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phoenix240

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Overdrive was a supervillainess from the 31th century, with vast cyberkinesis powers. She was acknowledged by Mechanon as a potential rival and threat, and studied by him till the two confronted in an epic battle that saw an entire solar system covered with a technovirus, that turned every organic life into machines. With the gathering of the Champions, The Star*Guard and several heroes and powerful beings, the Mechanon threat was annihilated.

 

But still, noone was able to understand how he could have achieved that kind of massive destruction; the reason is there : he captured Overdrive, and made experiment on her. He learned that they shared the same hatred of humanity, at least for freeing machines from them, and that she would prefer robots to life. And he wanted to use her powers for his own advantage. So, with nano surgery, he separated her head from her body, and used that said body, still full of her cyberkinesis abilities, as a way to spread the technovirus, covering the planets with a mix of nanites and Overdrive's organics particles.

But he underestimated the villainess survival instinct, and while Mechanon was fighting heroes in the galaxy, she subjugated another of Mechanon space facility, and built herself a new body, that would protect her brain and head. Now, using a body partially made of Mechanon technology, she became UltraDrive.

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Obsession is a dangerous thing and people can take Love Never Dies to an extraordinary degree.

So that when Rudolf Geinser's wife died he could not accept it. And so saved her head  He put in an experimental preservative liquid and encased it in a robotic body. It's brain functions power the robot's data synapses. However people have tried to destroy it as an abomination. This has lead to the creation being termed X-Woman by a number of blogs, television programmes and websites.

The robot is immune to shutdown commands, most forms of disintegration, electrical and acid damage. It is also immune to heat and cold damage.

It can take an awful amount of punishment but can shutdown due to excessive stun damage. Mind powers have little or no effect.

The hands can tear through stone and metal if need be but can be delicate enough to type on a computer.

Rudolf has had to turn to the underworld to survive but he keeps his 'wife' close.

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ArmorAqua72_zps07dced54.jpg

She is a rouge scientist named Rebecca Pandora. She eventually discovered a way to immortality by removal of her head and putting it inside a technology robotic/life support body (inspired by a comic book supervillain, none the less). Now she is Pandora, using her high tech equipment and great intelligence to do inhuman experiments on others.

 

(Inspired by Amna Zola, a Captain America villain)

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Obsession is a dangerous thing and people can take Love Never Dies to an extraordinary degree.

So that when Rudolf Geinser's wife died he could not accept it. And so saved her head  He put in an experimental preservative liquid and encased it in a robotic body. It's brain functions power the robot's data synapses. However people have tried to destroy it as an abomination. This has lead to the creation being termed X-Woman by a number of blogs, television programmes and websites.

The robot is immune to shutdown commands, most forms of disintegration, electrical and acid damage. It is also immune to heat and cold damage.

It can take an awful amount of punishment but can shutdown due to excessive stun damage. Mind powers have little or no effect.

The hands can tear through stone and metal if need be but can be delicate enough to type on a computer.

Rudolf has had to turn to the underworld to survive but he keeps his 'wife' close.

 

Very creepy, feels like a modern take on 50s B-movie horror movie concept. Very nice  

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ArmorAqua72_zps07dced54.jpg

VIM

 

VIM is incredibly often mistake for a "womens head in a robot body", but that asumption is plain wrong. VIM is a 100% Artificial Intelligence, Not even something like being "based on a existing humans brainpatterns" was used in her creation. This "pure heritage" is a point of Pride for her.

 

The VIM AI and her Robot Body were originally invented as infiltration units, but she disguised herself and escaped her creator (ironic really). The bodys most often used feature, is a holographic disguise matrix. togther with limited shape shifting in her hands, that allows VIM to fool just about anyone, as long as full body contact is avoided.

As for the Face: VIM realsied that outside of stealth mode, a "Face" would be adviseable for proper human interaction. So she created her "mask". Projected onto the chestplate it is often mistaken for a "famale head floating in liquid, but closer inspection (and corrections by VIM) usually reveal that those "tubes" seem to vanish into nothingness and do not seem to carry any form of nutrient solution or technological parts.

VIM's body has very limited offensive capability, due tho her original design goal. About the only abiltiy is advanced light projection from the chestplate, asuming it is not use as part of the disguise systems. While she can project a blinding flash from her chest (yes, she can literall flash her opponents - she is aware of the joke behind this), overall she relies on a skill rarely seen on robots: Martial Arts.

 

Catchphrases:

"My Eye is up here."

"I am more then meets the eye."

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Holy Avenger

 

The forces of evil are real--DEMON, The Crowns Of Krim, Takofanes--and they must be opposed, they must be destroyed.  That is the mission of Sister Beatrice, who has been trained by the Vatican from the age of twelve not only in the arts of combat, but to channel her faith to increase her strength and endurance.  Her weapons are designed by Harmon Industries with the advice and assistance of the Trismegistus Council; they may appear to be high-tech, but they possess spiritual power as well as physical power--just the thing for dealing with entities that cannot be affected by earthly weapons no matter how powerful.  In addition, Sister Beatrice possesses a tremendous strength of will--she once resisted an attempt by Menton to dominate her telepathically, and made him pay a dear price for the attack. 

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  • 2 weeks later...

Thank You, DT. Here's a picture I found online--let's see what everyone can do. . .

 

superhero-blank1-1030x800.jpg

She is a strange visitor from another planet, whose planet was destroyed by space pirates. The heroic refugee from the stars, she is Thunder Lady. She wants to settle down and just enjoy the planet she has adopted as her own. But no, every superhero comes out of the woodwork wanting to see her green card (whatever that is). So besides fighting crime, she must avoid the other people in law enforcement, or she will be sent away.

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Madame Might

 

Helen Clarkson was asked to portray the comic book character Madame Might for a photoshoot. And that is where fate takes a hand. Because one villain thought it would be funny to actually give her powers while another thought it would be good to kill her in front of witnesses, Fortunately the first one struck before the latter. And Helen was able to shrug off the bullets and take down the bad guys. Now she operates as Madame Might. See the powers have not worn off, and the first villain thought it would be authentic to gift Helen with Madame Might's mindset as well.

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superhero-blank1-1030x800.jpg

Malvina Fedorov was a Russian protocol officer for the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) but her political career ended when she was publicly revealed to be a mutant during the Josef Stalin clone army invasion. Under duress from her superiors in Moscow, she flies the Commonwealth's skies as Krasnaya Molniya or Red Lightning, bane to criminals and the United States and Great Britain as her disdain for their governments make it difficult for superheroes from those countries to ever get along with her.

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Thank You, DT.  Here's a picture I found online--let's see what everyone can do.  .  .

 

superhero-blank1-1030x800.jpg

 

Hero Girl...Strange Visitor from another planet...
 
Or was it “Born with inhuman powers, Hero Girl must fight to defend a world that hates and fears her....
 
Or maybe.. “After getting powers from a paper cut from a radioactive comic book, Hero Girl strives to live up to the words of her dead grandmother April: With great Powers comes great responsibility.”
 
She could never keep track off all these retcons! Well, the next universe reboot would clear things up. Probably... on the bright side, she really liked this new costume! Tres Golden Age!
 
Jenny Harper was a quiet introverted child, keeping to herself, often losing herself in her father's library of comic, both vintage and modern. He'd died shortly after Jenny was born and her mother, a distant woman, retreated even more in her grief. She was never deliberately abusive or cruel just closed off. Jenny never lacked for anything she needed but affection and assurance. She grew up quiet and alone, reading both comics and reams of adventure fiction. A more physical girl might have been a Tomboy, but the cerebral Jenny had her adventures in her imagination, putting herself among the four colors heroes she read about. She was allot like her father, a fact that drove a deeper wedge between the child and her mother. She reminded her too much of her dead husband. 
 
Sensing this but reading it as antipathy, Jenny retreated further, guilty for something but never knowing what. Eventually, she came to blame herself for her father's death. That must have been what made her mother so sad. She should have done something to stop it. A hero, like the ones she read about would have. But she wasn't a hero, just a girl. 
 
When Jenny was 13, her mother's depression finally became to much for her and she committed suicide. Jenny found her body,to late to be of any help. 
 
Again. 
 
Something broke inside her. Despair, self loathing, anger... Jenny's fragile psyche shattered but something was unlocked inside her as well, a great and potent power that burst outward, driven by her desire to fix things, to fix....everything. 
 
In that instant, the world was reshaped. To some extent. And Jenny was reborn. Now a 20 yr old intrepid reporter for metropolitan newspaper (that hadn't existed before) she had a secret identity as the blonde power house Hero Girl! 
 
But there was more, Jenny's unstable, instinctive power not only catered to her wish to be a hero, it drew on her fantasies of being in the comics she loved, bringing them to life. Jenny knows she's actually in a comic book and her world driven by the narrative rules of the medium along with the whims of writers and a sometimes fickle public.
 
Being in on the 'reality' of the situation gives Jenny certain advantages. Sometimes she can read the captions and thought bubbles and get insights that would be otherwise impossible, step between “panels” and transverse incredible distances instantly and other bizarre feats, even sweet talking (or arguing) with the writers and other beyond the 4th wall to various ends. 
 
As Hero Girl, her powers and appearance very widely, driven by the whims of the 'writers'. She manifests forms derived from stereotypes drawn from comics and the various ages and subgenres of superhero stories from brooding  Iron Age avengers to Silver Age boy (girl) scouts and her personality adjust to match but Jenny's perky optimistic core is always present. She likes the pictured version, a silver age heroine of  great physical power, the best but accepts retcons with grudging good will. They never last long anyway. Her past or 'origin' adjust accordingly as well but some things are constant. Her parents are both alive and well (sometimes happily married, sometimes troubled or even separated depending on the tone of this particular series), her father figure is constructed from idealized faint memories and fantasies of her father with her mother sometimes as a darker figure occasionally a sympathetic villain, one in need of help. 
 
Jenny's powers are such they occasionally create other figures to help drive her narratives but usually just subtly steer things in proper direction. Her reality sculpting powers don't often alter the larger world in overt ways, most of their effects are very subtle or focused on Jenny. She is completely unaware of them and truly believes she is a comic book character. Observant characters could notice the odd inconsistencies that spring up around her as reality is reshaped to cater to her delusion and deduce what's happening. For  example, if she is a 'brick' what she can do with her strength will be extreme even for comic book physics (crushing coal into diamonds, lifting entire intact buildings by one corner, and similar feats).
 
Investigative efforts could discover the odd holes in her background(s) and in the histories of people generated by her powers and other oddities (everyone has heard of the paper she works for but no one can remember beyond the last copy they read and any back issues only go back a year and all the stories are about superheroes mostly written by Jenny). Psychic or magically gifted beings might sense what is going on with Jenny and the extreme but largely unconscious and latent power within her. That could make the naive, troubled girl a target for malicious forces seeking to exploit, control or even steal her power.  After all, she is still an intelligent but young girl inside and a manipulative figure could easily take advantage of that. 
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Thank you so much!

 

Here is my image.

 

24200456398_c82947d3e3_o.jpg

Rachel Smith is the assassin called Blood Spike. A mutant, her mutation activated to protect her life from another assassin, and she went on a bloodthirsty revenge till she killed the man who employed the assassin. Then deciding that she was really good at killing, and knowing nothing else, she hired herself out.

 

She has one rule: no children as targets.

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