Character aliases that Marvel and DC have both used (2nd Draft)
Part 1: Preamble and Ground Rules
Part 2: The Master List
Part 1: Preamble and Ground Rules
Pop Quiz! Study these lists carefully before committing yourself! Remember, spelling and punctuation count for a lot!
LIST #1
Magneto
Professor X
The Vulture
Spider Girl
Blink
Dr. Doome
Yellowjacket
The Wasp
Karma
Molecule Man
And then we have:
LIST #2
Huntress
Impulse
Manhunter
Oracle
Raven
Specter
Ravager
Zealot
Psimon
Heatwave
All ten names on List #1 have something important in common. What is it?
And all ten names on List #2 have something important in common. What is it?
Take your time to mull it over . . . dont jump to any conclusions!
Ready?
All right. If you said, Thats obvious! List #1 is a bunch of aliases for characters controlled by DC, and List #2 is a bunch of aliases for characters controlled by Marvel, then congratulations! You correctly observed that Marvel has never had a villain who used an E at the end of Dr. Doome, nor a heroine who called herself Spider Girl without any hyphen; therefore it had to be an interesting selection of mostly-obscure DC characters on that first list!
By the same token, you were perceptive enough to realize that DC has never had a villain who called himself Heatwave as one word without a space in the middle, nor have any of their ghostly avenger types ever used the working name of Specter instead of Spectre therefore the second list had to be a collection of mostly-obscure Marvel characters!
On the other hand: If you leaped to the conclusion that the ownership of each list of characters was actually the other way around Marvel for List #1 and DC for List #2 then I regret to inform you that youve still got a lot to learn before you can really call yourself an Obsessive-Compulsive Nitpicking Fanboy Who Is Frighteningly Well-Informed Regarding the Details of Both the Marvel and DC Universes.
(Note: Please dont ask me why you would want to call yourself such an awkward mouthful in the first place especially if you happen to be female and thus not likely to qualify as any type of fanboy. Do I look like a psychoanalyst? How would I know why you feel the urge to call yourself that?)
When I was a kid, I used to wonder how the various writers at DC and Marvel managed to keep coming up with nifty new superhero names or supervillain names that nobody had ever thought to use before. Well . . . now I know better. They dont necessarily sweat blood in the effort to come up with new aliases in the superhero genre! Often, they just dust off and recycle old names, from their own companys past continuity or a rivals, if they figure they can get away with it!
Around the start of the year, I posted on a few forums, requesting that people help me compile a list of character aliases that have been used by both DC and Marvel for different characters in their respective comic books. I had a vague idea that I might end up with about 30 or so cases of duplication.
A week later, I posted my First Draft. It actually had 166 aliases listed! (Just between you and me: If Id had any idea of what I was letting myself in for when I started this project, I might not have gone through with it.)
That First Draft, in turn, inspired other fans to point out even more cases that I had missed. In addition, over the last eight months or so I have made notes in a file on my hard drive whenever I happened to stumble across yet another name in a DC or Marvel comic book that made me scratch my head and say to myself, Hey, didnt I see this name used at the other company once?
As I write this (early September 2007) I now have 303 listings for cases where both of those longtime rivals have used the same aliases for different characters at one time or another. And even that number would be a lot larger if I hadnt set up a few rules for myself as I went along.
Ground Rules
1. Im not interested in characters who have been around so long that they are in the public domain. For instance, DC and Marvel have both put their own spins on various characters from Norse Mythology, Graeco-Roman Mythology, Egyptian Mythology, etc. And theyve both done stories featuring names from Arthurian Legend (Arthur, Merlin, Morgan Le Fey, et cetera). But they didnt create those characters, really, so Im not interesting in calling those cases of duplication.
2. However, I am willing to list character names that both companies have swiped from mythological sources and then recycled for new character concepts who are not, and dont claim to be, the original Andromeda of Greek Myth or whatever. (Both DC and Marvel have, in fact, recycled the name Andromeda for original character concepts.)
3. I also ignore any cases where both companies have handled the same licensed characters at different times. Both DC and Marvel have published comics set in the Star Trek universe, for instance, but neither company ever claimed to have created the key characters. By an extension of that logic, Im ignoring any case where someone at DC or Marvel may have created, for a licensed comic, a new character who used the same colorful alias as someone belonging to Marvel or DC.
4. Group names dont count unless individual members also demonstrate the habit of using that name or an obvious variation for themselves personally (as when a new member of the Green Lantern Corps starts calling himself Green Lantern as his heroic alias). Examples of what I dont count: DC has had evil organizations with the names Cyclops and Colossus, but I dont count those as duplicates of the names of two famous X-Men. As near as I can tell, DC has never created any characters who used either of those names for themselves as individuals.
5. After looking at the examples of Dr. Doome and Dr. Doom, I decided that pronunciation trumps spelling. If two names are obviously meant to be pronounced exactly the same way by English-speaking readers, then Ill count them as duplicate aliases even if there are differences in how they are written down. (This rule came in handy when I was later considering the cases of three villains named Bulls-Eye, Bulls Eye, and Bullseye.)
6. It appears that at least a few dozen of Marvels group The Elements of Doom have been mentioned by name in their published appearances. I believe its also been stated in dialogue that they include members named after the full periodic table, not just those members who have specifically mentioned their own names for the record. So Im assuming that any DC character named after a chemical element has a a namesake at Marvel. In cases where it doesnt appear that such a character was mentioned by name at Marvel, I say presumably one of the Elements of Doom in the listing.
7. To keep the project down to a manageable size, Im only counting characters who are controlled by Marvel or DC; either because they were created at those companies or because they were created at some other company whose character stable later ended up under the thumb of Marvel or DC. Any other, completely independent company gets ignored. For instance: Marvel and DC have both used the alias the Ghost for one supervillain apiece. I list those villains below, but I dont include any mention of Dark Horses vigilante heroine Ghost, because she is not the property of either DC or Marvel. Likewise, Im ignoring any characters who are published by Image or TokyoPop or anyone else.
8. I ignore any characters who have only appeared as members of the cast in TV shows, movies, or video games derived from concepts owned by DC or Marvel. However: If such characters later appeared in printed comic books, then that makes them fair game! (After a brief struggle with my conscience, I also listed one character who apparently debuted in print as part of a roleplaying game module, but who has never appeared in any comic books to the best of my knowledge. Possibly I should not have done that. Let me know what you think!)
9. Defining the meaning of alias in this context has led me to some tricky decisions. Im not interested in finding cases where both Marvel and DC have used such bland names as John Smith or Mary Jones, whether those were aliases or real names of the fictional characters in question. On the other hand, I tend to include the more colorful names of Inhumans, Deviants, New Gods, and Metal Men (among others), even in cases where we are either told or led to believe that the names being used may be the only names those characters have ever had. I suppose in some cases Im settling for names that look like a carefully chosen alias even if they might not be.
One last thing: I dont try to tell you everything about everybody; Im not writing an encyclopedia. If you want to know more about the multiple users of a particular name in the Master List, good places to start looking are:
http://www.marvunapp.com/
and
www.dcuguide.com
Beyond that, sometimes Wikipedia or other online resources will have useful data.
And, of course, if you see anything I got wrong, be sure to set me straight!
THE MASTER LIST
Be warned: I dont make any claim to tell you everything you could possibly need to know about any of these characters. Most of the time, I wont even mention what their superpowers are (if any). Nor will I usually tell you exactly what issue showed a certain character first showing a certain alias. And I usually don't bother mentioning which company named a character with a certain alias first. I always mention DC users first, but only because DC precedes Marvel alphabetically!
Agent Axis
DC: Golden Age Nazi villain who fought the Boy Commandos; later reappeared in modern times.
Marvel: A WWII-era villain, retconned in during the 70s, who was somehow a merger of three Axis spies (one German, one Italian, one Japanese) into a single entity with the strength of three men.
Aluminum
DC: One of the second (and evil) team of Metal Men. Destroyed.
Marvel: Presumably one of the Elements of Doom.
The Anarchist
DC: Simon Ellis, villain who fought the JLA in the 1970s. (Just once, apparently?)
Marvel: Tike Alicar, hero, member of X-Statix; dead.
Andromeda
DC: In the Post-COIE era, and again after the Post-Zero Hour Legion Reboot, she was Laurel Gand, a retconned substitute for the role previously filled by the Pre-Crisis Supergirl in the continuity of the "Legion of Super-Heroes. She was erased by the 2004 Reboot of Legion continuity.
Marvel: An Atlantean superheroine.
Angel
DC: name for the heroine of the "Angel and the Ape" duo.
Marvel: Founding member of the X-Men; later Archangel. (Also a Golden Age hero The Angel who was later retconned to have been two brothers taking turns. The Angel who married Beak may or may not qualify, since that was actually her real first name and Im not sure if she ever tried to use it as an alias.)
Anomaly
DC: Super-powered clone of Floyd Barstow; villain, but with some signs of scruples.
Marvel: A metaphysical being.
Ape
DC: Sam Simeon is called The Ape in the titles of the series and various miniseries that have featured him working with Angel.
Marvel: One of the Morlocks.
Arclight
DC: Noah Pasternetti, villain.
Marvel: Phillippa Sontag, villain; one of the Marauders who performed the Morlock Massacre.
Argent
DC: Toni Moretti, heroine, one of the new batch of Teen Titans who debuted in the mid-90s.
Marvel: Samantha Hassard, a member of Clan Destine.
Argus
DC: Two users. One was an obscure villain; one is Nick Kelly, hero.
Marvel: Villain who cut off Leiko Wus hand.
Ariel
DC: Temporary Dial H for Hero identity of Vicki Grant.
Marvel: Several users, including Kitty Pryde at one point.
Arsenal
DC: Roy Harper, formerly "Speedy."
Marvel: An android long since destroyed. Also: a villain who fought Moon Knight.
Astra
DC: Hero, member of the Xenobrood.
Marvel: Several, including a member of the Shiar Imperial Guard and another who claimed to be a former member of Magnetos Brotherhood of Evil Mutants.
Atlas
DC: An action hero of ancient times.
Marvel: Steve Rand, villain. Later: Erik Josten, whos tried to be a hero as a Thunderbolt (after being a villain under other names).
Atom Smasher/Atom-Smasher
DC: Atom Smasher, alias once used by Manfred Mota, Golden Age villain. Atom-Smasher, alias used by Albert Rothstein (formerly Nuklon of Infinity Inc.)
Marvel: Two villains, brothers; Ronald English (dead) and then Michael English. They both used the hyphen.
Aura
DC: Heroine; one of the Ravers.
Marvel: Annie Herd, bounty hunter. Apparently last seen hospitalized with severe injuries.
Aurora
DC: One of the Recombatants who once fought the Titans; dead.
Marvel: Jeanne-Marie Beaubier, heroine; founding member of Alpha Flight.
Banshee
DC: Max Bine, a villain who fought the Question (Vic Sage) when he was still a Charlton character.
Marvel: Sean Cassidy, hero.
Barium
DC: Robot; member of an evil Metal Men team. Destroyed.
Marvel: One of the Elements of Doom.
Barracuda
DC: At least two.
Marvel: At least three.
Barrage
DC: Karnowsky. Superman villain.
Marvel: One of the Riders of the Storm who worked for Apocalypse.
Basilisk
DC: Irish Autumns, hero. (A shameless parody of Scott Summers Cyclops of the X-Men -- in an old Inferior Five story.)
Marvel: Villain, dead.
Battleax/Battleaxe
DC: Battleax is an alias for Princess Norka of Nekrome.
Marvel: Battleaxe has been used by several people.
Beautiful Dreamer
DC: One of the Forever People.
Marvel: One of the Morlocks.
Bedlam
DC: Two of them. One was a villain who gave Young Justice a hard time.
Marvel: Four of them, apparently.
Black Death
DC: Villain who fought the JLA a couple of years ago.
Marvel: Two users; both villains.
Black Racer
DC: Supernatural entity who skis around collecting souls of dying people.
Marvel: Villain; member of the Serpent Society.
Black Widow
DC: A woman named Princess Hellene, listed in online resources as Black Widow, once fought the Golden Age Flash and then died.
Marvel: At least three; the best-known (although not the first) is Natasha Romanoff.
Blacksmith/Blaquesmith
DC: Blacksmith is Amunet Black, a Flash villain.
Marvel: Blaquesmith was one of Cables mentors in the alternate future timeline where he grew up. A second character later impersonated the first Blaquesmith.
Blackwing
DC: Charlie Bullock, rookie superhero in the Gotham City of the Pre-COIE Earth-2; a shameless imitator of the Golden Age Batman.
Marvel: Two users; both villains.
Blindspot
DC: Mercenary whose suit lets him turn invisible.
Marvel: At least two.
Blink
DC: Temporary Dial H for Hero identity of Craig.
Marvel: Clarice Ferguson of the Exiles.
Bliss
DC: Nicole Callahan, member of Wildstorm's DV8.
Marvel: One of the Morlocks.
Blizzard
DC: Temporary villainous Dial H for Hero identity of Lisa Davis, but only in Pre-Crisis continuity.
Marvel: Several, usually villains. The second, Donny Gill, has recently tried to turn over a new leaf with the Thunderbolts.
Blockbuster
DC: Mark Desmond, now dead. Then his brother Roland, a Nightwing villain for a long time, now also dead.
Marvel: At least three. The third was one of the Marauders; he participated in the Mutant Massacre and was killed by Thor.
Bloc/Blok
DC: Blok, member of the Pre-Zero Hour Legion of Super-Heroes.
Marvel: Bloc a mercenary. Blok a villain working for Mister X.
Bloody Mary
DC: Villain; member of the Female Furies.
Marvel: Two of them; one is evidently the alias of one of the personalities inside Typhoid Marys head.
Bolt
DC: Larry Bolatinsky, assassin.
Marvel: Chris Bradley, hero; dead.
Bombshell
DC: Amy Allen, villain; recently infiltrated the Teen Titans on behalf of Deathstroke the Terminator.
Marvel: Wendy Conrad, villain; used to be one of the Death-Throws. (Bombshell was also the alias of a heroine in the alternate timeline of The Last Avengers Story.)
Bounty
DC: Character in the Emperor Joker storyline.
Marvel: Female mercenary who dated Ben Grimm for a bit in Chris Claremonts run on the FF.
Brain
DC: Villain; leader of the Brotherhood of Evil.
Marvel: Several users.
Brother Power
DC: Im told that the title character (an animated mannequin) of the old series Brother Power, the Geek strongly preferred to just call himself Brother Power and resented it when other people kept calling him the Geek.
Marvel: Achmed Korba, villain; fought Spider-Man in one story arc in the 70s; possibly died at the end of it.
Brute
DC: Several users; all pretty obscure, it seems.
Marvel: Several, including an evil analog of Reed Richards from a place called The High Evolutionarys Counter-Earth.
Bulls Eye/Bulls-Eye/Bullseye
DC: Bulls-Eye was a villain who fought the Golden Age Green Arrow in the old Pre-COIE continuity.
Marvel: Bulls-Eye (the exact spelling/punctuation of his version of the alias is debated) was a Hydra assassin who got just one appearance killed Nick Fury (or so he thought) and then was killed himself by Dum Dum Dugan. Later, the assassin Bullseye (apparently no relation) became a notorious Daredevil villain.
Note: This one became far and away the trickiest entry on the list. The Golden Age villain was Bulls-Eye. The assassin whos given Daredevil so much grief over the years is Bullseye. Those points are not disputed. But the Hydra assassin only appeared in a single Silver Age story -- Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. #15, published in 1969 -- and various online resources disagree horribly regarding just how he spelled and punctuated his name. It seems that the story in question has never been reprinted. Im not interesting in coughing up money for the original. After I pleaded for help on a few forums last week, one fan assured me that in his copy the alias was consistently rendered as Bulls-Eye. So Im going with that for the moment, but I feel obligated to warn you that theres considerable difference of opinion on this point and I dont actually own a copy of the source material to let me swear to how the name was printed in dialogue.
(One other sad point: In searching for more data, I kept stumbling across sites where people with a copy of Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. #15 to sell were claiming it was the first appearance of the assassin Bullseye by which they obviously meant the infamous Daredevil villain even though that claim is definitely false. I dont know if those sellers honestly believe its supposed to be the same character all along, or if theyre just using the similarity in names as an excuse to jack up the price for collectors, figuring they can just play dumb if someone screams about false advertising. I hope there is no deliberate fraud involved, but how can we tell?)
Part 1: Preamble and Ground Rules
Part 2: The Master List
Part 1: Preamble and Ground Rules
Pop Quiz! Study these lists carefully before committing yourself! Remember, spelling and punctuation count for a lot!
LIST #1
Magneto
Professor X
The Vulture
Spider Girl
Blink
Dr. Doome
Yellowjacket
The Wasp
Karma
Molecule Man
And then we have:
LIST #2
Huntress
Impulse
Manhunter
Oracle
Raven
Specter
Ravager
Zealot
Psimon
Heatwave
All ten names on List #1 have something important in common. What is it?
And all ten names on List #2 have something important in common. What is it?
Take your time to mull it over . . . dont jump to any conclusions!
Ready?
All right. If you said, Thats obvious! List #1 is a bunch of aliases for characters controlled by DC, and List #2 is a bunch of aliases for characters controlled by Marvel, then congratulations! You correctly observed that Marvel has never had a villain who used an E at the end of Dr. Doome, nor a heroine who called herself Spider Girl without any hyphen; therefore it had to be an interesting selection of mostly-obscure DC characters on that first list!
By the same token, you were perceptive enough to realize that DC has never had a villain who called himself Heatwave as one word without a space in the middle, nor have any of their ghostly avenger types ever used the working name of Specter instead of Spectre therefore the second list had to be a collection of mostly-obscure Marvel characters!
On the other hand: If you leaped to the conclusion that the ownership of each list of characters was actually the other way around Marvel for List #1 and DC for List #2 then I regret to inform you that youve still got a lot to learn before you can really call yourself an Obsessive-Compulsive Nitpicking Fanboy Who Is Frighteningly Well-Informed Regarding the Details of Both the Marvel and DC Universes.
(Note: Please dont ask me why you would want to call yourself such an awkward mouthful in the first place especially if you happen to be female and thus not likely to qualify as any type of fanboy. Do I look like a psychoanalyst? How would I know why you feel the urge to call yourself that?)
When I was a kid, I used to wonder how the various writers at DC and Marvel managed to keep coming up with nifty new superhero names or supervillain names that nobody had ever thought to use before. Well . . . now I know better. They dont necessarily sweat blood in the effort to come up with new aliases in the superhero genre! Often, they just dust off and recycle old names, from their own companys past continuity or a rivals, if they figure they can get away with it!

Around the start of the year, I posted on a few forums, requesting that people help me compile a list of character aliases that have been used by both DC and Marvel for different characters in their respective comic books. I had a vague idea that I might end up with about 30 or so cases of duplication.
A week later, I posted my First Draft. It actually had 166 aliases listed! (Just between you and me: If Id had any idea of what I was letting myself in for when I started this project, I might not have gone through with it.)
That First Draft, in turn, inspired other fans to point out even more cases that I had missed. In addition, over the last eight months or so I have made notes in a file on my hard drive whenever I happened to stumble across yet another name in a DC or Marvel comic book that made me scratch my head and say to myself, Hey, didnt I see this name used at the other company once?
As I write this (early September 2007) I now have 303 listings for cases where both of those longtime rivals have used the same aliases for different characters at one time or another. And even that number would be a lot larger if I hadnt set up a few rules for myself as I went along.
Ground Rules
1. Im not interested in characters who have been around so long that they are in the public domain. For instance, DC and Marvel have both put their own spins on various characters from Norse Mythology, Graeco-Roman Mythology, Egyptian Mythology, etc. And theyve both done stories featuring names from Arthurian Legend (Arthur, Merlin, Morgan Le Fey, et cetera). But they didnt create those characters, really, so Im not interesting in calling those cases of duplication.
2. However, I am willing to list character names that both companies have swiped from mythological sources and then recycled for new character concepts who are not, and dont claim to be, the original Andromeda of Greek Myth or whatever. (Both DC and Marvel have, in fact, recycled the name Andromeda for original character concepts.)
3. I also ignore any cases where both companies have handled the same licensed characters at different times. Both DC and Marvel have published comics set in the Star Trek universe, for instance, but neither company ever claimed to have created the key characters. By an extension of that logic, Im ignoring any case where someone at DC or Marvel may have created, for a licensed comic, a new character who used the same colorful alias as someone belonging to Marvel or DC.
4. Group names dont count unless individual members also demonstrate the habit of using that name or an obvious variation for themselves personally (as when a new member of the Green Lantern Corps starts calling himself Green Lantern as his heroic alias). Examples of what I dont count: DC has had evil organizations with the names Cyclops and Colossus, but I dont count those as duplicates of the names of two famous X-Men. As near as I can tell, DC has never created any characters who used either of those names for themselves as individuals.
5. After looking at the examples of Dr. Doome and Dr. Doom, I decided that pronunciation trumps spelling. If two names are obviously meant to be pronounced exactly the same way by English-speaking readers, then Ill count them as duplicate aliases even if there are differences in how they are written down. (This rule came in handy when I was later considering the cases of three villains named Bulls-Eye, Bulls Eye, and Bullseye.)
6. It appears that at least a few dozen of Marvels group The Elements of Doom have been mentioned by name in their published appearances. I believe its also been stated in dialogue that they include members named after the full periodic table, not just those members who have specifically mentioned their own names for the record. So Im assuming that any DC character named after a chemical element has a a namesake at Marvel. In cases where it doesnt appear that such a character was mentioned by name at Marvel, I say presumably one of the Elements of Doom in the listing.
7. To keep the project down to a manageable size, Im only counting characters who are controlled by Marvel or DC; either because they were created at those companies or because they were created at some other company whose character stable later ended up under the thumb of Marvel or DC. Any other, completely independent company gets ignored. For instance: Marvel and DC have both used the alias the Ghost for one supervillain apiece. I list those villains below, but I dont include any mention of Dark Horses vigilante heroine Ghost, because she is not the property of either DC or Marvel. Likewise, Im ignoring any characters who are published by Image or TokyoPop or anyone else.
8. I ignore any characters who have only appeared as members of the cast in TV shows, movies, or video games derived from concepts owned by DC or Marvel. However: If such characters later appeared in printed comic books, then that makes them fair game! (After a brief struggle with my conscience, I also listed one character who apparently debuted in print as part of a roleplaying game module, but who has never appeared in any comic books to the best of my knowledge. Possibly I should not have done that. Let me know what you think!)
9. Defining the meaning of alias in this context has led me to some tricky decisions. Im not interested in finding cases where both Marvel and DC have used such bland names as John Smith or Mary Jones, whether those were aliases or real names of the fictional characters in question. On the other hand, I tend to include the more colorful names of Inhumans, Deviants, New Gods, and Metal Men (among others), even in cases where we are either told or led to believe that the names being used may be the only names those characters have ever had. I suppose in some cases Im settling for names that look like a carefully chosen alias even if they might not be.
One last thing: I dont try to tell you everything about everybody; Im not writing an encyclopedia. If you want to know more about the multiple users of a particular name in the Master List, good places to start looking are:
http://www.marvunapp.com/
and
www.dcuguide.com
Beyond that, sometimes Wikipedia or other online resources will have useful data.
And, of course, if you see anything I got wrong, be sure to set me straight!
THE MASTER LIST
Be warned: I dont make any claim to tell you everything you could possibly need to know about any of these characters. Most of the time, I wont even mention what their superpowers are (if any). Nor will I usually tell you exactly what issue showed a certain character first showing a certain alias. And I usually don't bother mentioning which company named a character with a certain alias first. I always mention DC users first, but only because DC precedes Marvel alphabetically!
Agent Axis
DC: Golden Age Nazi villain who fought the Boy Commandos; later reappeared in modern times.
Marvel: A WWII-era villain, retconned in during the 70s, who was somehow a merger of three Axis spies (one German, one Italian, one Japanese) into a single entity with the strength of three men.
Aluminum
DC: One of the second (and evil) team of Metal Men. Destroyed.
Marvel: Presumably one of the Elements of Doom.
The Anarchist
DC: Simon Ellis, villain who fought the JLA in the 1970s. (Just once, apparently?)
Marvel: Tike Alicar, hero, member of X-Statix; dead.
Andromeda
DC: In the Post-COIE era, and again after the Post-Zero Hour Legion Reboot, she was Laurel Gand, a retconned substitute for the role previously filled by the Pre-Crisis Supergirl in the continuity of the "Legion of Super-Heroes. She was erased by the 2004 Reboot of Legion continuity.
Marvel: An Atlantean superheroine.
Angel
DC: name for the heroine of the "Angel and the Ape" duo.
Marvel: Founding member of the X-Men; later Archangel. (Also a Golden Age hero The Angel who was later retconned to have been two brothers taking turns. The Angel who married Beak may or may not qualify, since that was actually her real first name and Im not sure if she ever tried to use it as an alias.)
Anomaly
DC: Super-powered clone of Floyd Barstow; villain, but with some signs of scruples.
Marvel: A metaphysical being.
Ape
DC: Sam Simeon is called The Ape in the titles of the series and various miniseries that have featured him working with Angel.
Marvel: One of the Morlocks.
Arclight
DC: Noah Pasternetti, villain.
Marvel: Phillippa Sontag, villain; one of the Marauders who performed the Morlock Massacre.
Argent
DC: Toni Moretti, heroine, one of the new batch of Teen Titans who debuted in the mid-90s.
Marvel: Samantha Hassard, a member of Clan Destine.
Argus
DC: Two users. One was an obscure villain; one is Nick Kelly, hero.
Marvel: Villain who cut off Leiko Wus hand.
Ariel
DC: Temporary Dial H for Hero identity of Vicki Grant.
Marvel: Several users, including Kitty Pryde at one point.
Arsenal
DC: Roy Harper, formerly "Speedy."
Marvel: An android long since destroyed. Also: a villain who fought Moon Knight.
Astra
DC: Hero, member of the Xenobrood.
Marvel: Several, including a member of the Shiar Imperial Guard and another who claimed to be a former member of Magnetos Brotherhood of Evil Mutants.
Atlas
DC: An action hero of ancient times.
Marvel: Steve Rand, villain. Later: Erik Josten, whos tried to be a hero as a Thunderbolt (after being a villain under other names).
Atom Smasher/Atom-Smasher
DC: Atom Smasher, alias once used by Manfred Mota, Golden Age villain. Atom-Smasher, alias used by Albert Rothstein (formerly Nuklon of Infinity Inc.)
Marvel: Two villains, brothers; Ronald English (dead) and then Michael English. They both used the hyphen.
Aura
DC: Heroine; one of the Ravers.
Marvel: Annie Herd, bounty hunter. Apparently last seen hospitalized with severe injuries.
Aurora
DC: One of the Recombatants who once fought the Titans; dead.
Marvel: Jeanne-Marie Beaubier, heroine; founding member of Alpha Flight.
Banshee
DC: Max Bine, a villain who fought the Question (Vic Sage) when he was still a Charlton character.
Marvel: Sean Cassidy, hero.
Barium
DC: Robot; member of an evil Metal Men team. Destroyed.
Marvel: One of the Elements of Doom.
Barracuda
DC: At least two.
Marvel: At least three.
Barrage
DC: Karnowsky. Superman villain.
Marvel: One of the Riders of the Storm who worked for Apocalypse.
Basilisk
DC: Irish Autumns, hero. (A shameless parody of Scott Summers Cyclops of the X-Men -- in an old Inferior Five story.)
Marvel: Villain, dead.
Battleax/Battleaxe
DC: Battleax is an alias for Princess Norka of Nekrome.
Marvel: Battleaxe has been used by several people.
Beautiful Dreamer
DC: One of the Forever People.
Marvel: One of the Morlocks.
Bedlam
DC: Two of them. One was a villain who gave Young Justice a hard time.
Marvel: Four of them, apparently.
Black Death
DC: Villain who fought the JLA a couple of years ago.
Marvel: Two users; both villains.
Black Racer
DC: Supernatural entity who skis around collecting souls of dying people.
Marvel: Villain; member of the Serpent Society.
Black Widow
DC: A woman named Princess Hellene, listed in online resources as Black Widow, once fought the Golden Age Flash and then died.
Marvel: At least three; the best-known (although not the first) is Natasha Romanoff.
Blacksmith/Blaquesmith
DC: Blacksmith is Amunet Black, a Flash villain.
Marvel: Blaquesmith was one of Cables mentors in the alternate future timeline where he grew up. A second character later impersonated the first Blaquesmith.
Blackwing
DC: Charlie Bullock, rookie superhero in the Gotham City of the Pre-COIE Earth-2; a shameless imitator of the Golden Age Batman.
Marvel: Two users; both villains.
Blindspot
DC: Mercenary whose suit lets him turn invisible.
Marvel: At least two.
Blink
DC: Temporary Dial H for Hero identity of Craig.
Marvel: Clarice Ferguson of the Exiles.
Bliss
DC: Nicole Callahan, member of Wildstorm's DV8.
Marvel: One of the Morlocks.
Blizzard
DC: Temporary villainous Dial H for Hero identity of Lisa Davis, but only in Pre-Crisis continuity.
Marvel: Several, usually villains. The second, Donny Gill, has recently tried to turn over a new leaf with the Thunderbolts.
Blockbuster
DC: Mark Desmond, now dead. Then his brother Roland, a Nightwing villain for a long time, now also dead.
Marvel: At least three. The third was one of the Marauders; he participated in the Mutant Massacre and was killed by Thor.
Bloc/Blok
DC: Blok, member of the Pre-Zero Hour Legion of Super-Heroes.
Marvel: Bloc a mercenary. Blok a villain working for Mister X.
Bloody Mary
DC: Villain; member of the Female Furies.
Marvel: Two of them; one is evidently the alias of one of the personalities inside Typhoid Marys head.
Bolt
DC: Larry Bolatinsky, assassin.
Marvel: Chris Bradley, hero; dead.
Bombshell
DC: Amy Allen, villain; recently infiltrated the Teen Titans on behalf of Deathstroke the Terminator.
Marvel: Wendy Conrad, villain; used to be one of the Death-Throws. (Bombshell was also the alias of a heroine in the alternate timeline of The Last Avengers Story.)
Bounty
DC: Character in the Emperor Joker storyline.
Marvel: Female mercenary who dated Ben Grimm for a bit in Chris Claremonts run on the FF.
Brain
DC: Villain; leader of the Brotherhood of Evil.
Marvel: Several users.
Brother Power
DC: Im told that the title character (an animated mannequin) of the old series Brother Power, the Geek strongly preferred to just call himself Brother Power and resented it when other people kept calling him the Geek.
Marvel: Achmed Korba, villain; fought Spider-Man in one story arc in the 70s; possibly died at the end of it.
Brute
DC: Several users; all pretty obscure, it seems.
Marvel: Several, including an evil analog of Reed Richards from a place called The High Evolutionarys Counter-Earth.
Bulls Eye/Bulls-Eye/Bullseye
DC: Bulls-Eye was a villain who fought the Golden Age Green Arrow in the old Pre-COIE continuity.
Marvel: Bulls-Eye (the exact spelling/punctuation of his version of the alias is debated) was a Hydra assassin who got just one appearance killed Nick Fury (or so he thought) and then was killed himself by Dum Dum Dugan. Later, the assassin Bullseye (apparently no relation) became a notorious Daredevil villain.
Note: This one became far and away the trickiest entry on the list. The Golden Age villain was Bulls-Eye. The assassin whos given Daredevil so much grief over the years is Bullseye. Those points are not disputed. But the Hydra assassin only appeared in a single Silver Age story -- Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. #15, published in 1969 -- and various online resources disagree horribly regarding just how he spelled and punctuated his name. It seems that the story in question has never been reprinted. Im not interesting in coughing up money for the original. After I pleaded for help on a few forums last week, one fan assured me that in his copy the alias was consistently rendered as Bulls-Eye. So Im going with that for the moment, but I feel obligated to warn you that theres considerable difference of opinion on this point and I dont actually own a copy of the source material to let me swear to how the name was printed in dialogue.
(One other sad point: In searching for more data, I kept stumbling across sites where people with a copy of Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. #15 to sell were claiming it was the first appearance of the assassin Bullseye by which they obviously meant the infamous Daredevil villain even though that claim is definitely false. I dont know if those sellers honestly believe its supposed to be the same character all along, or if theyre just using the similarity in names as an excuse to jack up the price for collectors, figuring they can just play dumb if someone screams about false advertising. I hope there is no deliberate fraud involved, but how can we tell?)