Thanos has several "children," primarily adopted individuals he trained as elite warriors, known in comics as the Black Order, including Corvus Glaive, Proxima Midnight, Cull Obsidian (or Black Dwarf), Ebony Maw, Supergiant, and Gamora and Nebula (adopted daughters who defected). While Gamora and Nebula are adopted daughters, the core "Children of Thanos" in the MCU often refers to the Black Order quartet (Glaive, Midnight, Obsidian, Maw) who serve as his ruthless lieutenants in his quest for the Infinity Stones.
Thanos adopted six known children, Ebony Maw, Proxima Midnight, Corvus Glaive, Cull Obsidian, the Zehoberei Gamora, and the Luphomoid Nebula, and trained them in the ways of combat, turning each of them into a deadly warrior.
Thanos has 6 children. Ebony Maw, Cull Obsidian, Proxima Midnight, Corvus Glaive, Nebula, and Gamora. We see how Thanos enlisted Gamora and we can assume that he enlisted the other 5 in similar fashion. Thanos seems to have favorites as seen with Gamora and Nebula.
Lila Barton is only daughter of Clint Barton/Hawkeye and Laura Barton. She's the sister to Cooper and Nathaniel Barton. She lives at the Barton Family Farm with her family. Lila and her family are not in any government files, which is why the Barton Family Farm is used by the Avengers as a place to hide and lay low.
The fierce warrior Nebula is the adopted daughter of Thanos and the “sister” of Gamora.
Is Red Skull the son of Captain America? No way he is the son of Captain America in the MCU. But…. An alternate iteration has since been seen as the Ultimate Marvel equivalent of Red Skull, the secret son of Captain America (Steve Rogers) and Gail Richards.
NoobMaster69 in Avengers: Endgame is the same character, Aaron, from Captain America: The Winter Soldier, an Apple Store employee who played Fortnite with Thor and Korg, revealed in a later Xbox tie-in commercial where his cousin (who created the name) appears, tying him back to the MCU's gamer tag in Endgame.
The Scarlet Witch is a regular character in Uncanny Avengers (2012), beginning with issue #1. The 2014 AXIS crossover retconned the character's parentage again, revealing Magneto is not biologically her father, contrary to that relationship's place in the canon for 32 years.
In Eternals (2021), Ajak reveals that the Blip delayed the onslaught of the Emergence for five years, as it halved the Earth's population from the necessary level needed for it to occur.
Lila Cheney is a fictional interstellar British rock star and mutant who makes appearances as a guest character in X-Men titles. Created by Chris Claremont and Bob McLeod, she made her debut in The New Mutants Annual #1 (November 1984).
Korath is a major antagonist in the Marvel Animated Universe. Unlike the MCU, Korath was an adopted son of Thanos, and therefore, the adoptive brother of Gamora and Nebula and a follower of Ronan the Accuser.
Binary is a powerful cosmic superhero identity in Marvel Comics, originally belonging to Carol Danvers (Captain Marvel) after her transformation by the Brood, but in The Marvels movie, it refers to an alternate universe Maria Rambeau who joins the X-Men and gains cosmic powers, serving as an ally and counterpart to Monica Rambeau.
Ameenah Kaplan: Gamora's Mother.
Over the years, Gamora became Thanos' favorite child, and he considered her the future heir to his throne, which only strengthened the growing wedge in her relationship with Nebula and in time, Gamora built up the reputation as the "deadliest woman in the galaxy" and became well known throughout the cosmos.
She is depicted as a blue-skinned alien warrior who is both the adoptive daughter of Thanos, who killed her blood family before raising her, and the adoptive sister of Gamora, with whom she grew to share a bitter rivalry.
Though Thanos was born to two Eternals (A'lars and Sui-San), his body carries the Deviant gene . That's why he has mottled purple skin and a disfigured chin whereas the rest of his family could more or less pass for human.
The first F-bomb in the MCU was dropped by Chris Pratt as Peter Quill (Star-Lord) in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 during a scene where he tells Nebula to "open the f***ing door," a moment that broke the long-standing PG-13 language barrier for Marvel Studios films and was partially improvised by Pratt.
You're referring to the Spider-Man animated TV series that aired from 1981 to 1982, a 26-episode show featuring Peter Parker fighting villains like Doctor Doom, Green Goblin, and the Vulture, known for its unique animation style and focus on classic Spidey villains, and running alongside the contemporaneous Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends.
The MCU was initially labeled as Earth-199999 in the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe A to Z, but the recent timeline confirms Earth-616 as the official designation.
Once believed to be Magneto's mutant daughter, she and her twin, the speedster Quicksilver, are actually orphans enhanced by the High Evolutionary at Mount Wundagore.
Pietro Lensherr, a.k.a. Quicksilver, is the son of mutant supremacist Magneto and twin brother of Wanda. Magneto abandoned their human mother when the twins were children, taking them with him as he founded the Brotherhood of Mutants with Charles Xavier, whom the children regarded as an uncle.
Many of Lorna's stories involve her mental instability and mental health issues, particularly her bipolar disorder, which is exacerbated by the repeated brainwashing episodes and other traumatic events. Lorna's mental health has also been a factor in storylines where she becomes evil or loses control of her abilities.
He knew Tony for a long time. They also fought in a lot of battles together. They were like brothers. On top of that he had all the previous things happened which probably made him even more sad when Tony died.
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"Admit it, you need me. We're connected." Harley Keener is a Tennessee local who had crossed paths with Tony Stark when the latter broke into his garage, seeking shelter and food.