Are there any super-powered aliens in the Marvel universe?Who is depicted in the statues on the Grandmaster's...
How can I maintain game balance while allowing my player to craft genuinely useful items?
Print the phrase "And she said, 'But that's his.'" using only the alphabet
What is the context for Napoleon's quote "[the Austrians] did not know the value of five minutes"?
2 Managed Packages in 1 Dev Org
Why can't we feel the Earth's revolution?
Lead the way to this Literary Knight to its final “DESTINATION”
Co-worker is now managing my team. Does this mean that I'm being demoted?
Does anyone recognize these rockets, and their location?
How can I ping multiple IP addresses at the same time?
How did space travel spread through the galaxy?
What could be the physiological mechanism for a biological Geiger counter?
How do I gain the trust of other PCs?
First occurrence in the Sixers sequence
How did Avada Kedavra get its name?
Time at 1G acceleration to travel 100000 light years
How do I run a script as sudo at boot time on Ubuntu 18.04 Server?
...and then she held the gun
Converting 3x7 to a 1x7. Is it possible with only existing parts?
Why is gun control associated with the socially liberal Democratic party?
How to write a nice frame challenge?
Why do you need to heat the pan before heating the olive oil?
How does the Linux command "mount -a" work?
How can a flywheel makes engine runs smoothly?
What is this plant I saw for sale at a Romanian farmer's market?
Are there any super-powered aliens in the Marvel universe?
Who is depicted in the statues on the Grandmaster's Palace in Thor: Ragnarok?Are there any geniuses in the Marvel Universe who are not superheroes?Are there any actual gods in Marvel comics?Are there any psychics available to the Marvel Cinematic Universe?Are there any Australian superheroes in the Marvel-616 universe?Are any Marvel Universe superheroes or supervillains professional athletes?Are there ANY negative effects from the Super-Soldier Serum?Is Captain America gay?Are there any other Indian superheroes in the Marvel universe?Are There Any Marvel Paperbacks involving the Marvel group The Misfits?Are there any anachronisms in Captain Marvel?
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty{ margin-bottom:0;
}
We have seen plenty of examples of Earthlings (Terrans) who have obtained superpowers through various means:
- Bruce Banner, became the Hulk after exposure to Gamma Radiation
- Steve Rogers, gained super-human strength and abilities from a super-soldier serum
- Inhumans, obtain superpowers through Kree (alien) interference
Have there been any aliens who have obtained superpowers via similar means? I'm not talking about aliens like Asgardians, Kree, Skrulls, etc who are naturally stronger and more resilient than Humans. I'm referring to any extra-terrestrial beings (of commensurate composition with Humans) that have been exposed to anything that left them with powers that others of their race would consider "super".
Answers from both the MCU and Comics are acceptable!
marvel
add a comment |
We have seen plenty of examples of Earthlings (Terrans) who have obtained superpowers through various means:
- Bruce Banner, became the Hulk after exposure to Gamma Radiation
- Steve Rogers, gained super-human strength and abilities from a super-soldier serum
- Inhumans, obtain superpowers through Kree (alien) interference
Have there been any aliens who have obtained superpowers via similar means? I'm not talking about aliens like Asgardians, Kree, Skrulls, etc who are naturally stronger and more resilient than Humans. I'm referring to any extra-terrestrial beings (of commensurate composition with Humans) that have been exposed to anything that left them with powers that others of their race would consider "super".
Answers from both the MCU and Comics are acceptable!
marvel
1
While not Marvel, would someone like Superman count? He's an extraterrestrial who gets his powers by being exposed to a yellow sun. However, he's not a "transformed" superhero, that's just how the biology of Kryptonians works. Just trying to get an idea of what you're looking for.
– Thunderforge
8 hours ago
1
@Thunderforge Not necessarily if you consider that everyone from Superman's planet would have the same powers, were they to come to Earth's solar system.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
But if that's the case, I'm not seeing how that's different from any human who gets exposed to Banner's Gamma Radiation, or Parker's radioactive spider. Virtually all humans would react the same way, right?
– Thunderforge
8 hours ago
@Thunderforge That's a good point, but it's not permanent right? Once Superman leaves the sun, the powers begin to fade.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
Something that might interest you -- back in the 1980s, I bought an RPG called "The Marvel Super Heroes Advanced Set." In the section for rolling dice to create an original character, it said there was a 30 percent chance for each of the following: that your hero would be a Mutant (like the X-Men), an Altered Human (like Spidey or the Fantastic Four), or a High-Tech Wonder (like Iron Man or anyone else who relies on tools/weapons/etc. to win his fights). I think having your character's powers come from being an "Alien" or a "Robot" was only about a 5 percent chance apiece.
– Lorendiac
2 hours ago
add a comment |
We have seen plenty of examples of Earthlings (Terrans) who have obtained superpowers through various means:
- Bruce Banner, became the Hulk after exposure to Gamma Radiation
- Steve Rogers, gained super-human strength and abilities from a super-soldier serum
- Inhumans, obtain superpowers through Kree (alien) interference
Have there been any aliens who have obtained superpowers via similar means? I'm not talking about aliens like Asgardians, Kree, Skrulls, etc who are naturally stronger and more resilient than Humans. I'm referring to any extra-terrestrial beings (of commensurate composition with Humans) that have been exposed to anything that left them with powers that others of their race would consider "super".
Answers from both the MCU and Comics are acceptable!
marvel
We have seen plenty of examples of Earthlings (Terrans) who have obtained superpowers through various means:
- Bruce Banner, became the Hulk after exposure to Gamma Radiation
- Steve Rogers, gained super-human strength and abilities from a super-soldier serum
- Inhumans, obtain superpowers through Kree (alien) interference
Have there been any aliens who have obtained superpowers via similar means? I'm not talking about aliens like Asgardians, Kree, Skrulls, etc who are naturally stronger and more resilient than Humans. I'm referring to any extra-terrestrial beings (of commensurate composition with Humans) that have been exposed to anything that left them with powers that others of their race would consider "super".
Answers from both the MCU and Comics are acceptable!
marvel
marvel
asked 9 hours ago
Zip Zap JZip Zap J
636514
636514
1
While not Marvel, would someone like Superman count? He's an extraterrestrial who gets his powers by being exposed to a yellow sun. However, he's not a "transformed" superhero, that's just how the biology of Kryptonians works. Just trying to get an idea of what you're looking for.
– Thunderforge
8 hours ago
1
@Thunderforge Not necessarily if you consider that everyone from Superman's planet would have the same powers, were they to come to Earth's solar system.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
But if that's the case, I'm not seeing how that's different from any human who gets exposed to Banner's Gamma Radiation, or Parker's radioactive spider. Virtually all humans would react the same way, right?
– Thunderforge
8 hours ago
@Thunderforge That's a good point, but it's not permanent right? Once Superman leaves the sun, the powers begin to fade.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
Something that might interest you -- back in the 1980s, I bought an RPG called "The Marvel Super Heroes Advanced Set." In the section for rolling dice to create an original character, it said there was a 30 percent chance for each of the following: that your hero would be a Mutant (like the X-Men), an Altered Human (like Spidey or the Fantastic Four), or a High-Tech Wonder (like Iron Man or anyone else who relies on tools/weapons/etc. to win his fights). I think having your character's powers come from being an "Alien" or a "Robot" was only about a 5 percent chance apiece.
– Lorendiac
2 hours ago
add a comment |
1
While not Marvel, would someone like Superman count? He's an extraterrestrial who gets his powers by being exposed to a yellow sun. However, he's not a "transformed" superhero, that's just how the biology of Kryptonians works. Just trying to get an idea of what you're looking for.
– Thunderforge
8 hours ago
1
@Thunderforge Not necessarily if you consider that everyone from Superman's planet would have the same powers, were they to come to Earth's solar system.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
But if that's the case, I'm not seeing how that's different from any human who gets exposed to Banner's Gamma Radiation, or Parker's radioactive spider. Virtually all humans would react the same way, right?
– Thunderforge
8 hours ago
@Thunderforge That's a good point, but it's not permanent right? Once Superman leaves the sun, the powers begin to fade.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
Something that might interest you -- back in the 1980s, I bought an RPG called "The Marvel Super Heroes Advanced Set." In the section for rolling dice to create an original character, it said there was a 30 percent chance for each of the following: that your hero would be a Mutant (like the X-Men), an Altered Human (like Spidey or the Fantastic Four), or a High-Tech Wonder (like Iron Man or anyone else who relies on tools/weapons/etc. to win his fights). I think having your character's powers come from being an "Alien" or a "Robot" was only about a 5 percent chance apiece.
– Lorendiac
2 hours ago
1
1
While not Marvel, would someone like Superman count? He's an extraterrestrial who gets his powers by being exposed to a yellow sun. However, he's not a "transformed" superhero, that's just how the biology of Kryptonians works. Just trying to get an idea of what you're looking for.
– Thunderforge
8 hours ago
While not Marvel, would someone like Superman count? He's an extraterrestrial who gets his powers by being exposed to a yellow sun. However, he's not a "transformed" superhero, that's just how the biology of Kryptonians works. Just trying to get an idea of what you're looking for.
– Thunderforge
8 hours ago
1
1
@Thunderforge Not necessarily if you consider that everyone from Superman's planet would have the same powers, were they to come to Earth's solar system.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
@Thunderforge Not necessarily if you consider that everyone from Superman's planet would have the same powers, were they to come to Earth's solar system.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
But if that's the case, I'm not seeing how that's different from any human who gets exposed to Banner's Gamma Radiation, or Parker's radioactive spider. Virtually all humans would react the same way, right?
– Thunderforge
8 hours ago
But if that's the case, I'm not seeing how that's different from any human who gets exposed to Banner's Gamma Radiation, or Parker's radioactive spider. Virtually all humans would react the same way, right?
– Thunderforge
8 hours ago
@Thunderforge That's a good point, but it's not permanent right? Once Superman leaves the sun, the powers begin to fade.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
@Thunderforge That's a good point, but it's not permanent right? Once Superman leaves the sun, the powers begin to fade.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
Something that might interest you -- back in the 1980s, I bought an RPG called "The Marvel Super Heroes Advanced Set." In the section for rolling dice to create an original character, it said there was a 30 percent chance for each of the following: that your hero would be a Mutant (like the X-Men), an Altered Human (like Spidey or the Fantastic Four), or a High-Tech Wonder (like Iron Man or anyone else who relies on tools/weapons/etc. to win his fights). I think having your character's powers come from being an "Alien" or a "Robot" was only about a 5 percent chance apiece.
– Lorendiac
2 hours ago
Something that might interest you -- back in the 1980s, I bought an RPG called "The Marvel Super Heroes Advanced Set." In the section for rolling dice to create an original character, it said there was a 30 percent chance for each of the following: that your hero would be a Mutant (like the X-Men), an Altered Human (like Spidey or the Fantastic Four), or a High-Tech Wonder (like Iron Man or anyone else who relies on tools/weapons/etc. to win his fights). I think having your character's powers come from being an "Alien" or a "Robot" was only about a 5 percent chance apiece.
– Lorendiac
2 hours ago
add a comment |
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
I can think of three immediate examples:
- Super-Skrull, a Skrull warrior, was given (through some means available to Skrulls) the combined powers of the Fantastic Four. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super-Skrull
- Silver Surfer, from Zenn-La, was given the Power Cosmic by Galactus (and by implication every non-human Herald). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver_Surfer
- Beta Ray Bill, a Korbinite, was given the Power of Thor. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beta_Ray_Bill
Super-Skrull and Silver Surfer are great examples. And as mentioned Mark Beadles, Beta Ray Bill fits nicely too.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
1
Thor is technically a candidate since he's an Asgardian (and thus not an Earthling) with powers that are beyond that of a normal Asgardian.
– just_happen_to_know
8 hours ago
add a comment |
Beta Ray Bill is a Korbinite (alien from the planet Korbin) whose:
life force and consciousness were transferred by scientists of his race into the body of an alien carnivorous equine-like beast that had been bionically restructured into a cyborg. Courtesy of highly advanced genetic engineering, the character possesses vast superhuman strength, speed, stamina and durability, and a highly extended lifespan.
Bill was also notable for his worthiness to wield Thor's hammer Mjolnir.
Bill was also depicted in statue form in the MCU in Thor: Ragnarok.
1
I didn't know that was Beta Ray Bill's origin! Always suspected he was just some freaky-horse-looking alien that could wield Mjolnir.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
add a comment |
Kallark is a Strontian individual who went through an enhancement process which massively improved his already impressive physical abilities to become Gladiator, Praetor of the Shi'ar Imperial Guard.
Speaking of the Shi'ar, Deathbird was a Shi'ar who was born with a form of atavism, which gave her claws and allowed her to fly.
Both excellent examples, and good answers to my question. I also considered adding Mutants to my list, and I would say Deathbird fits into that category. Kallark is interesting since his page specifies he was part of a group that underwent enhancement. Very cool, thanks.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
add a comment |
I think that the best examples would be the Shi'ar Imperial Guard, made up of super-powered beings from many different planets (even Earth). They are lead by Gladiator, the last Strontian.
More examples would be from the Kree Starforce, who are super-powered above and beyond other Kree. Among them was Ultimus, an Eternal.
There are also the spaceknights of Galador. Most notable among them would be Rom.
Galactus grants the power cosmic to his heralds, most of whom were not from Earth. Among them were:
Stardust, an Ethereal- Morg
Terrax, a Birjan aka Landlak.- Firelord
- Air-Walker
- Tyrant
As mentioned in other answers, the Super Skrull and Beta Ray Bill would also be excellent examples.
add a comment |
The Elders of the Universe
The Elders of Universe are probably the closest thing to what you want; they are a group of individuals, each belonging to a separate alien race. All other members of their races are extinct, and so they consider one another brothers, though none are related (except Voyager, who is related to the Grandmaster). Each one possesses immortality. I can't remember how each one gained immortality, but it stands to reason the rest of their races didn't, as they are extinct, after all. Later, the Grandmaster won complete immortality for all the Elders after beating Death in a game. They all have different powers; the only one they share, to my knowledge, is immortality and maybe super-strength.
The Elders of the Universe first began calling themselves such sometime before the Earth was formed, meaning their races were spacefaring long before anyone else, except the Celestials (obviously) and most likely the Watchers, Builders, and Progenitors. They are generally neutral or evil, in terms of behavior towards Earth's heroes, and they are most famous for: keeping the Infinity Gems during the Thanos Quest, for the Grandmaster repeatedly playing games involving Earth's heroes, for the Thing and She-Hulk beating up the Champion, and for the Collector, who has collected some crazy stuff over the years, including Earth-1610's Mjolnir.
New contributor
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function() {
var channelOptions = {
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "186"
};
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
createEditor();
});
}
else {
createEditor();
}
});
function createEditor() {
StackExchange.prepareEditor({
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader: {
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
},
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
});
}
});
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fscifi.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f214481%2fare-there-any-super-powered-aliens-in-the-marvel-universe%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
I can think of three immediate examples:
- Super-Skrull, a Skrull warrior, was given (through some means available to Skrulls) the combined powers of the Fantastic Four. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super-Skrull
- Silver Surfer, from Zenn-La, was given the Power Cosmic by Galactus (and by implication every non-human Herald). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver_Surfer
- Beta Ray Bill, a Korbinite, was given the Power of Thor. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beta_Ray_Bill
Super-Skrull and Silver Surfer are great examples. And as mentioned Mark Beadles, Beta Ray Bill fits nicely too.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
1
Thor is technically a candidate since he's an Asgardian (and thus not an Earthling) with powers that are beyond that of a normal Asgardian.
– just_happen_to_know
8 hours ago
add a comment |
I can think of three immediate examples:
- Super-Skrull, a Skrull warrior, was given (through some means available to Skrulls) the combined powers of the Fantastic Four. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super-Skrull
- Silver Surfer, from Zenn-La, was given the Power Cosmic by Galactus (and by implication every non-human Herald). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver_Surfer
- Beta Ray Bill, a Korbinite, was given the Power of Thor. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beta_Ray_Bill
Super-Skrull and Silver Surfer are great examples. And as mentioned Mark Beadles, Beta Ray Bill fits nicely too.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
1
Thor is technically a candidate since he's an Asgardian (and thus not an Earthling) with powers that are beyond that of a normal Asgardian.
– just_happen_to_know
8 hours ago
add a comment |
I can think of three immediate examples:
- Super-Skrull, a Skrull warrior, was given (through some means available to Skrulls) the combined powers of the Fantastic Four. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super-Skrull
- Silver Surfer, from Zenn-La, was given the Power Cosmic by Galactus (and by implication every non-human Herald). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver_Surfer
- Beta Ray Bill, a Korbinite, was given the Power of Thor. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beta_Ray_Bill
I can think of three immediate examples:
- Super-Skrull, a Skrull warrior, was given (through some means available to Skrulls) the combined powers of the Fantastic Four. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super-Skrull
- Silver Surfer, from Zenn-La, was given the Power Cosmic by Galactus (and by implication every non-human Herald). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver_Surfer
- Beta Ray Bill, a Korbinite, was given the Power of Thor. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beta_Ray_Bill
answered 8 hours ago
just_happen_to_knowjust_happen_to_know
900312
900312
Super-Skrull and Silver Surfer are great examples. And as mentioned Mark Beadles, Beta Ray Bill fits nicely too.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
1
Thor is technically a candidate since he's an Asgardian (and thus not an Earthling) with powers that are beyond that of a normal Asgardian.
– just_happen_to_know
8 hours ago
add a comment |
Super-Skrull and Silver Surfer are great examples. And as mentioned Mark Beadles, Beta Ray Bill fits nicely too.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
1
Thor is technically a candidate since he's an Asgardian (and thus not an Earthling) with powers that are beyond that of a normal Asgardian.
– just_happen_to_know
8 hours ago
Super-Skrull and Silver Surfer are great examples. And as mentioned Mark Beadles, Beta Ray Bill fits nicely too.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
Super-Skrull and Silver Surfer are great examples. And as mentioned Mark Beadles, Beta Ray Bill fits nicely too.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
1
1
Thor is technically a candidate since he's an Asgardian (and thus not an Earthling) with powers that are beyond that of a normal Asgardian.
– just_happen_to_know
8 hours ago
Thor is technically a candidate since he's an Asgardian (and thus not an Earthling) with powers that are beyond that of a normal Asgardian.
– just_happen_to_know
8 hours ago
add a comment |
Beta Ray Bill is a Korbinite (alien from the planet Korbin) whose:
life force and consciousness were transferred by scientists of his race into the body of an alien carnivorous equine-like beast that had been bionically restructured into a cyborg. Courtesy of highly advanced genetic engineering, the character possesses vast superhuman strength, speed, stamina and durability, and a highly extended lifespan.
Bill was also notable for his worthiness to wield Thor's hammer Mjolnir.
Bill was also depicted in statue form in the MCU in Thor: Ragnarok.
1
I didn't know that was Beta Ray Bill's origin! Always suspected he was just some freaky-horse-looking alien that could wield Mjolnir.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
add a comment |
Beta Ray Bill is a Korbinite (alien from the planet Korbin) whose:
life force and consciousness were transferred by scientists of his race into the body of an alien carnivorous equine-like beast that had been bionically restructured into a cyborg. Courtesy of highly advanced genetic engineering, the character possesses vast superhuman strength, speed, stamina and durability, and a highly extended lifespan.
Bill was also notable for his worthiness to wield Thor's hammer Mjolnir.
Bill was also depicted in statue form in the MCU in Thor: Ragnarok.
1
I didn't know that was Beta Ray Bill's origin! Always suspected he was just some freaky-horse-looking alien that could wield Mjolnir.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
add a comment |
Beta Ray Bill is a Korbinite (alien from the planet Korbin) whose:
life force and consciousness were transferred by scientists of his race into the body of an alien carnivorous equine-like beast that had been bionically restructured into a cyborg. Courtesy of highly advanced genetic engineering, the character possesses vast superhuman strength, speed, stamina and durability, and a highly extended lifespan.
Bill was also notable for his worthiness to wield Thor's hammer Mjolnir.
Bill was also depicted in statue form in the MCU in Thor: Ragnarok.
Beta Ray Bill is a Korbinite (alien from the planet Korbin) whose:
life force and consciousness were transferred by scientists of his race into the body of an alien carnivorous equine-like beast that had been bionically restructured into a cyborg. Courtesy of highly advanced genetic engineering, the character possesses vast superhuman strength, speed, stamina and durability, and a highly extended lifespan.
Bill was also notable for his worthiness to wield Thor's hammer Mjolnir.
Bill was also depicted in statue form in the MCU in Thor: Ragnarok.
answered 8 hours ago
Mark BeadlesMark Beadles
9,40723758
9,40723758
1
I didn't know that was Beta Ray Bill's origin! Always suspected he was just some freaky-horse-looking alien that could wield Mjolnir.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
add a comment |
1
I didn't know that was Beta Ray Bill's origin! Always suspected he was just some freaky-horse-looking alien that could wield Mjolnir.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
1
1
I didn't know that was Beta Ray Bill's origin! Always suspected he was just some freaky-horse-looking alien that could wield Mjolnir.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
I didn't know that was Beta Ray Bill's origin! Always suspected he was just some freaky-horse-looking alien that could wield Mjolnir.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
add a comment |
Kallark is a Strontian individual who went through an enhancement process which massively improved his already impressive physical abilities to become Gladiator, Praetor of the Shi'ar Imperial Guard.
Speaking of the Shi'ar, Deathbird was a Shi'ar who was born with a form of atavism, which gave her claws and allowed her to fly.
Both excellent examples, and good answers to my question. I also considered adding Mutants to my list, and I would say Deathbird fits into that category. Kallark is interesting since his page specifies he was part of a group that underwent enhancement. Very cool, thanks.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
add a comment |
Kallark is a Strontian individual who went through an enhancement process which massively improved his already impressive physical abilities to become Gladiator, Praetor of the Shi'ar Imperial Guard.
Speaking of the Shi'ar, Deathbird was a Shi'ar who was born with a form of atavism, which gave her claws and allowed her to fly.
Both excellent examples, and good answers to my question. I also considered adding Mutants to my list, and I would say Deathbird fits into that category. Kallark is interesting since his page specifies he was part of a group that underwent enhancement. Very cool, thanks.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
add a comment |
Kallark is a Strontian individual who went through an enhancement process which massively improved his already impressive physical abilities to become Gladiator, Praetor of the Shi'ar Imperial Guard.
Speaking of the Shi'ar, Deathbird was a Shi'ar who was born with a form of atavism, which gave her claws and allowed her to fly.
Kallark is a Strontian individual who went through an enhancement process which massively improved his already impressive physical abilities to become Gladiator, Praetor of the Shi'ar Imperial Guard.
Speaking of the Shi'ar, Deathbird was a Shi'ar who was born with a form of atavism, which gave her claws and allowed her to fly.
answered 8 hours ago
Kyle DoyleKyle Doyle
6,74521941
6,74521941
Both excellent examples, and good answers to my question. I also considered adding Mutants to my list, and I would say Deathbird fits into that category. Kallark is interesting since his page specifies he was part of a group that underwent enhancement. Very cool, thanks.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
add a comment |
Both excellent examples, and good answers to my question. I also considered adding Mutants to my list, and I would say Deathbird fits into that category. Kallark is interesting since his page specifies he was part of a group that underwent enhancement. Very cool, thanks.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
Both excellent examples, and good answers to my question. I also considered adding Mutants to my list, and I would say Deathbird fits into that category. Kallark is interesting since his page specifies he was part of a group that underwent enhancement. Very cool, thanks.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
Both excellent examples, and good answers to my question. I also considered adding Mutants to my list, and I would say Deathbird fits into that category. Kallark is interesting since his page specifies he was part of a group that underwent enhancement. Very cool, thanks.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
add a comment |
I think that the best examples would be the Shi'ar Imperial Guard, made up of super-powered beings from many different planets (even Earth). They are lead by Gladiator, the last Strontian.
More examples would be from the Kree Starforce, who are super-powered above and beyond other Kree. Among them was Ultimus, an Eternal.
There are also the spaceknights of Galador. Most notable among them would be Rom.
Galactus grants the power cosmic to his heralds, most of whom were not from Earth. Among them were:
Stardust, an Ethereal- Morg
Terrax, a Birjan aka Landlak.- Firelord
- Air-Walker
- Tyrant
As mentioned in other answers, the Super Skrull and Beta Ray Bill would also be excellent examples.
add a comment |
I think that the best examples would be the Shi'ar Imperial Guard, made up of super-powered beings from many different planets (even Earth). They are lead by Gladiator, the last Strontian.
More examples would be from the Kree Starforce, who are super-powered above and beyond other Kree. Among them was Ultimus, an Eternal.
There are also the spaceknights of Galador. Most notable among them would be Rom.
Galactus grants the power cosmic to his heralds, most of whom were not from Earth. Among them were:
Stardust, an Ethereal- Morg
Terrax, a Birjan aka Landlak.- Firelord
- Air-Walker
- Tyrant
As mentioned in other answers, the Super Skrull and Beta Ray Bill would also be excellent examples.
add a comment |
I think that the best examples would be the Shi'ar Imperial Guard, made up of super-powered beings from many different planets (even Earth). They are lead by Gladiator, the last Strontian.
More examples would be from the Kree Starforce, who are super-powered above and beyond other Kree. Among them was Ultimus, an Eternal.
There are also the spaceknights of Galador. Most notable among them would be Rom.
Galactus grants the power cosmic to his heralds, most of whom were not from Earth. Among them were:
Stardust, an Ethereal- Morg
Terrax, a Birjan aka Landlak.- Firelord
- Air-Walker
- Tyrant
As mentioned in other answers, the Super Skrull and Beta Ray Bill would also be excellent examples.
I think that the best examples would be the Shi'ar Imperial Guard, made up of super-powered beings from many different planets (even Earth). They are lead by Gladiator, the last Strontian.
More examples would be from the Kree Starforce, who are super-powered above and beyond other Kree. Among them was Ultimus, an Eternal.
There are also the spaceknights of Galador. Most notable among them would be Rom.
Galactus grants the power cosmic to his heralds, most of whom were not from Earth. Among them were:
Stardust, an Ethereal- Morg
Terrax, a Birjan aka Landlak.- Firelord
- Air-Walker
- Tyrant
As mentioned in other answers, the Super Skrull and Beta Ray Bill would also be excellent examples.
edited 7 hours ago
answered 8 hours ago
RajRaj
1,7321517
1,7321517
add a comment |
add a comment |
The Elders of the Universe
The Elders of Universe are probably the closest thing to what you want; they are a group of individuals, each belonging to a separate alien race. All other members of their races are extinct, and so they consider one another brothers, though none are related (except Voyager, who is related to the Grandmaster). Each one possesses immortality. I can't remember how each one gained immortality, but it stands to reason the rest of their races didn't, as they are extinct, after all. Later, the Grandmaster won complete immortality for all the Elders after beating Death in a game. They all have different powers; the only one they share, to my knowledge, is immortality and maybe super-strength.
The Elders of the Universe first began calling themselves such sometime before the Earth was formed, meaning their races were spacefaring long before anyone else, except the Celestials (obviously) and most likely the Watchers, Builders, and Progenitors. They are generally neutral or evil, in terms of behavior towards Earth's heroes, and they are most famous for: keeping the Infinity Gems during the Thanos Quest, for the Grandmaster repeatedly playing games involving Earth's heroes, for the Thing and She-Hulk beating up the Champion, and for the Collector, who has collected some crazy stuff over the years, including Earth-1610's Mjolnir.
New contributor
add a comment |
The Elders of the Universe
The Elders of Universe are probably the closest thing to what you want; they are a group of individuals, each belonging to a separate alien race. All other members of their races are extinct, and so they consider one another brothers, though none are related (except Voyager, who is related to the Grandmaster). Each one possesses immortality. I can't remember how each one gained immortality, but it stands to reason the rest of their races didn't, as they are extinct, after all. Later, the Grandmaster won complete immortality for all the Elders after beating Death in a game. They all have different powers; the only one they share, to my knowledge, is immortality and maybe super-strength.
The Elders of the Universe first began calling themselves such sometime before the Earth was formed, meaning their races were spacefaring long before anyone else, except the Celestials (obviously) and most likely the Watchers, Builders, and Progenitors. They are generally neutral or evil, in terms of behavior towards Earth's heroes, and they are most famous for: keeping the Infinity Gems during the Thanos Quest, for the Grandmaster repeatedly playing games involving Earth's heroes, for the Thing and She-Hulk beating up the Champion, and for the Collector, who has collected some crazy stuff over the years, including Earth-1610's Mjolnir.
New contributor
add a comment |
The Elders of the Universe
The Elders of Universe are probably the closest thing to what you want; they are a group of individuals, each belonging to a separate alien race. All other members of their races are extinct, and so they consider one another brothers, though none are related (except Voyager, who is related to the Grandmaster). Each one possesses immortality. I can't remember how each one gained immortality, but it stands to reason the rest of their races didn't, as they are extinct, after all. Later, the Grandmaster won complete immortality for all the Elders after beating Death in a game. They all have different powers; the only one they share, to my knowledge, is immortality and maybe super-strength.
The Elders of the Universe first began calling themselves such sometime before the Earth was formed, meaning their races were spacefaring long before anyone else, except the Celestials (obviously) and most likely the Watchers, Builders, and Progenitors. They are generally neutral or evil, in terms of behavior towards Earth's heroes, and they are most famous for: keeping the Infinity Gems during the Thanos Quest, for the Grandmaster repeatedly playing games involving Earth's heroes, for the Thing and She-Hulk beating up the Champion, and for the Collector, who has collected some crazy stuff over the years, including Earth-1610's Mjolnir.
New contributor
The Elders of the Universe
The Elders of Universe are probably the closest thing to what you want; they are a group of individuals, each belonging to a separate alien race. All other members of their races are extinct, and so they consider one another brothers, though none are related (except Voyager, who is related to the Grandmaster). Each one possesses immortality. I can't remember how each one gained immortality, but it stands to reason the rest of their races didn't, as they are extinct, after all. Later, the Grandmaster won complete immortality for all the Elders after beating Death in a game. They all have different powers; the only one they share, to my knowledge, is immortality and maybe super-strength.
The Elders of the Universe first began calling themselves such sometime before the Earth was formed, meaning their races were spacefaring long before anyone else, except the Celestials (obviously) and most likely the Watchers, Builders, and Progenitors. They are generally neutral or evil, in terms of behavior towards Earth's heroes, and they are most famous for: keeping the Infinity Gems during the Thanos Quest, for the Grandmaster repeatedly playing games involving Earth's heroes, for the Thing and She-Hulk beating up the Champion, and for the Collector, who has collected some crazy stuff over the years, including Earth-1610's Mjolnir.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 4 hours ago
UshumgalluUshumgallu
1312
1312
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to Science Fiction & Fantasy Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fscifi.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f214481%2fare-there-any-super-powered-aliens-in-the-marvel-universe%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
1
While not Marvel, would someone like Superman count? He's an extraterrestrial who gets his powers by being exposed to a yellow sun. However, he's not a "transformed" superhero, that's just how the biology of Kryptonians works. Just trying to get an idea of what you're looking for.
– Thunderforge
8 hours ago
1
@Thunderforge Not necessarily if you consider that everyone from Superman's planet would have the same powers, were they to come to Earth's solar system.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
But if that's the case, I'm not seeing how that's different from any human who gets exposed to Banner's Gamma Radiation, or Parker's radioactive spider. Virtually all humans would react the same way, right?
– Thunderforge
8 hours ago
@Thunderforge That's a good point, but it's not permanent right? Once Superman leaves the sun, the powers begin to fade.
– Zip Zap J
8 hours ago
Something that might interest you -- back in the 1980s, I bought an RPG called "The Marvel Super Heroes Advanced Set." In the section for rolling dice to create an original character, it said there was a 30 percent chance for each of the following: that your hero would be a Mutant (like the X-Men), an Altered Human (like Spidey or the Fantastic Four), or a High-Tech Wonder (like Iron Man or anyone else who relies on tools/weapons/etc. to win his fights). I think having your character's powers come from being an "Alien" or a "Robot" was only about a 5 percent chance apiece.
– Lorendiac
2 hours ago