Nice. They sure screwed him up in that FF:Rise of the Silver Surfer movie huh?
Based on the Ultimate Version, so yeah they did =|.
For me it was Galactus or Apocalypse. Galactus just wasn't evil enough in the end though. He destroys to keep himself alive, Apocalypse destroys to prove who is strong.
Curses, I missed whatever it was you did with that quoted post. Stupid red X square at work. Whatever it was it warranted a thumbs down afterword, so it must have been sweet.
Edit: Awesome! I see that now. Good job. Of course, now I've had to edit it and add a different picture. Curse you, the peanut pron thing was funny!
Curses, I missed whatever it was you did with that quoted post. Stupid red X square at work. Whatever it was it warranted a thumbs down afterword, so it must have been sweet.
It reset for some reason, don't worry I fixed it =D
My 2nd round pick in the "Sidekick" category is...Nightwing. The quintessential sidekick all grown up. Dick Grayson broke the chains of the Robin identity and became a hero all on his own as Nightwing despite regularly returning to fight at Batman's side as though he will always be his sidekick at heart. He has been the leader of The Teen Titans, The Outsiders and even the vaunted Justice League of America for a time.
Although Nightwing doesn't have any superpowers he does posess the peak athletic strength and endurance of a man who regularly engages in intensive physical exercise.
His detective and martial arts skills are almost at Batman's level, making him one of the best crime fighters alive. Being a master of a half dozen martial arts such as: Judo, Jeet Kune Do, Taekwondo, Aikido, Wing Chun, and Escrima. He also possesses vast training in other martial arts such as Hapkido, Jiu-jitsu, Karate, Savate, Kendo, Ninjitsu, and Tai Chi. He was trained by Batman in everything from escapology to criminology, fencing, stealth, disguise, and numerous other combat/non-combat disciplines. He is among the seven characters in the DCU that fans are considering for best martial artist.
Dick being a prodigious natural athlete, possess a peak human level of agility and acrobatic skills. He is the best acrobat in the DC universe. He is the only person on Earth who can do the quadruple somersault now that his parents are dead (he used to be one of three).
Batman is now dead and there are a number of "contenders for the cowl" but the odds on favourite to become the new Dark Knight of Gotham City - the new Batman - is Nightwing.
Doomsday was created in the distant past on Krypton, long before the humanoid Kryptonian race had gained dominance over the planet. It was a violent, hellish world where only the absolute strongest of creatures could survive (at the time, the world's dominant life-forms were said to be the most dangerous creatures in the universe).[3][4] In an effort to create the ultimate life-form, the alien scientist Bertron sent an infant who was born in vitro to the surface of the planet where it would be promptly killed by the harsh environment.[3] Its remains were harvested and used to clone a stronger version of it, a process repeated countless times as a form of accelerated natural selection.[3] The agony of these deaths were recorded in his genes, driving the creature to hate all life.[3] Evolving, eventually the child was able to survive the hot tempature and rock landscape, only to be quickly killed by the savage creatures that inhabited the planet. Eventually, it gained the ability to return to life and adapt and overcome what killed it in its prior life without the need of Bertron's technology.[3] "The Ultimate" hunted and killed all of the lethal creatures that then inhabited Krypton, including Bertron, whom he had come to identify as hostile, due to having been "killed" by him hundreds upon hundreds of times.[3]
Well since there are not many great Female Villains we are proud to select Catwoman.
The original and most widely known Catwoman, Selina Kyle, first appears in Batman #1 (Spring 1940) in which she is known as The Cat. As an adversary of Batman, she was a whip-carrying burglar with a taste for high-stake thefts. Modern writers have attributed her activities and costumed identity as a response to a history of abuse.
Since the 1990s, Catwoman has been featured in an eponymous series that cast her as an anti-heroine rather than a supervillainess. The character has been one of Batman's most enduring love interests, and has occasionally been depicted as his one true love.
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