Your Greatest Superheroes Poll Results 30-21
  30  Zenith  
 Publisher:  IPC/Rebellion 
 First appearance:  2000AD #535, 1987 
 Created by:  Grant Morrison, Brendan McCarthy 
 Grant Morrison’s reluctant superhero was the shallow, spoilt, brattish son of two ’60s superheroes. He would rather have used his powers to further his career ambitions as a celebrity than fight villains. Morrison’s witty strip was less of a superhero parody, and more of a satire on Generation X and Thatcher’s Britain.
  29  Doctor Strange  
 Publisher:  Marvel 
 First appearance:  Strange Tales #110 
 Created by:  Stan Lee, Steve Ditko 
 Sorcerer Supreme Steven Strange was master of the mystic arts, and sometimes leaders of Marvel "non" team of misfits, The Defenders. Possessor of the best collar in superherodom, hands down. Artists loved him as they could go all freaky and psychedelic.
  28  Sandman  
 Publisher:  Vertigo 
 First appearance:  Sandman #1, 1989 
 Created by:  Neil Gaiman 
 Lord Of Dreams, Morpheus, is the quintessential goth – pale, skinny, wild-haired and black attired with a permanently passive expression. But the stories appealed to more than just the kohl-crowd, as Gaiman wove wonderfully dark adult fairy tales around his ethereal hero.
  27  The Tick  
 Publisher:  New England Comics 
 First appearance:  New England Comics Newsletter #14, 1986 
 Created by:  Ben Edlund 
 Possibly the thickest superhero ever, the big blue bug had his heart in the right place, even if his battle cry of, “Spoons!” hardly instilled fear in the enemy. Probably better known from his cartoon and live action TV series outing, The Tick started life in a wonderfully daft comedy strip from future Angel and Supernatural scriptwriter Ben Edlund.
  26  John Constantine  
 Publisher:  Vertigo 
 First appearance:  Saga Of The Swamp Thing #37 
 Created by:  Alan Moore 
 Foul mouth, cynical, blond British demon hunter with magical powers who's dying of cancer. Introduced in Swamp Thing he then chain-smoked his way through his starring role in the Hellblazer series.
  25  The Thing  
 Publisher:  Marvel 
 First appearance:  Fantastic Four #1, 1961 
 Created by:  Stan Lee, Jack Kirby 
 New Yoiker Benjamin Jacob Grimm was the pilot of the spaceship that was bombarded with cosmic rays, turning its crew into the Fantastic Four. He drew the short straw, being transformed into a superstrong roc monster. Grumpy and long suffering, his battle cry of, “It's clobberin’ time!” heralded many a major mash up.
  24  The Vision  
 Publisher:  Marvel 
 First appearance:  The Avengers #57, 1968 
 Created by:  Roy Thomas, John Buscema 
 There was a Golden Age superhero called the Vision, who was an alien, but your votes were for the android member of the Avengers, created by the Robot Ultron. Largely emotionless (though, hey, even an android can cry as we learned in his first appearance), he nevertheless married the Scarlet Witch. Had the power to alter his density (even to the point of being intangible), could fly and had some nifty eye rays. Was destroyed in 2004, but a new Vision is now doing the rounds.
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  23  Kitty Pryde  
 AKA, Shadowcat 
 Publisher:  Marvel 
 First appearance:  Uncanny X-Men #129, 1980 
 Created by:  Chris Claremont, John Byrne 
 Probably the most enduring new character created during the Byrne/Claremont era of X-Men, Kitty Pryde was a feisty youngster ready to embrace her power to become intangible. Sassy, chirpy and courageous beyond her years she was the longstanding girlfriend of Colossus, and had the kind of sisterly relationship with Wolverine that Rogue had in the movies. Her comics journey has been a charming coming of age saga. She also been a member of Excalibur and The New Mutants.
  22  Hawkeye  
 Publisher:  Marvel 
 First appearance:  Tales Of Suspense #57 
 Created by:  Stan Lee, Don Heck 
 Marvel’s “Purple Arrow" (okay, green had been taken, but purple?) Hawkeye was invited by Captain America to become an Avenger even though he had a shady past. A master archer armed with specialist arrows for all occasions, he's a bit cocky and known for rubbing Captain America up the wrong way.
  21  Rogue  
 Publisher:  Marvel 
 First appearance:  Avengers Annual #10, 1981 
 Created by:  Chris Claremont, Mike Golden 
 Southern belle Anna Marie is a mutant who can absorb the powers (and to a limited extent the personalities) of other superdudes. Having overdosed on Ms Marvel early in life, she now has her powers permanently (so she can fly and is super strong), but she's also prone to having her psyche taken over a psycho version of Ms Marvel’s alter ego Carol Danvers. Usually hangs out with the X-Men, possibly because Gambit is the only superhero with a worse accent than her’s.
Go to superheroes 20-11
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