User:The King of the Monsters/Sandbox/Marvel: Difference between revisions

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{{Nav
|type1      =Fighting
|type2      =Grass
|type      =[[Godzilla]] [[:Category:Comics|comic]] Incarnations
|prevname  ={{stroke|white|black|None}}
|name      ={{stroke|white|black|Godzilla (Marvel)}}
|next      =Godzilla (Dark Horse)
|nextname  ={{stroke|white|black|Godzilla (Dark Horse)}}
}}
{{Kaiju Infobox
{{Kaiju Infobox
|type1              =Grass
|type1              =Fighting
|type2              =Fighting
|type2              =Grass
|copyrighticon      =Monster Icons - Godzilla.png|crsize=30px|crname=Godzilla
|copyrighticon      =Monster Icons - Godzilla.png|crsize=30px|crname=Godzilla
|header              ={{Comic}} {{Kaijup}}
|altimage            =<tabs style="color:black; padding: 0px; margin: 0px;">
|altimage            =<tabs style="color:black; padding: 0px; margin: 0px;">
<tab name="Godzilla">[[File:Marvel Godzilla full.png|350px|Godzilla in Godzilla, King of the Monsters #1]]</tab>
<tab name="Godzilla">[[File:Marvel Godzilla full.png|350px|Godzilla in Godzilla, King of the Monsters #1]]</tab>
<tab name="Mutation">[[File:Neo Goji.jpg|350px|The mutated Godzilla in Iron Man]]</tab>
<tab name="Mutation">[[File:Neo Goji.jpg|350px|The mutated Godzilla in Iron Man]]</tab>
<tab name="Mighty Avengers">[[File: Mighty Avengers Godzilla.jpeg|350px|The unmutated Godzilla in Mighty Avengers]]</tab>
</tabs>
</tabs>
|name                =Godzilla{{tt|®|Godzilla is a registered Trademark of Toho Company Ltd., used by Marvel with permission.}} (Marvel)
|name                =Godzilla{{tt|®|Godzilla is a registered Trademark of Toho Company Ltd., used by Marvel with permission.}}
|dt                  =Godzilla (Marvel)
|dt                  =Godzilla (Marvel)
|species            ={{Small|Giant irradiated prehistoric amphibious reptile}}
|species            ={{Small|Giant irradiated prehistoric amphibious reptile}}
|nicknames          =
|nicknames          =The Beta-Beast, A Monstrous Hybrid of Land and Marine Reptiles,
|subtitle            =King of the Monsters
|subtitle            =King of the Monsters
|forms              =Shrank {{Small|(sub-human height, human height)}},<br>[[Douglas Birley|Doctor Demonicus]]' mutation
|forms              =Shrunken {{Small|(sub-human height, human height)}},<br>[[Douglas Birley|Doctor Demonicus]]' mutation
|height              =1 foot {{Small|(shrank, smallest)}},<ref name="Marvel1">{{Cite book|title=[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel)|Godzilla, King of the Monsters]] ''[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 19|#19]]: "With Dugan on the Docks!''"|author=Moench, Doug|date=February [[1979]]|publisher=[[Marvel Comics]] Group|page=1}}</ref><br>4 feet {{Small|(shrank, human size)}}<ref name="Marvel2">{{Cite book|title=[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel)|Godzilla, King of the Monsters]] ''[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 18|#18]]: "Fugitive in Manhattan!''"|author=Moench, Doug|date=January [[1979]]|publisher=[[Marvel Comics]] Group|page=31}}</ref>
|height              =1 foot {{Small|(shrunken, smallest)}},<ref name="Marvel1">{{Cite book|title=[[Godzilla (Marvel comic)|Godzilla]] ''[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 19|#19]]: "With Dugan on the Docks!''"|author=Moench, Doug|date=February 1979|publisher=[[Marvel Comics]] Group|page=1}}</ref><br>4 feet {{Small|(shrunken, human-sized)}}<ref name="Marvel2">{{Cite book|title=[[Godzilla (Marvel comic)|Godzilla]] ''[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 18|#18]]: "Fugitive in Manhattan!''"|author=Moench, Doug|date=January 1979|publisher=[[Marvel Comics]] Group|page=31}}</ref>
|controlled          =[[Douglas Birley|Doctor Demonicus]]{{sup|[[Iron Man Issue 193|IM #193]]-[[Iron Man Issue 194|194]], [[Iron Man Issue 196|196]]}}
605ft/184.4m <ref name="Issue2">{{Sup|In [[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 2|issue 2 of ''Godzilla'']], Godzilla attacks the Seattle Satellite Tower, which he appears to be around the same height as.}}</ref>
|controlled          =[[Douglas Birley|Doctor Demonicus]]{{sup|[[Iron Man Issue 193|IM #193]]-[[Iron Man Issue 194|194]], [[Iron Man Issue 196|196]]}}, [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Harvey Elder (Earth-616)|Mole Man]] {{sup|[[Mighty Avengers issue 1|Mighty Avengers]]}}


<!---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<!---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|allies              =
|allies              =[[Red Ronin]]
|enemies            =[[Robotic Devil Dinosaur]]{{sup|[[The Thing Issue 31|TT #31]]}}
|enemies            = [[http://community.fandom.com/w:c:marvel:Bruce_Banner_(Earth-616) The Hulk]], [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Strategic Homeland Intervention, Enforcement and Logistics Division (Earth-616)|S.H.I.E.L.D.]], [[Batragon]], [[Ghilaron]], [[Lepirax]], [[Centipor]], [[Red Ronin]], [[Yetrigar]], [[Beta-Beast]], [[Triax]], [[Rhiahn]], [[Krollar]], [[wikia:w:c:marvel:[[Robotic Devil Dinosaur]]{{sup|[[The Thing Issue 31|TT #31]]}}, Iron Man, Thor, Hercules, Susan Storm, Reed Ricords, The Thing, Shogun Warriors, Rom, Phil Grayfield,
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|debut    =''[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel)|Godzilla, King of the Monsters]]'' [[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 1|#1]]
|debut    =''[[Godzilla (Marvel comic)|Godzilla]]'' [[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) issue 1|#1]]
|last      =[[The Thing Issue 31|''The Thing'' #31]]
|last      =''[[wikia:w:c:marvel:Marvel 75th Anniversary Celebration Vol 1 1|Marvel 75th Anniversary Celebration]]''
}}
}}
'''[[Godzilla]]''' {{Nihongo|ゴジラ|Gojira}} is a giant [[kaiju|monster]] who appeared in Marvel Comics' ''[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel)|Godzilla, King of the Monsters]]'' series. He is the first incarnation of Godzilla to originate in [[United States|American]] media, as well as the first incarnation featured in an [[United States|American]] comic.
{{Sandbox}}
{{Quote|Some factors are certain: '''Godzilla''' represents a hitherto unknown essence of life and behavior...As such he is highly unpredictable, and definitely the most dangerous living creature on the face of the Earth.|[[wikia:w:c:marvel:Yuriko Takiguchi (Earth-616)|Yuriko Takiguchi]] (''[[Godzilla (Marvel comic)|Godzilla]]'' [[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 2|#2]])}}
'''[[Godzilla]]''' {{Nihongo|ゴジラ|Gojira}} is a giant [[kaiju|monster]] who starred in Marvel Comics' ''[[Godzilla (Marvel comic)|Godzilla]]'' series. He is the first incarnation of Godzilla to originate in [[United States|American]] media, as well as the first incarnation featured in an [[United States|American]] comic.


A giant prehistoric monster roused by atomic testing, Godzilla first menaced [[Japan]] in [[1956]] before gradually becoming the lesser of two evils, fending off other more malevolent creatures and unintentionally defending mankind in the process. At some point, Godzilla became frozen inside an iceberg, only to break free once the iceberg reached Alaska. Godzilla then began a destructive campaign across the United States, tracked by S.H.I.E.L.D. and crossing paths with the many heroes of the Marvel Universe. This finally culminated in a battle against the Avengers in [[New York City]], which ended in a draw as Godzilla decided to leave and returned to the ocean. At some point, Godzilla was captured and mutated by his old nemesis [[Douglas Birley|Doctor Demonicus]] and used as a pawn in his evil plans, at one point clashing with Iron Man. Godzilla disappeared afterward, though many creatures resembling him have since appeared.
A giant prehistoric monster roused by atomic testing, Godzilla first menaced [[Japan]] in [[1956]] and repeatedly attacked the nation's cities before gradually becoming the lesser of two evils, fending off other more malevolent creatures and unintentionally defending mankind in the process. This lasted for 20 years. At some point after that, Godzilla became frozen inside an iceberg, only to break free once the iceberg reached Alaska. Godzilla then began a destructive campaign across the United States, tracked by S.H.I.E.L.D. and crossing paths with the many heroes of the Marvel Universe. This finally culminated in a battle against the Avengers and the Fantastic Four in [[New York City]], which ended in a draw as Godzilla decided to return to the ocean. He was later captured and mutated by his old nemesis [[Douglas Birley|Doctor Demonicus]] and used as a pawn in his evil plans, at one point clashing with Iron Man. Godzilla largely disappeared afterward, though many creatures resembling him have since appeared. His last known appearance came when he attacked New York City along with several other inhabitants of [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Monster Isle|Monster Island]] under the control of the [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Harvey Elder (Earth-616)|Mole Man]]. By this point, he no longer bore the mutated appearance he had while under Demonicus' control.
{{TOC}}
{{TOC}}
==Name==
==Name==
The name "Godzilla" is a transliteration of ''Gojira'' {{Nihongo|ゴジラ}}, a combination of two Japanese words: ''gorira'' {{Nihongo|ゴリラ}}, meaning gorilla, and ''kujira'' (鯨 or クジラ), meaning whale. At one planning stage, the concept of "Gojira" was described as "a cross between a gorilla and a whale." The two words "whale" and "gorilla" describe Godzilla's traditional characteristics: "whale" represents his aquatic lifestyle and bulky size, while "gorilla" represents his sheer strength and the strategic thinking he uses when fighting against other monsters.
{{See also|Godzilla#Name}}
Godzilla's Japanese name, ''Gojira'' {{Nihongo|ゴジラ}}, comes from a combination of the Japanese approximation of "gorilla" {{Nihongo|ゴリラ|gorira}}, and ''kujira'' {{Nihongo|クジラ}}, the Japanese word for "whale."


After the close of ''[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel)|Godzilla, King of the Monsters]]'', this Godzilla is never referred to by name during any of his subsequent appearances, due to [[Marvel Comics]] no longer holding the rights to the character. Though, perhaps jokingly, the mutation which appears in issue #31 of ''The Thing'' is alluded to as "Godzilla."
After the close of ''[[Godzilla (Marvel comic)|Godzilla]]'', Godzilla is never referred to by name during any of his subsequent appearances, due to [[Marvel Comics]] no longer holding the rights to the character, though, perhaps jokingly, the mutation which appears in [[The Thing issue 31|issue #31 of ''The Thing'']] is referred to as "Godzilla."
==Design==
==Design==
This incarnation of Godzilla is entirely green unlike the character's film incarnations, and has purely red eyes. His dorsal plates start near the top of his head, similarly to the [[Godzilla/Hanna-Barbera|Hanna-Barbera Godzilla]]. His head is more dinosaur-like, with a long snout, sharp teeth, and eyes positioned higher on his head and facing slightly to the sides. His dorsal plates maintain the traditional maple-leaf shape, but are green in color rather than bone-white. The Marvel Godzilla has long, muscular arms with four claws. The Marvel Godzilla tends to keep his tail suspended in the air rather than drag it across the ground.
Upon finally securing the comics rights to Godzilla, and after opting for an original storyline instead of adapting any of the existing films, Marvel began considering their interpretation of Godzilla's appearance. Due to the campy nature of the contemporary films, they chose to model their Godzilla after the [[ShodaiGoji|original suit]]. Despite this, they were willing to make changes to make the character more workable in the new medium.<ref name="Grams">{{cite book|title="Godzilla-Grams", [[Godzilla (Marvel comic)|Godzilla]] [[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 1|#1]]|last=Goodwin|first=Archie|date=August 1977|publisher=[[Marvel Comics]] Group|page=19}}</ref>
 
This incarnation of Godzilla is entirely green, unlike the character's film incarnations, and has purely red eyes. His dorsal fins start near the top of his head, similarly to the [[Godzilla (Hanna-Barbera)|Hanna-Barbera Godzilla]]. His head is more dinosaur-like, with a long snout, sharp teeth, and eyes positioned higher on his head and facing slightly to the sides. His dorsal fins maintain the traditional maple-leaf shape, but are green in color rather than bone-white. The Marvel Godzilla has long, muscular arms with four claws. The Marvel Godzilla tends to keep his tail suspended in the air rather than drag it across the ground.
 
In the ''Iron Man'' comics, Godzilla's mutated form has webbed fingers and large fish-like fins starting at his armpits and going down to his wrists. During his appearances in ''The Thing'' #31, the Godzilla mutation has very short arms and large scales on his brow and lip areas. In both comics the mutated Godzilla has a large fish-like fin in place of his dorsal fins, and two horns protruding from the top of his snout. He is also a lot smaller than his normal appearance.
 
In his last known appearance in [[Mighty Avengers issue 1|''Mighty Avengers'' #1]], Godzilla has returned to a more traditional appearance, having a appearance closely to his [[Godzilla (Heisei)|Heisei Counterpart]]. In an early version of the comic, he bore visible dorsal fins, though they were removed in the final comic.


In the ''Iron Man'' comics, Godzilla's mutated form has webbed fingers and large fins staring at his armpits, and going down to his wrists. During his appearances in ''The Thing'', the Godzilla mutation has very short arms, and large scales on his brow and lip areas. In both comics the mutated Godzilla has a large fin in place of his dorsal fins, and two horns protruding from the top of his snout.
==Personality==
==Personality==
The Marvel Godzilla is an aggressive creature who often attacks anything in his path. His aggressiveness frequently puts him into conflict with other, more malevolent monsters, painting him as the lesser of two evils as he unintentionally defends mankind from his monstrous foes. This Godzilla's portrayal as a violent force of nature is somewhat in line with the character's portrayal in the early films of the [[Showa era]], and predates his similar portrayal in the [[Heisei era|Heisei series]] of films.
The Marvel Godzilla is an aggressive creature who often attacks anything in his path. According to [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Yuriko Takiguchi (Earth-616)|Yuriko Takiguchi]], Godzilla's behavior is unpredictable, making him particularly dangerous. Takiguchi's assistant [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Tamara Hashioka (Earth-616)|Tamara Hashioka]] compares Godzilla to an elemental force, claiming he has his own dignity and cannot be judged as evil. His aggressiveness frequently puts him into conflict with other, more malevolent monsters, painting him as the lesser of two evils as he unintentionally defends mankind from his monstrous foes. This Godzilla's portrayal as a violent force of nature is somewhat in line with the character's portrayal in the early films of the [[Showa era]], and predates his similar portrayal in the [[Heisei era|Heisei series]] of films. However, Godzilla has occasionally displayed inquisitive behavior and has also proved capable of complex reasoning and making moral decisions. In one of his fights against another giant monster, it is explained that Godzilla’s drive for survival is drawn from him tapping into his inner strength, which consists of courage and rage.
 
==Origins==
==Origins==
The Marvel Godzilla is a prehistoric hybrid of land and sea reptiles who was awakened in [[1956]] by an underwater joint-nation nuclear weapon test in the [[Pacific Ocean]] which split open the ocean floor and released him. The King of the Monsters first attacked the ship which oversaw the test before attacking [[Japan]]. Over the ensuing two decades, Godzilla became the lesser of two evils, fending off malevolent monsters that would attack [[Japan]]. By unknown means he was eventually trapped in an iceberg, and managed to break free once the iceberg reached Alaska in the 1970's.
The Marvel Godzilla is a prehistoric hybrid of land and sea reptiles who was awakened in [[1956]] by an underwater joint-nation nuclear weapon test in the [[Pacific Ocean]] which split open the ocean floor and released him while also radiologically mutating him. The King of the Monsters first attacked the ship which oversaw the test before attacking [[Tokyo]]. Over the ensuing two decades, Godzilla became the lesser of two evils, fending off malevolent monsters that would attack [[Japan]]. By unknown means he was eventually trapped in an iceberg, and managed to break free once the iceberg reached Alaska in the 1970s.
==History==
==History==
===''[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel)|Godzilla, King of the Monsters]]''===
*''[[Godzilla (Marvel comic)|Godzilla]]'' #1-24 (1977-78)
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 1|The Coming!]]"
*''Transformers'' (1984) #3 (Mentioned)
Godzilla suddenly erupted from an iceberg that floated into Alaskan waters, capsizing a supply ship. The monster quickly stomped ashore and destroyed a lighthouse before making his way to the Alaskan Pipeline. The King of the Monsters easily lifted the pipeline and slammed it on the ground like a whip, causing untold destruction. [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Strategic Homeland Intervention, Enforcement and Logistics Division (Earth-616)|S.H.I.E.L.D.]] was alerted to the attack and sent a [[wikia:w:c:marvel:S.H.I.E.L.D. Helicarrier|Helicarrier]] commanded by Agent [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Timothy Dugan (Earth-616)|Timothy "Dum-Dum" Dugan]] to attack Godzilla. Soldiers were deployed on floating platforms and opened fire on Godzilla, who simply swatted them out of the sky. Dugan commandeered a Disc-Plane and flew at Godzilla, but the monster simply snatched it in his mouth, with Dugan barely escaping. Fighter jets began firing missiles at Godzilla to no effect, with the monster snatching one out of the air and breaking it in half. S.H.I.E.L.D. next deployed an advanced laser cannon invented by [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Tony Stark (Earth-616)|Tony Stark]] to attack Godzilla, which succeeded in hurting and enraging him. Godzilla lashed out with his radioactive fire breath, obliterating the cannon. He continued spewing flames from his mouth, igniting the oil which leaked from the destroyed pipeline and setting the surrounding encampment ablaze. Dugan and Agent [[wikia:w:c:marvel:James Woo (Earth-616)|Jimmy Woo]] drew Godzilla's attention and made him smash a nearby mountain, triggering an avalanche that smothered the raging fire. Godzilla then walked off into the sunset unopposed.
*[[wikia:w:c:marvel:Iron Man Vol 1|''Iron Man'']] #193-194, 196 (1985)
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 2|Thunder in the Darkness!]]"
*[[wikia:w:c:marvel:Thing Vol 1|''The Thing'']] #31 (1985)
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 3|A Tale of Two Saviors]]"
*[[Mighty Avengers issue 1|''Mighty Avengers'' #1]] (2007)
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 4|Godzilla Versus Batragon!]]"
*[[wikia:w:c:marvel:Marvel 75th Anniversary Celebration Vol 1 1|''Marvel 75th Anniversary Celebration'' #1]] (2014) [censored]
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 5|The Isle of Lost Monsters]]"
===''[[Godzilla (Marvel comic)|Godzilla]]''===
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 6|A Monster Enslaved!]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 1|The Coming!]]"
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 7|Birth of a Warrior!]]"
Godzilla suddenly erupted from an iceberg that floated into Alaskan waters, capsizing a supply ship. The monster quickly stomped ashore and destroyed a lighthouse before making his way to the Alaskan Pipeline. The King of the Monsters easily lifted the pipeline and slammed it on the ground like a whip, causing untold destruction. [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Strategic Homeland Intervention, Enforcement and Logistics Division (Earth-616)|S.H.I.E.L.D.]] was alerted to the attack and sent a [[wikia:w:c:marvel:S.H.I.E.L.D. Helicarrier|Helicarrier]] commanded by Agent [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Timothy Dugan (Earth-616)|Timothy Aloysius Cadwallader "Dum Dum" Dugan]] to attack Godzilla. Soldiers were deployed on floating platforms and opened fire on Godzilla, who simply swatted them out of the sky. Dugan commandeered a Disc-Plane and flew at Godzilla, but the monster simply snatched it in his mouth, with Dugan barely escaping. Fighter jets began firing missiles at Godzilla to no effect, with the monster snatching one out of the air and breaking it in half. S.H.I.E.L.D. next deployed an advanced laser cannon invented by [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Tony Stark (Earth-616)|Tony Stark]] to attack Godzilla, which only succeeded in hurting and enraging him. Godzilla lashed out with his radioactive fire breath, obliterating the cannon. He continued spewing flames from his mouth, igniting the oil which leaked from the destroyed pipeline and setting the surrounding encampment and forest ablaze. Dugan and Agent [[wikia:w:c:marvel:James Woo (Earth-616)|Jimmy Woo]] drew Godzilla's attention and made him smash a nearby mountain, triggering an avalanche that smothered the raging fire. Godzilla then walked off into the sunset unopposed.
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 8|Titan Times Two!]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 2|Thunder in the Darkness!]]"
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 9|The Fate of Las Vegas]]"
After leaving Alaska, Godzilla rose from Elliot Bay, still in pain from S.H.I.E.L.D.'s laser cannon, and set the docks ablaze with his fire breath. As Godzilla made his way toward the heart of Seattle, he was observed from above by Agent [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Gabriel Jones (Earth-616)|Gabe Jones]], who reported the sighting to S.H.I.E.L.D. As night fell, Godzilla laid waste to the city before being drawn toward the lights of the Space Needle. Godzilla peered into the observation deck and lit it on fire with his fire breath. Jones destroyed the local power plant with bombs and plunged the city into a blackout in order to stop Godzilla, but the monster was still attracted to the fire he had started at the top of the Space Needle. Using beacon-flares, S.H.I.E.L.D. began to lure Godzilla away from the city and toward the ocean. However, the monster stopped following the flares once he reached the coastline. The Helicarrier flew overhead and emitted a blinding bright light that blinded Godzilla. With the monster temporarily stunned, block-busters opened fire at Godzilla's back, causing him to fall off the cliffside he was standing on and into the ocean below. Godzilla's head broke the surface as he turned and began swimming out to sea rather than returning to Seattle.
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 10|Godzilla vs. Yetrigar]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 3|A Tale of Two Saviors]]"
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 11|Arena for Three!]]"
Godzilla surfaced next at the [[Golden Gate Bridge]] in [[San Francisco]]. Police watercraft opened fire on him, irritating him enough to smash one. Four of the members of the [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Champions of Los Angeles (Earth-616)|Champions]] - the [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Natalia Romanova (Earth-616)|Black Widow]], [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Hercules Panhellenios (Earth-616)|Hercules]], the [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Robert Drake (Earth-616)|Iceman]], and the [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Warren Worthington III (Earth-616)|Angel]] - sortied to the area. They landed their [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Champscraft|Champscraft]] on the bridge as Godzilla shifted his attention to Fisherman's Wharf. Godzilla struck the Angel with an errant swing of his tail as the hero tried convincing police to evacuate, knocking him to the ground. Hercules stopped him from stepping on the Angel, using his incredible strength to topple him. He quickly returned to his feet and unleashed his radioactive fire on the city.
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 12|The Mega-Monsters from Beyond! Part One: The Beta-Beast!]]"
 
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 13|The Mega-Monsters from Beyond! Part II: Triax]]"
The Helicarrier arrived on the scene and readied Electro-Mag-Nets to stun Godzilla, while Dum Dum Dugan bickered with the Champions over jurisdiction. As he took off on his hoverbike, the Angel startled him by flying too close, forcing him to leap off of it as it sailed into Godzilla's mouth. The monster briefly submerged into the bay, only to emerge beneath the Golden Gate Bridge. The Iceman briefly froze Godzilla's head as Hercules swam towards him and an irate Dugan ordered the Electro-Mag-Nets into action. Realizing the danger to Hercules, he tried to call off the attack, failing to do so but spoiling his team's aim. The nets only grazed Godzilla, but his thrashing forced Hercules underwater. The demigod retaliated by throwing a broken-off section of the bridge at Godzilla, only for the monster to dodge it. The missile hit the Helicarrier instead, causing it to drop into the bay directly in front of Godzilla. He paused suddenly amidst the mayhem, gently crumpled one of the Helicarrier's back fins, and returned to the sea. Dugan blamed the Champions for the fiasco, but Jones pointed out that S.H.I.E.L.D. was equally responsible.
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 14|Mega-Monsters Part III: The Super-Beasts]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 4|Godzilla Versus Batragon!]]"
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 15|Roam on the Range]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 5|The Isle of Lost Monsters]]"
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 16|The Great Godzilla Roundup!]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 6|A Monster Enslaved!]]"
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 17|Of Lizards, Great and Small]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 7|Birth of a Warrior!]]"
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 18|Fugitive in Manhattan!]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 8|Titan Times Two!]]"
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 19|With Dugan on the Docks!]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 9|The Fate of Las Vegas]]"
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 20|A Night at the Museum]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 10|Godzilla vs. Yetrigar]]"
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 21|The Doom Trip!]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 11|Arena for Three!]]"
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 22|The Devil and the Dinosaur!]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 12|The Mega-Monsters from Beyond! Part One: The Beta-Beast!]]"
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 23|The King Once More]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 13|The Mega-Monsters from Beyond! Part II: Triax]]"
;"[[Godzilla, King of the Monsters (Marvel) Issue 24|And Lo, a Child Shall Lead Them]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 14|Mega-Monsters Part III: The Super-Beasts]]"
===''Iron Man''===
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 15|Roam on the Range]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 16|The Great Godzilla Roundup!]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 17|Of Lizards, Great and Small]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 18|Fugitive in Manhattan!]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 19|With Dugan on the Docks!]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 20|A Night at the Museum]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 21|The Doom Trip!]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 22|The Devil and the Dinosaur!]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 23|The King Once More]]"
;"[[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 24|And Lo, a Child Shall Lead Them]]"
 
===[[wikia:w:c:marvel:Iron Man Vol 1|''Iron Man'' #193-194 and 196]]===
;"[[Iron Man Issue 193|The Choice and the Challenge]]"
;"[[Iron Man Issue 193|The Choice and the Challenge]]"
[[File:Godzilla_(Earth-616)_mutated_form_from_Iron_Man_Vol_1_193.jpg|thumb|right|200px|The Godzilla mutation in ''Iron Man'' #193]]
[[File:Godzilla_(Earth-616)_mutated_form_from_Iron_Man_Vol_1_193.jpg|thumb|right|200px|The Godzilla mutation in ''Iron Man'' #193]]
Line 75: Line 105:
After the suit's boosters could no longer sustain their combined weights, Stark and the former Godzilla fell into the sea, the latter losing interest and swimming away.
After the suit's boosters could no longer sustain their combined weights, Stark and the former Godzilla fell into the sea, the latter losing interest and swimming away.
;[[Iron Man Issue 196|''Iron Man'' #196]]
;[[Iron Man Issue 196|''Iron Man'' #196]]
After abandoning Stark, the creature discovered his abandoned suit of Iron Man armor and brought it back to Demonicus' lair. There, the doctor took the beast back in and shelved his plans to take over the world with an army of clones of his creature, now favoring the use of Stark's armor to take personal revenge on him for his interference in his schemes.
After abandoning Stark, the creature discovered his abandoned suit of Iron Man armor and brought it back to Demonicus' lair. There, the doctor took the beast back in and shelved his plans to take over the world with an army of clones of his creature for the time being, now favoring the use of Stark's armor to take personal revenge on him for his interference in his schemes.
<gallery widths="120" position="center" captionalign="center" spacing="small">
<gallery widths="120" position="center" captionalign="center" spacing="small">
Neo clones.png|Clones of the mutant Godzilla
Neo clones.png|Clones of the mutant Godzilla
</gallery>
</gallery>
===''The Thing''===
 
===[[wikia:w:c:marvel:Thing Vol 1|''The Thing'' #31]]===
[[File:Godzilla-marvel-mutated.jpg|thumb|right|200px|The Godzilla mutation in ''The Thing'' #31]]
[[File:Godzilla-marvel-mutated.jpg|thumb|right|200px|The Godzilla mutation in ''The Thing'' #31]]
;"[[The Thing Issue 31|Devil Dinosaur: The Movie!]]"
;[[The Thing issue 31|"Devil Dinosaur: The Movie"]]
Whether it was the same creature that had once been Godzilla, or simply one of its clones, a member of Demonicus' race of gigantic reptiles surfaced near the set of a movie based on the Devil Dinosaur. Likely intrigued by the Devil Dinosaur animatronic, the beast came out of the ocean and attacked. The crew and technicians did their best to fight back, trying to swing their suspended "pteradactyl" prop to distract it while they prepared to operate the robotic Devil Dinosaur. The monster quickly bit the neck of the robot, electrocuting it. Unused to the sensation, the creature retreated back into the ocean and was never seen again.
The mutated Godzilla resurfaced on a desert island in the Pacific Ocean, the filming location of ''{{Plain link|[https://marvel.wikia.com/wiki/Devil_Dinosaur_(Earth-78411) Devil Dinosaur]}}: The Movie''. Likely intrigued by the activity, Godzilla poked his head above the water's surface to take a peek at the island one evening, before attacking during the night. Godzilla destroyed the film set before returning to the sea. That afternoon he arose once again to menace the film crew. After getting from the beach to the clifftop off camera, Godzilla posed a threat to the actors, and mistook the Devil Dinosaur animatronic for a rival. The special effects director, Mr. Trimble, swung the suspended "[[Pteranodon|pteradactyl]]" prop at him to distract him long enough for the actors to escape from the set. Godzilla bit and crushed the prop, before turning his jaws on the Devil Dinosaur prop. However, when he bit into its back, he was electrocuted by the sparking animatronics. Godzilla then retreated into the ocean, never to be seen again, although it is implied that the Fantastic Four might go looking for him.
{{Clear}}
 
===[[Mighty Avengers issue 1|''Mighty Avengers'' #1]]===
When the [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Harvey Elder (Earth-616)|Mole Man]] invaded [[New York City]] with his army of giant monsters from [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Monster Isle|Monster Isle]], the unmutated Godzilla was among them.
 
===[[wikia:w:c:marvel:Marvel 75th Anniversary Celebration Vol 1 1|''Marvel 75th Anniversary Celebration'' #1]]===
[[File:Godzilla in Licensed Contest of Champions.jpeg|thumb|right|200px|Godzilla fighting Shoegun Warriors, Rom, Superpro, and Micronauts]]
The stories in this issue are interspersed with comedic "rejected" pitches for Marvel comics, one of which is ''Licensed [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Contest of Champions|Contest of Champions]]''. The cover depicts a battle between Godzilla, the [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Shogun Warriors (Earth-616)|Shogun Warriors]], [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Phil Grayfield (Earth-616)|SuperPro]], and [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Rom (Earth-616)|Rom]], teasing an appearance by the [[wikia:w:c:marvel:Micronauts (Earth-616)|Micronauts]] as well. Since Marvel no longer has the rights to ''any'' of these properties (although ''Micronauts'' characters that Marvel themselves created continue to appear in their comics without using the team's name), they are all obscured and censored by black boxes and furious notes from an editor.
{{Clear}}
{{Clear}}
==Abilities==
==Abilities==
===Fire Breath===
===Radioactive breath===
Instead of firing the character's traditional atomic breath, the Marvel Godzilla is able to breath radioactive flames from his mouth. Godzilla can also shoot a non-lethal blast of hot air from his mouth instead of fire breath. Godzilla's fire breath is strong enough to overpower the Human Torch. However, he appears to lose this ability following his mutation at the hands of Dr. Demonicus.
The Marvel Godzilla is capable to breathing a breath weapon similar to radioactive flames from his mouth, referred to as "radioactive breath" in [[Godzilla (Marvel comic) issue 5|issue 5]]. Godzilla can also shoot a non-lethal blast of hot air from his mouth instead of radioactive breath. Godzilla's radioactive breath is strong enough to overpower the Human Torch. However, he appears to lose this ability following his mutation at the hands of Dr. Demonicus.
===Durability===
===Durability===
Like most other incarnations of Godzilla, the Marvel Godzilla displays an impressive level of durability. Godzilla is immune to all conventional weaponry, and appears to be mostly unharmed when hit full-force by Thor's hammer.
Like most other incarnations of Godzilla, the Marvel Godzilla displays an impressive level of durability. Godzilla is immune to all conventional weaponry, and appears to be mostly unharmed when hit full-force by Thor's hammer, though it did made him feel a lot of pain.
===Physical Strength===
 
Godzilla possesses immense strength not unlike that of past incarnations of the character. His strength appears to be equal with that of Thor, as neither could outdo the other while pushing opposite sides of a building.
=== Physical Abilities ===
Godzilla’s strength is unimaginable, being able to match Thor, who even compared Godzilla to the Midgard Serpent, whose reputation revolves around constricting planets. Heracles, the Greek god of strength and known for handling the weight of the universe itself, struggled to hold back Godzilla when the monster tried to crush him under his foot.
 
=== Intelligence ===
Godzilla is somehow capable of understanding human speech, as demonstrated when a young Japanese boy persuaded him to stop fighting the Avengers.
 
==Gallery==
<gallery widths="120" position="center" spacing="small" captionalign="center">
Godzilla-1-1977-002.jpg|Godzilla's first appearance in the U.S.
Godzilla (Marvel).jpg
Marvel_Godzilla_Full.jpg|Artwork used to announce the Marvel comic book series
scn_0004.jpg|Godzilla takes down the Helicarrier
godzillamonsters5f.jpg|Godzilla vs. [[Lepirax]]
MarvelGodzilla12BetaBeastBattle.jpg|Godzilla vs. the Beta-Beast
J. Jonah yells at Godzilla.jpg|J. Jonah Jameson yells at Godzilla
thorgodzilla.jpg|Godzilla vs. Thor
3037496-7470203526-g02z.jpg|Godzilla vs. Thor at the [[Empire State Building]]
Godzilla vs. The Whole Marvel Verse.jpg|Godzilla vs. S.H.I.E.L.D., the Avengers and the Fantastic Four of the Marvel Universe of Earth-616
Godzilla-Spidey.jpg|Spider-Man takes a picture of Godzilla
Godzilla Marvel.jpeg|Godzilla in textless The Godzilla: Original Marvel Years Omnibus cover
File:Godzilla Mightly Avengers Original Design.jpeg
</gallery>
===Merchandise===
<gallery widths="120" position="center" spacing="small" captionalign="center">
File:Ymsf marvel godzilla.png|[[Y-MSF|Raymond Toys]] Godzilla
</gallery>
 
==Roar==
==Roar==
Godzilla's roar is spelled "MRAWWW" in the comic.
Godzilla's roar is spelled "MRAWWW" in the comic.
==Trivia==
==Trivia==
*Artwork of this incarnation of Godzilla was used by [[Toho]] to create Godzilla's current [[Copyright icons|copyright icon]].
*Artwork of this incarnation of Godzilla was used by [[Toho]] to create Godzilla's current [[Trademark icons|trademark icon]].
*The Marvel Godzilla's appearance reflects the [[United States|American]] poster artwork for ''[[Godzilla (1954 film)|Godzilla, King of the Monsters!]]'', which depicted Godzilla as green and breathing orange flames. The stereotype of Godzilla being green and breathing fire would be carried over to many other depictions of the character in both American and Japanese media, such as Hanna-Barbera's ''[[Godzilla (Hanna-Barbera series)|Godzilla]]'' cartoon and the [[Godzilland (Merchandise Line)|Godzilland merchandise line]], as well as the [[Adventure! Godzilland|television series]] and [[Get Going! Godzilland|OVAs]] based on it. In the film ''[[Godzilla 2000: Millennium]]'', Godzilla was actually made a dark green color while his atomic breath was depicted as orange rather than blue. These characteristics would also be present in ''[[Godzilla vs. Megaguirus]]''.
*The Marvel Godzilla's appearance reflects the [[United States|American]] poster artwork for ''[[Godzilla (1954 film)#U.S. release|Godzilla, King of the Monsters!]]'', which depicted Godzilla as green and breathing orange flames. The stereotype of Godzilla being green and breathing fire would be carried over to many other depictions of the character in both American and Japanese media, such as Hanna-Barbera's ''[[Godzilla (series)|Godzilla]]'' cartoon and the [[Godzilland (Merchandise Line)|Godzilland merchandise line]], as well as the [[Adventure! Godzilland|television series]] and [[Get Going! Godzilland|OVAs]] based on the latter. Most notably, in the 1999 [[Toho]] film ''[[Godzilla 2000: Millennium]]'', Godzilla's skin was a dark green color, while his atomic breath was orange rather than blue. These characteristics were carried over into the next film, ''[[Godzilla vs. Megaguirus]]''.
*The backstory given for Marvel's version of Godzilla loosely reflects that of the [[Showa era|Showa]] ''[[Godzilla (franchise)|Godzilla]]'' films, in that he is said to be a prehistoric monster living deep underwater before being unleashed and irradiated by an underwater nuclear bomb test. After first attacking [[Tokyo]], he gradually began to be viewed as the lesser of two evils as other, more malevolent, monsters began to attack [[Japan]]. The comic specifies that Godzilla's first attack on Tokyo occurred in [[1956]] rather than [[1954]], reflecting the release date of ''[[Godzilla (1954 film)#U.S. release|Godzilla, King of the Monsters!]]'' instead of the original Japanese version of his debut film. It also makes no specific mention of any of the other monsters Godzilla encountered in the Showa films (mainly because Marvel's contract with Toho permitted them the comics rights only to Godzilla and not to said other monsters, such as [[Rodan]], [[Mothra]], [[Anguirus]], [[King Ghidorah]], [[Mechagodzilla]], etc.), nor does it indicate that more than one Godzilla existed, as was the case in said films.
*With the [[Monsterverse]] incarnation of [[Godzilla (Monsterverse)|Godzilla]] appearing in the collaboration [[:Category:Comic Series|comic book]] ''[[Justice League vs. Godzilla vs. Kong]]'' in [[2023]], the character has appeared in the universes of both [[wikipedia:DC Comics|DC]] and [[Marvel Comics]].
 
==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}
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{{Comments}}
{{Comments}}
{{Era|TOH|MAR|BOK|GOD}}
{{Era|TOH|MAR|BOK|GOD}}
<!--- [[Category:Monsters]]
[[Category:Godzilla]]
[[Category:Comic Kaiju]] --->
[[Category:Godzilla]]
[[Category:Marvel]]

Latest revision as of 22:46, 9 April 2024

Godzilla comic Incarnations
None
Godzilla (Marvel)
Godzilla (Dark Horse)
Godzilla trademark icon
Godzilla®
Godzilla in Godzilla, King of the Monsters #1
The mutated Godzilla in Iron Man
The unmutated Godzilla in Mighty Avengers
Alternate names The Beta-Beast, A Monstrous Hybrid of Land and Marine Reptiles,
Subtitle(s) King of the Monsters
Species Giant irradiated prehistoric amphibious reptile
Height 1 foot (shrunken, smallest),[1]
4 feet (shrunken, human-sized)[2]

605ft/184.4m [3]

Forms Shrunken (sub-human height, human height),
Doctor Demonicus' mutation
Controlled by Doctor DemonicusIM #193-194, 196, Mole Man Mighty Avengers
First appearance Latest appearance
Godzilla #1 Marvel 75th Anniversary Celebration
MosuGoji sandbox.png This page is a sandbox.
Sandboxed pages are unfinished and not yet approved.
Information found here may be unpolished or unverified.
Some factors are certain: Godzilla represents a hitherto unknown essence of life and behavior...As such he is highly unpredictable, and definitely the most dangerous living creature on the face of the Earth.
„ 

Yuriko Takiguchi (Godzilla #2)

Godzilla (ゴジラ,   Gojira) is a giant monster who starred in Marvel Comics' Godzilla series. He is the first incarnation of Godzilla to originate in American media, as well as the first incarnation featured in an American comic.

A giant prehistoric monster roused by atomic testing, Godzilla first menaced Japan in 1956 and repeatedly attacked the nation's cities before gradually becoming the lesser of two evils, fending off other more malevolent creatures and unintentionally defending mankind in the process. This lasted for 20 years. At some point after that, Godzilla became frozen inside an iceberg, only to break free once the iceberg reached Alaska. Godzilla then began a destructive campaign across the United States, tracked by S.H.I.E.L.D. and crossing paths with the many heroes of the Marvel Universe. This finally culminated in a battle against the Avengers and the Fantastic Four in New York City, which ended in a draw as Godzilla decided to return to the ocean. He was later captured and mutated by his old nemesis Doctor Demonicus and used as a pawn in his evil plans, at one point clashing with Iron Man. Godzilla largely disappeared afterward, though many creatures resembling him have since appeared. His last known appearance came when he attacked New York City along with several other inhabitants of Monster Island under the control of the Mole Man. By this point, he no longer bore the mutated appearance he had while under Demonicus' control.

Name

See also: Godzilla#Name.

Godzilla's Japanese name, Gojira (ゴジラ), comes from a combination of the Japanese approximation of "gorilla" (ゴリラ,   gorira), and kujira (クジラ), the Japanese word for "whale."

After the close of Godzilla, Godzilla is never referred to by name during any of his subsequent appearances, due to Marvel Comics no longer holding the rights to the character, though, perhaps jokingly, the mutation which appears in issue #31 of The Thing is referred to as "Godzilla."

Design

Upon finally securing the comics rights to Godzilla, and after opting for an original storyline instead of adapting any of the existing films, Marvel began considering their interpretation of Godzilla's appearance. Due to the campy nature of the contemporary films, they chose to model their Godzilla after the original suit. Despite this, they were willing to make changes to make the character more workable in the new medium.[4]

This incarnation of Godzilla is entirely green, unlike the character's film incarnations, and has purely red eyes. His dorsal fins start near the top of his head, similarly to the Hanna-Barbera Godzilla. His head is more dinosaur-like, with a long snout, sharp teeth, and eyes positioned higher on his head and facing slightly to the sides. His dorsal fins maintain the traditional maple-leaf shape, but are green in color rather than bone-white. The Marvel Godzilla has long, muscular arms with four claws. The Marvel Godzilla tends to keep his tail suspended in the air rather than drag it across the ground.

In the Iron Man comics, Godzilla's mutated form has webbed fingers and large fish-like fins starting at his armpits and going down to his wrists. During his appearances in The Thing #31, the Godzilla mutation has very short arms and large scales on his brow and lip areas. In both comics the mutated Godzilla has a large fish-like fin in place of his dorsal fins, and two horns protruding from the top of his snout. He is also a lot smaller than his normal appearance.

In his last known appearance in Mighty Avengers #1, Godzilla has returned to a more traditional appearance, having a appearance closely to his Heisei Counterpart. In an early version of the comic, he bore visible dorsal fins, though they were removed in the final comic.

Personality

The Marvel Godzilla is an aggressive creature who often attacks anything in his path. According to Yuriko Takiguchi, Godzilla's behavior is unpredictable, making him particularly dangerous. Takiguchi's assistant Tamara Hashioka compares Godzilla to an elemental force, claiming he has his own dignity and cannot be judged as evil. His aggressiveness frequently puts him into conflict with other, more malevolent monsters, painting him as the lesser of two evils as he unintentionally defends mankind from his monstrous foes. This Godzilla's portrayal as a violent force of nature is somewhat in line with the character's portrayal in the early films of the Showa era, and predates his similar portrayal in the Heisei series of films. However, Godzilla has occasionally displayed inquisitive behavior and has also proved capable of complex reasoning and making moral decisions. In one of his fights against another giant monster, it is explained that Godzilla’s drive for survival is drawn from him tapping into his inner strength, which consists of courage and rage.

Origins

The Marvel Godzilla is a prehistoric hybrid of land and sea reptiles who was awakened in 1956 by an underwater joint-nation nuclear weapon test in the Pacific Ocean which split open the ocean floor and released him while also radiologically mutating him. The King of the Monsters first attacked the ship which oversaw the test before attacking Tokyo. Over the ensuing two decades, Godzilla became the lesser of two evils, fending off malevolent monsters that would attack Japan. By unknown means he was eventually trapped in an iceberg, and managed to break free once the iceberg reached Alaska in the 1970s.

History

Godzilla

"The Coming!"

Godzilla suddenly erupted from an iceberg that floated into Alaskan waters, capsizing a supply ship. The monster quickly stomped ashore and destroyed a lighthouse before making his way to the Alaskan Pipeline. The King of the Monsters easily lifted the pipeline and slammed it on the ground like a whip, causing untold destruction. S.H.I.E.L.D. was alerted to the attack and sent a Helicarrier commanded by Agent Timothy Aloysius Cadwallader "Dum Dum" Dugan to attack Godzilla. Soldiers were deployed on floating platforms and opened fire on Godzilla, who simply swatted them out of the sky. Dugan commandeered a Disc-Plane and flew at Godzilla, but the monster simply snatched it in his mouth, with Dugan barely escaping. Fighter jets began firing missiles at Godzilla to no effect, with the monster snatching one out of the air and breaking it in half. S.H.I.E.L.D. next deployed an advanced laser cannon invented by Tony Stark to attack Godzilla, which only succeeded in hurting and enraging him. Godzilla lashed out with his radioactive fire breath, obliterating the cannon. He continued spewing flames from his mouth, igniting the oil which leaked from the destroyed pipeline and setting the surrounding encampment and forest ablaze. Dugan and Agent Jimmy Woo drew Godzilla's attention and made him smash a nearby mountain, triggering an avalanche that smothered the raging fire. Godzilla then walked off into the sunset unopposed.

"Thunder in the Darkness!"

After leaving Alaska, Godzilla rose from Elliot Bay, still in pain from S.H.I.E.L.D.'s laser cannon, and set the docks ablaze with his fire breath. As Godzilla made his way toward the heart of Seattle, he was observed from above by Agent Gabe Jones, who reported the sighting to S.H.I.E.L.D. As night fell, Godzilla laid waste to the city before being drawn toward the lights of the Space Needle. Godzilla peered into the observation deck and lit it on fire with his fire breath. Jones destroyed the local power plant with bombs and plunged the city into a blackout in order to stop Godzilla, but the monster was still attracted to the fire he had started at the top of the Space Needle. Using beacon-flares, S.H.I.E.L.D. began to lure Godzilla away from the city and toward the ocean. However, the monster stopped following the flares once he reached the coastline. The Helicarrier flew overhead and emitted a blinding bright light that blinded Godzilla. With the monster temporarily stunned, block-busters opened fire at Godzilla's back, causing him to fall off the cliffside he was standing on and into the ocean below. Godzilla's head broke the surface as he turned and began swimming out to sea rather than returning to Seattle.

"A Tale of Two Saviors"

Godzilla surfaced next at the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco. Police watercraft opened fire on him, irritating him enough to smash one. Four of the members of the Champions - the Black Widow, Hercules, the Iceman, and the Angel - sortied to the area. They landed their Champscraft on the bridge as Godzilla shifted his attention to Fisherman's Wharf. Godzilla struck the Angel with an errant swing of his tail as the hero tried convincing police to evacuate, knocking him to the ground. Hercules stopped him from stepping on the Angel, using his incredible strength to topple him. He quickly returned to his feet and unleashed his radioactive fire on the city.

The Helicarrier arrived on the scene and readied Electro-Mag-Nets to stun Godzilla, while Dum Dum Dugan bickered with the Champions over jurisdiction. As he took off on his hoverbike, the Angel startled him by flying too close, forcing him to leap off of it as it sailed into Godzilla's mouth. The monster briefly submerged into the bay, only to emerge beneath the Golden Gate Bridge. The Iceman briefly froze Godzilla's head as Hercules swam towards him and an irate Dugan ordered the Electro-Mag-Nets into action. Realizing the danger to Hercules, he tried to call off the attack, failing to do so but spoiling his team's aim. The nets only grazed Godzilla, but his thrashing forced Hercules underwater. The demigod retaliated by throwing a broken-off section of the bridge at Godzilla, only for the monster to dodge it. The missile hit the Helicarrier instead, causing it to drop into the bay directly in front of Godzilla. He paused suddenly amidst the mayhem, gently crumpled one of the Helicarrier's back fins, and returned to the sea. Dugan blamed the Champions for the fiasco, but Jones pointed out that S.H.I.E.L.D. was equally responsible.

"Godzilla Versus Batragon!"
"The Isle of Lost Monsters"
"A Monster Enslaved!"
"Birth of a Warrior!"
"Titan Times Two!"
"The Fate of Las Vegas"
"Godzilla vs. Yetrigar"
"Arena for Three!"
"The Mega-Monsters from Beyond! Part One: The Beta-Beast!"
"The Mega-Monsters from Beyond! Part II: Triax"
"Mega-Monsters Part III: The Super-Beasts"
"Roam on the Range"
"The Great Godzilla Roundup!"
"Of Lizards, Great and Small"
"Fugitive in Manhattan!"
"With Dugan on the Docks!"
"A Night at the Museum"
"The Doom Trip!"
"The Devil and the Dinosaur!"
"The King Once More"
"And Lo, a Child Shall Lead Them"

Iron Man #193-194 and 196

"The Choice and the Challenge"
The Godzilla mutation in Iron Man #193

After being captured by his former nemesis Dr. Demonicus, Godzilla was mutated to an unrecognizable extent, with further mutation being used as punishment for misbehavior. One day while in the Pacific Ocean, the former Godzilla swatted an Avengers Quinjet out of the sky and onto an uncharted island, though Demonicus was greatly angered by the fact that the beast had not destroyed it completely. On reaching the shore and seeing the ship unoccupied, Demonicus discovered a native village, and ordered the monster to destroy it. However, Tigra, the ship's pilot, attempted to lure him away and leapt at the beast before trying to run away to divert its attention from the villagers. The monster grabbed her, but was then attacked by the Avengers. Hawkeye fired an explosive-tipped arrow into its mouth, causing it to drop her. The mutated monster attempted to swipe at Hawkeye, but was stopped by Tony Stark, who used an old Iron Man suit to carry it away over the ocean.

"Otherwhere"

After the suit's boosters could no longer sustain their combined weights, Stark and the former Godzilla fell into the sea, the latter losing interest and swimming away.

Iron Man #196

After abandoning Stark, the creature discovered his abandoned suit of Iron Man armor and brought it back to Demonicus' lair. There, the doctor took the beast back in and shelved his plans to take over the world with an army of clones of his creature for the time being, now favoring the use of Stark's armor to take personal revenge on him for his interference in his schemes.

The Thing #31

The Godzilla mutation in The Thing #31
"Devil Dinosaur: The Movie"

The mutated Godzilla resurfaced on a desert island in the Pacific Ocean, the filming location of Devil Dinosaur: The Movie. Likely intrigued by the activity, Godzilla poked his head above the water's surface to take a peek at the island one evening, before attacking during the night. Godzilla destroyed the film set before returning to the sea. That afternoon he arose once again to menace the film crew. After getting from the beach to the clifftop off camera, Godzilla posed a threat to the actors, and mistook the Devil Dinosaur animatronic for a rival. The special effects director, Mr. Trimble, swung the suspended "pteradactyl" prop at him to distract him long enough for the actors to escape from the set. Godzilla bit and crushed the prop, before turning his jaws on the Devil Dinosaur prop. However, when he bit into its back, he was electrocuted by the sparking animatronics. Godzilla then retreated into the ocean, never to be seen again, although it is implied that the Fantastic Four might go looking for him.

Mighty Avengers #1

When the Mole Man invaded New York City with his army of giant monsters from Monster Isle, the unmutated Godzilla was among them.

Marvel 75th Anniversary Celebration #1

Godzilla fighting Shoegun Warriors, Rom, Superpro, and Micronauts

The stories in this issue are interspersed with comedic "rejected" pitches for Marvel comics, one of which is Licensed Contest of Champions. The cover depicts a battle between Godzilla, the Shogun Warriors, SuperPro, and Rom, teasing an appearance by the Micronauts as well. Since Marvel no longer has the rights to any of these properties (although Micronauts characters that Marvel themselves created continue to appear in their comics without using the team's name), they are all obscured and censored by black boxes and furious notes from an editor.

Abilities

Radioactive breath

The Marvel Godzilla is capable to breathing a breath weapon similar to radioactive flames from his mouth, referred to as "radioactive breath" in issue 5. Godzilla can also shoot a non-lethal blast of hot air from his mouth instead of radioactive breath. Godzilla's radioactive breath is strong enough to overpower the Human Torch. However, he appears to lose this ability following his mutation at the hands of Dr. Demonicus.

Durability

Like most other incarnations of Godzilla, the Marvel Godzilla displays an impressive level of durability. Godzilla is immune to all conventional weaponry, and appears to be mostly unharmed when hit full-force by Thor's hammer, though it did made him feel a lot of pain.

Physical Abilities

Godzilla’s strength is unimaginable, being able to match Thor, who even compared Godzilla to the Midgard Serpent, whose reputation revolves around constricting planets. Heracles, the Greek god of strength and known for handling the weight of the universe itself, struggled to hold back Godzilla when the monster tried to crush him under his foot.

Intelligence

Godzilla is somehow capable of understanding human speech, as demonstrated when a young Japanese boy persuaded him to stop fighting the Avengers.

Gallery

Merchandise

Roar

Godzilla's roar is spelled "MRAWWW" in the comic.

Trivia

  • Artwork of this incarnation of Godzilla was used by Toho to create Godzilla's current trademark icon.
  • The Marvel Godzilla's appearance reflects the American poster artwork for Godzilla, King of the Monsters!, which depicted Godzilla as green and breathing orange flames. The stereotype of Godzilla being green and breathing fire would be carried over to many other depictions of the character in both American and Japanese media, such as Hanna-Barbera's Godzilla cartoon and the Godzilland merchandise line, as well as the television series and OVAs based on the latter. Most notably, in the 1999 Toho film Godzilla 2000: Millennium, Godzilla's skin was a dark green color, while his atomic breath was orange rather than blue. These characteristics were carried over into the next film, Godzilla vs. Megaguirus.
  • The backstory given for Marvel's version of Godzilla loosely reflects that of the Showa Godzilla films, in that he is said to be a prehistoric monster living deep underwater before being unleashed and irradiated by an underwater nuclear bomb test. After first attacking Tokyo, he gradually began to be viewed as the lesser of two evils as other, more malevolent, monsters began to attack Japan. The comic specifies that Godzilla's first attack on Tokyo occurred in 1956 rather than 1954, reflecting the release date of Godzilla, King of the Monsters! instead of the original Japanese version of his debut film. It also makes no specific mention of any of the other monsters Godzilla encountered in the Showa films (mainly because Marvel's contract with Toho permitted them the comics rights only to Godzilla and not to said other monsters, such as Rodan, Mothra, Anguirus, King Ghidorah, Mechagodzilla, etc.), nor does it indicate that more than one Godzilla existed, as was the case in said films.
  • With the Monsterverse incarnation of Godzilla appearing in the collaboration comic book Justice League vs. Godzilla vs. Kong in 2023, the character has appeared in the universes of both DC and Marvel Comics.

References

This is a list of references for The King of the Monsters/Sandbox/Marvel. These citations are used to identify the reliable sources on which this article is based. These references appear inside articles in the form of superscript numbers, which look like this: [1]

  1. Moench, Doug (February 1979). Godzilla #19: "With Dugan on the Docks!". Marvel Comics Group. p. 1.
  2. Moench, Doug (January 1979). Godzilla #18: "Fugitive in Manhattan!". Marvel Comics Group. p. 31.
  3. In issue 2 of Godzilla, Godzilla attacks the Seattle Satellite Tower, which he appears to be around the same height as.
  4. Goodwin, Archie (August 1977). "Godzilla-Grams", Godzilla #1. Marvel Comics Group. p. 19.

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