The first Black Hulk in Marvel Comics is Tyrone Cash, also known as Leonard Williams, a genius scientist from the Ultimate Universe (Earth-1610) who became the first person to successfully transform into a powerful Hulk, retaining his intellect, before Bruce Banner. He appeared in Ultimate Comics: Avengers starting in 2010 and was a mentor to Banner, later taking on a darker persona as a crime lord before being recruited by the Avengers.
Tyrone Cash (Leonard Williams) is a character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character is depicted in the Ultimate Marvel universe, where he is a member of The Ultimates and is described as being The First Hulk prior to Bruce Banner.
Blade was introduced as a supporting character in the Marvel Comics series The Tomb of Dracula #10 (July 1973), written by Marv Wolfman and penciled by Gene Colan. The artist recalled in 2003, "Marv told me Blade was a black man, and we talked about how he should dress, and how he should look – very heroic looking.
Luke Cage first appeared in Luke Cage, Hero for Hire #1 in June 1972 and was created by Archie Goodwin, George Tuska, Roy Thomas, and John Romita Sr. He was the first black superhero to be featured as the protagonist and title character of a comic book.
Hulk Isn't Just Green: All 11 Colors of Hulk in Marvel Lore Explained - IMDb.
However, during a recent fight with a group of gamma-powered Abominations in a different dimension, the deadliest Hulk ever, Titan, emerged, showing off his incredible powers that make him a game-changing new addition to the lore of the longtime Marvel Comics hero.
Along with Iron Fist and Jessica Jones, Cage's supporting characters include his friend David Griffith and the doctor Claire Temple. His archenemy is Diamondback, a career criminal and Cage's friend-turned-enemy who caused him to be wrongfully arrested.
As the first major, openly gay character created by Marvel Comics, Northstar generated significant publicity in the mainstream press, and Alpha Flight #106 sold out in a week, although the series was not a very popular title. It is the only comic book issue to have been inducted into the Gaylactic Hall of Fame.
The character was created by Dennis O'Neil and Neal Adams, and first appeared in Green Lantern (Volume 2) #87 (December 1971/January 1972). Stewart's original design was based on actor Sidney Poitier and he was one of the first African-American superheroes to appear in DC Comics.
When Marvel's editorial staff decided that the Ultimate universe's Peter Parker would be killed in the 2011 storyline "Death of Spider-Man", the character Miles Morales was created. Although Morales is the first black Spider-Man, he marks the second time a Latino character has taken the Spider-Man identity.
His suit was initially black and gray but around the early 1940s about 2 years after Batman's first appearance they DID switch fully to a blue and grey suit and use that for a majority of his continuity since.
J.A.R.V.I.S. was replaced by F.R.I.D.A.Y. in the MCU because J.A.R.V.I.S. evolved into the sentient being Vision at the end of Avengers: Age of Ultron, leaving Tony Stark needing a new primary AI for his suit, with F.R.I.D.A.Y. serving as the next step in his AI development, not just a temporary fix.
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.
Biography. The cyborg known only as Pretty Boy was a member of the band of cybernetically-enhanced assassins known as the Reavers.
The character is the original Captain Marvel in the comic book created by Stan Lee. The key difference: Comic book Mar-Vell is a male while movie Mar-Vell is female. According to directors Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck, the gender swap happened “very late” into development.
Deadpool was revealed to be pansexual - which is defined as being attracted to people of any gender or to people regardless of their gender - in the comics over a decade ago, but there's been some debate about whether his sexual orientation carried over to Ryan Reynolds' big-screen take on the character.
The Hulk has admitted that The Void is the only thing he fears.
A mercenary soldier, he played an important role in the series Deadpool; T-Ray served to remind Wade Wilson, also known as Deadpool, what a failure he was. He is Deadpool's archenemy for many issues and almost everything that happened to Deadpool was a part of an elaborate plan orchestrated by him.
Diamondback (Willis Harold Stryker) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. He is primarily an enemy of Luke Cage and is notable for being the first major supervillain that he faced. Stryker/Diamondback in Heroes for Hire #1.
Stan Lee: (at around 13 mins) the comic writer who co-created The Incredible Hulk in 1962 is the man who drinks the soft drink contaminated with Bruce Banner's blood. Rickson Gracie: (at around 5 mins) appears as the Jiu-Jitsu instructor that is teaching Bruce Banner breathing exercises.
The Abomination is one of the most powerful mortals on Earth, and was once considered by the Hulk himself to be his strongest enemy physically. Blonsky is a longtime enemy of the Hulk who is capable of fighting the Hulk on equal terms (sometimes even overwhelming him on occasion), a feat he did for several years.