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The Beyonders (first mentioned in Marvel Two-in-One #63) are enigmatic, virtually omnipotent entities powerful enough to collect planets. They are unable to leave their own dimension and have never been observed by any being of the Earth dimension and to interact with the Earth dimension they must operate through agents.
Eight powerful magical beings known as the Octessence could not agree on which of them was the most powerful. They decided on a wager wherein each of the eight beings created an artifact that would turn the first human being that touched it into an Exemplar, personifying the power of that specific magical being.
Later, the Champion had settled on the planet Skardon, whose native Skard exist in a "might makes right" culture; all disputes, including matters of law, are settled in a trial by combat. By defeating Skardon's most powerful fighters in the natives' boxing-ring-esque arena, the Champion became the ruler of the planet.
View the 5 images of this gallery on the original article. New Marvel Comics February 21 2024. New Comics . Amazing Spider-Man: Facsimile Edition #253. X-Force #49. Star Wars #43
Marvel Comics: First appearance: ... The Overmind is an alien belonging to the Eternals of ... CBR.com ranked Grom/The Over-Mind 14th in their "15 Most Powerful ...
The Thunderbolts is a team of comic book supervillains and superheroes, as published by Marvel Comics. The roster of the team has changed a great deal over the years. This page consists of the list of members during the team's history.
Geheneris Hala´son Mahr Vehl (also known as Mahr Vehl) is a character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by writer Warren Ellis and penciller Steve McNiven, the character first appeared in Ultimate Secret #1 (March 2005). Mahr Vehl appears in the Ultimate Marvel universe and is the Ultimate version of Mar ...
Shuma-Gorath first appears as an adversary for Doctor Strange in Marvel Premiere #10 (September 1973), [6] created by writer Steve Englehart and artist Frank Brunner.The character's name is taken from Robert E. Howard's short story "The Curse of the Golden Skull," [7] which features a dying magician named Rotath invoking the "iron-bound books of Shuma-Gorath" in a curse against humanity.