The Beef Boys From Wildcats 3.0
Wildcats | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | WildStorm (DC Comics) |
Showtime appearance | WildC.A.T.s #i (Baronial 1992) |
Created by | Jim Lee Brandon Choi |
In-story data | |
Base of operations(s) | Halo Building, Los Angeles |
Member(due south) | Lord Emp Spartan Grifter Voodoo Zealot Maul Warblade Void Mr. Imperial Savant Ladytron Condition Ruby-red Mythos Olympia Sister Eve Amanuensis Wax Edwin Dolby C.C. Rendozzo The Beef Boys Nemesis Backlash (Jodi Slayton) |
Wildcats, sometimes rendered WildCats or WildC.A.T.s, is a superhero team created by the American comic book creative person Jim Lee and writer Brandon Choi.
Publication history [edit]
The squad get-go appeared in August 1992 in the first upshot of their eponymous comic volume WildC.A.T.southward: Covert Action Teams, published by Epitome Comics. It was Image founding partner Jim Lee's get-go work published by the newly launched company, and his first creator-owned project. The Wildcats were the starting point for Lee's menagerie of interconnected superhero creations which became the foundation of the Wildstorm Universe. The Wildcats launched at the apex of a speculator-fueled comics sales boom and was wildly popular at its inception, with wholesale sales to comic volume stores above one 1000000 copies for early issues. This first series ran for fifty issues, and in addition to Lee, featured work past comics creators such as Travis Charest, Chris Claremont, James Robinson and Alan Moore. This popularity saw the holding aggrandize into other media, with an animated adaptation of the comic debuting on CBS in 1994 and a toyline from Playmates Toys.
In 1998, buying of the Wildcats concepts and characters were sold to DC Comics, a subsidiary of Time Warner, equally part of DC's conquering of Lee's company Wildstorm Productions. A new incarnation of the team was presently launched under the simplified title Wildcats, focusing on the former members of the now-disbanded squad and emphasizing a grittier tone during its 28-issue run. The 3rd series, Wildcats Version 3.0, revolved around the HALO Corporation, its CEO Jack Marlowe (an amalgamation of original squad members Spartan and Void), Grifter, and a gallery of new characters subverting corporate politics to their cause of creating a better world. This incarnation lasted 24 problems and was followed by a nine-issue limited serial titled Wildcats: Nemesis, which returned to a more superheroic style reminiscent of the first series. In tardily 2006, a fourth ongoing series was launched as a part of the Worldstorm publishing initiative. The series saw the render of Jim Lee as regular penciller for the first fourth dimension since its get-go volume while Grant Morrison took over writing duties. Only one upshot was ever published, with hereafter issues placed on hold. In mid-2008, the fifth book of Wildcats was launched, tying into the Earth'due south End crossover event.
WildC.A.T.south volume ane [edit]
Launched as an original Paradigm comic book title by popular X-Men penciler Jim Lee and his friend writer Brandon Choi, the comic book'south premise revolved around the centuries-long war between aliens chosen Kherubim and Daemonites. Kherubim, a nearly immortal, human-looking alien race with exceptional powers and skills, traveled to Globe and, by breeding with humans, populated the planet with "Half-Breeds". Daemonites, besides having a fearsome appearance, also possessed diverse superhuman abilities, including trunk possession and mental control over homo beings. The initial arc brought Voodoo over to the team every bit the readers' point-of-view character as Helspont, a Daemonite warlord, had taken control over Vice President of the United States Dan Quayle. Rob Liefeld'southward Youngblood co-starred in the endmost chapters of the arc.
WildC.A.T.due south ' story connected in a three-part mini-series, penciled past Jae Lee, that introduced the Daemonite Lord Hightower. Jim Lee and Marc Silvestri proceeded to publish a 'Killer Instinct' crossover detailing Warblade's connection to Marc Silvestri's Cyber Strength.
Jim Lee devoted his time to coming upwardly with the new concepts of Gen13, Deathblow, and Stormwatch. Before he left the volume, he did the iv-event Gathering of Eagles storyline written past his Uncanny X-Men writer, Chris Claremont. It featured a new villain in Tapestry and added the characters of Mister Purple, Savant, and Soldier, and featured Claremont'due south creator-owned grapheme, Huntsman.
Almost all of the characters were spun off into their own mini-series, with Zealot featured in a series past Ron Marz and Terry Shoemaker,[one] Spartan in one by Kurt Busiek and Mike McKone,[2] Warblade sharing another with Cyberforce's Ripclaw, Grifter co-starred in The Kindred's express series with Stormwatch's Backfire past Brett Berth[3] that led to the latter's ongoing title, every bit well equally some other with Youngblood'south Badrock, Billy Tucci'due south Shi, and even Night Horse's the Mask.
James Robinson wrote a scattering of issues besides as a Squad One Stormwatch/WildC.A.T.south mini-series detailing the past of the Wildstorm universe and would go on to write the Wildcats' first annual. The title also participated in the WildC.A.T.s-oriented "Wildstorm Rising" crossover that saw the heroes try to proceeds control of the Daemonite battleship, which turned out to exist the Kheran transport instead, with WildC.A.T.southward eventually leaving for Khera. Following a Grifter i-shot, the crossover gave birth to a short-lived Steven Seagle-written Grifter series that centered on his super-spy/superhero adventures while linking to an obscure Team Ane character Regiment at one point.
Alan Moore then took over writing duties, and proceeded to tell a tale split between Savant and Majestic's replacement team on Earth and the original squad journey to Khera. The Kherubim had won the Daemonite-Kherubim war and were living in prosperity. Appearances were deceiving, however, and it was apparent the planet was run by power-hungry politicians who had ruthlessly subjugated the Daemonites as second-grade citizens. Voodoo, with her Daemonite blood, experienced this firsthand. Maul'south race was as well treated unjustly and though Emp and Zealot were seduced by promises of power and recognition, Spartan discovered the truth about Khera'south corrupt leaders. It took the death of one of Maul'southward race for the WildC.A.T.south to get out and head back for World. Voodoo and Emp both left the team, while the rest joined with Savant and Majestic's new team. Moore also participated in Fire From Sky, a fairly continuity-heavy crossover that resolved plotlines regarding Team One, Team vii, and Kaizen Gamorra.
Alan Moore, Mike Lopez and Al Rio spun Voodoo off in a four-outcome mini-series that dealt with voodoo magic,[4] while Moore also wrote a time-traveling WildC.A.T.southward/Spawn crossover mini-series drawn by Scott Clark and inked by Sal Regla.
At the time, Grifter had another plough at an ongoing serial, this time written by Steven Grant and drawn by Mel Rubi and Michael Ryan, while Zealot was featured in a Backlash spinoff, Wildcore.
Barbara Randall Kesel, Pasqual Ferry, Rich Johnson and Carlos D'Anda crafted a two-part storyline that, in result, wrote Majestic, Savant and Ladytron out of the team,[5] [6] and set up the spin-off Savant Garde, written by Randall Kesel. Original scripter Brandon Choi returned alongside Johnathan Peterson and artists Mat Broome and Ed Benes for a storyline with an organization chosen Puritans as the main villains. The Puritans' goal was to eradicate the Kherubim and Daemonites on Earth by traveling back in time and erasing killing them before the aliens could influence global events.[7] A new line-up of WildC.A.T.s traveled in fourth dimension to terminate the Puritans, and had various adventures throughout different time periods.
Wildcats volume two [edit]
Later the first series' counterfoil, WildStorm, now an imprint of DC Comics, resurrected the Wildcats nether a whole dissimilar premise—Wildcats dealt with the lives of the original members after the team's breakup following a botched mission during which team member Zealot apparently died. Scott Lobdell provided the writing for the initial seven issues besides every bit a Mosaic one-shot detailing the change in Lord Emp, with Travis Charest penciling most of them. New villains like Kenyan and CC Rendozzo were featured as antagonists, just it was all dropped very rapidly, with Charest leaving the monthly comic format to work on a French Metabarons graphic novel called Dreamshifters and Lobdell exiting a couple of issues afterwards.
Every bit Joe Casey and Sean Phillips took over Wildcats, they quickly dealt away with Kenyan, while Void and Emp ended upwardly having Spartan absorb their assets and powers; thus the book began a long spell featuring him aided by Ladytron and Grifter with Maul and Voodoo guest-starring, too as new characters Noir, Agents Wax, and Mohr of the National Park Service. Warblade was featured very briefly, last seen in the Wildcats 2000 annual that brought back the expressionless version Status Red killing Olympia. Casey and Phillips signaled the new Wildstorm, critically acclaimed but low on readers' radar. The heroes fought Samuel Smith (a superhuman series killer whose granddaddy had appeared in Squad Ane: WildC.A.T.s) after which eventually Zealot returned. Casey besides wrote the Ladytron 1 shot, a farsic rendition of her by, likewise as a Mister Purple ongoing series which ran for 9 issues.
Wild Times: Wildcats and Wild Times: Grifter were published every bit one-shots as a part of the crossover series Wild Times that spotlighted the characters in Elseworlds-like alternating reality scenarios that blended genres. Wildcats also participated in the WildC.A.T.s/Aliens crossover written by Stormwatch'due south Warren Ellis that served equally a coda to that series and a prequel to his Authority run, having very little to exercise with the Wildcats themselves.
Wildcats 3.0 [edit]
The 3rd series, Wildcats Version three.0, was a function of the mature readers' Centre of the Storm banner, dealing with Spartan'southward (now Jack Marlowe) calendar to better the globe by proliferating advanced technology and ability sources throughout the world via the HALO Corporation. Grifter was his troubleshooter and Agent Wax was one of his beginning associates. The stories added a motley group to this proactive system including the ability banker C.C. Rendozzo and her arrangement, Agent Orangish, and Grifter's unlikely pupil Edwin Dolby, one of HALO'due south accountants. The serial ended with a thunderous finale where Zealot, Marlowe, and a squad assembled by Grifter destroyed the Coda affiliate that Zealot had created on Earth. The series was written by Joe Casey and drawn by Dustin Nguyen, Duncan Rouleau, Francisco Ruiz Velasco, Pascual Ferry and Sean Phillips.
Concurrent with Wildcats Version 3.0, Wildstorm likewise published a critically acclaimed noir-superhero series Sleeper starring Alan Moore'southward Wildcats villain Tao, which too featured Grifter. As office of the crossover Insurrection D'État, centering on the Wildstorm Universe's The states, a Wildcats 3.0: Insurrection D'État one-shot was released.[8]
After guest-starring in Superman books, in 2004 DC published a Mr. Majestic mini-series to test waters for an ongoing series that ran for 17 issues.
Wildcats starred in a limited series by Robbie Morrison and Talent Caldwell entitled Wildcats: Nemesis, focusing on Zealot, Purple, and the Coda continuity, while heavily spotlighting the new Wildstorm universe anti-hero character of Nemesis.
At the same time, Wildstorm published the Captain Atom: Armageddon maxi-serial, heavily featuring the Wildcats as they tried to help DC character Helm Atom render to his universe and stop him from accidentally destroying their reality. Nikola, a female medic, became the new Void with Captain Atom sharing a part of the ability that eventually remade the Wildstorm universe altogether.
Wildcats volume iv [edit]
In 2006, as office of the "Worldstorm" line-wide effect, the championship was restarted, written by Grant Morrison and drawn past Jim Lee. The team consisted of Spartan, Mr. Imperial, Zealot, Grifter, Voodoo, Savant, and Ladytron. Warblade is on a secret mission, and Maul has retired to his civilian identity. Kaizen Gamorra returned as the villain, aided by the WildCats' first enemy, Helspont. Still, the title was permanently put on hold afterwards only one event.
Wildcats volume 5 [edit]
In July 2008 Wildstorm debuted a new ongoing WildCats series[9] written by Christos Gage[10] and pencilled by Neil Googe[eleven] following on from the imprint'south Number of the Beast mini-series.[12] Adam Beechen took over writing duties from Gage in late 2009,[13] with he and artist Tim Seeley starting with issue #19[xiv] until the book'south cancellation in Dec 2010 with #30.
Cast [edit]
Original squad [edit]
The original WildC.A.T.s (Covert Activity Team) consisted of:
- Spartan (Jack Marlowe, originally Hadrian-7): Originally intended to exist a highly sophisticated cyborg who could "die" and easily be downloaded to another body,[15] Spartan's character has been revised several times. Spartan was one many Spartan-series androids fabricated in Khera, modeled later on the Kherubim hero Yohn Kohl,[16] who would keep to be known on Earth as John Colt. After Colt'south apparent death in battle, Jacob Marlowe implanted some of Colt'southward memories and personality in Spartan's bodies.[17] Additionally, Jacob had a scientist design Spartan's bogus intelligence, knowing the scientist would model it after his deceased son-in-law,[16] Zachary Krieger,[2] which Jacob claimed he'd done in club to grant Spartan an affinity with humanity, which had the side effect of prevent Filly's personality from overwhelming him.[16] Spartan had something of an on-again, off-again relationship with Voodoo. Eventually, Colt's memories and personality returned, and, for some time, Spartan considered himself John Colt.[16] While another Spartan unit of measurement without Colt's memories would get on to be activated,[xviii] and John Colt would leave the squad, eventually the Colt personality receded.[16] After Emp's expiry,[xix] Spartan assumed the identity of Jack Marlowe, Jacob's "nephew" and became the C.E.O. of Halo.[twenty] Later still, he absorbed Void's powers,[21] making him one of the most powerful beings in the Wildstorm Universe. Jack went on to turn away from the role of super-hero, attempting to make the world a better place by introducing highly advanced Kheran technology into human being society. At some betoken, he lost Void's powers.[22] [sixteen] Spartan went on suggest to Voodoo in the Carrier.[23] All of Spartan's bodies possess some caste of incredible force and endurance and are capable of flight (however, it was explained that he flew but when necessary because it took upwardly so much ability from his free energy reserves), ionizing gases into controlled plasma blasts[24] and interfacing with electronic systems[24] through a diversity of ports in his trunk.[24] [25]
- Grifter (Cole Greenbacks): A former authorities operative and member of Team 7, Grifter is a skilled marksman and manus-to-mitt combatant. Found by Zealot later gaining Gen-Active powers every bit a result of Team 7's exposure to Gen Factor, Zealot helped him recover from the ordeal and taught him how to completely remove his ability, as well equally bring it back at volition.[26] Zealot also trained him in Coda combat techniques, making him the only human ever trained by the Coda. He was the only member of the original team not to utilize any active post-human powers. Grifter left the team for the first time after Jacob made a pact with Hightower,[27] the man responsible for killing Cole'south friend Lonely,[28] leading to his fourth dimension as a solo agent, chronicled in his 2 ongoing series. He eventually rejoined the WildC.A.T.south[29] and, over the years, as the team would reform and disband many times, Cole maintained ties to Halo and his teammates, especially Jack Marlowe. Grifter sustained severe injuries to his legs during a mission,[30] and went on to utilise a wheelchair for some time,[31] somewhen using Ladytron's robotic body as a remote-controlled stand-in in the field.[32] [33] Grifter'southward powers somewhen healed his wounded legs, allowing him to walk once over again.[34]
- Zealot (Lady Zannah): A Kherubim and a Coda warrior. Zealot is the former Majestrix of the Coda and helped develop their virtues and practices. She has lived for thousands of years and has had many relationships with both humans and aliens alike. In Khera, Zealot was ordered to breed with Majestros, which she did, resulting in the birth of Savant. However, since bearing a kid would change Zealot's social standing and ensure she could never be a warrior e'er again, Zealot'southward mother Harmony convinced her to lie to anybody that the kid was stillborn, while Harmony pretended that the child was, in fact, hers.[35] The child was named Kenesha and raised as Zealot's sister, though Kenesha would go best known past the name Savant.[35] Zealot left the Coda, believing they did not follow the club'south true precepts, and she would go along to fight against the Coda on multiple occasions. She was office of Team Ane under the allonym Lucy Blaze.[36] Zealot was once in a romantic relationship with Grifter, and the two went on to have various flings over the years. Zealot left the Wildcats and briefly joined Section PSI and co-led WildCORE with Backlash, a half-Kheran and old member of Squad 7. In after years, Zealot faked her own death and began hunting Coda on her own, before existence brought back to Wildcats.[37]
- Voodoo (Priscilla Kitaen): A telepathic human-Kherubim-Daemonite hybrid ancestry, Voodoo has the power to see Daemonites who take possessed other beings and remove them from the bodies they have possessed. Voodoo was an exotic dancer earlier beingness rescued by the WildC.A.T.s from the Daemonites.[38] She was afterward trained by Zealot in combat[39] and adult an attraction to Spartan. It was eventually revealed that 1 of her ancestors, was the result of an attempt to splice a Kherubim with the body of a Daemonite.[twoscore] When the WildC.A.T.south went to Khera, Priscilla discovered that the Kherubim-Daemonite War had concluded centuries prior, and was treated every bit a second-class citizen due to her Daemonite ancestry.[41] Disillusioned with the WildC.A.T.s, and particularly with Zealot and Emp, Pris left the team,[42] journeying to New Orleans, where she studied voodoo magic.[iv] Voodoo briefly returned to the WildC.A.T.s,[43] [44] although the squad would get on to be disbanded and reformed[24] and, ultimately, afterwards Zealot's apparent death, the team members went their divide means for what appeared to exist the last time.[45] [46] Pris eventually moved in with old teammate Jeremy Stone. Priscilla was targeted by post-human serial killer Samuel Smith, who used his powers to sever both her legs and hurt her pharynx.[47] Priscilla was contacted by a chivalrous Daemonite, considered to be a conscientious objector to the Kheran-Daemonite state of war, who helps her hone her hithertho unknown healing and time dilation powers, allowing Pris to regrow her legs.[48] She went on to appointment Jeremy, though they eventually broke up. Pris rejoined the Wildcats after the Armageddon event, and soon became romantically involved with Spartan once once more.[16] Spartan eventually proposed to her.[23] Aside from her telepathic, healing and time dilation powers, Voodoo is an empath,[49] capable of sensing people's emotions, and has been trained in the apply of voodoo magic, being able to commune with and raise the expressionless, though the commencement time she attempted the latter, she found herself rapidly drained.[fifty]
- Maul (Jeremy Stone): A man/Titanthrope hybrid capable of increasing his size and mass at the cost of his reasoning capability, Maul experiences powerful rage and is really a Nobel-prize-winning[51] [eighteen] scientist named Dr. Jeremy Stone. He somewhen discovered he could increase his intelligence by decreasing his body mass, simply this proved to be physically depleting.[52]
- Warblade (Reno Bryce): A man/Kherubim hybrid and member of Khera'south Shaper's Club, Warblade can transform his torso into liquid metal, and shape himself into a multifariousness of bladed weapons and sharp objects, as well as withstand immense trauma, including massive explosions[53] and exposure to intense rut.[50] Warblade is also an accomplished martial artist.[51] Although a virtual killing machine, Reno also has the soul of an artist, having his sculpted piece of work displayed in major art galleries. While Reno stayed away from the Wildcats for a while, he returned to the team after the Armageddon consequence.
- Void (Adrianna Tereshkova): She has the ability to see the future and teleport herself and others to anywhere on Earth due to her absorption of an Orb of Power. Over time, Void grew more than and more distant from humanity and the office of her spirit that was Adrianna moved on to the afterlife.[54] The Void entity existed without any host for a short time, until Noir sabotaged Void's voyage to another dimension, resulting in the Void entity disintegrating.[55] Jack Marlowe then went on to absorb Void's powers[21] before it bonded with paramedic Nikola Hanssen.[56]
- Lord Emp (Jacob Marlowe): A Kherubim lord, Emp has assumed a variety of guises throughout his time on Earth, his best known alias being Jacob Marlowe, owner of the Halo Corporation. Throughout about of Emp's time in the Wildcats, he possessed little control over his powers, generally serving as the team leader and advisor, usually non going out into the field. Emp eventually began a process known as the Ascension, in which he transformed into a more obvious alien existence. In gild to finally ascend, Emp needed someone to kill him and somewhen was forced to ask Spartan to practice and then, to which Spartan complied.[54] Emp'southward final advent was in the Wildstorm: A Celebration of 25 Years special, in which he contacts and counsels Spartan from beyond.[57]
Savant's team [edit]
A second squad was introduced later in the series. They were formed after the original team, rumored to be dead, had left for Khera, the Kherubim homeworld. This unlikely grouping broke from the WildC.A.T.s usual anti-Daemonite agenda and conducted a proactive war on criminals. This alienated them from many other characters in the Wildstorm universe.
- Mister Majestic (Lord Majestros): Another Kherubim warlord who is 1 of four that had been stuck on Earth. Mr. Majestic is a Superman homage. Much like Superman, Majestic possesses amazing strength, endurance and speed, is capable of flight and generating heat beams from his eyes, though he has besides appeared to possess some course telekinesis[twoscore] and the power to projection energy blasts from his hands,[58] and is also a genius inventor[44] and a skilled swordsman.[59]
- Savant (Kenesha): The daughter of Majestic and Zealot (unbeknownst to Savant or Majestic) who was raised every bit Zealot's sister,[35] Savant is an adventurer and archeologist who has worked for the Smithsonian[60] and possesses many artifacts of mystic power and avant-garde technologies, including her Seven-League Boots, which substantially allow their user the ability of teleportation,[sixty] and a tesseract pocketbook which contains an almost space amount of objects as well as entire rooms within.[61]
- Condition Reddish (Max Greenbacks, as well known every bit Max Profitt): Grifter's younger blood brother, Max Cash had splendid fighting and marksmanship abilities. Max followed Cole's footsteps, becoming a covert operative for International Operations.[62] Max went undercover in a criminal offense family unit, and went on to kill police officers and have part in hits I.O. did not know nigh, which Savant used to blackmail him into joining her team.[62] Max left the WildC.A.T.due south after being caught in an explosion,[63] partly due to Ladytron'due south unrequited feelings for him and due to his injury.[42] Max eventually went hush-hush one time again, adopting the allonym Max Profitt[eighteen] and joining an organisation known as the Puritans, who intended to eradicate all conflicting life on Globe, condign romantically involved with a Puritan named Gina DeMedici. He alerted the WildC.A.T.s to the Puritans' threat and re-joined the team, somewhen traveling back in fourth dimension to foil the Puritans' try to change history by killing Kherubim and Daemonites during various points in time.[seven] After a battle at the time of the Kherubim and Daemonites' initial arrival on Globe, Max was forced to take DeMedici's time travel device, leaving her stranded on Earth centuries before she was fifty-fifty built-in.[43] DeMedici joined a Coda house, and eventually died, asking that the Coda get revenge for her by killing Max.[44] A Coda assassin ambushed Max shortly after his return and gunned him downwardly,[43] killing him.[44] He was resurrected as a zombie for i annual in the second series.
- Tao: An artificially produced man being with peculiar thinking abilities that enables him to be inhumanly persuasive and incredibly intuitive. Tao, as he would eventually exist known, joined the WildC.A.T.s and manipulated them into starting a war against mail service-human criminals in lodge to create a mail-human being regular army made of the WildC.A.T.s and other super-heroes that he would command. When his manipulations were discovered, Tao attempted to escape, though, eventually, Royal defenseless up with and plain killed him.[64] Tao eventually sent Savant a letter revealing that he had brainwashed the shapeshifter known as Mr. White into assuming his class and assertive himself to be Tao, and that it was Mr. White who Royal had evidently killed, while Tao had escaped.[44] He later re-appeared, having founded a worldwide criminal organization that aimed to destabilize human being global governments, public institutions, and age-old cloak-and-dagger societies, though his plans were foiled past undercover I.O. amanuensis Holden Carver, likewise every bit Tao's second-in-command Miss Misery, John Lynch of Gen¹³ and Grifter.[65] [66]
- Ladytron (Maxine Manchester): A cyborg punk with homicidal tendencies. She was captured by the Wildcats and, through T.A.O.'s reprogramming, convinced to join the team. She admired the cybernetic mercenary Overtkill and was romantically interested in Max Cash, though her involvement was not returned. When T.A.O. was revealed as a traitor, he disabled her robotic torso and Ladytron was taken to the Church of Gort. She became a nun for this new age cult devoted to robotics but had a falling out with its members because she withal contained organic torso parts[ volume & consequence needed ]. She ended up with the Wildcats once again only was wounded by the serial killer Samuel Smith. The damage was so all-encompassing that Ladytron was shut down.[ volume & issue needed ] A brusk stint as Noir'due south reprogrammed pawn afterwards, Ladytron's mind was downloaded into the Halo mainframe and her torso was used by the wheelchair-bound Grifter as a remote-controlled stand-in.[ volume & issue needed ]
Savant Garde [edit]
For a time Kenesha would drib out of the hero excursion and return to a life of Indiana Jones-lite spelunking for hidden reliquary, forth the way she would gather her own team of adventurers with Majestros at her side.
- Sheba: A humanoid feline metamorph with tactical probability based powers and no known historical background, she would disharmonism with Savant and co while they were out hunting for artifacts in the Amazon Basin. Little to zip is known almost her other than the fact that she may be related to The Kindred a mutated race of anthropomorphic animals created by the Gen-Gene. She would later return during the World's Cease event as a beneficiary to Stormwatch's Paris, who constitute a perfectly habitual forest which had survived the superhuman cataclysm and later teaming upwards with the WildC.A.T.south to rebuild their damaged world.
- Mable Blight: Ace pilot and possibly more than she appears at start glance. Mable is the closest thing to a all-time friend Kenesha has in her life, she was the one who got Savant out of her slump subsequently her disastrous stint as leader of the WildC.A.T.s. Mable is allegedly human with no known superpowers only her partner in crime in one case stated she'd died several times in the past. Indicating she may take some regenerative or rebirthing abilities.
- Disperse: A human being mystic from a different dimension where arcane forces reign supreme, Capri Toriamo used to be a guerrilla freedom fighter who stood against the tyranny of many overlords in his world of magic. After having dealt with Tapestry his mother, an alternate counterpart of Katrina Kupertino; would encourage him to leave their war torn Earth to travel with Savant'due south group for a time. Disperse is a mage with vast shape shifting abilities that enable him to take on the grade and abilities of whomever or whatsoever he's mimicking. He was last seen aiding in the boxing against the Knight of Khera after the World'south End event.
- Cybernary (Katrina Kupertino/Yumiko Gamorra): A powerful next-gen bionic hunter-killer spawned on the lawless Island Gamorra. Katrina was a low rent street hustler who traded her life and her humanity for her best friend Cisco'due south liberty, at present sharing the consciousness of the despot Kaizen Gamorra'south daughter; Yumiko Gamorra, they live in a tumultuous spousal relationship body and mind as they travel the world with the newfound companions. Cybernary has several retrofitted abilities thanks to her cybernetic enhancements. Such as a tactical estimator, enhanced physicals pertaining to forcefulness, speed, resilience and stamina, she's even able to secrete mind decision-making pheromones that enable her to influence peoples directives. The personality governing Yumiko's consciousness can initiate a doomsday virus dispersal arrangement which would blanket the world in water catalyzing agent which will impale-off all non cyber life. Cybernary would act as an adversary to the Say-so subsequently the Globe's Cease calamity while working under her hated father Kaizen when he attacked them. Then became a subsidiary under Zannah'due south new Coda training grounds subsequently her bionics were removed so (allegedly) replenished later the Knights of Khera battle.
- Miranda: A cyber-shrink who helped Katrina/Yumiko through their gestalt identity crisis after having been reactivated by her deranged creator. She would escape Gamorra along with Cybernary while the nation devolved into civil conflict just earlier the Burn down From Heaven event to human action as Met-L'southward flagman and pilot.
- Met-L (Albert Kaplan): Once a criminal underworld degenerate under the surname of Cisco, Albert was the partner of Katrina before she became a transorganic cyber assassin. A bupkis job led to Cisco's incarceration in a Gamorran hunter killer manufacturing facility where his partner came to rescue him while he lay on the tabular array. Afterward she gave her life in commutation for his freedom, Katrina was later cheated and Cisco was secretly remodeled into an animal themed hunter killer cyborg for gladiatorial entertainment for Gamorra'due south denizens. Cybernary would do battle with and ultimately dispatch of the aberration that was one time her trusted confidante, but she managed to save a hard-copy of Mr. Kaplan's persona and have his mental engrams imprinted on a Multi-Environmental Transformation-Laborer Class automaton; Met-50 for short.
Time travel squad [edit]
The team consisted of Grifter, Max Cash, Void, and an former Spartan unit of measurement activated by Grifter, possessing Hadrian'due south original personality,[xviii] as well every bit new members:[67]
- Mythos: A powerful mystic[68] and Kherubim lord,[69] Mythos possesses super-human physical attributes,[68] particularly strength[seventy] and speed, being capable of moving so fast normal humans cannot run across him.[69]
- Olympia: A Daemonite mercenary who has Coda training. She took in a teenager named Kai as her ward.[43] When Max Cash was killed by a Coda warrior, Olymbia bankrupt into her cell and killed the Coda, an act which led Jacob to kicking her out of the team and inform her that, as long as she kept away from the WildC.A.T.s, the team would not seek to apprehend her.[44] She was killed by a resurrected Max Cash during the Devil's Dark crossover.
- Sister Eve: a former nun who lived in a convent in South Bend,[69] who, unbeknownst to herself, was Lord Entropy'due south girl. She tin generate a "chaos field", allowing her to break molecular bonds,[71] thus generating destructive energy.[68] She can just control her power by wearing a pair of inhibiting gloves[70] and a dampening cloak.[69] Sister Eve was killed subsequently using all her power to stop an barrage from hitting the other members of the team, draining her to such an extent that she quickly died.[70]
Halo Team [edit]
After a disastrous mission wherein Zealot faked her death to hunt down the earth Coda affiliate. The True cat's, whittled down to Jacob and Spartan, would keep to recruit both one-time faces and new claret after Lord Emp had ascended.
- Noir: A French artillery dealer whom would offer his expertise to the Halo Corporation, for a price. Later killed by Jacob'southward successor Jack Marlowe, a.k.a. Spartan, when the treacherous private tried to usurp the company for acquisition of its access to Otherspace using a retrofit of Maxine Manchester's inert remains to impale his employer and employing French hitmen to do away with Cole Cash.
- Anthony Pacheco: A captain of the Los Angeles Police's C.R.A.S.H. Section seeking Jack Marlowe's aid of in dealing with a local drug baron selling & dealing on the mean streets of his precinct.[72] Despite having easily removed the narco'southward distributing the metabolic and cerebral perception booster called Hype, officeholder Pacheco was revealed to've partaken of the narcotic himself. Jack chose to trust the good samaritan's judgement while leaving the production facilities backside in his care regardless.[73]
3.0 cast [edit]
Besides Grifter and Jack Marlowe, the main characters were:
- Grifter Two (Edwin Dolby): Jack Marlowe's primary accountant and right-hand human being in the Halo Corporation.[74] When Grifter's legs were seriously injured in a mission, Cole brought him up to speed near Halo'south more exotic exploits with the intent of training Dolby to be his replacement subsequently learning of Dolby's natural bent for marksmanship. Dolby, however, refused to kill.[75] Despite this, Dolby was sent on a mission, during which he panicked and accidentally crippled a homo. He suffered a mental breakdown and quit Halo, merely Marlowe was able to convince him to return by reinforcing his belief in the success of Halo's mission. In an attempt to cease his nightmares over the mission, he agrees to help Grifter and his team rescue Zealot from the Coda.[76]
- Agent Orange: Another mole of Jack Marlowe's, this fourth dimension at the FBI. Agent Orange is an enhanced human who tin exist mentally programmed for sure tasks. Said operative's blood had been replaced by the chemical compound dioxin bestowing superhuman strength, durability, healing and endurance.[77] Never speaking or showing any emotion, Agent Orange is quite similar in advent and behavior to The Terminator. Whilst Grifter meets with Maul in Miami, Orange is sent out by the FBI alongside agents Cave and Cartman to acceleration them both but was undone when a Fundamental Intelligence Agency program gained sentience and aided them past sending Orange a shutdown code. Later when Cole and his team go far over their heads while attempting to rescue Zealot from the Coda, Marlowe activates Agent Orangish, who finds Zealot and brings her to Grifter's team.[37]
- Ramon A eugenically enhanced tween intellect born from a testing chalice in the services of the underworld affiliate Cecelia Rendozzo.[78] After Marlowe'southward people did his employer a hefty service, Ramon would aid grifter with a neural uplink organisation which would enable him to continue field missions using Ladytron'due south inert mechanical trunk equally a proxy for field missions.[79] He and C.C's son are constantly at odds with one another.
- Sam Garfield: A secondary accountant and partner to Edwin Dolby working their own business firm until it was purchased by Mr. Marlowe.[80] While infinitely less accommodating to the rather abrupt methods of managing their services as his concern acquaintance. Being rather surprised at how nonchalantly Mr. Dolby went along with their new bosses micromanagement, offering advice on topics they usually don't cover due to being centre management for coin. A sense of tension that came to a head when after Marlowe had reassigned him to a whole new business organisation firm which was secretly a shell company to front the Central Intelligence Agency's underground operations.[81] Something that Jack brings to his attention after Mr. Garfield runs afoul with the law after an altercation with a road sus scrofa, his employer covering upward for Sam's deed of first caste murder; the auditor comes around to working as Spartan'due south mole within the C.I.A and continues managing his new assets with a newfound calm and perspective later on.[82]
- Agent Wax: Jack Marlowe's contact at the National Park Service, a government agency tasked with monitoring superhuman activity. Wax is gifted with potent hypnotic powers, but his superiors never knew of this. He became aware of the C.A.T.s while following up leads on a superhuman serial killer in the second book of Wildcats.[83] Afterwards quitting the Service after the death of his partner, despite this he never lost interest in Marlowe and his team fifty-fifty before after returning to NPS on the formers proffer. Wax had frequently been bullied past his boss, Agent Downs; even earlier he left the bureau. His C.O. often forcing him into undergoing demeaning and/or aggravating tasks such equally taking on a new partner; besides every bit forcing Wax to a desk-bound task when he returned.[84] The bemoaned amanuensis would enact revenge by using his meta abilities to engage in a sexual affair with his superiors' obnoxious spouse after being slatted every bit her personal chofer. Wax ended up killing his superior Downs when the latter angled his employee into a confrontation in a secluded location with his wife tied upwardly; an event said operator would disguise every bit a field assignment. Using his unique skills Agent Wax would then impersonate his deceased employer, effectively taking over the NPS after to keep upwardly appearances.[85] Marlowe found out most this turn of events yet decided to give him a 2d hazard seeing such happenstance as an opportunity to broaden Halo Corps. attain through the Park Service's assets and ties to the social ability structure.
- The Beef Boys: 2 remarkably, possibly superhumanly, strong men dressed in S&K fetish gear. Autonomously from running a BDSM social club, they are also mercenaries who work for Grifter from time to fourth dimension. The taller of the two, Glenn, never speaks, while the other, Cedric, is quite eloquent. Glenn was killed by the Coda while on mission.[37]
- C. C. Rendozzo: A scientific criminal mastermind, ace gunman and powerful data broker who knows a great deal tour many disquisitional plot points in the Wildstorm Universe.[86] She's the employer of Ramon; introduced later initially having come up after Jeremy Stone due to the old's genius work in genetic isolation and extrapolation.[87] Having contracted a form of doomsday virus while tinkering with it for sales purposes, Cecelia would later turn upwardly looking for an FBI agent to employ as bribe for a personal matter, enlisting both Cole and Wax's aid when they initially crossed paths. Later seeking to blackmail Jack Marlowe by using his alien origin equally leverage after the initial mission went sideways.[31] In return for her silence after giving Cecelia what she desired, she would deed as an underworld contact whom Marlowe would keep in touch with; Grifter having called in a favor of her in helping rescue Zannah from the earthborn Coda Chapter she'd been attacking equally of late.[76]
Majestic's pact [edit]
While non specifically function of any WildC.A.T.s group, Mister Majestic would work with his ain covert action team for a time when the Shapers Guild would effort seize earth'due south Kherubim terraforming engine to brand a new Khera. Members would include mainstays like Spartan, Zealot and Savant while also including:
- Desmond: Longtime sidekick and child super genius aide to Majestros in his earlier years, after his friend went on to become a Universal; a conclave of super celestials whom Majestros's father was a role of. Desmond would become onto create his own xenotechnological sales visitor called Quickthink Incorporated, a business concern industry which contrary engineers and amalgamates kherubim technology into human technology.
- Lady Harmony: A high Priestess of the Kherubim Coda sect known equally the Skein and the mother of Zeolot.
- Imperator: Rival Kherubim Lord and advocate of House Khull on the Pantheon, aiding Harmony and her forces to stand against the rogue shaper sect's incursion of Earth. His truthful goal was to take the Shaper Engine in the name of his family firm to lord over the failing Khera.
- Lord Helspont: Long standing enemy and bitterest rival to the Kheran sanctioned WildC.A.T.southward. The Daemon Regal would offer his services in aid against the Shaper's Guild for his own agendas.
Nemesis Coiffure [edit]
The introduction of rogue Kherubum warrior Lady Charis would exist first adversarial too, then join up with a team consisting of Majestros, Zannah, Cole Cash and Kenesha. A team which would later be adjourned past former WildC.A.T.s mainstays such as Jeremy, Reno and Priscilla while battling the mutated human forces of the Brotherhood of the Sword.
- Nemesis: A Coda warrior and former lover of Majestic. Having been framed by Raven and the Brotherhood of the Blade, who collaborated with like-minded Daemonites to overthrow their masters back dwelling to conquer the milky way, she would be hunted and hated past her former compatriots equally a traitor to the Kheran war endeavour for eons till modern mean solar day. When the Brotherhood began their assail, transforming humans into posthuman warriors for their cause.
"Globe's Finish" [edit]
With the "World'southward End" crossover, original Wildcats Spartan, Zealot, Voodoo, Grifter, Maul, Nemesis and Warblade were brought together once more to help save what was left of the homo race. Their membership as well included Ladytron as well as a few new members:
- Backfire (real name Jodi Slayton, formerly known every bit Jet): The girl of the original Backfire. She possesses superhuman speed and reflexes.
Nemesis later on went missing post-obit the teams battle with Majestic, while Savant rejoined the team.
Creative teams [edit]
Volume 1 [edit]
- 0: Jim Lee (Plot), Brandon Choi (Script), Brett Booth (Art)
- ane–9: Jim Lee (plot, art), Brandon Choi (script)
- 10–13: Chris Claremont (writer), Jim Lee (artist)
- fourteen: Erik Larsen (writer, creative person)
- 15–twenty: James Robinson (author), Travis Charest, Jim Lee (artists)
- 21–34: Alan Moore (writer), Travis Charest, Jim Lee, Mat Broome and others (artists)
- 35–36: Barbara Kesel (writer), Pascual Ferry, Rich Johnson and Carlos D'Anda (artists)
- 37–49: Brandon Choi, Jonathan Peterson (co-plotters), Mat Broome, Ed Benes and others (artists)
- l: James Robinson, Brandon Choi & Jonathan Peterson, Alan Moore (writers), Jim Lee, Ed Benes, Travis Charest (artists)
- Special 1: Steve Gerber (writer), Travis Charest (artist)
- Almanac 1: James Robinson (writer), Larry Stroman (artist)
Volume ii [edit]
- ane–7: Scott Lobdell, Joe Casey (co-plotters), Travis Charest and others (artists)
- eight–28: Joe Casey (author), Sean Phillips, Steve Dillon (artists)
Volume 3.0 [edit]
- 1–15: Joe Casey (author), Dustin Nguyen, Richard Friend (artists)
- xvi: Joe Casey (writer), Francisco Ruiz Velasco, Sean Phillips (artists)
- 17: Joe Casey (writer), Francisco Ruiz Velasco (artists)
- 18: Joe Casey (writer), Pascual Ferry, Sandra Hope (artists)
- 19-24: Joe Casey (writer), Duncan Rouleau, John Dell (artists)
Volume 4 [edit]
- 1: Grant Morrison (plot), Jim Lee (fine art).
Volume 5 [edit]
- 1–12: Christos Gage (writer), Neil Googe, Pete Woods (fine art).
- 13–18: Christos Cuff (writer), Shawn Moll (art).
- nineteen–xxx: Adam Beechen (author), Tim Seeley (art).
Nerveless editions [edit]
Merchandise paperback collections:
- Absolute WildC.A.T.southward by Jim Lee—Collects vol. one #1-xiii and #l, WildC.A.T.s/X-Men: The Silverish Age
- WildC.A.T.s: Covert Action Teams: Compendium (ISBN 1563895870)—Collects vol. i #1–four
- WildC.A.T.south/Cyberforce: Killer Instinct (ISBN 1401203221)—Collects vol. 1 #v–7 and Cyberforce vol. 2 #1–iii (ISBN 1401203221)[88]
- WildC.A.T.s: A Gathering of Eagles—Collects vol. 1 #x–13 (ISBN 978-1-56389-585-2)
- WildC.A.T.southward: Trilogy—Collects mini-series #1–3
- James Robinson's Complete WildC.A.T.s (ISBN 1401222048)—Collects vol. i #15–20, Almanac #1, and Squad One/WildC.A.T.South. (Jan 2009)
- Alan Moore's Consummate WildC.A.T.s—Collects vol. ane #21–34 and #50
- WildC.A.T.southward: Homecoming—Collects vol. one #21–27 (ISBN 156389582X) (offset printing, 1998; 2d printing 1999)
- WildC.A.T.s: Gang War—Collects vol. one #28–34 (ISBN 1-58240-037-7) (beginning press, November 1998; second printing, May 1999)
- Alan Moore's Wild Worlds—Collects Spawn/Wildcats #1–four, Voodoo #1–four, Voodoo: Dancing in the Nighttime, Deathblow: Past Blows #1–3, Wildcats #l, Wildstorm Spotlight #i ISBN 1401213790
- Wildcats: Street Smart—Collects vol. 2 #1–half dozen
- Wildcats: Vicious Circles—Collects vol. ii #8–13
- Wildcats: Serial Boxes—Collects vol. ii #14–19
- Wildcats: Battery Park—Collects vol. 2 #xx–28
- Wildcats 3.0 Year One—Collects vol. 3 #1–12
-
- Wildcats Version iii.0: Brand Building—Collects vol. 3 #1–6
- Wildcats Version 3.0: Full Disclosure—Collects vol. three #7–12
- Wildcats 3.0 Year 2—Collects vol. three #13–24
- Wildcats: Nemesis—Collects Wildcats: Nemesis #1–9
- Wildcats: World's End—Collects vol. 5 #1–half-dozen, ISBN ane-4012-2363-Ten
- Wildcats: Family unit Secrets—Collects vol. 5 #seven–12, ISBN ane-4012-2668-X
Vol. 1 #14 is nerveless in Roughshod Dragon Vol. 4: Possessed as it was done by Erik Larsen as part of Image X Month; #xx is also nerveless in the Wildstorm Rising trade paperback, while JLA/WildC.A.T.due south is collected in the JLA: Ultramarine Corps trade.
Both WildC.A.T.Due south Covert Action Teams: Compendium and A Gathering of Eagles are out of print. New printings of the trade paperbacks WildC.A.T.southward: Homecoming and WildC.A.T.south: Gang War were published in 1999 after the late 1998 acquisition of WildStorm Productions by DC Comics; as of 2009, both volumes accept at present sold out and are currently out of impress. In August 2007 Alan Moore's Complete WildC.A.T.S TPB was released, containing the contents of both Gang State of war and Homecoming TPBs, every bit well every bit the brusque story from WildC.A.T.Due south #50.
Reception [edit]
Andy Butcher reviewed the beginning graphic novel compendium of WildC.A.T.s: Covert Activeness Teams for Cabalistic magazine, rating it a 6 out of 10 overall.[89] Butcher comments that "of all the artists who've tries to write, Lee is one of the more successful. Despite some confusing flashbacks at the showtime, he is at least capable of stringing a story together. As long as you concentrate (a lot of characters and factions are introduced very speedily), it's an enjoyable if fairly linear tale. And of course, the art is simply stunning."[89]
In other media [edit]
Boob tube series [edit]
A WildC.A.T.s TV series was created in 1994. It had simply thirteen episodes and a more family unit-friendly storyline. As a result, there were numerous changes from the source textile, such as Voodoo being an boyish rather than an ex-stripper and Lord Emp being an ordinary human. The group was equanimous of all the original 'C.A.T.s. The major villain was Helspont, only the Troika and the Coda were featured. A parody of the series, MadD.O.G.south, was seen during Alan Moore's run in the comics. The series was produced past Nelvana Express and WildStorm Productions.
Toyline [edit]
A toyline from Playmates Toys was also released in 1994. The basic serial included figures of Grifter, Helspont, Maul, Spartan, Warblade and Zealot, along with a generic Daemonite figure.[90] In 1995, new versions of Helspont, Maul, Spartan, Warblade, and Zealot were released, along with figures of Pike, Void, and Voodoo, and a WildC.A.T.S. Bullet Bike accessory. In addition, Playmates also produced "giant" versions of Grifter, Maul, and Spartan, plus figures for other characters in the Epitome Universe, such every bit Black Razor, Mr. Purple, and Slag.[xc]
Video game [edit]
In 1995, Playmates Toys published a WildC.A.T.s video game exclusively for the Super NES.[91] A WildC.A.T.s game for Sega Genesis was planned only never released.[92]
References [edit]
- ^ Zealot #ane (August 1995)
- ^ a b Spartan: Warrior Spirit #i (July 1995)
- ^ Kindred vol. 1 #ane (February 1994)
- ^ a b Voodoo vol. 1 #4 (March 1998)
- ^ WildC.A.T.s #35 (March 1997)
- ^ WildC.A.T.southward #36 (March 1997)
- ^ a b WildC.A.T.s #47 (March 1998)
- ^ "DC/WildStorm Stages Coup D'État". Diamond . Retrieved June 2, 2020.
- ^ "Comics". DC Comics. Retrieved 2015-10-01 .
- ^ [one] Archived August 18, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ [2] [ dead link ]
- ^ [3] Archived Dec 7, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Adler, Matt (October 27, 2009). "WildStorm-Berries: Adam Beechen Talks WildCats". Broken Borderland. Archived from the original on October 31, 2009. Retrieved Oct 28, 2009.
- ^ Arrant, Chris (Nov 25, 2009). "New WILDCATS Team Keeps Fighting at World's End". Newsarama. Retrieved November 29, 2009.
- ^ WildC.A.T.southward #iv (March 1993)
- ^ a b c d eastward f m Wildcats vol. 3 #five (Jan 2009)
- ^ WildC.A.T.s #30 (June 1996)
- ^ a b c d WildC.A.T.s #37 (April 1997)
- ^ Wildcats vol. 1 #10 (June 2000)
- ^ Wildcats vol. 1 #12 (August 2000)
- ^ a b Wildcats vol. 1 #24 (August 2001)
- ^ Majestic vol. 2 #13 (March 2006)
- ^ a b Wildcats vol. 3 #thirty (Feb 2011)
- ^ a b c d WildC.A.T.s/Aliens (August 1998)
- ^ Wildcats vol. 1 #fifteen (November 2000)
- ^ Grifter vol. two #3 (September 1996)
- ^ WildC.A.T.southward #20 (May 1995)
- ^ WildC.A.T.s Trilogy #one (June 1993)
- ^ WildC.A.T.s #31 (September 1996)
- ^ Wildcats 3.0 #4 (Jan 2003)
- ^ a b Wildcats 3.0 #7 (April 2003)
- ^ Wildcats three.0 #15 (December 2003)
- ^ Wildcats 3.0 #16 (Jan 2004)
- ^ Sleeper Season Two #nine (April 2005)
- ^ a b c Wildstorm Winter Special #1 (January 2005)
- ^ Team One: WildC.A.T.southward #i (July 1995)
- ^ a b c Wildcats 3.0 #24 (Oct 2004)
- ^ WildC.A.T.due south #one (August 1992)
- ^ WildC.A.T.s #13 (September 1994)
- ^ a b WildC.A.T.southward #17 (January 1995)
- ^ WildC.A.T.due south #23 (September 1995)
- ^ a b WildC.A.T.southward #29 (Apr 1996)
- ^ a b c d WildC.A.T.s #49 (May 1998)
- ^ a b c d e f WildC.A.T.southward #50 (June 1998)
- ^ Wildcats vol. 1 #1 (March 1999)
- ^ Wildcats vol. 1 #iv (September 1999)
- ^ Wildcats vol. 1 #16 (December 2000)
- ^ Wildcats vol. one #28 (December 2001)
- ^ Wildcats vol. 3 #3 (November 2008)
- ^ a b Wildcats vol. three #7 (March 2009)
- ^ a b WildC.A.T.south #40 (July 1997)
- ^ Wildcats vol. 1 #2 (May 1999)
- ^ Wildcats vol. i #7 (March 2000)
- ^ a b Wildcats vol. 1 #13 (September 2000)
- ^ Wildcats vol. 1 #23 (July 2001)
- ^ Captain Atom: Armageddon vol. 1 #1 (December 2005)
- ^ Wildstorm: A Celebration of 25 Years (August 2017)
- ^ Union vol. 2 #4 (May 1995)
- ^ Majestic vol. 2 #9 (November 2005)
- ^ a b WildC.A.T.s #11 (June 1994)
- ^ WildC.A.T.s: Savant Garde F.A.N Edition #2 (March 1997)
- ^ a b WildC.A.T.southward #21 (July 1995)
- ^ WildC.A.T.s #28 (April 1996)
- ^ WildC.A.T.southward #34 (February 1997)
- ^ Sleeper Season Ii #11 (June, 2005)
- ^ Sleeper Season Two #12 (July 2005)
- ^ WildC.A.T.due south #41 (Baronial 1997)
- ^ a b c WildC.A.T.due south #43 (November 1997)
- ^ a b c d WildC.A.T.south #38 (May 1997)
- ^ a b c WildC.A.T.due south #44 (November 1997)
- ^ WildC.A.T.s #39 (June 1997)
- ^ Wilfcats vol. 2 #22 (June 2001)
- ^ Wilfcats vol. 2 #25 (September 2001)
- ^ Wildcats 3.0 #eighteen (March 2004)
- ^ Wildcats 3.0 #9 (June 2003)
- ^ a b Wildcats iii.0 #20 (June 2004)
- ^ Wilfcats vol. 2 #21 (May 2001)
- ^ Wildcats three.0 #3 (Nov 2002)
- ^ Wildcats 3.0 #15-16 (2003-04)
- ^ Wildcats three.0 #1 (Oct 2002)
- ^ Wildcats 3.0 #eight (May 2003)
- ^ Wildcats 3.0 #xi (Aug 2003)
- ^ Wilfcats vol. 2 #fifteen (November 2000)
- ^ Wildcats iii.0 #17 (Feb 2004)
- ^ Wildcats 3.0 #14-15 (2003)
- ^ Wildcats 3.0 #8 (March 2003)
- ^ Wilfcats vol. 2 #2 (May 1999)
- ^ "Comics". DC Comics. Retrieved 2015-10-01 .
- ^ a b Butcher, Andy (Jan 1996). "The Great Library". Arcane. Future Publishing (2): 89.
- ^ a b "Wildcats (Playmates) Action Figure Checklist". Figurerealm.com. Retrieved 2015-10-01 .
- ^ "Review Crew: WildC.A.T.due south". Electronic Gaming Monthly. Ziff Davis (76): 41. November 1995.
- ^ "Adjacent Wave: Genesis (Activeness) - WildC.A.T.S (Playmaters)". EGM2 . No. 13. Sendai Publishing. July 1995. p. 56.
External links [edit]
- WildC.A.T.due south at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
- International Hero entry for WildC.A.T.s
- WILDCATS: WORLDSTORM #1 PREVIEW
- Autumn PREVIEW: WILDCATS Take an exclusive look at writer Grant Morrison's original pitch to resurrect Wildstorm's flagship championship!
- 'CATS AND CATACOMBS Jim Lee delves into his by and his initial thoughts for the new Wildcats serial
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wildcats_(comics)
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