Jump to content

wcw43921

HERO Member
  • Posts

    5,421
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    25

Reputation Activity

  1. Like
    wcw43921 got a reaction from Pariah in STARBURST--4th Edition Update   
    I've always had a liking for the Starburst character. To me he was what I think many of us would be like if we had superpowers--he'd go out, fight crime and Be A Hero , but it also seemed like he was having fun with it, that he got a kick out of having superpowers. And while I believe we can all agree that having superpowers can be fun, it's using them to do the right thing that can make life really tough, if not downright painful--as I've tried to illustrate here.
     
    Anyway, I present this Character Update as a tribute to 4th Edition Champions, and to one of the iconic heroes of the Champions Universe I'd like to think that if Starburst had ever got an official update for the 4th Edition CU that it would look something like this. I've built him with the 4th Edition rules; if any of you are still using those rules or have campaigns set in the 4th Edition CU, feel free to use this update.
     
    Comments and constructive criticisms appreciated--and if anyone can tell me who created the original Starburst, I would deeply appreciate it so I can give proper credit. (I believe it was Bruce Harlick who created Crusader; did he also create Starburst?)
     
     
    STARBURST–4TH EDITION UPDATE
     
    NAME: Starburst
     
    Secret ID: Dr. Thomas Adams
     
    Originally Created By: ?
     
    Updated By: wcw43921
     
    STR 20 (10) Lift: 400kg HTH Damage: 4D6 Jump: 4 hexes
    DEX 27 (51) DEX Roll 14- OCV 9 DCV 9
    CON 30 (20)
    BDY 13 ( 6 )
    INT 13 ( 3 ) PER Roll 12-
    EGO 20 (20) EGO Roll 13- ECV 7
    PRE 25 (15) PRE Attack: 5D6
    COM 12 ( 1 )
    PD 25 (21) PD 25/rPD 25
    ED 25 (19) ED 25/rED 25
    SPD 6 (23) Phases: 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12
    REC 12 ( 2 )
    END 70 ( 5 )
    STN 40 ( 7 )
     
    Total=203
     
    Running 6" (12")
    Swimming 7" (14")
    Flight 30" (240")
     
    POWERS
     
    75 Multipower (Light/Heat Attacks) END
    7(u) 12D6 Energy Blast ½ END (+1/4) 3
    7(u) 10D6 Energy Explosion (+½) 7
    7(u) 3D6 Flash vs. Normal Sight 7
    Area Effect 6" Radius (+1 1/4)
    7(u) 3D6+1 Energy RKA Armor Piercing (+½) 7
     
    25 Damage Resistance (25 PD/25 ED)
    10 Power Defense (10 pts)
    10 Mental Defense (14 pts)
    5 Flash Defense for Sight Group (5 pts)
     
    87 30" Flight, x8 Non-Combat, ½ END (+1/4) 3
    5 +5" Swimming, 7" Total 1
     
    20 Regeneration, +3 BODY per Turn, Only In Direct Sunlight (-½)
    7 +10 REC, Only In Direct Sunlight (-½)
     
    13 N-Ray Vision, Not Through Ice Or Refrigeration, Only To Detect Heat Forms (-½)
    12 Telescopic Sense For Sight Group; +8 To Offset Range Penalties
    5 Infrared Vision
    5 Ultraviolet Vision
    7 High-Range Radio Hearing,
    OIF Costume Communicator (-½)
     
    Total=314
     
    SKILLS/PERKS
     
    20 +4 Levels With Multipower
    3 Breakfall 14-
    9 Computer Programming 15-
    3 Conversation 14-
    5 Deduction 13-
    3 KS: Superheroes & 12-
    Supervillains
    4 KS: Licensing & Publicity 13-
    3 Persuasion 14-
    3 PS: Scientific Writing & 14-
    Editing
    3 Scientist
    3 SC: Computer Science 14-
    3 SC: Mathematics 14-
    3 SC: Molecular Biology 14-
    4 SC: Nuclear-Based 15-
    Superpowers
    4 SC: Nuclear Physics 15-
    4 Contact: Crusader 13-
    2 Contact: Champions 11-
    2 Contact: Publicist 11-
     
    Total=81
     
    Overall Total=598
     
    DISADVANTAGES
     
    20 Vulnerability: 2x STUN From Surprise/From Behind Attacks
    20 Vulnerability: 2x BODY From Surprise/From Behind Attacks
     
    20 Physical Limit: Severe Chronic Back Pain
    (All The Time, Greatly Impairing)
     
    15 Psychol Limit: Scientific Curiosity (Common, Strong)
    15 Psychol Limit: Feels He Must Prove His Worth As A Hero (Common, Strong)
    10 Psychol Limit: Underconfident, Insecure (Common, Moderate)
     
    15 Reputation: Very Famous Superhero 14-
     
    15 Hunted: Pulsar (As Powerful, 11-)
     
    5 DNPC: Howard Springer, Current Publicist, 8-
    (Normal, Useful Non-Combat Skills)
     
    15 Secret ID: Thomas Adams
     
    Total Disadvantages=150
    Base Points=100
    Experience Spent=348
    Total=598
     
    Updated Background: The day that Thomas Adams became the superpowered Starburst was the greatest day of his life. Or the worst, depending upon what mood he’s in when you ask him.
     
    Starburst has had one of the longest careers of any active superhero; not even some of the Champions* have been around as long as he has, or have made as big a name for themselves. He’s made a fair number of friends in the superhero community–and more than his share of enemies. Pulsar*, of course, still considers Starburst his greatest foe, and more than occasionally turns up to torment and threaten him as part of his ongoing quest to become the most feared and famous master criminal on the planet. Starburst has always managed to thwart Pulsar–but villains aren’t the only ones with friends and allies. Starburst’s encounters with Pulsar have brought him into conflict with Power Crusher^ and the other members of the Crusher Gang.** He’s fought one or more of them on more than one occasion, and always prevailed–fortunately, he’s never had to face them all at once. Not yet, anyway.
     
    But Pulsar isn’t the only arch-enemy Starburst has acquired over the years. The supervillainous scientist Beamline^ put Starburst on his enemies list after a 1986 battle which ended up with him in Stronghold.^ Escaping in 1990, he attempted to form his own villain team, recruiting such science and tech-oriented villains as Avar-7,^ Ladybug,^ Thunderbolt^ and Vibron^ as the first members of the Society for Scientific Supremacy, an organization he hoped would realize his dreams of a scientific oligarchy. Once again, Starburst opposed and defeated them in their first crime, an attempt to steal some advanced weaponry from a PRIMUS*^ arsenal. Beamline managed to escape, but was eventually recaptured by Starburst.
     
    While Starburst has been a superhero for a long time, he has never been part of an established super-group. Some say that his love of publicity has kept him from sharing the spotlight with other heroes; others speculate that he’s just naturally a loner. Asked directly about it, Starburst usually claims to be extending offers to other heroes about forming his own team. Nothing ever comes of these claims, however.
     
    Perhaps his closest friend in the superhero community is the relentless costumed vigilante known as Crusader.* The two met for the first time when they both happened to be present at a bank robbery committed by the super-muscled brute Ogre.* Working together they stopped him dead in his tracks, but Crusader slipped away before Starburst could talk to him. Then Sunburst^ attacked and captured Starburst in an attempt to study him to learn the nature of the apparent similarity between their super-powers. It was Crusader who tracked Starburst down and rescued him--and so began the Crusader–Starburst Team, as they came to be called by the media. (They’ve also been called "The Dynamic Duet," "The Pair Of Aces," and "The Action Alliance,"--that last one was from Starburst’s publicist at the time.) Together they’ve thwarted Project Sunburst^ on at least two occasions, and the Conquerors^ and the Asesinos* on several others. Perhaps their greatest triumph was when they stopped the maniacal weapons genius Dr. Draconis** from using a massive laser cannon to destroy the moon. Starburst has also been of invaluable assistance to Crusader in his battle against VIPER,* and together they’ve done considerable damage to the organization. While they’ve never been seen hanging out together at Sanctuary or any other superhero gathering place, and Crusader has never been seen at any of Starburst’s public appearances for charity, they each know they can count upon the other whenever the need.
     
    Ironically, it was Sunburst’s kidnaping of him to study his powers that inspired Starburst to begin researching his own powers in greater detail. Through these researches he was able to develop and increase his control over the nuclear energies he wielded, becoming able to focus his energy blast so that it could punch through the strongest defense with laser-like precision, or diffuse it to generate an intense field of blinding light. He figured out how to internalize his own force field so that it required no effort to activate or maintain it, and to attune his eyesight so he could see into both the infrared and ultraviolet ends of the spectrum, as well as seeing thermal images through almost any intervening barrier. But his greatest accomplishment with regards to his powers was that not only did he eliminate the effects of cutting and darkness-based attacks on his altered physiology, he was able to attune his body so that he could regenerate and replenish himself from direct sunlight.
     
    Starburst’s research into his own powers naturally led him to study other superbeings with similar powers–which is how he became involved with Starlyn Johnson, better known to the world as the superheroine Quantum.* What began as an informal scientific collaboration led to a deep, passionate romance, which disintegrated one night when an argument over an alleged infidelity on Starburst’s part escalated into a super-battle that caused extensive property damage to downtown–even for a super-battle. The property owners sued Starburst and Quantum, and Starburst and Quantum sued each other for their share of the damage. Everyone managed to settle out of court, but Starburst still came out on the losing end. Eventually it was discovered that the "cheating" Starburst was actually a disguised Pulsar, who was collaborating with Foxbat^ in a scheme to discredit the hero–but the damage, in every sense of the word, had already been done.
     
    In spite of such incidents, Starburst is one of the most popular superheroes in history, largely due to his own efforts towards publicizing himself. His official comic book line comprises six monthly titles chronicling adventures fictitious and real, along with annuals, bi-annuals, special editions, and trade soft-cover and hardcover compilations. He has been the subject of four live-action television series, seven animated TV series, three major motion pictures, and nine direct-to-video features and documentaries. His action figure line is the top seller among both children and super-memorabilia collectors, and includes such items as All-American Starburst (blue tights instead of yellow, with a white Starburst emblem), Stealth Starburst (solid black tights, cape, mask, gloves and boots, with dark red trim and Starburst emblem) Space Armor Starburst (reinforced space suit with red arms and yellow torso with Starburst emblem) and Starburst 2220 (based on the animated series; solid yellow tights with white Starburst emblem over the left breast and radiating throughout the costume). His battle-damaged costumes routinely fetch thousands of dollars at super-memorabilia auctions, and his autograph signing appearances draw crowds that wait for hours in lines that extend for several city blocks. And of course, he donates a substantial portion of his licensing and appearance fees to charity.
     
    Although Starburst has had tremendous success popularizing himself, he’s never had the best luck keeping a publicist on hand. Most of the ones he’s hired usually leave his employ as quickly as possible after getting caught in the middle of their first super-battle. One who didn’t was Serena Norman, a beautiful, ambitious and assertive forty-something woman whose business association with Starburst evolved into a wildly passionate affair that ended when he proposed marriage. Claiming she wasn’t the "marrying kind," she broke things off both personally and professionally. Then there was the time that Fabian Bartleheimer** offered his services–that went well until Starburst learned Bartleheimer was also the publicist for the super-terrorist team Deathstroke.** (To this day no one is sure whether Bartleheimer was setting up Starburst for Deathstroke or attempting to expand his client base.) Starburst’s current publicist is Howard Springer, an ambitious young man who doesn’t seem to mind getting caught in the middle of a super-battle–some would say he enjoys it a little too much, which is why he needs Starburst’s help every now and again.
     
    With tremendous popularity comes tremendous controversy, and Starburst is no exception to this rule. There are many who revile him for being so popular, believing that anyone so thoroughly well-known and idolized must be completely worthless, and proclaim loudly to anyone who will listen that life and the common good would be best served if Starburst would just go away or be blasted into oblivion. Preferably both. Politicians, editorial columnists, and TV news pundits alike use Starburst as a metaphor for everything wrong about superheroics, saying that his propensity for claiming the lion’s share of the spotlight draws away attention from those more deserving of such praise–police, firefighters, paramedics, even lesser-known superheroes. And then there are those who spread the ugly rumors that Starburst is a total fraud, a poser, that without Crusader or some other hero covering his back he would have killed long ago. The worst of those rumors was that he actually paid villains to commit crimes, then take the fall when he shows up to "fight" them. Despite Starburst’s vehement denials, the rumors persisted–those who spread them believe that if he’s denying them, they must be true.
     
    That, of course, was before Gotterdammerung.
     
    June 6, 1994. Starburst was attending a celebration commemorating the 50th anniversary of the D-Day invasion at Illinois Beach State Park, north of Chicago. As historical re-enactors in period costume and driving landing craft of the era "stormed" the beaches of Lake Michigan, the "invasion force" suddenly came under live artillery fire. Spectators reacted in horror as they turned to behold a thirty-foot tall heavily armed robot resembling the infamous Dreadnought^ power armor suit coming slowly towards them.
     
    "DEATH!" screeched the robot in a metallic voice. "Death to the decadent and despicable dogs of democracy! Your Gotterdammerung is at hand! With your obliteration the old orders shall be swept away to the dustbin where they belong, and the New Reich shall rise to take its rightful place as master of the world! The weak will be erased, and the unworthy shall be cleansed from the Earth, leaving only the pure and the strong! SIEG HEIL!"
     
    Starburst stood there, still as a statue, listening to the monstrous robot’s speech. There were no other heroes, no one else to help him–and he was certain that if he faced it alone, he would die. And if he fled for his life, like the crowd around him, it would be the end of Starburst–his superheroic identity would be ruined forever, and any good he had ever done or could have done with his powers would have been washed away by the memory of his cowardice. His detractors would be proven right–he would be nothing but a fraud.
     
    And then, as the robot approached, he heard, as though for the first time, the screams of the helpless crowd. And he realized–it wasn’t about him. It was about them. They were the ones in the greatest danger. They couldn’t flee as easily as he could. And they had no way to fight this monster.
     
    They needed help.
     
    They needed a hero.
     
    They needed Starburst.
     
    For a moment he wished Crusader was with him–if for no other reason than to say good-bye. Then he took off at full velocity, charging towards Gotterdammerung. He had the idea to take out its legs, figuring anything that massive couldn’t crawl as easily as it walked. But as he closed to striking range the robot fired a Panzerfaust-style rocket at him, forcing him to dodge. Changing plans, Starburst concentrated on disabling its weapons–the shoulder-mounted cannon, the large machine gun mounted at its waist, the Panzerfaust launchers and flamethrowers mounted in its forearms. Having succeeded in disarming the robot, Starburst tried to get in closer–but it struck out with one hand and grabbed him around the waist. As he felt his legs breaking in the robot’s monstrous grip, he focused an energy blast at the exposed shoulder joint, severing the arm entirely. The arm crashed to the ground with Starburst still in its grip–and that’s when he felt something else break. Forcing himself to remain conscious as the pain overwhelmed him, Starburst saw Gotterdammerung attempting to escape by the massive rockets fixed to its back. With one last energy blast he disabled one of its rocket engines, and it careened out of control into Lake Michigan, where it exploded.
     
    Then–and only then–did Starburst pass out.
     
    He didn’t wake up until several days later. While he was still alive, the doctors told him in addition to his broken legs, his pelvis was fractured in three places and there was considerable damage to his spinal cord. Every doctor he spoke to–including Quantum–said he’d never walk again. He then set out to prove them wrong. Every day he forced his way past the pain, trying to make his legs work the way they used to. Hydrotherapy was included in his rehabilitation, and he became a really good swimmer. Seven months after his battle with Gotterdammerung, he was walking upright; four months after that he was walking without assistance.
     
    It was not, however, a complete recovery. Despite the surgeries to reconstruct his skeleton, despite his own persistent efforts at rehabilitation, Starburst was left with severe pain in his lower back. Even with all the advanced medical science available, every doctor he spoke to–including Quantum–said it was likely he’d have the pain for the rest of his life. And this time, it looked like they were right.
     
    Starburst took the advice of one of his motivational speeches–"A hero’s greatest competition isn’t against the villains, and it isn’t against other heroes. A hero’s greatest competition is against himself. Every day a hero has to do better, work better, be better than the day before. Every day a hero strives to make things better than the day before--for himself, for his friends and family, for the world around him. If you believe in your own power to make things better–for yourself, for your friends and family, for the world around you–if you make the decision to do better, work better, be better than the day before–then you can be a hero, too."
     
    And that is what Starburst does, each and every day, battling the pain just as strongly and tenaciously as he battles villains, super and otherwise. He has built up his mental strength as well as his physical strength, for even to stand up straight, let alone walk normally, is an excruciating ordeal requiring a supreme act of will to endure. And while he can withstand the shock of an attack as long as he’s aware of it, it’s the attacks he doesn’t see coming that send him into paroxysms of agony. He’s become known for taking a tougher, no-nonsense attitude towards his opponents, preferring to blast first without announcing himself the way he did in the past. But while he may seem more forceful and confident outwardly, inwardly he’s plagued by the same collection of self-doubts as he’s always been throughout his superhero career. Each time he goes into battle is like going up against Gotterdammerung again–he’s certain he could die, and he’s got the back pain to remind him just how close he came to dying. But at the same time he believes he cannot back down from a fight–ever. If he ever did, it would confirm the worst suspicions of his detractors and the rumor-mongers–that he is a coward and a fraud.
     
    The same suspicions that have lingered in the back of his mind since he became Starburst.
     
    Of course, since his battle with Gotterdammerung, the rumors and criticism have dwindled down to nearly nothing, with only a few professional "hero-bashers" sowing any fresh detraction. The credit he received for single-handedly defeating a thirty-foot tall robot at nearly the cost of his own life has gone a long way, earning him a new-found respect in the eyes of the superhero community. He’s even reconciled with Quantum, although there’s little chance of renewing their relationship. Even his life as Thomas Adams has gotten better, having found himself a place in the scientific community as a science writer. He’s the current editor of The North-Eastern Journal Of Theoretical And Applied Nuclear Research, and a regular freelance contributor to Science International, one of the more popular mainstream science magazines. But for all the observers inside and outside of superheroism who applaud Starburst for taking superheroics more seriously, there are those who miss the days of the seemingly carefree Starburst, who was always ready with a smile for the cameras and a smart quip for the press, who represented the possibility that fighting crime, saving lives and stopping evil was not only the right thing to do–it was also fun.
     
    There are times when Starburst misses those days, too.
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
    Footnotes:
    *Champions 4th Edition (Big Blue Book)
    ^Classic Enemies
    **Champions Universe 4th Edition
    ^*Classic Organizations
     
    (P.S. I'll post stats for Gotterdammerung at my first opportunity.)
  2. Like
    wcw43921 got a reaction from Sketchpad in STARBURST--4th Edition Update   
    I've always had a liking for the Starburst character. To me he was what I think many of us would be like if we had superpowers--he'd go out, fight crime and Be A Hero , but it also seemed like he was having fun with it, that he got a kick out of having superpowers. And while I believe we can all agree that having superpowers can be fun, it's using them to do the right thing that can make life really tough, if not downright painful--as I've tried to illustrate here.
     
    Anyway, I present this Character Update as a tribute to 4th Edition Champions, and to one of the iconic heroes of the Champions Universe I'd like to think that if Starburst had ever got an official update for the 4th Edition CU that it would look something like this. I've built him with the 4th Edition rules; if any of you are still using those rules or have campaigns set in the 4th Edition CU, feel free to use this update.
     
    Comments and constructive criticisms appreciated--and if anyone can tell me who created the original Starburst, I would deeply appreciate it so I can give proper credit. (I believe it was Bruce Harlick who created Crusader; did he also create Starburst?)
     
     
    STARBURST–4TH EDITION UPDATE
     
    NAME: Starburst
     
    Secret ID: Dr. Thomas Adams
     
    Originally Created By: ?
     
    Updated By: wcw43921
     
    STR 20 (10) Lift: 400kg HTH Damage: 4D6 Jump: 4 hexes
    DEX 27 (51) DEX Roll 14- OCV 9 DCV 9
    CON 30 (20)
    BDY 13 ( 6 )
    INT 13 ( 3 ) PER Roll 12-
    EGO 20 (20) EGO Roll 13- ECV 7
    PRE 25 (15) PRE Attack: 5D6
    COM 12 ( 1 )
    PD 25 (21) PD 25/rPD 25
    ED 25 (19) ED 25/rED 25
    SPD 6 (23) Phases: 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12
    REC 12 ( 2 )
    END 70 ( 5 )
    STN 40 ( 7 )
     
    Total=203
     
    Running 6" (12")
    Swimming 7" (14")
    Flight 30" (240")
     
    POWERS
     
    75 Multipower (Light/Heat Attacks) END
    7(u) 12D6 Energy Blast ½ END (+1/4) 3
    7(u) 10D6 Energy Explosion (+½) 7
    7(u) 3D6 Flash vs. Normal Sight 7
    Area Effect 6" Radius (+1 1/4)
    7(u) 3D6+1 Energy RKA Armor Piercing (+½) 7
     
    25 Damage Resistance (25 PD/25 ED)
    10 Power Defense (10 pts)
    10 Mental Defense (14 pts)
    5 Flash Defense for Sight Group (5 pts)
     
    87 30" Flight, x8 Non-Combat, ½ END (+1/4) 3
    5 +5" Swimming, 7" Total 1
     
    20 Regeneration, +3 BODY per Turn, Only In Direct Sunlight (-½)
    7 +10 REC, Only In Direct Sunlight (-½)
     
    13 N-Ray Vision, Not Through Ice Or Refrigeration, Only To Detect Heat Forms (-½)
    12 Telescopic Sense For Sight Group; +8 To Offset Range Penalties
    5 Infrared Vision
    5 Ultraviolet Vision
    7 High-Range Radio Hearing,
    OIF Costume Communicator (-½)
     
    Total=314
     
    SKILLS/PERKS
     
    20 +4 Levels With Multipower
    3 Breakfall 14-
    9 Computer Programming 15-
    3 Conversation 14-
    5 Deduction 13-
    3 KS: Superheroes & 12-
    Supervillains
    4 KS: Licensing & Publicity 13-
    3 Persuasion 14-
    3 PS: Scientific Writing & 14-
    Editing
    3 Scientist
    3 SC: Computer Science 14-
    3 SC: Mathematics 14-
    3 SC: Molecular Biology 14-
    4 SC: Nuclear-Based 15-
    Superpowers
    4 SC: Nuclear Physics 15-
    4 Contact: Crusader 13-
    2 Contact: Champions 11-
    2 Contact: Publicist 11-
     
    Total=81
     
    Overall Total=598
     
    DISADVANTAGES
     
    20 Vulnerability: 2x STUN From Surprise/From Behind Attacks
    20 Vulnerability: 2x BODY From Surprise/From Behind Attacks
     
    20 Physical Limit: Severe Chronic Back Pain
    (All The Time, Greatly Impairing)
     
    15 Psychol Limit: Scientific Curiosity (Common, Strong)
    15 Psychol Limit: Feels He Must Prove His Worth As A Hero (Common, Strong)
    10 Psychol Limit: Underconfident, Insecure (Common, Moderate)
     
    15 Reputation: Very Famous Superhero 14-
     
    15 Hunted: Pulsar (As Powerful, 11-)
     
    5 DNPC: Howard Springer, Current Publicist, 8-
    (Normal, Useful Non-Combat Skills)
     
    15 Secret ID: Thomas Adams
     
    Total Disadvantages=150
    Base Points=100
    Experience Spent=348
    Total=598
     
    Updated Background: The day that Thomas Adams became the superpowered Starburst was the greatest day of his life. Or the worst, depending upon what mood he’s in when you ask him.
     
    Starburst has had one of the longest careers of any active superhero; not even some of the Champions* have been around as long as he has, or have made as big a name for themselves. He’s made a fair number of friends in the superhero community–and more than his share of enemies. Pulsar*, of course, still considers Starburst his greatest foe, and more than occasionally turns up to torment and threaten him as part of his ongoing quest to become the most feared and famous master criminal on the planet. Starburst has always managed to thwart Pulsar–but villains aren’t the only ones with friends and allies. Starburst’s encounters with Pulsar have brought him into conflict with Power Crusher^ and the other members of the Crusher Gang.** He’s fought one or more of them on more than one occasion, and always prevailed–fortunately, he’s never had to face them all at once. Not yet, anyway.
     
    But Pulsar isn’t the only arch-enemy Starburst has acquired over the years. The supervillainous scientist Beamline^ put Starburst on his enemies list after a 1986 battle which ended up with him in Stronghold.^ Escaping in 1990, he attempted to form his own villain team, recruiting such science and tech-oriented villains as Avar-7,^ Ladybug,^ Thunderbolt^ and Vibron^ as the first members of the Society for Scientific Supremacy, an organization he hoped would realize his dreams of a scientific oligarchy. Once again, Starburst opposed and defeated them in their first crime, an attempt to steal some advanced weaponry from a PRIMUS*^ arsenal. Beamline managed to escape, but was eventually recaptured by Starburst.
     
    While Starburst has been a superhero for a long time, he has never been part of an established super-group. Some say that his love of publicity has kept him from sharing the spotlight with other heroes; others speculate that he’s just naturally a loner. Asked directly about it, Starburst usually claims to be extending offers to other heroes about forming his own team. Nothing ever comes of these claims, however.
     
    Perhaps his closest friend in the superhero community is the relentless costumed vigilante known as Crusader.* The two met for the first time when they both happened to be present at a bank robbery committed by the super-muscled brute Ogre.* Working together they stopped him dead in his tracks, but Crusader slipped away before Starburst could talk to him. Then Sunburst^ attacked and captured Starburst in an attempt to study him to learn the nature of the apparent similarity between their super-powers. It was Crusader who tracked Starburst down and rescued him--and so began the Crusader–Starburst Team, as they came to be called by the media. (They’ve also been called "The Dynamic Duet," "The Pair Of Aces," and "The Action Alliance,"--that last one was from Starburst’s publicist at the time.) Together they’ve thwarted Project Sunburst^ on at least two occasions, and the Conquerors^ and the Asesinos* on several others. Perhaps their greatest triumph was when they stopped the maniacal weapons genius Dr. Draconis** from using a massive laser cannon to destroy the moon. Starburst has also been of invaluable assistance to Crusader in his battle against VIPER,* and together they’ve done considerable damage to the organization. While they’ve never been seen hanging out together at Sanctuary or any other superhero gathering place, and Crusader has never been seen at any of Starburst’s public appearances for charity, they each know they can count upon the other whenever the need.
     
    Ironically, it was Sunburst’s kidnaping of him to study his powers that inspired Starburst to begin researching his own powers in greater detail. Through these researches he was able to develop and increase his control over the nuclear energies he wielded, becoming able to focus his energy blast so that it could punch through the strongest defense with laser-like precision, or diffuse it to generate an intense field of blinding light. He figured out how to internalize his own force field so that it required no effort to activate or maintain it, and to attune his eyesight so he could see into both the infrared and ultraviolet ends of the spectrum, as well as seeing thermal images through almost any intervening barrier. But his greatest accomplishment with regards to his powers was that not only did he eliminate the effects of cutting and darkness-based attacks on his altered physiology, he was able to attune his body so that he could regenerate and replenish himself from direct sunlight.
     
    Starburst’s research into his own powers naturally led him to study other superbeings with similar powers–which is how he became involved with Starlyn Johnson, better known to the world as the superheroine Quantum.* What began as an informal scientific collaboration led to a deep, passionate romance, which disintegrated one night when an argument over an alleged infidelity on Starburst’s part escalated into a super-battle that caused extensive property damage to downtown–even for a super-battle. The property owners sued Starburst and Quantum, and Starburst and Quantum sued each other for their share of the damage. Everyone managed to settle out of court, but Starburst still came out on the losing end. Eventually it was discovered that the "cheating" Starburst was actually a disguised Pulsar, who was collaborating with Foxbat^ in a scheme to discredit the hero–but the damage, in every sense of the word, had already been done.
     
    In spite of such incidents, Starburst is one of the most popular superheroes in history, largely due to his own efforts towards publicizing himself. His official comic book line comprises six monthly titles chronicling adventures fictitious and real, along with annuals, bi-annuals, special editions, and trade soft-cover and hardcover compilations. He has been the subject of four live-action television series, seven animated TV series, three major motion pictures, and nine direct-to-video features and documentaries. His action figure line is the top seller among both children and super-memorabilia collectors, and includes such items as All-American Starburst (blue tights instead of yellow, with a white Starburst emblem), Stealth Starburst (solid black tights, cape, mask, gloves and boots, with dark red trim and Starburst emblem) Space Armor Starburst (reinforced space suit with red arms and yellow torso with Starburst emblem) and Starburst 2220 (based on the animated series; solid yellow tights with white Starburst emblem over the left breast and radiating throughout the costume). His battle-damaged costumes routinely fetch thousands of dollars at super-memorabilia auctions, and his autograph signing appearances draw crowds that wait for hours in lines that extend for several city blocks. And of course, he donates a substantial portion of his licensing and appearance fees to charity.
     
    Although Starburst has had tremendous success popularizing himself, he’s never had the best luck keeping a publicist on hand. Most of the ones he’s hired usually leave his employ as quickly as possible after getting caught in the middle of their first super-battle. One who didn’t was Serena Norman, a beautiful, ambitious and assertive forty-something woman whose business association with Starburst evolved into a wildly passionate affair that ended when he proposed marriage. Claiming she wasn’t the "marrying kind," she broke things off both personally and professionally. Then there was the time that Fabian Bartleheimer** offered his services–that went well until Starburst learned Bartleheimer was also the publicist for the super-terrorist team Deathstroke.** (To this day no one is sure whether Bartleheimer was setting up Starburst for Deathstroke or attempting to expand his client base.) Starburst’s current publicist is Howard Springer, an ambitious young man who doesn’t seem to mind getting caught in the middle of a super-battle–some would say he enjoys it a little too much, which is why he needs Starburst’s help every now and again.
     
    With tremendous popularity comes tremendous controversy, and Starburst is no exception to this rule. There are many who revile him for being so popular, believing that anyone so thoroughly well-known and idolized must be completely worthless, and proclaim loudly to anyone who will listen that life and the common good would be best served if Starburst would just go away or be blasted into oblivion. Preferably both. Politicians, editorial columnists, and TV news pundits alike use Starburst as a metaphor for everything wrong about superheroics, saying that his propensity for claiming the lion’s share of the spotlight draws away attention from those more deserving of such praise–police, firefighters, paramedics, even lesser-known superheroes. And then there are those who spread the ugly rumors that Starburst is a total fraud, a poser, that without Crusader or some other hero covering his back he would have killed long ago. The worst of those rumors was that he actually paid villains to commit crimes, then take the fall when he shows up to "fight" them. Despite Starburst’s vehement denials, the rumors persisted–those who spread them believe that if he’s denying them, they must be true.
     
    That, of course, was before Gotterdammerung.
     
    June 6, 1994. Starburst was attending a celebration commemorating the 50th anniversary of the D-Day invasion at Illinois Beach State Park, north of Chicago. As historical re-enactors in period costume and driving landing craft of the era "stormed" the beaches of Lake Michigan, the "invasion force" suddenly came under live artillery fire. Spectators reacted in horror as they turned to behold a thirty-foot tall heavily armed robot resembling the infamous Dreadnought^ power armor suit coming slowly towards them.
     
    "DEATH!" screeched the robot in a metallic voice. "Death to the decadent and despicable dogs of democracy! Your Gotterdammerung is at hand! With your obliteration the old orders shall be swept away to the dustbin where they belong, and the New Reich shall rise to take its rightful place as master of the world! The weak will be erased, and the unworthy shall be cleansed from the Earth, leaving only the pure and the strong! SIEG HEIL!"
     
    Starburst stood there, still as a statue, listening to the monstrous robot’s speech. There were no other heroes, no one else to help him–and he was certain that if he faced it alone, he would die. And if he fled for his life, like the crowd around him, it would be the end of Starburst–his superheroic identity would be ruined forever, and any good he had ever done or could have done with his powers would have been washed away by the memory of his cowardice. His detractors would be proven right–he would be nothing but a fraud.
     
    And then, as the robot approached, he heard, as though for the first time, the screams of the helpless crowd. And he realized–it wasn’t about him. It was about them. They were the ones in the greatest danger. They couldn’t flee as easily as he could. And they had no way to fight this monster.
     
    They needed help.
     
    They needed a hero.
     
    They needed Starburst.
     
    For a moment he wished Crusader was with him–if for no other reason than to say good-bye. Then he took off at full velocity, charging towards Gotterdammerung. He had the idea to take out its legs, figuring anything that massive couldn’t crawl as easily as it walked. But as he closed to striking range the robot fired a Panzerfaust-style rocket at him, forcing him to dodge. Changing plans, Starburst concentrated on disabling its weapons–the shoulder-mounted cannon, the large machine gun mounted at its waist, the Panzerfaust launchers and flamethrowers mounted in its forearms. Having succeeded in disarming the robot, Starburst tried to get in closer–but it struck out with one hand and grabbed him around the waist. As he felt his legs breaking in the robot’s monstrous grip, he focused an energy blast at the exposed shoulder joint, severing the arm entirely. The arm crashed to the ground with Starburst still in its grip–and that’s when he felt something else break. Forcing himself to remain conscious as the pain overwhelmed him, Starburst saw Gotterdammerung attempting to escape by the massive rockets fixed to its back. With one last energy blast he disabled one of its rocket engines, and it careened out of control into Lake Michigan, where it exploded.
     
    Then–and only then–did Starburst pass out.
     
    He didn’t wake up until several days later. While he was still alive, the doctors told him in addition to his broken legs, his pelvis was fractured in three places and there was considerable damage to his spinal cord. Every doctor he spoke to–including Quantum–said he’d never walk again. He then set out to prove them wrong. Every day he forced his way past the pain, trying to make his legs work the way they used to. Hydrotherapy was included in his rehabilitation, and he became a really good swimmer. Seven months after his battle with Gotterdammerung, he was walking upright; four months after that he was walking without assistance.
     
    It was not, however, a complete recovery. Despite the surgeries to reconstruct his skeleton, despite his own persistent efforts at rehabilitation, Starburst was left with severe pain in his lower back. Even with all the advanced medical science available, every doctor he spoke to–including Quantum–said it was likely he’d have the pain for the rest of his life. And this time, it looked like they were right.
     
    Starburst took the advice of one of his motivational speeches–"A hero’s greatest competition isn’t against the villains, and it isn’t against other heroes. A hero’s greatest competition is against himself. Every day a hero has to do better, work better, be better than the day before. Every day a hero strives to make things better than the day before--for himself, for his friends and family, for the world around him. If you believe in your own power to make things better–for yourself, for your friends and family, for the world around you–if you make the decision to do better, work better, be better than the day before–then you can be a hero, too."
     
    And that is what Starburst does, each and every day, battling the pain just as strongly and tenaciously as he battles villains, super and otherwise. He has built up his mental strength as well as his physical strength, for even to stand up straight, let alone walk normally, is an excruciating ordeal requiring a supreme act of will to endure. And while he can withstand the shock of an attack as long as he’s aware of it, it’s the attacks he doesn’t see coming that send him into paroxysms of agony. He’s become known for taking a tougher, no-nonsense attitude towards his opponents, preferring to blast first without announcing himself the way he did in the past. But while he may seem more forceful and confident outwardly, inwardly he’s plagued by the same collection of self-doubts as he’s always been throughout his superhero career. Each time he goes into battle is like going up against Gotterdammerung again–he’s certain he could die, and he’s got the back pain to remind him just how close he came to dying. But at the same time he believes he cannot back down from a fight–ever. If he ever did, it would confirm the worst suspicions of his detractors and the rumor-mongers–that he is a coward and a fraud.
     
    The same suspicions that have lingered in the back of his mind since he became Starburst.
     
    Of course, since his battle with Gotterdammerung, the rumors and criticism have dwindled down to nearly nothing, with only a few professional "hero-bashers" sowing any fresh detraction. The credit he received for single-handedly defeating a thirty-foot tall robot at nearly the cost of his own life has gone a long way, earning him a new-found respect in the eyes of the superhero community. He’s even reconciled with Quantum, although there’s little chance of renewing their relationship. Even his life as Thomas Adams has gotten better, having found himself a place in the scientific community as a science writer. He’s the current editor of The North-Eastern Journal Of Theoretical And Applied Nuclear Research, and a regular freelance contributor to Science International, one of the more popular mainstream science magazines. But for all the observers inside and outside of superheroism who applaud Starburst for taking superheroics more seriously, there are those who miss the days of the seemingly carefree Starburst, who was always ready with a smile for the cameras and a smart quip for the press, who represented the possibility that fighting crime, saving lives and stopping evil was not only the right thing to do–it was also fun.
     
    There are times when Starburst misses those days, too.
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
    Footnotes:
    *Champions 4th Edition (Big Blue Book)
    ^Classic Enemies
    **Champions Universe 4th Edition
    ^*Classic Organizations
     
    (P.S. I'll post stats for Gotterdammerung at my first opportunity.)
  3. Like
  4. Like
    wcw43921 reacted to Logan D. Hurricanes in Funny Pics II: The Revenge   
  5. Like
    wcw43921 reacted to Cygnia in Funny Pics II: The Revenge   
  6. Like
    wcw43921 reacted to Christopher R Taylor in Effects of the modern world on comic book worlds.   
    Yeah that was in the original Strike Force, I thought that was a clever device, but I've never thought it was necessary.    Its comics.  If Franklin Richards can be a toddler for 25 years, then the world can be more or less static without needing to explain why Reed's inventions never changed the world.  Comic books are about the illusion of change: IN THIS ISSUE, NOTHING WILL EVER BE THE SAME!
  7. Like
    wcw43921 reacted to Cygnia in A Little Good News   
    26-Year-Old Nigerian Athlete Wins Taekwondo Gold Medal While 8 Months Pregnant
  8. Haha
  9. Like
    wcw43921 reacted to Logan D. Hurricanes in Funny Pics II: The Revenge   
  10. Like
    wcw43921 reacted to Cygnia in And now, for your daily dose of cute...   
  11. Like
    wcw43921 got a reaction from tkdguy in Futuristic Sports & Entertainment   
    I came up with  my own idea for a flying surfboard when I was little.  It would have had wings, an upside-down outboard motor with a big propeller, landing gear, and a control wheel.
     
    I was so certain it would work.  .  .
  12. Like
    wcw43921 reacted to Cancer in Funny Pics II: The Revenge   
    "On a scale from 1 to 10, I'll take the Fifth.  Make mine Irish."
  13. Like
    wcw43921 reacted to unclevlad in Political Discussion Thread (With Rules)   
    Not lost the will.  Multiple factors in play:
     
    --any change is in a zero-sum game...so if you win, I lose.
    --"If you're not first, you're last."  Ricky Bobby.  Or I suspect, the inspiration:  Dale Earnhardt and "Second place is first loser."  How about "Winning isn't everything, it's the only thing."  That's Vince Lombardi...still THE Coaching God, with all due respect to Belichick or even Wooden.
     
    NOT a good combination.  It devolves to "I'm for any change that helps me!"  But it's impossible to have a meaningful change that doesn't have some downsides.  So, real change is extremely difficult to manifest until it's clear that without that change, EVERYONE loses.  Even then, there will be objectors...c.f. the current pandemic...where some view a greater opportunity by denying the situation.  It's particularly ugly in that Fox has proven just how successful that approach can be.
  14. Like
    wcw43921 got a reaction from Jhamin in The Upcoming Marvel Game Is Cutesy   
    And there was the Marvel FASERIP's device of referring to task resolution as a FEAT--a Function of Extraordinary Ability and Talent.
     
    I thought it was kind of clever, myself.  'Nuff Said.
  15. Like
    wcw43921 got a reaction from drunkonduty in The Upcoming Marvel Game Is Cutesy   
    And there was the Marvel FASERIP's device of referring to task resolution as a FEAT--a Function of Extraordinary Ability and Talent.
     
    I thought it was kind of clever, myself.  'Nuff Said.
  16. Haha
    wcw43921 reacted to Logan D. Hurricanes in Funny Pics II: The Revenge   
  17. Like
    wcw43921 reacted to Cygnia in Funny Pics II: The Revenge   
    Skors are one of my favorite candy bars.  Love 'em chilled in the freezer!
     

  18. Like
    wcw43921 got a reaction from Certified in The Upcoming Marvel Game Is Cutesy   
    And there was the Marvel FASERIP's device of referring to task resolution as a FEAT--a Function of Extraordinary Ability and Talent.
     
    I thought it was kind of clever, myself.  'Nuff Said.
  19. Thanks
    wcw43921 reacted to Michael Hopcroft in What Have You Watched Recently?   
    I've seen part of the controversial (and, by many, despised) 1984 film of Dune.  When you give a filmmaker like David Lynch an unlimited amount of money, this is what you get -- a beautifully shot, decently-acted bit of Grand Guignol weirdness.
     
    Everything in the film is grandiose and much, much larger than life. Every set is massive, every costume is ornate, all the action bigger than life. Even the Gom Jabbar scene  is big.
     
    Does it work? Sort of. The novel itself is very problematic, and it's unsure just what Frank Herbert was either lauding or condemning. Paul Atriedies is an ambiguous figure, at least morally, and I don't know why such an entitled young man deserves to be a Messiah. The Spice itself is a major logic hole -- there appears to be nothing it can't do, and the battle over it reminds me of a drug war.
     
    But grandiose though it is, it's lovely to look at.  Kyle MacLachlan is not at all a bad actor, although he is asked to play Paul as a nearly perfect man. I haven't read Dune in a while, so  I don't know how he decided to write  the character. Sting does not at all look, sound, or act like Sting. You just don't expect to see one the artists most dedicated to peace and compassion playing a homicidal maniac whose grasp on reality is tenuous at best. (He has since said that this shoot was one of the many things that turned him off to acting.)
     
    I'm kind of surprised this is being remade for a second time, because I'm still not sure the source material demans it. Realism does not match this novel. It demands the sort of operative treatment Lunch brought it.
     
     
     
     
  20. Haha
    wcw43921 reacted to Cygnia in Funny Pics II: The Revenge   
  21. Thanks
    wcw43921 got a reaction from Grailknight in Funny Pics II: The Revenge   
  22. Like
    wcw43921 got a reaction from pinecone in Funny Pics II: The Revenge   
  23. Like
    wcw43921 reacted to Simon in Political Discussion Thread (With Rules)   
    Champ was over 13 years old - that’s a long life for a GSD. It’s rare that there’s an autopsy when a dog that old passes, unless there was some cause for concern or other mystery to the passing beyond simply being time.
     
    Run free, Champ.
  24. Like
    wcw43921 reacted to Cygnia in Funny Pics II: The Revenge   
  25. Haha
    wcw43921 reacted to Logan D. Hurricanes in Funny Pics II: The Revenge   
×
×
  • Create New...