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Corazón was the first Marvel character to adopt the identity Araña (Spider), before becoming Spider-Girl (Young Allies #5, October 2010). She is third Spider-Girl published by Marvel, and the first to appear in the mainstream Marvel universe .
The Legend of the Blue Lotus. The following is a list of female superheroes in comic books, television, film, and other media. Each character's name is followed by the publisher's name in parentheses; those from television or movies have their program listed in square brackets, and those in both comic books and other media appear in parentheses.
Carol Danvers (Marvel Cinematic Universe) Dark Angel (Marvel Comics) Darkstar (Marvel Comics) Daughters of the Dragon; Dazzler (Marvel Comics) Dead Girl; Karolina Dean; Death Locket; Deathcry; Debrii; White Tiger (Angela del Toro) Delphyne Gorgon; Destiny (Irene Adler) Diamondback (Rachel Leighton) Domino (character) Dorma (character) Dust ...
Phyla-Vell first appeared in Captain Marvel vol. 5 #16 and was created by writer Peter David and artist Paul Azaceta. [5] She is introduced as Phyla-Vell and is the daughter of Elysius, the genetically engineered woman beloved by the late Mar-Vell.
Mrs. Clayface (DC Superhero Girls) Penelope Spectra and Ember McLain (Danny Phantom) Princess Morbucks (The Powerpuff Girls) Sedusa and Femme Fatale (The Powerpuff Girls) Shego (Kim Possible) [citation needed] Eletronique (Kim Possible) Supersonic Sue (Big Hero 6) Talon (Static Shock) [citation needed] Yzma (The Emperor's New School)
Marvel loosely tied questions regarding Jean Grey's eventual return to the events in 2007's X-Men: Messiah Complex in which a mutant girl named Hope—who has red hair, green eyes, and immense mutant powers—is born, [31] and 2010's X-Men: Second Coming which sees both Hope's return as a teenager and the return of the Phoenix Force.
Comic Book Resources ranked Ophelia Sarkissian 2nd in their "10 Most Powerful Crime Bosses In Marvel Comics" list, [65] 2nd in their "Marvel: The Council Of Hydra Members" list, [66] 7th in their "10 Most Attractive Marvel Villains" list, [67] and 7th in their "Marvel Comics: Ranking 10 Members Of Hydra From Weakest To Most Powerful" list. [68]
Spider-Girl is the code name of several fictional characters in comic books published by Marvel Comics.The most prominent version and first to receive an ongoing series is Mayday Parker from the MC2 universe, the second version is Anya Corazon, and the third version is Gwen Warren, the latter two from the Earth-616 universe.