Yandroth: Difference between revisions
Proposing article for deletion per WP:PROD. |
suggesting merge instead of deletion |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{mergeto|List of Marvel Comics characters: Y}} |
|||
{{Proposed deletion/dated |
{{Proposed deletion/dated |
||
|concern = Fails [[WP:GNG]] and [[WP:NOTPLOT]]. |
|concern = Fails [[WP:GNG]] and [[WP:NOTPLOT]]. |
Revision as of 21:45, 13 October 2020
It has been suggested that this article be merged into List of Marvel Comics characters: Y. (Discuss) |
It is proposed that this article be deleted because of the following concern:
If you can address this concern by improving, copyediting, sourcing, renaming, or merging the page, please edit this page and do so. You may remove this message if you improve the article or otherwise object to deletion for any reason. Although not required, you are encouraged to explain why you object to the deletion, either in your edit summary or on the talk page. If this template is removed, do not replace it. This message has remained in place for seven days, so the article may be deleted without further notice. Find sources: "Yandroth" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR Timestamp: 20201013180658 18:06, 13 October 2020 (UTC) Administrators: delete |
Yandroth | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Strange Tales #164 (Jan 1968) |
Created by | Jim Lawrence Dan Adkins |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Yandroth |
Species | Human |
Notable aliases | Scientist Supreme |
Abilities | Magic user Genius-level intellect |
Yandroth (also known as the Scientist Supreme) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Yandroth is a known enemy of Doctor Strange and the Defenders.[1]
Publication history
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (September 2017) |
He first appears in Strange Tales #164 and was created by Jim Lawrence and Dan Adkins.
Fictional character biography
Yandroth was the humanoid Scientist Supreme of the "otherdimensional" planet "Yann" and a would-be-conqueror who, with his robot Voltorg, has fought Doctor Strange as a counterpart to the latter's title of Sorcerer Supreme. Doctor Strange defeats Yandroth, sending him to seemingly fall forever through an alternate dimension, the Dimension of Dreams.[2]
There, he gains great magical knowledge and learns that he could gain great power by destroying a world. He returns to Earth and constructs an "Omegatron", although he suffers injuries received when he was hit by a truck in New York City. His physical body dies, thus activating the Omegatron. As the Omegatron, he battles Doctor Strange, Namor, and the Hulk, who come together as the Defenders for the first time. Yandroth is placed under a time displacement spell by Doctor Strange.[3]
The Omegatron is eventually released from the time displacement spell and battled Namor, the Hulk, Valkyrie, and Namorita and was destroyed.[4] Yandroth's spirit next possesses a young female chemist in order to telepathically attack the heroes; however, he is defeated by the Defenders again.[5]
Although Yandroth is dead, his spirit is still capable of taking possession of a living human's mind. Taking the form of a vagrant, he is discovered by Patsy Walker. Seemingly an innocent, she rescues him, allowing him to regain his strength and capture her. He becomes a nihilist and crafts a plan to end the world. He summons monsters from all over like Negative Zone Borers, Mindless Ones, Toad Men, Dark-Crawler, Quasimodo, Warlord Kaa and his Shadow Warriors, Living Erasers, Gorgilla, Vi-Locks, and the Lizard Men of Tok. This attack involved many superhero teams. Most of the New York-based heroes are tied up confronting destructive, mindless monstrosities. Alpha Flight is attacked by Warlord Kaa and his Shadow Warriors. Yandroth causes a group of Living Erasers to appear in the Tokyo Headquarters of Big Hero 6. Lizard Men from Tok attack the island nation of Genosha. Gorgilla subdues the Avengers by dropping a building on them. It turns out he is utilizing the captured form of Gaea, the spirit of the Earth, to summon the monsters. Patsy, who had escaped and learned this, tells the Defenders, who were currently comprising Namor, Hulk, Doctor Strange, and Silver Surfer. The superheroes battles Yandroth has caused has given him enough power to summon the Ravagers of Creation. Four elemental creatures confront the Defenders, who are unable to stop them individually. They attack the Stone creature, disabling the spell needed to destroy the world. This frees Gaea and kills Yandroth. In his dying breath as the Hulk and Namor fight, he realizes the Defenders hate each other. Yandroth uses his powers to curse the four original members so that they must come and work together in times of a severe crisis. This involves uncontrollable teleportation, affecting all four of the heroes.[6] Yandroth's curse caused the Defenders to work together against a plot by Lorelei and Pluto.[7] The curse that Yandroth placed on the four original members of the Defenders was also tied to Yann and adding into Yandroth's powers.[8]
When the four Defenders members became The Order for a short time, their curse started to cause Yandroth to slowly reform.[9] He started to slowly materialize in smoky form above a throne.[10] Yandroth then began to materialize in an all-powerful mist-like form. When he was denied of the final power he needed when the Order wouldn't attack him, Yandroth regressed to human form as Christopher Ganyrog took Yandroth back to Yann to stand trial for his crimes.[11]
Yandroth is featured in the limited series "The Last Defenders", disguised as a businessman after he escaped, killed the Ganyrogs, and took over Yann. Assisted by the floating head of the entity known as the "Recorder", he attempts to manipulate his way into gaining god-level powers. Nighthawk, Colossus, Blazing Skull She-Hulk, and Warlord Krang battle the group the Sons of the Serpent which culminates in a confrontation with Yandroth. Yandroth manipulates time and forces Nighthawk to battle a twisted version of his old team the Squadron Sinister before being rescued by a future incarnation of the Defenders, who with Yandroth disappear once the threat is over.[12]
Powers and abilities
Yandroth has the ability to manipulate the forces of magic for a number of effects, including the extrasensory ability to perceive beings in invisible astral form. In Kurt Busiek's Defenders series, he had grown powerful enough to imprison the elder goddess Gaea and use her power to control the Earth and summon elementals powerful enough to stand against the assembled Defenders members.
Yandroth also has the ability to exist in an independent astral form after his physical death. As a spirit, he has the ability to possess the mind of any living human with similar brain patterns. However, he has the inability to affect the physical world without possessing a physical form and the inability to possess the minds of more than half a dozen beings at once. He showed the ability to absorb energy released by the Defenders while under his influence.
Yandroth has an extraordinary genius intellect and possesses vast knowledge of various sciences, including advanced physics, computer science, and robotics. He also possesses some knowledge of mystic lore.
Equipment
Yandroth uses a number of technological devices that he has designed and manufactured. He is often armed with Q-ray blasters capable of firing bursts of flame, concussive force, or disintegration beams. He also wears gloves equipped with mechanisms to fire brain implants, and has used disintegrators, ultra-spectrum lasers, a force-shield belt, anti-gravity devices, and interplanetary teleportation devices.
Yandroth programmed and built Voltorg, a 15-foot-tall (4.6 m) robot armed with "atomic electrodes" capable of incinerating solid steel. Yandroth also constructed the Omegatron, a computer intelligence created by a combination of science and magic and infused with Yandroth's own personality, programmed to protect its own existence and to detonate every nuclear stockpile on Earth simultaneously on command. He also uses microscopic brain implants capable of altering victims' brainwaves so as to be identical to Yandroth's, thus enabling him to possess them.
References
- ^ Sacks, Jason; Dallas, Keith (2014). American Comic Book Chronicles: The 1970s. TwoMorrows Publishing. pp. 50–51. ISBN 978-1605490564.
- ^ Strange Tales Vol. 1 #164-168. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Marvel Feature Vol. 1 #1. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Defenders #5
- ^ Defenders #119. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Defenders Vol. 2 #1. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Defenders Vol. 2 #2. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Defenders Vol. 2 #3-12. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Order #4. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Order #5. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Order #6. Marvel Comics.
- ^ The Last Defenders #1 - 6 (May – Oct. 2008). Marvel Comics.