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#K'un Lun
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cogentranting · 2 years
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Muneeba’s here still thinking her mom is crazy for believing in djinn. Like Ma’am. I hate to inform you of this, but you live in the MCU. Thor coming to Earth and fighting aliens alongside a raccoon is common knowledge. Give your mom a break. 
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gatecoeur · 2 years
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So last night I got curious about Danny Rand's comic book origin story cuz I'm in the process of figuring out how I wanna portray Danny, and after watching two break down videos, I finally fully understand why Danny Rand fans were pissed
Why the fuck didn't the Netflix show do a more faithful adaptation of his origins, it's so much better narratively speaking???
Like I get wanting to draw connections to The Hand for the purposes of Defenders, but overall og comics Danny just feels way more fleshed out as a character with actual motivations.
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youcantcallmethat · 4 days
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So Netflix Marvel basically made the Hand start off as a Japanese clan of ninja with a side order of Chinese mysticism.
Turn into a blended Chinese/Japanese-inspired cult seeking to colonise a partly-Chinese mostly-blended-Asian area (but destroy it instead of colonising it because drama).
And end up as a vaguely Asian cult where a white woman is in charge of four POC and enslaves a WOC.
I mean. At least it resolves itself with Elektra and Colleen unintentionally working together to wipe them out but damn the Hand was a mess.
For the record, I love Nobu, Gao, and Bakuto, but the Hand really was a mess and they could have done so much better if they'd stopped before they made it Generic Asian Antagonists because it went all downhill from there.
(Colleen being half-Chinese, half-Japanese could have been even more of an amazing commentary on the Hand if they'd stuck to the idea that the Hand was a Japanese-origin ninja clan that attacked and wanted to steal from K'un-Lun and Gao alone was a traitor of K'un-Lun, instead of whatever they thought they were doing with Reid.)
(I'm not going to get into the issues around Tibet and China but I am not surprised that Netflix Marvel didn't bother to address that at all.)
(Also, I find it incredibly disrespectful that they not only introduced a white leader of the Hand who hails from an Asian country, but also that Sowande, the Black leader, was reduced to a gun-wielding gangster. I have no comments on Murakami other than being disappointed that they made him Nobu's puppet master instead of his replacement or equal.)
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shmreduplication · 2 years
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i think if you were the lawyer that had the Fantastic Four as his first clients, who brought the question of superheroes being able to testify while masked to the supreme court and won, who was the mayor of nyc during a city-wide Hand infestation*, then I think other superheroes would know your secret identity if they saw your face and any reassurance from Spidey that he totally didn’t look at your mail after breaking into your apartment so he definitely doesn’t know your secret identity would be bullshit
*the ninja clan not the body part
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usaigi · 1 year
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If Danny Rand was biracial (Chinese-White) he'd still be the forever outsider. Not fitting in with the upper-class society in the US and not fitting in with the upper-class society in East Asia. And when he's orphaned and adopted by K'un-Lun, never fitting in because he's half white and American.
Later when he befriends Luke, Luke has to teach him about racism and the discrimination Brown and Black people experience in the US. For a moment Danny is under the impression he's exactly the same. Luke needing to explain that while Danny has adversities as an Asian man, it's not the same as what he experiences as a Black man.
Then, both of them learning about the 'model minority' myth and how that's been weaponized to divide Asians from Black and Brown people. What it means to be 'white-adjacent' and how that's bullshit and super conditional. It changes the dynamic between Luke and Danny from "Luke needing to constantly teach (white)Danny about racism" to "Luke realizing that everyone is a victim of racism/the white patriarchy."
Throw in Mexican!Matt, Colleen, and Misty so they have to unpack intersectionality and what it means to be poor, disabled, and a women.
I don't know, I just think you can't end violent street-level crime without addressing racism and inequality.
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bookoftheironfist · 2 months
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Today marks the 50th anniversary of the publication of Marvel Premiere #15, which hit shelves on February 19th, 1974! (The cover date of May 15 indicated when the book should be taken off the shelves.) This anthology series served as a testing ground where creative teams tried out new characters and storylines to gauge their appeal. One such character was Iron Fist/Danny Rand, who first appeared in #15 and stuck around for ten more issues until proving popular enough, both here and in his guest appearances in the Deadly Hands of Kung Fu magazine, to earn his own solo comic in 1975.
This was a time when martial arts were exploding in popularity across the U.S., and Marvel leapt onboard the trend with new characters like Shang-Chi/Master of Kung Fu, the Sons of the Tiger, White Tiger (Hector Ayala), and Iron Fist. These characters were a departure from Marvel's standard superhero fare; they were martial arts heroes first and foremost, directly inspired by kung fu films and famous contemporary masters like Bruce Lee, Jim Kelly, and Chuck Norris, and with stories heavily focused on beautiful, thrilling, technically precise fight scenes.
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Caption: "You whirl: one man, still doubled with pain, receives the blow of the hammer...another, already reeling, you dispose of with the monkey blow. The fourth attacker, more cautious than his fellows, only now makes his forward leap..." Marvel Premiere #15 by Roy Thomas, Gil Kane, Glynis Wein, D. Giordano, and L.P. Gregory
This sucker-punch of an introductory issue flips breathlessly back and forth between nineteen-year-old Danny Rand's fight to survive the ritual Challenge of the Many and the One, and his flashbacks to the horrors he experienced as a nine-year-old child when, high in the mountains, he watched his parents die. The issue doesn't have room to introduce the dragon Shou-Lao the Undying (that epicness is saved for Marvel Premiere #16), but it introduces the world of Marvel's K'un-Lun and several of its key players, and teases the core premise by culminating in Danny's first time using the power of the Iron Fist. It's an explosive introduction to a character and corner of the Marvel universe that has only grown richer, larger, and more exciting over the past 50 years.
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classicmarvelera · 11 months
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Mary, Luke & Danny
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Mary Jo Duffy's run on Power-Man and Iron Fist series is a significant contribution to the development of these two urban superheroes. Her unique perspective and storytelling style brought a fresh approach to the characters, making them more relatable to readers. Her work on these titles is still relevant and engaging for today's audiences, making it a must-read for any fan of the superhero genre
Duffy's run on Power-Man and Iron Fist began in 1979 where she took over where Chris Claremont had left off to focus on X-Men and lasted till 1982. During this time, she created a memorable cast of characters and storylines that explored the complex issues faced by the heroes. She also introduced new villains and allies that added depth to the series
One of the most significant contributions Duffy made to the Power-Man and Iron Fist series was the development of Luke Cage's character. Duffy explored Cage's past as a former criminal and how it affected his relationships and his superhero career. She also delved into his personal life which helped to humanize and flesh out the character
In addition to Cage, Duffy also developed Iron Fist's character by exploring his relationship with his mystical powers and his duty as a protector of K'un-Lun. She introduced new challenges and conflicts for Iron Fist, making him a more complex and layered character
Duffy's storytelling style was also unique and groundbreaking for its time. She incorporated socio-political themes into her stories with a lighthearted approach, addressing issues such as racism, poverty, and social inequality. This approach was considered daring and revolutionary at the time, and it helped to distinguish Power-Man and Iron Fist from other superhero titles
Her run on Power-Man and Iron Fist series was a significant contribution to the development of these two urban superheroes. Her original approach and unique perspective helped make the characters more relatable and engaging. Her work on these titles is still relevant and exciting for today's audiences, making it a must-read for any superhero fan
Mary Jo Duffy's run on Power-Man and Iron Fist is remembered more than her other works for Marvel Comics for several reasons. Compared to her other works, Duffy's run on Power-Man and Iron Fist was more consistent and had a greater impact on the characters. Her run on Power-Man and Iron Fist lasted for almost three years, during which she developed the characters and their relationships in a way that had lasting consequences. She introduced new villains and allies (El Águila, Señor Muerte / Señor Suerte to name a few)  that added to the richness of the series, and her socio-political themes and unique storytelling style helped to set the series apart from other superhero titles
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In contrast, some of Duffy's other works for Marvel Comics were shorter and less impactful. For example, her run on the Wolverine series was only four issues long and did not leave as much of a lasting impression on the character or the series. Similarly, her work on the Fallen Angels series was relatively brief and did not have as significant an impact on the characters or the Marvel Universe as a whole
While Duffy's work on Power-Man and Iron Fist is undoubtedly her most memorable, her other works for Marvel Comics are still noteworthy for their unique perspectives and storytelling styles. In addition to the Wolverine and Fallen Angels series, Duffy also contributed to various other titles, including Star Wars, and The Defenders. Her contributions to these titles helped to shape the Marvel Universe and showcase her versatility as a writer
She worked with several talented artists during her run on Power-Man and Iron Fist, but two of the artists with whom she had the best chemistry were undoubtedly Kerry Gammill and Denys Cowan 
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Cover Art by Frank Miller and Klaus Janson
Cowan worked with Duffy on several issues of the series, including some of the "Sabretooth" issues. His artwork perfectly complemented Duffy's writing, bringing her stories to life with dynamic action scenes, expressive character designs, and a strong attention to detail
Gammill's style was well-suited to the urban setting of Power-Man and Iron Fist, and he was able to capture the gritty, street-level feel of the series with ease. His artwork was also able to convey the emotional depth of Duffy's stories, particularly in scenes that focused on the characters' relationships and personal struggles
Both’s artistic contributions to Power-Man and Iron Fist helped to make Duffy's run on the series one of the most memorable and influential in the history of the characters
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From Iron Man Vol. 1 No. 103
Overall, while Mary Jo Duffy's run on Power-Man and Iron Fist is remembered more than her other works for Marvel Comics, her entire body of work is noteworthy for its unique perspectives, socio-political themes, and groundbreaking storytelling style
If you want to experience Duffy's run on Power-Man and Iron Fist for yourself, be sure to check out Marvel Comics' collected editions, available now via Amazon.com Affiliate links. These collections are a great way to experience the entire run of these groundbreaking series and to appreciate the impact that Mary Jo Duffy had on the world of comics
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went home and got my tpb of the iron fist comics and I am back on my lin lie bullshit. thinking about his hands and the shards again and the amount of fine motor control he's having to build back up. and then he just jams a whole bunch more of the shards into his arms. like.
he's really concerned about his duty, isn't he. keeping the sword away from chiyou's demons. keeping the tomb sealed. maybe he thought he was going to get a break. the sword was shattered, he was dead. no more duty for him.
and instead he gets another duty. he's the iron fist now. immortal weapon, protector of k'un lun. oh and he's also still beholden to the whole fu xi thing. the sword has literally become a part of him. he cannot separate himself from his duty because it's literally embedded and tattooed in his skin. at least this time, when he presses the remaining loose shards into his arm, he's choosing it.
and he worked so hard, too. he just relearned how to wield a sword, how to hold chopsticks, how to write. but he's confronted with his duty and in a heartbeat he decides, fuck it, he's not letting chiyou get the sword. by any means necessary. it's his responsibility.
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yellowocaballero · 2 years
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Iron Fist is Kinda Weird
Or: How do we talk about talking about social justice?
I have a diseased brain poisoned from reading comic books since elementary school, and I think it's fun to look at bad things and wonder why they're bad. I ended up writing Danny Rand AKA The Immortal Iron Fist for my Moon Knight fic series and I got so deep into researching him and the Heroes For Hire that he began to interest me. I ended up having a lot of opinions about it, things went out of hand again, I wrote a very weird Iron Fist story, and I'm officially giving up and putting my thoughts down about the character.
TL;DR: Iron Fist's history, character, and most notable relationship has an intrinsic relationship with race that really shouldn't be ignored, but the consistent framing of the character is highly revealing of the assumed context of media about social issues.
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Yeah, there's some stuff to talk about. Rest under the cut. I want to make a giant disclaimer here that I am speaking from the perspective of the origins and histories of the characters, and that I am sourcing from the 1970s-1980s Heroes For Hire comic.
Unfortunately Important History
In 1974 comic book executives realized that martial arts movies were highly popular among teenage boys and were making a lot of money. Similarly, the other comic book execs across the hall were also realizing that Blaxploitation movies were also super hot right now. Thus, Iron Fist and Luke Cage were born. With this identical genesis, it's fitting that they ended up so tightly paired.
Thanks in part to the martial arts movies and the booming Hong Kong and Japanese industries, Orientalism was at a huge high America. Probably highest since the 1920s when the whole archeology thing and movies with dancing women were really taking off. TV shows like Kung Fu, about a man who wandered around knowing kung fu, were about the glories of kung fu and featuring a half-white half-Asian man played by a white man. Similarly, Blaxpoitation movies (which I know relatively little about besides the fact that the NAACP hated it, so that's probably the main takeaway here) were probably the first American film genre predominantly featuring Black people. Blaxploitation films...talked about Black issues...kind of...in a way, and you can see that thread in Luke Cage. The main thing you need to know about Luke Cage was that Dwayne McDuffie, one of the founders of the imprint featuring the only comics that actually deserve to talk about race (DC you neutered Static Shock), hated him. The background for these guys and the cultural & media landscape that gave birth to them is important, but you mostly just need to get that they were born from an American voyeuristic fascination with sensationalized depictions of other cultures.
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Frog (Luke) and Toad (Danny) Are Friends
To their credit (?), they did eventually realize this about themselves, and Danny and Luke's strong friendship was characterized by their polar opposite backgrounds. Danny had been adopted at nine years old by the mystical Oriental city of kung fu etc, became the specialest little white boy and harnessed his chi to become the hero of K'un Lun, and travelled back to America in a revenge quest to find his father's killer and avenge him and inherit a fuckton of money. Luke was in a gang and then prison and he's very bitter about the prison industrial complex. They're good friends and a great team, but you can see repeatedly that no matter how seamlessly they work in the field they essentially can never understand each other. The most interesting parts of their relationship involve the push and pull of this disconnect, where Danny's naïve and clueless about America and Luke has to teach him about how the world works and the injustices that POC face. Luke teaches Danny about racism and checks his privilege like a thousand times a day. Observe.
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Danny doesn't know or give a shit about money so he cluelessly tells Luke that they are best friends, what's mine is yours! Luke's tetchy about it because of Blaxpoitation Baggage. Danny's offended and he doesn't know why, Luke's old wounds are reopened and he struggles to explain it. Frog and Toad have racial conflict.
Danny is, basically, the clueless white guy. The backstory panels highlight that: he was trained in kung fu in K'un Lun, and now he's swimming in money and privilege in America and Luke feels weird about it.
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Look at the way Danny talks about himself - Danny talks about his life in K'un Lun as if he had gone to the weirdest boarding school of all time. He talks about K'un Lun from a distance, using words an American would use. Danny is the privileged, sheltered white guy.
He does not think of Asia as an actual home. He doesn't identify with it. Narratively and thematically, he is a white guy who grew up in a sheltered place learning kung fu and now he's Dazed And Confused in America struggling to connect with his best friend's very unsheltered experiences.
The conversations Danny has with Luke about race are held as a white person. It is Luke explaining racism to a white person over and over again. It is a white person's clueless privilege being knocked down a peg again and again. Danny could be from Antarctica or Mars and his relationship with Luke would be he same.
Wait, Why Would A Dynamic Entirely Around Race Never Engage With The Fact That One Party Grew Up In Asia
You tell me buddy!!!
Why! Why make this choice? It is RIGHT there! Why would a guy whose entire schtick is living in Fantasy Vaguely Tibet from ages 9-19 never once speak from that cultural perspective? Why flush all of that experience and perspective down the drain?
Why would Danny engage with the world as a privileged, clueless white guy? He was just a kid when he left America. He doesn't engage with these conversations with Luke as, "Wow, your weird American situation's fucked up", he engages with it as "That can't possibly be what America is like!". Like a white person. There is no difference between Danny and someone who never left their boarding school as a child.
Is this really the most interesting way to talk about race? The characters, by virtue of their history and genesis, are inherently about race. Why are we talking about it as a Black guy constantly educating a white guy instead of as a Black guy talking to a white guy who grew up in Fantasy Tibet? As a a product of capitalism to a product of Whatever K'un Lun's Fantasy Economy was. As a product of a highly racialized society to an aracialized society. As someone who's from an area of great cultural and racial diversity to someone who grew up in a racial and cultural monoculture.
Why does Danny not have a complex relationship with his own race? He was the only white guy around for ten years, that has to be kind of weird. How does he relate his adopted culture to his home one? How does he deal with the white privilege he does hold when he doesn't understand why he holds it? I can seriously go on. I absolutely did go on.
None of this makes any sense. And the only way it makes any sense if if you see that Luke & Danny's conversations about race are not actually conversations about race. They are Luke explaining racism to the reader. Danny is the audience stand-in. The audience is obviously American white guys, so Danny has to be white and engage with the entire thing as an American white guy would. As he audience stand-in Danny has to come from the same place and viewpoint as the assumed reader, so he has to come from a place of white privilege.
It sucks. Not every reader was a privileged white guy. Not every reader was white. This narrative decision, conscious or unconscious, cut off a lot of interesting choices at the kneecaps. Because there is a basic assumption that white audiences cannot relate to nonwhite characters, and that they are incapable of looking through another's eyes and learning from their perspective.
How Do We Talk About Talking About Race?
Why should we care that Iron Fist is uninteresting and bad? This is not news. The premise has always been vaguely racist and boring. I've read some pretty nifty Iron Fists in my time and there are a fair handful of good Iron Fist comics, but the very root of the character is Orientalist. This Dances With Wolves style of 'story about POC but the lead has to be white or white people won't watch it' scenario is very old hat.
Heroes For Hire is interested in race. Luke Cage & Iron Fist are characterized by race. Their writers can admit this or not, but it's true. At its best, this inherent disconnect opens up the comics for potentially interesting breakdowns of racial dynamics, prejudice, the prison industrial complex, privilege, and American society. Luke & Danny talk about everything from capitalism to crime. Pretty reliably, the comic tends to actually try.
But all of these conversations are fixed through a white gaze. Luke talks through a white gaze, Danny's characterized by a white gaze, and these conversations are written with the white audience as the implied constant observers. At a certain point it never really feels like two different perspectives clashing and changing - just one perspective, talking about two different issues from both sides of its mouth.
I have mixed feelings on #ownvoices, but I think this is what people mean when they talk about it. There is a provincial, reductionist scope of perspectives allowed into the conversations Heroes For Hire holds, and although that's not a crime it's abjectly disappointing when compared against the interesting stories that could be told.
I haven't read a modern Iron Fist comic in like ten years, and the last time I read Heroes For Hire was during the cursed Civil War situation. I really don't know if modern Heroes For Hire and Danny & Luke are still like this. They probably aren't! But the same problems probably still underlie the two characters, and their origins will always occupy this strange space.
TL;DR: Read Milestone comics. Start with Static and move to Icon & Rocket. These are the only comics about race people should read. Look up their history sometime, it's fascinating. Ignore Luke Cage & Iron Fist. Good god.
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i-have-one-braincell · 4 months
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Oh, oh, oh!
Male Ava being all possessive and territorial is great! But what if we add in Danny?
Like that anon said, Peter doesn't think much of it since Danny does the same but what if Danny really is doing the same? Danny is the most friendly towards Peter (and gave him that back-breaking hug when they thought he was to stay in K'un Lun) so he can slip in being more affectionate than he would be with the others (a different kind of affectionate). Which would drive Ava up the wall and the guy wouldn't even understand why, only that he doesn’t like Peter smelling like Danny (Ava having heightened senses my beloved), so he starts being more aggressive when it comes to touching – gripping his arms/waist, shoving his face near Peter's, and (my favourite) biting him more (aaahh!💓).
They probably didn't mention it to the others, or the show didn't bother giving reactions😒, but what if the team was made aware of what happened in K'un Lun? They left at night, arrived when it was day in K'un Lun, competed and returned. I'm pretty sure the kingdom is hours ahead in timezone and travelling with plane couldn't have been quick if they went over the ocean, so they had to have been gone at least a day.
Ava is obviously sad that there was a chance of his friend not returning, but that doesn’t stop him from being mad that Peter went as well. He ends up nearly mauling the guy that night and biting his neck has evolved to include his shoulders as well. Good thing Peter can heal, but he still needs to wear turtlenecks some days.
Give me feline territorial Ava. Now add in reptilian/draconic territorial Danny who is more subtle.
He can provide financially and emotionally, is nice and respectful so aunt May will like him. Only thing that may be a problem is that he will have to return to his kingdom, but that doesn’t mean he can't return with a queen 😉
They're both competing for Peter whom they have in a love corner.
Me while reading this anon:
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I would swallow that story UP. Jealous and territorial Danny and Ava fighting for Peter’s affection and love would be enough for me to combust 😍😍😍.
I LOVEEEE the idea of both of them having animalistic qualities from their powers😩😩😍😍. You can’t imagine how I behaved when I watched Peter become Man-Spider in his 80s show, I couldn’t contain myself. I JUST LOVEEEE THAT SHIT AND UGHHHHH ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
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I lowkey just feel as if the show were too lazy to show the team’s and Aunt May’s worries of the duo leaving for over a day to another continent 💀💀. A missed opportunity😭😭.
Watching intense drama unfold among lovestruck teenagers is my favorite hobby (drama in general is my fav hobby)😍😍😍😍
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king-starkrogers · 10 months
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Peter is A Mess (when is he not?)
+ short drabble +
“He’s so hot!” Peter groaned miserably, burying his face in his hands while he flopped down on the couch next to Ava. Ava, who was reading one of her sappy romance novels had to close her book but not before marking the page.
“Lemme guess? Danny again?” Ava sighed, shaking her head at her team leader.. well team leader slash friend.
“Who else makes me so miserable…” Peter replied, eyes closed in agony.
“I-“ Ava was about to answer with a few villain names but Peter held up his hand to stop her.
“I know i knowww” He mumbled, another heavy sigh leaving his lips.
As if on cue, the blonde came into the rec room, wearing a green sleeveless shirt and laughing with his hair stuck to his forehead from the sparring session he had with Luke.
Ava threw Peter a knowing smirk when Danny came in, Luke close behind. Now she understood what he was groaning and moaning about.
“You owe me a milkshake Luke, it was promised if i win” Danny grinned in victory at his two friends on the couch.
“Yeah yeah, we’ll get one after dinner”’Luke assured him, heading towards the vending machine to get a drink.
“How was your session boys?” Ava asked as Peter looked up from the pillow he was hiding his face in. When his eyes saw Danny grinning at them both, his eyes widened comically and Ava swears he choked on nothing.
“Victory happened, I'm not one to to brag but taking down Power Man felt great” Danny replied.
“Stop hanging out with Webs so much man, he’s rubbing off on you” Luke mused.
That statement alone made Ava burst into laughter and Peter groan in exasperation again.
“What’s this i hear about rubbing?” Sam asked, walking in with a swing in his step and a burrito in hand.
“Eww, don’t even go there” Luke made a face.
Danny just laughed in earnest, surprisingly not even disturbed in any way.
“I think I hang out with Peter a considerable amount” Danny said, sitting right next to the brunette which made him smile goofily at iron fist.
“You only say that cause I taught you how to play Mario Kart”
“It’s a crime they didn’t have Mario Kart at K'un-Lun“ Danny tsked, shaking his head.
“We’ll set it up if you have to go back for a visit, fortune cookie!” Peter smiled reassuringly.
Danny gave him a soft smile in return which made Peter’s insides melt. Curse him and his teenage boy feelings, he felt like a middle schooler.
“Oh they’re disgusting” Sam gagged and Ava elbowed him with a shush.
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darthkvznblogs · 6 months
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Does Afterlife (the Inhuman "HQ" as seen in AoS) exist in the Kverse and, if so, being located so near the Temple of the Guardians (Miraculous), were there interactions between those factions?
This is a much more complicated question than you might realize, but the idea is doing a combination of AoS and more comics-accurate Inhumans. You've seen a bit of that already with the ruins of Attilan on the Moon, as well as a couple references to Kree modification of early humans (and obviously Skye/Daisy is in there as well). There's a lot about the Inhumans' depiction in AoS I'm not the biggest fan of (of which Jiaying is a major factor), so I'm hoping to patch things up a bit with comics lore.
Anyway, there might be a comment made about the presence of other nearby-ish enclaves, such as Kamar-Taj, the Guardians' Monastery, the entrance to K'un-Lun, etc., but they're not exactly the kind of neighbors to interact much. They keep to themselves, believing they're safe in isolation.
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alexgamestyle · 5 months
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LEGO Marvel Super Heroes 2 - 100% Guide Level 10 K'un Lun Konundrum - Colleen Wing https://youtu.be/BBt1Df_Pqyo
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asahiazulied · 2 years
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This is Eliz.
Her superpower is remarkable regeneration with the help of smoke coming out of her blood.
19-20 years.
born in k'un-lun.
She was born with a male sex but identifies as a female
her clan deals with Contract Killing / Protection of People and Death Falsification.
as the monks of k'un-lun dislike her clan a bit. both sides wanted to end this unnecessary conflict so they arranged the marriage of some warriors. Hoping that the relationship of people as different as yin and yang will be able to show old and new generations that both sides can get along, and there is no reason for one to destroy the other.
Eliz was thrown into a marriage to Daniel. However, due to the "work" they were doing, they had no opportunity to get married.
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chifists · 1 year
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𝗙𝗜𝗟𝗘 𝗖𝗔𝗧𝗘𝗚𝗢𝗥𝗬:⠀⠀character study
𝗙𝗜𝗟𝗘:⠀⠀genetic file
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⠀⠀⠀✖⠀⠀𝗚𝗘𝗡𝗘𝗧𝗜𝗖𝗦;
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀—⠀table of contents
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀i. ⠀general info
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ii. ⠀background
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀iii. ⠀appearance
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀iv. ⠀further info
⠀✱ ଂ̣̣⠀|⠀⠀GENERAL INFO
name:⠀⠀Daniel Thomas Rand-K'ai
current alias:⠀⠀Iron Fist
nicknames:⠀⠀Danny, Young Dragon
name origin:⠀⠀Daniel comes from the Hebrew
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀words Din(to judge) and El(God).
titles:⠀ Immortal Iron Fist, The Living Weapon
pronouns:⠀⠀He/Him
⠀✱ ଂ̣̣⠀|⠀⠀BACKGROUND
citizenship:⠀⠀American, K'un-Lun
age:⠀⠀Mid 20s — Early 30s
birthday:⠀⠀August
zodiac:⠀⠀Virgo
race:⠀⠀Human
occupation:⠀ Adventurer, Hero-for-Hire,
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Thunderer of K'un-Lun, Martial Artist,
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ CEO of Rand Enterprises
base of operations:⠀⠀Harlem, Manhattan, NY
affiliations:⠀⠀Defenders, Avengers,
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀Immortal Weapons, Midnight Sons,
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀Heroes-for-Hire, Rand Enterprises
⠀✱ ଂ̣̣⠀|⠀⠀APPEARANCE
gender:⠀⠀Male
height:⠀⠀5'11"
weight:⠀⠀Approx. 175lbs
pigmentation:⠀⠀Warm Ivory
body type:⠀⠀Muscular, chiseled, toned
extra:⠀⠀‘Heart of the Dragon’ branded on his chest
eye color:⠀⠀Blue
hair color:⠀⠀Blond
⠀✱ ଂ̣̣⠀|⠀⠀FURTHER INFO
moral alignment:⠀⠀Good
traits:⠀⠀Heroic, Amiable, Rash,
⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀Protective, Open-Minded, Laid-Back,
⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀Overthinking, Self-Confident,
orientation:⠀⠀Biromantic, Bisexual
2 notes · View notes