Kang the Conqueror 1888

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A Brief History of Kang[edit]

Brief History of Kang

Kang the Conqueror 1888

time traveling despot from far in the future, the 21st century. Using arcane technologies from the future he has an edge over the Victorian Era, and is determined to shape the upcoming 20th century in his image. As Kang's real name is Nathaniel Richards, and has gone by other aliases, you might want to come up with your own alias. the time-travelling Kang the Conqueror....is actually the Time Traveller H.G Wells wrote about, gone mad with power and trying to prevent the terrible future he visited.


Part 1:[edit]

A Time To Begin

"Can you think of ANY one man whose power is greater than the Avengers? Don't answer that!! Not until you meet...Kang, the Conqueror!" (From the cover of Avengers #8)


And so the man who would become one of the Avengers' foremost (and most confusing) villains was introduced to the world. Kang was always an appealing character because of his incredible power, which meant that in order to defeat him, the Avengers would have to rely on teamwork, willpower, and smarts. Kang's weakness always rested in his overconfidence, arrogance, and inability to trust others. As a time-travelling villain, he always begged the question: if he can't defeat the Avengers in one fight, why doesn't he just appear again and again once he's rested up from a fight, or attack them when they've just finished a battle? This was addressed in any number of ways--"time storms" preventing his entrance, the wish to beat the Avengers without "cheating", looking at fighting the Avengers as more of a game rather than real "conquest", and others. One writer actually did have Kang attack over and over again, until he was supposedly killed off. Years later, he was brought back with the concept of multiple Kangs in multiple eras. This opened up a huge can of worms, until the continuity surrounding Kang became almost impenetrably complicated. But his extensive hand in the Marvel Universe, combined with his other personas (Immortus, Scarlet Centurion and Rama-Tut), still make him an intriguing character in the hands of the right author. With Avengers Forever redefining the character, let's look at Kang from the beginning. But this is a job far greater than any one Avenger fan can handle, and thus a Council Of Kang Chroniclers has been assembled, consisting of me (Rob Clough), Mighty Michael Proteau, the Astonishing Avenger Lady Lonni Holland, Ominous Owen Erasmus, and the originator of these Kang Chronicles: John Simons, the Lord of Time. Each of us will tackle a different era of the Avengers and Kang. Let us start at the beginning...

Avengers #8: The Avengers are summoned to deal a huge UFO that lands in the woods of Virginia. The ship vaporized a bunch of trees and destroyed some tanks before the pilot of the ship came out, demanding to see the world's leaders. This man, in an unusual green and purple uniform with a blue mask, was Kang.

Confronting Kang, he seemed cool and collected. He was there to conquer the planet, and figured that no one could stop him. Thor threw his hammer at him, and Kang caused it to go into "sub-space" and reappear elsewhere. He zapped the team with an "anti-grav" ray that had them go flying.

After playing around with the Avengers, he then explained his origin to the government man who came by. He revealed that he was born in the year 3000, and became the Pharaoh Rama-Tut. After he fought the Fantastic Four, he traveled to the 20th century and met Dr. Doom, who may have been a distant relative. While trying to return to his own century, he overshot it and instead landed in the year 4000. It was a desolate, war-torn world where the soldiers no longer understood how their own weapons were created. Kang quickly took over, but got bored ruling such a barren world, and decided to build a new time ship and conquer the 20th century.

The Avengers attacked again, but Kang threw up an anti-matter screen to deflect Thor's hammer. While the Avengers got a few licks in, Kang was pretty much unharmed, and in fact managed to capture the team with an "attractor ray". He held the whole team in stasis, except for the Wasp, who managed to escape with mascot Rick Jones. Kang then gave the agent an ultimatum: either surrender the earth or die. He gave him 24 hours to spread the word. Kang boasted that he could destroy the moon with just his ship!

Rick Jones and his Teen Brigade preyed on Kang's sometimes-muddled decision-making by pretending to surrender to him, wishing to become his servants. So he sent them into the ship, where he told them to bring him something. The kids dropped it, not knowing it's his "energizer tank". Kang had to spend time plugging up the leaking energy...but Rick Jones managed to free Thor (who had turned back into Don Blake).

While the team fought Kang, the Wasp returned with a weapon she fished out of Giant-Man's lab. Hank instructs Thor to keep hammering away at Kang's personal force shield, and he manages to distract Kang for a moment. His shield lowered, Hank sprays him with an "acid-base solvent, which will rot and decay any fabric, any type of wiring or insulation." Kang's suit is ruined, but he launches a "neutrino missile" at the team. Iron Man deflects it with his repulsors, and it explodes harmlessly, while Giant-Man destroyed the rest of the missiles. Kang then has his mask emit deadly levels of radiation, but Thor absorbed it with Mjolnir and directed it back at Kang. Beaten, he ran back to his ship and escaped into time...

Avengers #11: Kang was really stung by his humiliating defeat to a bunch of primitives. He had been monitoring the Avengers since his defeat, waiting for the right time to strike, and it was now, when Iron Man was temporarily missing (due to Tony Stark's illness, unbeknownst to all). After seeing the Masters of Evil almost succeed in beating the Avengers by using Wonder Man, Kang concluded that this was the sort of route to go. Not interested in fighting them directly, he instead built a Spider-Man robot.

The robot is obedient to Kang and has all of Spidey's powers, and even his language patterns. After Kang sent him back in time, the robot tells the Avengers he wants to join them, and offers knowledge of Iron Man's whereabouts as incentive. He claims that he saw him kidnapped by the Masters of Evil and heard he was being taken to an ancient pyramid in Mexico.

The Avengers zoom down south to find their friend. Of course, the whole thing is a trap. Kang was pumping in nerve gas to weaken the Avengers, and the Spider-bot managed to beat each of the team one at a time in different traps. Unbeknownst to everyone, the real Spider-Man had tagged along, just when the Spidey-bot was about to transport the Avengers to the future and Kang's mercies. Spidey managed to deactivate the robot, and Kang is foiled yet again...

"Time means nothing to Kang, the Conqueror!" --guess, #8


Part 2:[edit]

Introducing Immortus...Or Did They?

"Featuring: The Truly Different Villainy of the Evil Immortus!" --from the cover of Avengers V1 #10

This was a truly strange issue of the Avengers. The Masters of Evil (Baron Zemo I, the Enchantress, and the Executioner) were sitting around, thinking of ways to wipe out the Avengers. As Zemo suggested that they needed another powerful ally, they are conveniently contacted by a mental probe coming from "a different time...another age!" A bearded man in a green outfit and a strange, crown-like helmet emerged from the mists and announced himself as Immortus. One of the MOE knows him as "The master of time! The one who rules the mystic realm of limbo, where things never change!" Immortus announced that he wants to have the MOE as his servants, since he'll be taking over the 20th century at some point. The Executioner naturally gets annoyed and tries to strike him, but Immy zips off to Limbo, and summons Paul Bunyan to fight him, since he has "all the warriors of the ages to choose from!" After a brief fight, Zemo accepted Immortus' power, but demanded that in order to prove his loyalty, he must kill one of the Avengers. Immortus accepts, "with glee!"

Immortus had mentioned that he had observed the MOE's battles with the Avengers "with amusement" and was joining "for my own purposes." This sort of mysterious talk, in addition to the weird fight that comes later, was explained rather nicely by Englehart in his run.

Immortus put an ad in a magazine advertising a method of obtaining super-powers. (No, really!) Rick Jones naturally sees this, and wanting to join the Avengers, follows up. Unfortunately for him, Immortus is waiting with Atilla the Hun; Rick is captured and sent to the Tower of London in 1760.

Cap sees the ad also and figures Rick will answer it, so he hops on over to Immortus' place, where Immy is confidently sitting on a throne. He claims that the Avengers put him up to capturing Rick in order to control Cap. Cap runs back to the Avengers full of anger, and after a pointless fight, they run back to Immortus.

Immortus then pulls out a series of historical challenges for the Avengers. Giant-Man fights the biblical Goliath (and beats him by shrinking himself down and sling-shotting him!), Iron Man defeats Merlin, and Thor fights Hercules. Cap is captured by Immortus and whisked off to the Tower of London. Immortus promises Cap that he can have Rick Jones if he fights his way through the guards.

Without Cap around, the MOE attack and do quite well. At the last second, Cap pops up and turns the tide. The MOE are about to be beaten when the Enchantress uses a spell to take them a few days in the past...right before they met Immortus. This time, when they feel the mental probe, they break it off.

Comments: So did the Avengers really fight Immortus? The story suggests that because of the time spell that the Enchantress used, they never encountered him. This of course goes against other interpretations of time we've seen in the MU. The other odd thing about this story is how quickly Immortus bowed out of the battle. What exactly was he after?

You sure can't tell from this story. This is perhaps why this issue was forgotten until Englehart cleverly recast Immortus as a manipulator whose ends are unclear, rather than an out-and-out villain.


Part 3:[edit]

The Rama-Tut Years

The first appearance of the Avenger’s greatest foe doesn’t actually feature the Avengers at all. In fact, when it appeared on the stands the team had only just been formed and hadn’t even faced the Space Phantom yet (more on him later.)

Much of the information in this and later issues was retroactively changed, I am presenting it as it appeared then.

Fantastic Four 19 "The Prisoners of the Pharaoh" Written by Stan Lee Penciled by Jack Kirby Inked by Dick Ayers

Reed Richards, taking a break from science to do some research on ancient Egypt, notices some hieroglyphs which appear to show some ancient Egyptians curing blindness with a radioactive potion. Curious about the existence of radioactivity in ancient times and wanting to restore the sight of the Thing's girlfriend Alicia, the Fantastic Four borrow Dr. Doom's time machine and head back to the time of the Pharaohs.

On arrival they are captured by soldiers and dragged before the Pharaoh Rama- Tut who shocks them by speaking English and recognising them.

He informs them that he is from the year 3000, and that seeking adventure in a rather boring time he spent his time watching tapes of more exciting eras. Eventually, that is no longer enough for him and he sets out to recreate a time machine that one of his ancestors had invented centuries before. Taking with him a mind control gun, he builds the time machine in the shape of a sphinx and sets out to make himself ruler of ancient Egypt. The ray gives him control of the country and he turns it on the Fantastic Four, making them his slaves.

Reed proves useful as a spy for Rama-Tut's armies, the Human Torch becomes a court jester and Sue is set to become his Queen. The Thing's strength is put to work as a galley slave, but the hot sun somehow changes the Thing back to Ben Grimm. Now able to slip through Thing-sized chains, Ben escapes and makes it back to the court. Stealing Rama Tut's gun, he sets the rest of the Fantastic Four free. They make short work of Rama-Tut's army and he flees back to his sphinx.

The Fantastic Four follow and find that the inside of the sphinx is packed with futuristic machines, including an escape pod that stands ready to take Rama to another dimension or time. The FF are unable to stop his escape and only just get out of the sphinx before an explosion gets rid of all trace of Rama-Tut.

They salvage Rama Tut's conveniently labeled blindness cure and return to the future. Unfortunately, Dr. Doom had blocked his time machine from carrying radioactive material and the cure stays in the past. This left Alicia still blind and Rama Tut travelling to another dimension and another identity.


Part 4:[edit]

Who Was On The Sandy Knoll?

Very little of Kang's history has stayed intact. A lot of it has been changed in small or not so small ways by later writers. The following two examples add some shadowy figures to the proceedings of Fantastic Four 19 without ever having them really make a visible impact on that story. Normally, that would earn them a 'stop meddling with the classics' complaint from me for putting continuity copping before storytelling but both stories are reasonably logical parts of time travel arcs in their respective books and are fun in a way. I'm only going to detail the changes that affect Rama-Tut; for the actual plot, refer back to my post on FF 19.

Dr Strange v2 #53

This issue tells us very little new about Rama-Tut, it is a basically a rerun of Fantastic Four 19. Even the dialogue remains the same.

It does add a brief encounter between the fleeing Rama-Tut and Dr Strange, but Strange is held off with some laser beams and he gets away as per the original story.

It also shows that it was Dr Strange, rather than the Egyptian sun, who freed the Thing from Rama's barge and therefore led to the end of his rule in Egypt. This clears up a little plot hole from the original but doesn't really alter the intent of the original story.

The West Coast Avengers 17-24 'Lost in Space-Time'

This story really only adds some background to the situation shown in FF 19. I'm going to concentrate on any changes and direct you towards my review of the original for the basic plot.

Trapped in the old west and only able to go backwards in time, Wonder Man suggests that the WCA make their way back to ancient Egypt and make use of Rama-Tut's time machine.

They make it back to the time of the reformed Rama-Tut who had helped them during the Celestial Madonna crisis and find him about to enter the suspended animation from which he was awakened by the Swordsman. He is a mumbling mess and unable to help them so they head back to try and use the time machine of the earlier evil Rama-Tut. They are immediately blasted by Rama-Tut's Ultra-diode ray and knocked out.

They are taken to be buried by the priests of Konshu. Konshu wants to get rid of Rama-Tut and heals them and sends a message through time to his modern champion Moon Knight. Konshu's priests take the Avengers to attack Rama's time machine where they fight off his troops and watch him flee.

While this is possibly as good as the WCA ever got, the Egyptian sequences are just part of a very complicated time travel story and don't really add much to our knowledge of Kang. Some of the tie-ins with other books are cute but this is not in the same class as Englehart's earlier work with the character. If it is of any interest at all it is because it includes a rare appearance of the good Rama-Tut.


Part 5:[edit]

Apocalypse? How?!

Well, clearly, some of Marvel's writers have enjoyed the opportunity, which time travel provides, to re-invent history. Thus, a meeting between Rama-Tut and the Fantastic Four has, over the years, expanded to include Dr. Strange and the West Coast Avengers. That was an awfully busy weekend for the Pharaoh, wasn't it?

But wait, there's more! Seems that all of those time travelers were only a minor diversion for Rama, a slight distraction from his true activities in the last days of his rule: participating in the origin of infamous X-villain Apocalypse!

Say WHAT?

Yep, it's true. In 1996, Marvel released the 4-issue miniseries THE RISE OF APOCALYPSE, which tells the fateful origin of Earth's first mutant against the backdrop of Pharaoh Rama-Tut's reign in Egypt. Avengers fans may have even heard of the author before, a fella by the name of...

TERRY KAVANAGH! (cue scary music: dum-dum-DUUUUUUUMMMM!)

The story begins in the early days of Rama's rule, as a bunch of Egyptian desert nomads ponder their decision to cast out a freakish baby that had been born amongst them. Suddenly, they are attacked by Sandstormers, fearsome warriors led by a man called Baal. The attackers wipe out the entire tribe, and eventually find the grey-skinned baby left to die amongst some rocks. When some of the warriors see the baby's strange face they want to kill it too, so Baal kills them! Baal muses that the baby is "a god in the making".

Flash-forward seventeen years, and the babe En Sabah Nur has grown to a strong young warrior. He still feared and despised by all but Baal, who has become like a father to him. Now that Nur has reached manhood, Baal takes him to the secret temple of Rama-Tut. While others consider Rama a god, Baal knows he is only a man, because he is the one who found the blinded Rama when the stranger first arrived. Apparently when the Sphinx first crashed in this time, a "burning fragment" on it broke off and crashed in the desert. His tribe nursed Rama-Tut back to health, but they were betrayed and enslaved in return. This temple is in the spot where the fragment crashed.

The Pharaoh's grand vizier, Logos, has brought him word that Nur has reached adulthood. Rama refers to Nur as a "child of destiny" who "will become the most powerful being on the planet", and finds it unacceptable that the young prodigy's future be molded by Baal. He orders his warlord, Ozymandias, to lead all the armies of Egypt into the desert to find the boy.

While a bloody clash ensues above, Baal and Nur penetrate the heart of Rama's secret temple and discover a mysterious high-tech globe. Just then, the temple roof caves in, and soldiers from both sides come crashing down to their deaths.

Soon Ozymandias returns to the City of Kings, exultant in the destruction of the Sandstormers. Rama-Tut takes him down a few notches by reminding him that he failed in his mission to bring back Nur. To himself, Rama muses about how Nur will eventually become Apocalypse, one of the most important figures in history, and plans to make the mutant his heir. Meantime, he moves forward with his plans to wed Nephri, Ozymandias' sister. The warlord, meanwhile, has his own plans. If not for Rama, he would be king. The upcoming nuptials will bring him "one body closer to the throne".

En Sabah Nur and Baal have crawled from the wreckage of the temple, but they are badly hurt. Nur's mutant abilities allow him to heal rather quickly, but his mentor is near death. They wander passages under the desert for nearly a week before stumbling upon a secret entrance to the interior of the Sphinx. Aside from high-tech marvels, they also find hieroglyphics which foretell En Sabah Nur's rise to power as "The First One". Then Baal croaks, Nur swears vengeance on Rama-Tut, and then he wanders around underground for another month.

Finally, he climbs to the surface and, lo and behold, Logos just happens to be waiting for him right there! The vizier sneaks the mutant into the city and hides him in his laboratory. Logos thinks that neither Rama nor Ozymandias are good for Egypt's future, and that Nur is his greatest hope "to preserve civilization".

Masked and disguised as a slave, Nur toils to help build a pyramid. When he makes the mistake of being insubordinate to Ozymandias, the warlord kicks him off a cliff! Not only does Nur survive, but he is visited by Isis, goddess of the sun, and suddenly he finds the hidden power inside him and bursts into fire. Fortunately, the city is attacked just then, and so Nephri is able to sneak Nur away.

It is at this point that the Fantastic Four comes into the story (perhaps wisely, Kavanagh decided to leave Dr. Strange and the WCA out of it). Aside from kicking Logos out of the throne room, the scene progresses more or less as it did in FF 19. Later, Logos is startled to find that Rama has scorned Nephri in favor of Sue Storm. He soon has more pressing concerns, though, as Rama has learned of his betrayal.

Nur and Nephri walk into an ambush, and soon the young girl and Logos are strung up on wooden stakes. The Pharaoh tries to seduce Nur with promises of great power, and has all of his subjects bow before the mutant. Although Nehpri is repulsed when she finally sees Nur's uncovered face, Rama-Tut tells him he accepts him for what he is. Logos tries to be the voice of reason and Ozymandias runs him through with a spear. Not a smart move. This tips the balance, as Nur rejects the Pharaoh's offer, and is subsequently fried by Rama's ultra-diode ray.

Between issues 3 and 4, Nur somehow escapes certain death once again, possibly with the help of some rebel slaves, but this is not made clear. Pharaoh Rama-Tut once again orders his Warlord to find the mutant-- and then his involvement in this series comes to an end. The rest of his story follows as described in other stories-- with Dr. Strange's help the FF rally against him and he is forced to flee back to the future.

Although this is not an Apocalypse history, I would feel remiss if I didn't give a quick account of how the rest of this story goes: Ozymandias lures Nur out of hiding by stringing up his own sister, Nephri, as giant asp bait. Nur kills the snake, takes the name Apocalypse, is rejected by Nephri for being too ugly, and reaches his full genetic potential. He somehow transfers all of the memory of Rama's computers into Ozymandias' brain, and then he destroys all of the Pharaoh's technology. Rather than take the throne of Egypt, he rejects its citizens and wanders back into the desert.

The incursion of the X-books into Rama-Tut's life doesn't quite end there. As seen in CABLE #57, Rama apparently spends a little time on Earth in the 20th century, probably right after his first encounter with Dr. Doom. He returns to the Sphinx, where it seems there is still some working technology, after all. Rama's time sphere is damaged, and he needs help repairing it.

This story is told in a completely pointless and confusing manner of flashbacks and flashforwards, but the gist I can make out of it is this: somehow Rama manages to capture the alien time-traveler called Blaquesmith, and is trying to persuade him to help fix the time machine. Unfortunately for Rama, Blaquesmith also happens to be an old teacher of Cable's, and the mutant cyborg uses his telepathy to track them down. Rama and Cable get into some good old-fashioned fisticuffs, until Cable is felled by some strange psionic backlash that you need to read about in some other X-book to understand (ahh, gotta love those multitudinous x-books). Rama is about to zap him but then the chamber starts to fall apart. Cable grabs Rama's ultra-diode gun and shoots him with it. He and Blaquesmith run out as some kind of chronal distortion collapses the cave. Blaquesmith surmises that Rama was somehow able to launch himself back into the timestream, which leaves me wondering why Rama had to torture Blaquesmith in the first place.

..And if that's an indication of Joe Casey's writing abilities, I can't imagine why he's such a fan-favorite.

As for the Apocalypse series, I will grudgingly admit that it could have been worse. At least "The Butcher" managed to stick to most of the established facts about Rama-Tut, down to the identical dialogue in the first meeting with the FF. I definitely hope this is the last time a Marvel writer tries to shoehorn new characters into that 48 hour period!

There are several plot holes that just leave me scratching my head, like who built the temple Baal and Nur originally went to, what was the big deal about the globe Nur grabbed at the end of issue one, who inscribed the prophetic hieroglyphics on the inside of the Sphinx, and how exactly Nur escaped between issues 3 and 4. Also, like just about any time travel story (which by extension would mean, any Rama/Kang story) I wonder why Rama didn't just fly back in time to when Nur is still a baby, and bring him up as his own son.

I also wonder if the "good" Rama-Tut (from Englehart's run) had to deal with Apocalypse again when he went back to ancient Egypt for his second reign.

If the answers to these questions were to be had in a second Apocalypse mini-series-- I think I'd just as soon live in ignorance, thanks.


Part 11:[edit]

Growing Pains

Thor 140 The Growing Man

While Thor is watching his dad have a bath in Asgard, some of Midgard's finest scientists and a bored-looking NYC cop are investigating an artificial figure unearthed by a museum expedition. When they found it, it was doll size, but it has since grown to human dimensions. Although it appears to be some form of robot, it is warm to the touch. When one of the scientists gives it a good knock on the chest, it comes to life and strikes him. The cop starts blasting away with his pistol, but the only effect it has on the robot is that it starts growing to the extent that it can crash through the wall and pick up a nearby house.

He doesn't seem to be interested in mindless destruction though, and keeps calling for his master asking why he has forsaken him and what task he can do for him.

While Thor sorts out his paperwork at Don Blake’s surgery, the police are making matters worse by hunting down the Growing Man with machine guns. Every shot is making him bigger and he is now capable of trying to swat the police with uprooted trees.

The Police get their butts saved by Kang who turns up and shrinks the robot back down to doll size. He explains that the robot was planted on earth in preparation for a long-term plan but that the museum expedition had set him off prematurely. The police try to bring in Kang and he starts to threaten them. "Keep your distance!! To me you are like anthropoid cave men."

Police reinforcements arrive on the scene bringing with them Dr Blake because he had in the past had been able to summon Thor. Giving them the slip, he bangs his walking stick on the ground and joins the fray.

Kang has disappeared between pages and seemingly reactivated his robot so Thor lays into the Growing Man, deducing almost immediately that his blows are powering, rather than damaging, the robot. Deciding that Mjolnir would be too much for the robot, he lets fly and the resulting blow expands the robot to new heights. As Thor realises the futility of his actions he is grabbed from behind by Kang whose cobalt energy glove is enough to overpower even Thor.

With Thor momentarily powerless Kang does what he does best. Explain his plans. The stimuloid was supposed to be a hidden weapon, left tiny and inert in the past so he could activate it when his enemies least expected. Kang resets the Growing Man to doll size once more and retreats to his time machine. Thor is sufficiently healed to send his hammer flying around the time machine at light speed "placing yon time machine within a universal infinity vortex".

Thor gets a bit big for his boots for someone who has basically spent the issue getting kicked around by a doll and pronounces "The evil one shall never reach the future for he is now beyond all time and beyond all place". True enough, well until Avengers 69 anyway.

Comments: The Growing Man is one of Kang's most potent weapons turning up again in Avengers 69 and 268 and more recently Thunderbolts 5. It obviously works best against a hero not schooled in Avengers history but it showed here that it could give Thor a run for his money.

As far as the ongoing Kang/Thor fight goes, this round went to Kang. Thor would certainly get his own back in Avengers 143.

Although this may seem like a rather minor Kang appearance it actually is noteworthy in two respects. Firstly, Kang isn't interested in the Avengers here; instead, he is plotting and preparing to face another foe whom according to him is searching for his hidden weapons. I suppose this could refer to a later Avengers story but it could also be the first sign (albeit unintentional) that Kang had other things on his plate other than his vendetta with our heroes.

Secondly, it was the last time that Kang's creators worked on the character. There was a Kang robot in 2 panels of Fantastic Four 100 and Kirby may have drawn him on a cover somewhere after this but as far as Lee/Kirby Kang appearances go this is the last one. Kirby draws a great Kang here, Colleta really messed up some of the Don Blake faces in this issue but he turns in some reasonable work on Kang. There is a panel of Kang with the Growing Man in one hand and a huge Kirbytech pistol in the other that is as menacing a Kang as any artist ever managed.

It’s not a bad issue of Thor either, Kang cleans his clock but there is some interesting Don Blake and Asgard stuff in there.

Avengers Comics #2[edit]

  • seated in his command center... "...You have thwarted my machinations one too many times heroes... Now I shall avenge!"

The Avengers Battle the Space Phantom

So what happens?:
As the Avengers have their monthly meeting a shape changing alien crash lands on Earth and takes the form of a bystander. His victim is sent into Limbo while he uses his form and the alien sets off to attack the Avengers.
The Avengers see him coming and the Hulk is sent to confront him. Taking the place of the Hulk he starts insulting the avengers when they ask what happened to the intruder. After starting the team fighting amongst themselves he smashes out of the mansion and starts tearing up first the NYC streets and then a missile base.
The Missile base had been testing a Stark design and Iron Man is sent to investigate. The Space Phantom becomes a passing insect and leaves Iron Man fighting the real Hulk. The Wasp and Giant-Man intervene but Hank gets dragged into the fight although they do manage to work out what is going on.
Jan flies to get Thor who breaks the battle up with a rainstorm which rusts Iron Man's armour shut. The Phantom decides that Thor would make a great host and tries to steal his form, he is surprised to find himself chucked into Limbo because he can't Thor
As the Avengers congratulate each other the Hulk is less than happy, he thinks that the Avengers were too quick to distrust him and that they must really hate him. He becomes the first member to quit the team.
So is it any good?:
It isn't as good as #1 either artistically or as a story but it is ok. Reinman suits the Space Phantom very well adding a tinge of skulking menace to a pretty standard alien design but he is less suited to the actual Avengers.
The Space Phantom's powers dont really make too much sense, the man whose shape he uses to break into the mansion returns to the spot where he was copied when he is freed but the Hulk is dumped in the middle of the fight the Phantom has engineered. Thor also claims that the reason he was sent to Limbo was that he could only imitate humans but he had already imitated a wasp (an actual one, not Jan) and a meteorite.
The story is basically an excuse to have the heroes fight each other and Hulk vs Iron Man takes up a lot of the room just as in #1. Another echo of #1 is that Thor only turns up for the conclusion, maybe Stan had already realised that he could spoil the balance of the team.
Is it a landmark?:
We see out first team meeting, get our first glimpse of Hank as Giant-Man, get the first villain to debut in the book and have the first member quit.

NO SINGLE FOE[edit]

  • Amahl Farouk. The Shadow Khedive of Cairo. Head of the Cairo Underworld and reputed dark sorcerer. Klaue had dealings with Farouk before Klaue departed for the darkest parts of the continent. Farouk will offer the party assistance in tracking Klaue if they agree to find his kidnapped bride, Ororo.
    Ororo is not actually Farouk's bride, but the queen of a large and powerful tribe. She is also their High Priestess to the Storm Goddess. Farouk wants to control her so he can control the tribe and the land they posses, where the Tomb of En Sabah Nur lies. What complicates matters further is that Ororo is already the promised bride of another, King T'Challa, the Panther King of Wakanda.
Klaue wishes to capture Ororo so he can ransom her to T'Challa for more Vibranium.
Other characters you could use'
  • Enrich Killmonger: The Wakandan Exile who was schooled in Prussia for many years. It is rumored he was an aid to Bismark himself. Killmonger plans to return to Wakanda and claim the throne. Then he will use the advanced Wakandan technology to conquer the world. He draws allies from the White Gorilla Cult, a sinister group who gain power through cannibalization of their foes.
  • The Baron Sergei Kravenoff: a big game hunter who wishes to hunt the most dangerous game. He is aided by his giant henchman Aleksei, who reputedly uses a mixture of rhino horn and herbs to grant himself superhuman strength (Kraven the Hunter and The Rhino)
  • Ahmet Abdol, the Pharaoh Reborn: a man who claims to be the reincarnation of the Great Pharaoh Rama-Tut. He has amassed a large cult around himself. He also has a servant of an animated mummy, called N'Kantu. (The Living Monolith and The Living Mummy)
  • The Fist of Konshu: a caped demon that haunts the criminals of Cairo (Moon Knight)
  • The Bushman: the brutal chief of the Burunda tribe, who often work as mercenaries for unscrupulous imperialists. He is recognizable for the white deaths head he paints on his face before battle. (Bushman, Moon Knight's old rival).
  • Dutch Genosha, the colony where the native mutants are slaves.
  • Brother Drumm: For the more mystical minded there is the witch doctor, the most powerful Yoruban sorcerer.


The problem is that Safari Adventures are different from Egyptian Adventures, and while Marvel has a huge amount of Egyptian themed characters, they have much less Sub-Saharan characters. Also, your game sounds awesome.

Kang the Conqueror 1888[edit]

The Time Traveller[edit]

The Time Traveller (Alexander Hartdegen) Having demonstrated to friends using a miniature model that time is a fourth dimension, and that a suitable apparatus can move back and forth in this fourth dimension, he completes the building of a larger machine capable of carrying himself. He then immediately sets off on a journey into the future. While travelling through time, his machine allows him to observe the changes of the outside world in fast motion. He observes the sun and moon traversing the sky and the changes to the buildings and landscape around him as he travels through

His journey takes him to the year 802,701 A.D., where he finds an apparently peaceful, pastoral, communist,[1] future filled with happy, simple humans who call themselves the Eloi.

The wealthy, leisure classes appear to have devolved into the ineffectual, not very bright Eloi he has already seen; but the downtrodden working classes have evolved into the bestial Morlocks, cannibal hominids resembling human spiders, who toil underground maintaining the machinery that keep the Eloi — their flocks — docile and plentiful. He then travels into the far future, roughly 30 million years from his own time.

There he sees the last few living things on a dying Earth, the rotation of which has ceased with the site of London viewing a baleful, red sun stuck at the setting position. In his trip forward, he had seen the red sun flare up brightly twice, as if Mercury and then Venus had fallen into it. Menacing reddish crab-like creatures slowly wander the blood-red beaches, and the world is covered in "intensely green vegetation." He continues to make short jumps through time, seeing the red giant of a sun grow redder and dimmer. Finally, the world begins to go dark as snowflakes begin to fall, and all silence falls upon Earth. In the very end of the Earth, all life has ceased, other than the lichens that still grow on rocks, and a kraken-like creature, roughly the size of a soccer ball, that slowly moves onto shore.

the Time Traveller blunders into a highly advanced future society where time travel is illegal. The time machine is confiscated and the Traveller is arrested, but he eventually escapes after one of the future men attempts to steal the time machine.

An extract from the 11th chapter of the serial published in New Review (May, 1895) was censored from the book, as it was thought too disturbing. This portion of the story was published elsewhere as The Grey Man.

The censored text begins with the Traveller waking up in his Time Machine after escaping the Morlocks. He finds himself in the distant future of an Earth that is unrecognizable, seeing rabbit-like hopping herbivores near him. He stuns or kills one with a rock, and upon closer examination realizes they are probably the descendants of the Eloi. A gigantic, centipede-like arthropod approaches and the traveller advances ahead in time a day to flee, finding the creature to have apparently eaten the tiny humanoid. This dark ending of humanity was thought too shocking to be published.

the Time Traveller finally settling down with Weena in the 33rd century. Soon after his arrival in the future the first time he rescues Weena, a female Eloi he finds drowning in a river. Much to his surprise she is grateful to him and insists on following him.


Kang[edit]

time traveling despot from far in the future, the 21st century. Using arcane technologies from the future he has an edge over the Victorian Era, and is determined to shape the upcoming 20th century in his image. As Kang's real name is Nathaniel Richards, and has gone by other aliases, you might want to come up with your own alias.

the time-travelling Kang the Conqueror....is actually the Time Traveller H.G Wells wrote about, gone mad with power and trying to prevent the terrible future he visited.

"The master of time! The one who rules the mystic realm of limbo, where things never change!"


AVENGERS #8[edit]

the Chornonaut[edit]

  • Avengers have meeting
  • Parliment orders they look into the "event" in Egypt.
  • A UFO (chopper/Rigid Airship) has appeared and destroyed all arms!
  • Kang appears from UFO (on flat panel screen) and delivers his speach.
Master of time, Ruler of the mystic realm of limbo, where things never change.
"Put away your childish weapons. They are no more than toys to me!
I will not communicate with underlings! Send me the rulers of your primitive world so that I, Rama-Tut, can tell them my demands!

No need for such unseemily speed!
Time means nothing to Rama-Tut the Ruler!!

My business? Conquest of course, I claim this planet, this era and all its land areas as my domain. >br> As for you 'Avengers', I shall demonstrate how powerless you are against the immortal pharoah! At a mere touch of a button I shall render you helpless.

It is hopeless to defy me... My name may sound strange because it is not of your century - it is from the future! The machine I travel came from the year 4000, the 40th century is barbaric savages with men constantly at war, fighting with weapons so scientifically advanced that they cannot even understand theri composition. It was a simple matter for me to muster the barbarian warriors to my side, to make them my serfs! Within weeks I had carved out an empire for myself. But it was a hollow one! For I was merely ruler of a dying world. So possessing the greatest scientific knowledges of all time... armed with the weapons against which you have no defense... I proclaim myself KANG the first, ruler of the 19th century.

True I have removed myself to Limbo! But by the powers at my command I shall send another to battle in my sted... For I have all the warriors of the ages to choose from!"
  • Dinosaurs
  • Attila the Hun
  • Goliath (biblical)
  • Merlin the magician
  • Hercules
  • Hannibal and his elephants
  • the Morlocks (MiGo, or in other eras abominable snowmen)
  • Nuke = Uranium = Madam Curie = Lu Chen

Radioactive man[edit]

LANZHOU, CHINA, INDOCHINA, ASIA: Birthplace of Chen Lu (Radiactive Man).
Chen Lu is a railroad worker in the American West, and like his fellow Chinamen he recieves little respect from his American peers, but he continues onward to support his family. One day, while blasting through a mountain, Chen is caught in a cave collapse and ends up in a hidden chamber, where he is exposed to mysterious green glowing rocks. When he is eventually found, his skin has turned green, and he now has the strength of many men, capable of doing the work of ten men. This is lucky, because after Chen returns to work everyone around him begins to sicken and die, including his wife and two children. Chen is blamed and driven off by the surviving railroad workers, but their blame is justified: Chen is now giving off radiation, ten years before Marie and Pierre Curie would discover the concept. Now Chen is living as a hermit, bitter at the loss of his family and his freakish appearence, as well as his mistreatment in general, he has begun to lash out at nearby downs and at his former employers, endagering people with his rampages and even moreso with his radioactive aura.
Eventually they studied radioactive materials, particularly pitchblende, the ore from which uranium was extracted. By April 1898, Skłodowska-Curie deduced that pitchblende must contain traces of an unknown substance far more radioactive than uranium. In July 1898, Pierre and Marie together published an article announcing the existence of an element which they named polonium, in honor of her native Poland, then still partitioned among three empires. On December 26, 1898, the Curies announced the existence of a second element, which they named radium for its intense radioactivity — a word that they coined.


Origin of the Space Phantom[edit]

  • Limbo = Temporal Realm outside time
  • His possession powers do not work on "mystics"
  • agent of Immortus, master of time
  • military strategist on his home planet Phantus
  • Phantus invented time travel opening the portal to Limbo. Their temporal civil wars trapped his people in Limbo forever.
  • Immortus found Phantus (the Space Phantom) and offered him a deel to trade places with others.
  • he hates being a puppet and hates Immortus


Immortus[edit]

Immortus then pulls out a series of historical challenges for the Avengers. Giant-Man fights the biblical Goliath (and beats him by shrinking himself down and sling-shotting him!), Iron Man defeats Merlin, and Thor fights Hercules. Cap is captured by Immortus and whisked off to the Tower of London. Immortus promises Cap that he can have Rick Jones if he fights his way through the guards.

research on ancient Egypt, notices some hieroglyphs which appear to show some ancient Egyptians curing blindness with a radioactive potion. Curious about the existence of radioactivity in ancient times. (note: surgical means!)

Ancient Egypt uncovers a Chopper!!

the babe En Sabah Nur has grown to a strong young warrior. He still feared and despised by all but Baal, who has become like a father to him. Now that Nur has reached manhood, Baal takes him to the secret temple of Rama-Tut.

The Pharaoh's grand vizier, Logos, has brought him word that Nur has reached adulthood. Rama refers to Nur as a "child of destiny" who "will become the most powerful being on the planet", and finds it unacceptable that the young prodigy's future be molded by Baal. He orders his warlord, Ozymandias, to lead all the armies of Egypt into the desert to find the boy.

While a bloody clash ensues above, Baal and Nur penetrate the heart of Rama's secret temple and discover a mysterious high-tech globe.

The Growing Man[edit]

When they found it, it was doll size, but it has since grown to human dimensions. Although it appears to be some form of robot, it is warm to the touch. When one of the scientists gives it a good knock on the chest, it comes to life and strikes him. The cop starts blasting away with his pistol, but the only effect it has on the robot is that it starts growing to the extent that it can crash through the wall and pick up a nearby house.

He doesn't seem to be interested in mindless destruction though, and keeps calling for his master asking why he has forsaken him and what task he can do for him.

The Police get their butts saved by Kang who turns up and shrinks the robot back down to doll size. He explains that the robot was planted on earth in preparation for a long-term plan but that the museum expedition had set him off prematurely. The police try to bring in Kang and he starts to threaten them. "Keep your distance!! To me you are like anthropoid cave men." The stimuloid was supposed to be a hidden weapon, left tiny and inert in the past so he could activate it when his enemies least expected. Kang resets the Growing Man to doll size once more and retreats to his time machine. The Growing Man is one of Kang's most potent weapons turning up again in Avengers 69 and 268 and more recently Thunderbolts 5.

Qin's Army, Terracotta[edit]

The Terracotta Army, sometimes referred to as "Qin's Armies", Terracotta Warriors and Horses is a collection of 8,099 larger than life Chinese terra cotta figures of warriors and horses located near the Mausoleum of the First Qin Emperor. The figures vary in height according to their rank; the tallest being the Generals. The heights range is 6ft - 6ft 5in, or more than a full foot taller than the average soldier of the period. The figures were discovered near Xi'an, Shaanxi province, China.

Construction of this mausoleum began in 246 BC and is believed to have taken 700,000 workers and craftsmen 38 years to complete. buried alongside great amounts of treasure and objects of craftsmanship, as well as a scale replica of the universe complete with gemmed ceilings representing the cosmos, and flowing mercury representing the great earthly bodies of water. Pearls were also placed on the ceilings in the tomb to represent the stars, planets, etc.

The tomb of Qin Shi Huangdi is near an earthen pyramid 76 meters tall and nearly 350 square meters.


Kang Comic Notes[edit]

The Time Traveller[edit]

"My name is of no consequence, for you will be beneath the ground soon... Suffice to say that I am a humble man of knowledge, a self made king of men, formerly residing the London of your time. It was with the investments of Lord Doom that I perfected in the last years of the 19th century a means of traveling across the eons of time. I had adventures in Earth's farthest futures after which, following a brief farewell visit to my own day, I have dwelled in the phantom stream (limbo) for decades ever since as an explorer... a conqueror!"


the Mandarin[edit]

the Mandarin (Zhang Tong) explores the forbidden "Valley of Spirits," where no one has dared set foot for centuries. There he finds the skeleton and starship of Axonn-Karr, an intelligent dragon-like alien from the planet Maklu-4, who had come to Earth centuries ago and died. Over the following years, the Mandarin studies Makluan science until he masters it. He also learns how to use the ten rings he found within the starship which were apparently its propulsion source, among other things. The Mandarin then subjugates the villages around the Valley, and, through his advanced science, rapidly becomes a power that not even the Chinese Army could successfully challenge. He then embarks on a long series of attempts to achieve world domination. The Mandarin later schemes to turn the Great Vibranium Mound of Wakanda into Type II Vibranium which destroys the molecular cohesion of metals. He also tries to destroy China's entire rice crop in an attempt to provoke war.



NATIVE AMERICANS[edit]

WHERE[edit]

The "Four-Corners" region of the United States: Where Marshal will always consider home. The Four Corners is the intersection of the four U.S. states of Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, and Arizona and the high desert plateau region surrounding that point in the southwestern United States. This is the only point in the United States where four states touch. Three of the four state corners are on the Navajo Indian Reservation.


Sarcee[edit]

The Sarcee is a First Nation in Canada. Their territory is adjacent to the southwest city limits of Calgary, Alberta. The Sarsi or Sarcee, words which are believed to have been derived from a Blackfoot word meaning boldness and hardiness.

Shaman[edit]

(Dr. Michael Twoyoungmen) Twoyoungmen studied Sarcee magic, eventually becoming strong enough in his belief to draw mystical items from his enchanted medicine bag at will. He adopted the title and garb of Shaman. Several years later, Shaman assisted in the birth of Snowbird, the product of a mystical union between a human and the goddess Nelvanna. Shaman cast spells to bind Snowbird to the Earthly realm. a vision of Ranaq the Devourer, one of the Great Beasts.

Moonhunter, Zachary[edit]

Former pilot, Avengers Crew. An occult investigator who specialized in hunting werewolves, Moonhunter was enslaved by the Druid and freed by Captain America. At roughly the same time, pilot John Jameson resigned from the Avengers staff and Moonhunter applied successfully to replace him, serving primarily as personal pilot to Captain America. Moonhunter assisted Captain America and several other Avengers associates in a variety of missions, but apparently resigned from the team's service when Captain America was believed to be dying. His current whereabouts and activities are unrevealed.


Apache[edit]

The Apachean tribes were historically very powerful, constantly at enmity with the Spaniards and Mexicans for centuries. The first Apache raids on Sonora appear to have taken place during the late 17th century. The U.S. Army, in their various confrontations, found them to be fierce warriors and skillful strategists.

Apache - Camp Verde, Yavapai County, Arizona, United States. It is in the Verde River valley. To the south lie the Bradshaw Mountains. Camp Verde is surrounded by Prescott National Forest. The head of the Verde River begins below the dam that catches water from the Big Chino Wash and Williamson Valley Wash combining to create Sullivan Lake in Yavapai County, Arizona.


Thunderbird[edit]

(John Proudstar) possesses the ability to become a variety of North American animals (and seems to lack the strength, speed, and durability of the comic version), much resembling Alpha Flight's Snowbird in that respect. Warpath (James Proudstar),

Michael Redstone[edit]

the strength of the Earth.

Puma[edit]

Thomas Fireheart, and he is of Native American descent. The tribe he belongs to (never named, but located in Hartsdale, Arizona) has had an ancient prophecy of the coming of a powerful being who might destroy the world for generations. Long ago, they began making preparations for this coming doom. They used mystic ceremonies and selective breeding to create a perfect warrior. Thomas Fireheart is the latest in this line of men. mastering his ability to turn into a powerful humanoid mountain lion werecat. it was revealed that both groups were actually being manipulated by the shape-changing Space Phantom.


Warlock[edit]

America has produced a number of home grown prophets. In the wilds of Utah, few are stranger than the man known as Adam Warlock. What his original name is, is anyone's guess, but the declared Messiah has such outlandish claims as having been born fully grown and possessed of a body of what the 'Unsullen Man' looked like. It's easy to see why the uneducated frontiersmen would believe it for Adam is a pretty sight with his golden skin and hair. While I wasn't able to see much of his faith healings or ability to cast out demons, I did get to hear some of his bizarre predictions for the future. In the words of the bizarre man "An ancient evil rests beneath our waves! Sleeping horrors untold in strange eons with the power to strip our planet clean of all life! An evil as ancient as dread Cthon or the horrid Shug-Niggarauth! Only the gemstone of power can banish it!" He even set a specific date for three months in the future. Somehow, I think that he's going to look very foolish when the world doesn't end.


Marshal America's America[edit]

young Steven's tribal name. The Subject would not give us it's true pronunciation, but said only that it translated into english as "Star Bearer."

Until he was ordered to suppress an uprising in the Oregon territories. What exactly occurred is unclear, Subject refuses to discuss the matter, or even communicate in any way when asked about it. The little facts we have, indicate that his unit was killed to the last man, only the Subject survived. The native population they had been sent to deal with had also vanished completely, only a burned out husk of an encampment remained. Subject resigned in disgrace.

  • Sharon Carter -Aide to Nick Fury(?). Cap's had trouble focusing since the train back in issue #1.... ((Durn it))
  • "Cloudless Moon" -Cap's maternal grandfather. He passed on while Steve was still a young child, but he occasionally appears in dreams or if Steve really needs a hand, in a waking vision.
  • Reginald "Buckshot" McClurg. -Every good Marshall needs a Deputy. Think of him as Bucky, with a shotgun. Note: Buckshot is still back in America, tracking down Tombstone, actually...
  • Agent Smith -US Army Intelligence. 1880's equivalent of a CIA man. No sense of humor. Deadpan. You get the picture. He was Cap's source of intel and contact with the Government.
  • Tesla, Nikola: One possible creator, though he may not trust Argo as it is a known associate of Hank Pym.
  • Edison, Thomas: American inventor and pioneer in phonograph and sound technology. Argonaut may seek him out in order to attain a "voice."


VILLAINS[edit]

Confederate Skull[edit]

(aka Johnny Red, real name John Smith) - Confederate Colonel who was cashiered for needless brutality towards the end of the Civil War. Has a vast network of terrorists to draw upon called "The Army of the New Confederacy". The Skull is obsessed with the destruction of the United States and the rebirth of this New Confederacy (we call call them the NeoCons for short! ^_~). Of course, he views the Confederate economic model as nearly perfect, if too lenient. He believes the status of slave should not just apply to the black man, but to all who don't share his vision. Note: Based on the SECOND Red Skull: Johann Schmidt.


Baron Karl Amadeus Mordo[edit]

Originally a Transylvanian nobleman (born in Varf Mandra), Mordo became a student of the Tibetan sorcerer known as the Ancient One. arl Mordo was the son of Nikolai Mordo, a Transylvanian nobleman (or boyar) who was made “Baron” when his lands fell under the control of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Bitter over the Empire’s defeat after the war, its generals and politicians, and the encroachments of modern technology, Nikolai sought to restore Transylvania to its past glories via black magic. Dr. Estrange is no longer a member of the Masons for he has indeed uncovered a secret sect within, lead by Lord Mordo. Estrange trusted him, his medical teachings & certain 'advanced surgical procedure' which Estrange took part in. Steven discovered that he wasn't helping people but making slaves for Mordo's sinister cult, which Estrange only knows that they worship some being called "Dormammu". Fury maybe the one who helped him learn the truth about Mordo.


NEWS[edit]

  • MacDonald "Mac" Gargan a former private investigator hired by J. Jonah Jameson to, at first, discover the connection between Peter Parker and Spider-Man, and later as a means to destroy Spider-Man.





AGE OF WONDERS - "The IMPERIALS"