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The 15 Best Lesser-Known Comic Book Heroes By Zach Seemyer #15. Miranda Zero- She is the shadowy leader of the Global Frequency, and she is the most powerful woman in the world due to the sheer power of her international web of agents. From Warren Ellis’s series Global Frequency, Miranda Zero is the leader of an agency with 1001 agents across the world who are dedicated to keeping the public both safe and unaware of the darkness and evil caused by nations across the globe. She has the entirety Global Frequency at her fingertips, making her more powerful then almost anyone. #14. Yorick Brown- He is the last man on Earth, which, due to what is presumed to be a plague, is now populated entirely by women. In the comic Y: The Last Man, by Brian K. Vaughn, a spontaneous disease killed every mammal or animal with a Y chromosome, except for Yorick and his helper monkey. His story is of his travels across the planet being guarded by a special government agent woman and in the company of a genetic biologist who hopes she can find out why Yorick survived and possibly save “mankind.” #12. Invincible Ed- Due to a mix-up with alien technology, a dorky high school kid and a tough bully football jock both gain powers from a magic alien orb only intended to affect one person with super-human powers. Ed gets invincibility, and the Jock gets strength, laser vision and an array of other powers that drive him mad. Invincible Ed, by Ryan Woodward, is unique in the way it portrays its hero as a less-than-popular kid instead of the stereotypical, muscle-bound hero that you see in most other superhero comics. #11. Rick Grimes- The undeclared leader of some of the last remaining humans on Earth in Robert Kirkman’s terrifying and entertaining series The Walking Dead. He was a cop, and now he leads a group, including his wife and son, from one place to another looking for somewhere that they can call home, and possibly start life over again. He is pessimistic, violent and yet severely moral and dedicated to survival and his family. His is the uber-hero in the vein of the stoic defender. #10. Allan Quartermain- Once a hero of British legend, he is now a decrepit, starved opium addict living in Arabia when Wilhelmina Parker finds him and brings him into the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. What makes him so unique is his persistence on getting better and over his addiction, and his undying dedication to chivalry and protection of Wilhelmina. Alan Moore’s League of Extraordinary Gentleman sees some of the greatest literary characters come together to battle the forces of evil that threaten England, and Quartermain is by far the most sympathetic of the collection. #9. Dream- From The Sandman series by Neil Gaiman, Dream is the god of dreams and can appear as the personification of story telling, dreams and nightmares. More commonly known as Morpheus, Dream is one of seven brothers and sisters who make up the pantheon of gods. Dream was summoned to this realm by occultists, but he freed himself and the series are different tales of his adventures. #8. Dwight McCarthy- A rough and tumble photographer from Sin City, Dwight spends a lot of time snapping shots of cheating husbands and knocking back shots at Kadie’s Club Pecos. He is drawn back into a love affair with his ex who accuses her rich husband of abuse and kidnapping. When Dwight goes to investigate, it turns out that his ex was, in fact, a femme fatale and plugs him full of rounds. After serious facial surgery, he becomes a new man, with a new deadly vision: Taking revenge on the dame who messed up his life. Dwight is similar to a Philip Marlow or possibly Walter Neff (played by Fred MacMurray) from Double Indemnity. #7. The Goon- In a world of mobs, The Goon is a mobster hit man on the human side who works tirelessly to rid the city of the annoying yet powerful zombie mafia with the help of his massive muscles and helpful sidekick Frankie. The Goon, by Eric Powell, is set in a noir crime age, and although that genre was limited to drama in the films, the comic incorporates dark and outlandish humor in a way unseen in any other comic series. #6. V- While some call him an anarchist, and others call him a terrorist, the smooth, educated, knife-wielding, bomb-planting violent activist of Alan Moore’s V for Vendetta is unlike any other hero in comics. You agree with him, but just barely because of the severity of his actions, but his rationalizations, his flair, is genius and his background inexplicably command you to root for him, even during his most violent acts. #5, The Great Machine- The man who can talk to machines, Mitchell Hundred, is known as The Great Machine. Elected Mayor of New York after preventing the second plane from hitting the WTC by talking to the plane itself, Mitchell gives up the mantle of “superhero” to focus on task of Mayor and out of shame that he was unable to save both towers (instead of just the one). His weakness turns out to be a simple device, a bow and arrow, which is too basic to be controlled by him. The Great Machine appears in the comic Ex Machina, written by Brian K. Vaughn and Tony Harris. Mitchell’s ability to control things with his words and thoughts are noticeably similar to Jesse Custer’s “voice of God” power (see: #1). The series, as a whole, is very enjoyable.
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