OMAC (comics)

OMAC (comics)
Brother Eye redirects here.
OMACs
Omac1.PNG
An OMAC
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
First appearance The OMAC Project #1 (June 2005)
Created by Greg Rucka
In-story information
Team affiliations Brother Eye
Abilities Cybernetic armor, access to extensive metahuman database

The OMACs (Omni Mind And Community, originally Observational Metahuman Activity Construct) are a fictional type of powerful cyborg that exist in the DC Comics universe. Based on the Jack Kirby character of the same name, the OMACs were created by Greg Rucka and first appeared in The OMAC Project #1 (June 2005).

Contents

Publication history

The OMAC Project

The OMACs are cyborgs who take over human bodies via a virus in order to assassinate any and all beings with superpowers. The virus was created from Brainiac-13-derived nanotechnology acquired by the U.S. Department of Defense and Lexcorp, which was then secretly introduced into general vaccine supplies. The OMACs are featured in the mini-series The OMAC Project that leads up to the Infinite Crisis series.

Brother MK I

The new OMACs are controlled by the Brother MK I satellite. Brother MK I was created by Batman and programmed by Pseudopersons, Inc. scientist Buddy Blank, who in this retelling of the story is a partner of Wayne Industries.[1] Its purpose was to keep an eye on all metahumans, both villain and hero, after Batman grew distrustful after discovering the Justice League altered his memories following an altercation with Doctor Light years earlier. (see Identity Crisis). Alexander Luthor, Jr. later gave the satellite sentience as part of his plans. Maxwell Lord subverted the original mission of the Brother MK I satellite by inculcating a fear and suspicion of all metahumans when he rose to the top rank of the government agency Checkmate. The first test subject activated shared his name with his "father" and his alternate version, both being called Buddy Blank.[2]

However, the OMACs' history may be more recent than Brother MK I's itself. Equus and Pilates, formerly featured in Superman: For Tomorrow, are later denounced as supposed former iterations of the OMAC concept; and in JLA: Classified an all mechanic OMAC is featured as an enemy for the Metal Men. Since then, the design has improved to the current form, with little to no changes to the base model, aside from Sasha Bordeaux.

Brother Eye

When Maxwell Lord brainwashed Superman to kill Batman, Wonder Woman, and possibly the rest of the JLA, Wonder Woman broke Lord's neck to free Superman from his control. Thanks to her Lasso of Truth, Diana knew that this was the only course of action possible; but she was fiercely criticized from many quarters.

Brother MK I, rechristening itself Brother Eye, initiated the "KingIsDead" protocol. Specifically designed to be used in the event of Lord's death, it ordered all of the OMACs (all 1,373,462 of them) to attack and kill all the metahumans on Earth. A group superhero effort stopped the attack, reducing the number of OMACs to roughly 200,000 by disabling the majority of them with an EMP blast as well as a "Shut Down" command given by Sasha Bordeaux, who had become a third-generation cyborg linked to Brother Eye, now designated Blacknight 1. These measures effectively freed the OMAC hosts from their nanotech forms.

Infinite Crisis

Truth and Justice

In response, the satellite broadcast footage of Wonder Woman executing Maxwell Lord, preceded by the word MURDER, to media outlets all over the world, destroying her reputation. After this, Brother Eye initiated the final protocol, "Truth and Justice," by having all the remaining OMACs invade and attack her homeland, Themyscira, to wipe out all of the Amazons.

It was revealed that Alexander Luthor was the one who wrestled control of Brother Eye away from Batman. He used it to calculate the coordinates of where the multiverse Watchtower would concentrate its energy as part of his attempt to re-create Earth-Two. Brother Eye continues to aid Alex Luthor and helps guard the tower, reasoning that it would eliminate the need for heroes like those who Batman had created it to monitor by aiding in the creation of a perfect Earth.

Agents of Checkmate battle the Brother Eye satellite. Cover to The OMAC Project: Infinite Crisis Special (2006). Art by Jose Ladrönn.

Downfall of Brother Eye

Batman leads a collection of superheroes to Earth's orbit, including: Hal Jordan, John Stewart, Green Arrow (Oliver Queen, only because Batman is attempting to trust people again and contacted Queen to see if he would come), Mister Terrific, Black Lightning, Black Canary, the new Blue Beetle, Metamorpho, Booster Gold, and Sasha Bordeaux. Blue Beetle manages to reveal Brother Eye in orbit by negating its vibrational frequency. Brother Eye sends OMACs and the two groups clash.

With the two Green Lanterns fighting off the OMACs, the ship crashes into Brother Eye. Metamorpho provides an oxygen supply as Blue Beetle and Booster Gold remain behind on the ship to guard it. Batman goes to distract Brother Eye by attempting to shut down the central computer; although, Brother Eye tries to distract him by showing him Nightwing's confrontation with Superboy-Prime. Sasha, linked to Oracle, goes to upload every computer virus on Earth into Brother Eye's system as well as trying to prevent the artificial gravity from shutting down. Black Canary goes to the surveillance room to try using her sonic scream to blind the Eye. Black Lightning and Mr. Terrific go together so that Black Lightning fries as much circuitry as possible while Mr. Terrific, invisible to machines and electronics, delivers the fatal blow by knocking Brother Eye off orbit using its orbital thrusters.

The plan works and Brother Eye is deactivated. All of the activated OMACs shut down, releasing their hosts. Brother Eye tries to take Batman down with him, asking Batman if he can ever trust the costumed heroes again after what they did to him. Batman, however, says that he will take his chances, and accepts Hal Jordan's aid in getting to safety.

After crash-landing in Saudi Arabia, Brother Eye tries to download his system into Sasha as a means of self-preservation. However, Sasha manages to destroy the satellite, freeing herself from the nanobots infecting her.

DCU: A Brave New World/OMAC

On June 28, 2006, DC released DCU: A Brave New World, which was the prelude to the OMAC limited series.

Brother Eye has not been fully decommissioned and lies in a NORAD facility. Michael Costner is the last OMAC unit, kept as emergency backup, and Brother Eye calls to him.

This Brother Eye has corrupted programming and now believes that all humans need to be subjugated and/or exterminated, whether metahuman or not. It has also recently begun to manifest disassociative behavior with at least two "personalities" now being heard in the OMAC's internal conversations. Brother Eye attempts to make Costner rebuild itself, but is forced to face his wrath when Costner regains control of both his forms, human and OMAC, and subsequently destroys Brother Eye again; although a tiny fraction of it is still active.

Countdown to Final Crisis

A portion of Brother Eye was later retrieved and rebuilt by Buddy Blank, a former scientist from Wayne Industries. This portion meets the time-traveling Karate Kid who is seeking a cure for the Morticoccus, a 31st-century illness that evolved from the OMAC virus. Announcing that "the Great Disaster has come to me," Brother Eye directs him to Blüdhaven. Soon after, it reactivates its offensive protocols and assimilates the hangar it is being held in, turning the people within the hangar into new OMAC cyborgs. It then travels to the ruins of Blüdhaven and assimilates the city's infrastructure and the people within it using the Atomic Knights and Firestorm as power sources.[3][4][5] Later, it activates a Boom Tube and travels to Apokolips, where it assimilates the entire planet and attempts to obtain the Morticoccus virus from Karate Kid, who has also been led there.[6] However, it is forced to flee Apokolips when attacked by the Pied Piper using the Anti-Life Equation.

Later, Brother Eye transforms Buddy Blank into a modified OMAC resembling Kirby's version of the character. Buddy uses this power to save himself and his grandson from starvation in the Command-D bunker beneath Blüdhaven.[7] Brother Eye implies that it will contact Buddy again for a future need.

Batman and the Outsiders

Depiction of ReMAC from Batman and the Outsiders.

A modified OMAC is shown as a part of the new Outsiders team in the 2008 Batman and the Outsiders series.

When a team from the Justice League attempts to seize a partially active OMAC, a leftover from The OMAC Project events, Batman takes the opportunity to reclaim it for himself—having Dr. Francine Langstrom (the long-suffering wife of Dr. Kirk Langstrom) create a clever forgery to leave in care of the League.

The OMAC, aptly renamed ReMAC, appears to be "an iPod with its tracklist wiped." Dr. Langstrom is unable to discern who ReMAC was before being infected by the OMAC virus; finding ReMAC a mere husk, devoid of any personal identity. This complete lack of personality makes ReMAC the perfect infiltrator, using its advanced shapeshifting abilities and its unquestioning obedience for the Outsiders' sake.

Since its lack of personality allows villains to snatch control of ReMAC, turning it into an enemy, Batman rigs up a telepresence system turning ReMAC into an advanced drone for Salah Miandad, Dr. Langstrom's chief assistant, enabling operation from the Outsiders HQ, the Batcave, or other secret locations.

However, while testing a new neural interface, less dependent from his stamina, to control the former OMAC, Salah is knocked into a coma. His mind comes to reside in ReMAC, supplanting the missing personality of the drone for a while (one full issue), until, due to the machinations of the villainous Simon Hurt, ReMAC is fed a malicious self-destruct code that blows it to pieces, making the restoration of Salah's consciousness impossible.

Final Crisis

In Final Crisis, Darkseid and his prophets from Apokolips have taken new forms as humans on Earth after mass-distributing the Anti-Life Equation around the world. Batman has been captured; Superman is on a journey in the multiverse; and Wonder Woman has become a Female Fury. With most of the world's population under the influence of the equation, they are effectively under Darkseid's control seemingly making him the ruler of the Earth.

In the one-shot Final Crisis: Resist, Mister Terrific and the Checkmate organization are working to mount a resistance against Darkseid, but seemingly do not have the means to do it. Sitting in despair in a Checkmate stronghold, Snapper Carr, through his hopeless rantings, gives Mister Terrific an ingenious idea. Using Sasha Bordeaux to make contact with Brother Eye, he convinces the A.I. to help them, explaining that it will surely be destroyed if Darkseid indeed captures the world.

Realizing this, Brother Eye accepts Mister Terrific's terms and reveals that there are still millions of people infected with OMAC nanotech. These people, now mindless drones of Darkseid, are overwritten by Brother Eye and become OMAC soldiers under the command of Mister Terrific. This gives Checkmate and him the means to forcefully resist Darkseid.

During the Final Crisis events when all seems lost, Lord (Brother) Eye prepares to leave the doomed Earth with his OMACs and the people of Command-D, the bunker underneath Blüdhaven, and start a new society on another Earth in another universe. To this end, he asks Renee Montoya to serve as the head of a to-be-founded Global Peacekeeping Agency, her faceless appearance as the Question being an allusion to the faceless agents of the GPA from the original OMAC series.

Generation Lost

In the Justice League: Generation Lost limited series, the resurrected Maxwell Lord controls the squad of OMACs attacking Jaime Reyes's home and his family.[8] The old Justice League International arrives and takes Jaime's family to safety.[9]

After Max escapes from the JLI, Booster Gold's partner, Skeets informs the JLI that he has the locations of the four formerly-dormant Checkmate cells which he had placed inside robotics laboratories that Max has been in contact with.[10] The JLI travel to Chicago beneath the hidden robotics laboratory and learns that the OMAC variants were pure robots that are human/machine synthesis of the originals. Skeets scans the fingerprints of the robotics laboratory and discovers that Professor Ivo was here.[11]

When Captain Atom absorbs the energy from Magog's spear, he is propelled forward through time 112 years in the future, where Max, while long dead, has plunged humanity into a massive metahuman war ruled by OMACs. Captain Atom battled for survival alongside the future versions of the Justice League, however they all are eventually contaminated by a new version of OMACs and one by one become OMACs themselves. Captain Atom is eventually returned to the present, but not before Batman (Damian Wayne) tells him how to stop Max's ultimate plans.[12]

Afterward, Max gains new abilities to transform his targets into cadaver OMACs.[13] Max uses a device to enhance his mental powers, turning people around the world into OMACs to attack Wonder Woman and the JLI.[14] Max sends the new OMAC known as OMAC Prime that he controls to attack the JLI.[15] During the final battle, OMAC Prime takes Blue Beetle's power, causing it to be nearly unstoppable, but Blue Beetle mentioned to OMAC Prime that it cannot take control with the Scarab's power. Blue Beetle attacks and destroys the OMAC Prime.[16]

Kevin Kho

Following the events of Flashpoint, an Asian American man named Kevin Kho is introduced as the new OMAC.[17] Maxwell Lord is revealed to have had a hand in Kevin's transformation.[18]

Possible Future

In Batman #700 (June 2010), in a vignette within the issue, Damian Wayne, as Batman, is shown having succeeded at what his father had failed: regaining control of Brother Eye.

Powers and abilities

Brother Eye can activate the OMAC virus in any infected person, at any time, within planetary range. Once activated, the person is covered in cybernetic armor and becomes a thrall to Brother Eye's commands.

An OMAC unit has access to archives on almost every metahuman on file, and can simulate the powers of a variety of superheroes and supervillains in order to target its opponent's weaknesses. Among the powers displayed were the ability to fly, shoot fire, project needles of artificial cellulose (against Alan Scott; an approximation of his weakness to wood), dispense flame-retarding foam, and fire various energy beams from its eyes and hands with caustic, concussive, or blinding effects. In addition, the OMAC unit can morph its extremities into blades and pincers. It once simulated Shazam's lightning power and forced Mary Marvel to revert to her human form. It can disable the Eradicator effortlessly.

The only weakness an OMAC has is that they are human beneath their shells (which was meant as a deterrent to heroes using lethal force against them). Other than that, the OMACs are dependent on their assessment of individual heroes. When fighting multiple opponents, they require a few seconds to adapt their countermeasures for each hero. Atom Smasher was able to stop an OMAC that was attacking the JSA by stomping it before it could assess his threat level. OMACs are also very vulnerable to Mister Terrific, as he cannot be detected by technology.

In the Superman/Batman series, Brainiac temporarily occupies an OMAC body.[19]

ReMAC, the OMAC possessed by the Outsiders, has the same powers and abilities of a regular OMAC. He greatly differs in his physical makeup, being redder in color and with a more human-like face even in his armored form.

Unable to contact Brother Eye and unable to access his former personality, ReMAC was controlled for a period by Dr. Salah Miandad. In this way, ReMAC retained his invulnerability and strength, but was limited by Salah's personal stamina and attention span, which was not always sufficient for a fight. Salah's mind was later trapped into the ReMAC body by a faulty mind interface, removing the limits of his less-than-average stamina.

Victims of OMACs

Among those killed by OMACs are:

In other media

Television

Video games

  • The OMAC Project makes a cameo appearance in Batman's ending for the video game Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe. In the game, it is explained that Batman designed the OMACs as a way to defend New Earth from multiverse invaders following the destruction of the merged Darkseid/Shao Kahn. These OMACs have an armor pattern that is similar to Batman's own costume.
  • Brother Eye and the OMAC Project appear in DC Universe Online, voiced by Ken Thomas. Brother Eye is reactivated and becomes a pawn of Brainiac in his plot to take over Earth. Brother Eye unleashes the OMAC virus and begins assimilating the area around the Gotham City Knights Dome. The players find Brother Eye in the sewers in Gotham City. Brother Eye's OMAC minions consist of Defective OMAC, OMAC Drones, OMAC MK II, OMAC Nanosyths, OMAC Sigmas, OMAC Units, OMAC Delta, and an OMAC Incinerator.

References

  1. ^ Countdown 30 (October 3, 2007), DC Comics
  2. ^ Geoff Johns, Greg Rucka and Judd Winick (w), various artists (a). Countdown to Infinite Crisis 1 (May 2005), DC Comics
  3. ^ Countdown 21 (December 5, 2007), DC Comics
  4. ^ Countdown 20 (December 12, 2007), DC Comics
  5. ^ Countdown 15 (January 16, 2008), DC Comics
  6. ^ Countdown 12-9 (February 2008), DC Comics
  7. ^ Countdown 1 (April 23, 2008), DC Comics
  8. ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #2 (May 2010)
  9. ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #3 (June 2010)
  10. ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #10 (September 2010)
  11. ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #11 (October 2010)
  12. ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #14 (November 2010)
  13. ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #17 (January 2011)
  14. ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #22 (March 2011)
  15. ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #23 (April 2011)
  16. ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #24 (April 2011)
  17. ^ OMAC #1
  18. ^ OMAC #2
  19. ^ Superman/Batman 36, 2007.

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • OMAC — can refer to: OMAC (Buddy Blank), a DC Comics superhero OMAC (comics): an organization of powerful cyborgs that exist in the DC Universe The OMAC Project, a limited series dealing with the OMACs Michael Costner, the last OMAC cyborg standing,… …   Wikipedia

  • OMAC (Buddy Blank) — For the OMAC cyborgs, see OMAC (comics). OMAC Cover to OMAC #6, with the original OMAC. Art by Jack Kirby. Publication information Publis …   Wikipedia

  • OMAC Project — Éditeur DC Comics Fréquence Mensuel Date(s) de publication (US) Juin Novembre 2005 (FR) Août Septembre 2006 (dans les numéros 6 et 7 du magazine Superman/Batman) Numéros 6, plus un spécial. Personnages principaux …   Wikipédia en Français

  • OMAC — One Man Army Corps One Man Army Corps (O.M.A.C.) est un personnage de DC Comics crée par feu Jack Kirby en 1974 et repris par John Byrne sur une mini série en 4 parties. For Tomorrow Dans l arc For Tomorrow (Pour Demain) de la série Superman… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Omac — One Man Army Corps One Man Army Corps (O.M.A.C.) est un personnage de DC Comics crée par feu Jack Kirby en 1974 et repris par John Byrne sur une mini série en 4 parties. For Tomorrow Dans l arc For Tomorrow (Pour Demain) de la série Superman… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • The OMAC Project — OMAC Project OMAC Project Éditeur DC Comics Fréquence Mensuel Date(s) de publication (US) Juin Novembre 2005 (FR) Août Septembre 2006 (dans les numéros 6 et 7 du magazine Superman/Batman) Numéros 6, plus un spécial. Personnages principaux …   Wikipédia en Français

  • The OMAC Project — Cover to The OMAC Project #1 Art by Jose Ladrönn Publication information …   Wikipedia

  • Checkmate (comics) — Checkmate! redirects here. For the album, see Checkmate! (Namie Amuro album). Checkmate Artwork for the cover of Checkmate (vol. 2) #4 (Sept, 2006). Art by Lee Bermejo. Publication information …   Wikipedia

  • Proyecto OMAC — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda El Proyecto OMAC es una serie limitada de seis números del cómic escrito por Greg Rucka con el arte de Jesús Saiz y publicado por DC Comics en el 2005. La serie está conectada con Cuenta regresiva a la Crisis… …   Wikipedia Español

  • List of DC Comics publications — This literature related list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it. DC Comics is one of the largest comic book and graphic novel publishers in North America. DC has published comic books under a number of different imprints and corporate… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”