ a b "GOTG Vol. 2: Gunn Clarifies Nathan Fillion's 'Role'". 21 April 2017.
  112. ^ Kit, Borys (June 16, 2022). "Marvel Developing 'Wonder Man' Series with Destin Daniel Cretton, Andrew Guest (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved June 16, 2022.
  113. ^ "Captain America and the Avengers, Arcade Video game by Data East (1991)". www.arcade-history.com. Retrieved 2022-06-18.
  114. ^ "Manhattan Side Missions - LEGO Marvel Super Heroes 2 Guide".
  115. ^ "LEGO Marvel's Avengers DLC adds even more characters on March 29". Shacknews. 17 March 2016.

External links

  • Wonder Man at Marvel.com
  • Wonder Man at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
  • Wonder Man on Marvel Database, a Marvel Comics wiki
  • v
  • t
  • e
CharactersSupporting
Teams
Enemies
In other media
  • Ms. Marvel (miniseries)
  • The Marvels
    • soundtrack
  • Kamala Khan
Related topics
  • v
  • t
  • e
Supporting characters
Teams
Enemies
Publications
In other media
  • Category
  • v
  • t
  • e
Avengers characters
Founding
members
Recurring
members
Other
characters
Supporting
characters
Allies
Neutral allies
Enemies
Central
rogues
Other
supervillains
Organizations
Alternative
versions
Alternate versions
of the Avengers
Marvel Cinematic
Universe
  • Bruce Banner
  • Clint Barton
  • Carol Danvers
  • Nick Fury
  • J.A.R.V.I.S.
  • Scott Lang
  • Wanda Maximoff
  • Nebula
  • Peter Parker
  • James Rhodes
  • Rocket
  • Natasha Romanoff
  • Steve Rogers
  • Xu Shang-Chi
  • Tony Stark
  • Thor
  • Vision
  • Sam Wilson
Others
  • Captain America
  • Hulk
  • Iron Man
  • Thor
  • Category
  • v
  • t
  • e
Initial members
Enemies
Storylines
Related series
  • v
  • t
  • e
Avengers
Affiliated teams
Locations
In other media
Television
  • United They Stand
  • Earth's Mightiest Heroes
  • Avengers Assemble
  • Marvel Disk Wars: The Avengers
  • Marvel Future Avengers
Film
  • Marvel Animated Features
  • The Avengers
    • soundtrack
    • accolades
  • Avengers Confidential: Black Widow & Punisher
  • Age of Ultron
    • soundtrack
  • Infinity War
    • production
    • soundtrack
    • box office records
    • accolades
  • Endgame
Video games
Attractions and
experiences
Related
  • Avengers (Marvel Cinematic Universe)
  • Rogers: The Musical
  • Category
  • v
  • t
  • e
Media
Titles
Storylines
Shows
Films
Related
Created
Characters
Heroes
Villains
Supporting
Species
  • Asgardians
  • Kree
  • Giants
  • Goblins
  • Mutants
  • New Men
  • Olympians
  • Skrulls
  • Trolls
  • Uranians
  • Watchers
Locations and
businesses
Objects
  • Category
  • v
  • t
  • e
Marvel Comics
DC Comics
Other
Television work
Related articles
Category