Overmind (comics)

Overmind (comics)
Overmind
Comic image missing.svg
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance Fantastic Four #113 (August 1971)
Created by Stan Lee & John Buscema
In-story information
Alter ego Grom
Team affiliations Thunderbolts
Eternals
the Psychics
Defenders
Notable aliases Champion of Champions
Abilities Transform psionic energy
Superhuman strength

Overmind (originally Over-Mind) is a villain in the Marvel Comics universe.

Contents

Fictional character biography

The Overmind is an alien belonging to the Eternals of Eyung, and was born uncounted millennia ago on the planet Eyung ("Eternus"). Grom acted as one of their warlords, leading massacres of entire species. He was also the reigning champion in their gladiatorial arenas. When his race had engaged the Gigantians in a war about to lead to mutual absolute destruction, Grom's physical prowess led to his being chosen as the receptacle for their entire population of several hundred million minds, and was launched in a protective capsule, unconscious for thousands of years while assimilating them into one single mind.

In more recent years he awoke, and piloted his ship to the nearest inhabited planet which happened to be Earth. He here came into contact with the Fantastic Four, who had been warned by Uatu the Watcher. The Overmind took over the mind of Mister Fantastic, and battled the Fantastic Four and Doctor Doom, who proved unable to stop him until the Stranger intervened and shrank the Overmind into a subatomic microverse on a dust mote, where he was left completely isolated with no available conquests, and went mad from the strain.[1]

He was later discovered by another collective consciousness known as Null, the Living Darkness. In his current broken state Null managed to take control of him and sent him on a campaign against a parallel universe Earth inhabited by the Squadron Supreme. The Overmind, now a conqueror, mentally enslaved both the Squadron and this Earth's leaders, while posing as the U.S. president Kyle Richmond, and began construction of an interstellar armada to invade other worlds. When Hyperion brought the Defenders to assist him, they managed to free the Squadron. Meanwhile Null had leeched away the Overmind's mental energies, but yet another psychic composite entity, of 7 human telepaths, empowered by the assembled heroes, managed to defeat it, and came to inhabit the weakened Grom.[2]

The Overmind then returned with the Defenders to their Earth.[3] For a while this entity was welcomed into the Defenders' ranks, and the loose ends of the seven psychics's old lives were tied up.[4] He assisted the Defenders in the rescue of Daimon Hellstrom from the Miracle Man.[5] The Overmind grew uncomfortable and eventually left, while making them forget it was ever one of them. It tried to find a purpose by attempting to help Millwood, New Hampshire, a town of 800 people dying of chemical poisoning, by controlling their minds and making them ignore their ailments, in order to foster the illusion that they were well. However, the Overmind was convinced to let them be aware of reality rather than an illusion.[6]

When the Squadron transferred to this Earth, the Overmind's original psyche was stirred into awareness and absorbed the telepaths into his own billion-wide whole. His psychic powers were replenished and his true mind reasserted itself. He once more mind-controlled and kidnapped the Squadron to take revenge against the Stranger by organizing a raid against the latter's laboratory world.[7] He freed many of the Stranger's superhuman captives to fuel his enslaved ranks. He locked the Stranger in a stalemated mental battle. When several Watchers arrived on an unrelated business the Overmind was wrought by paranoia, believing the Stranger to have summoned them for assistance, inducing psychosis, and enabling the Stranger to capture him as a subject of study.[8]

The Overmind's future counterpart travels back in time to present-day Squadron-Earth to aid the Scarlet Centurion in repulsing the expanding Nth Man. His head explodes from the effort and he dies.[9]

He later apparently managed to escape and declined participation in the Mad Thinker's quest for vengeance against the Fantastic Four.

Civil War

Shortly afterwards Grom was affected by the Purple Man's mind-controlling pheromones, and used to both monitor New York's population, as the latter's chemicals spread in the water supply, as well as control potential threats like the Avengers, but disappeared after the Purple Man's defeat. He was eventually located by Baron Zemo and his Thunderbolts, during the Civil War event, and coerced to join the group or face jail time.

Powers and abilities

The Overmind possesses vast psychic powers derived from the synthesized intellects of the billion Eternals of Eyung composing his essence, including telepathy, telekinesis, or illusion-casting, and can use them over great distances. The Over-Mind can scan the thoughts of others and project his thoughts into others' minds within an unrevealed radius. His victims are completely unaware of his influence unless he allows them. Even when severely weakened, with his mind comatose and his body under the influence of the 7 telepaths, whose assembled might was likened to a drop in the ocean compared to his own, he was able to control the minds of 800 people, and at full power he managed to push the Stranger, a cosmic entity rivaling Galactus in scope, to his mental limits. He possesses psychokinetic ability enabling him to lift approximately what he can physically lift. He can project psychokinetic concussion blasts capable of deforming steel at 10 feet (3.0 m).

His sole weaknesses are his inability to control Eternals of any race, and his schizoid composition can make his abilities weaken immensely when sufficiently stressed. The Over-Mind is susceptible to magic, the imposition of superior intellects and powers, and fatigue. Twice he suffered mental breakdowns, rendering him mentally vulnerable. He cannot impose his will upon the Eternals of any known alien races.

Additionally as a result of his alien physiognomy and metabolism, he possesses great superhuman physical strength, magnified sevenfold through psionic augmentation, and even more impressive speed, stamina, and durability. He is an experienced veteran of many wars, with considerable fighting skills.

Notes

  1. ^ Fantastic Four #113-116
  2. ^ Defenders #112-115
  3. ^ Defenders #115
  4. ^ Defenders #117
  5. ^ Defenders #120-121
  6. ^ Marvel Comics Presents #40
  7. ^ Quasar #13
  8. ^ Quasar #16
  9. ^ Squadron Supreme Graphic Novel

References

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Overmind — may refer to: In science fiction An interstellar Hive Mind in the Arthur C. Clark novel Childhood s End The Zerg Overmind, one of the antagonists in the StarCraft series. Overmind (comics), a supervillain in the world of Marvel Comics A group of… …   Wikipedia

  • Overmind — Pour l’Overmind, créature alien, chef suprême des Zerg du monde imaginaire de StarCraft, voir Overmind (StarCraft). L Overmind est un super vilain créé par Marvel Comics. il est apparu pour la première fois dans Fantastic Four #113, en 1971.… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Blue Eagle (comics) — Superherobox| caption=Blue Eagle comic color=background:#ff8080 character name=Blue Eagle real name=James Dore Junior publisher=Marvel Comics debut= (as American Eagle) The Avengers #85 (Feb 1971) (as Cap n Hawk) The Avengers #148 (Jun 1976) (as… …   Wikipedia

  • Moonglow (comics) — Moonglow Publication information Publisher Marvel Comics Firs …   Wikipedia

  • List of first appearances in Marvel Comics publications — This is a list of first appearances of artifacts, characters, dimensions, locations, species, and teams in publications by Marvel Comics. NOTOC *List of first appearances: compactTOC *Related articles *External linksList of first appearancesA*The …   Wikipedia

  • Hyperion (comics) — Hyperion Hyperion. Art by Tom Grummett Publication information Publisher Marvel Comics …   Wikipedia

  • Quasar (comics) — Infobox comics set index code name=Quasar caption=Wendell Vaughn and Phyla Vell, both versions of Quasar. publisher=Marvel Comics debut=Captain America #217 (January, 1978) creators=Don Glut, Roy Thomas (co writers), John Buscema (artist)… …   Wikipedia

  • Dragonfly (Marvel Comics) — Dragonfly Publication information Publisher Marvel Comics Fir …   Wikipedia

  • Dragonfly (Comics) — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Dragonfly. Dragonfly (la Libellule) est une super vilaine appartenant à l univers de Marvel Comics. Elle est apparue pour la première fois dans Uncanny X Men vol.1 #94. Origine Dragonfly fut à la base un membre… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Etranger (comics) — Étranger (comics) L Étranger (the Stranger) est un super vilain extraterrestre créé par Marvel Comics (Stan Lee et Jack Kirby). Il est apparu pour la première fois dans Uncanny X Men #11, en 1965. Origines L Étranger est un puissant alien… …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

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