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Encyclopedia > Agent Zero
Agent Zero


Agent Zero, on the cover to Weapon X #3. Art by Georges Jeanty Download high resolution version (575x862, 66 KB)Cover to Weapon X #3, featuring Agent Zero. ...

Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance X-Men (vol. 2) #5
Created by Jim Lee
Characteristics
Alter ego Christoph Nord
Species Human Mutant
Affiliations Cell Six, CIA, Weapon X, Team X, Major Arthur Barrington
Notable aliases David North, Maverick
Abilities Depowered, formerly:
Ability to absorb kinetic energy,
Force blasts,
Superhuman strength,
Accelerated healing factor,
No discernible scent,
Anti-healing factor corrosive

David North (born Christoph Nord) is a mutant comic book character in the fictional Marvel Universe. He is known as both Maverick and Agent Zero. North first appeared in X-Men (vol. 2) #5 and was created by Jim Lee. Marvel Comics is an American comic book line published by Marvel Publishing, Inc. ... In comic books, first appearance refers to first comic book to feature a character. ... This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ... In Marvel comic books, particularly those of the X-Men mythos, a mutant is a human being who is born with genetic modifications that allow for abilities not possessed by regular humans. ... Weapon X is a fictional clandestine government project in the Marvel Universe conducted by the Canadian Governments Department K (and secretly funded by the US government) which turns willing and unwilling beings into living weapons. ... Team X is a fictional comic book group, owned by Marvel Comics and existing in the Marvel Universe. ... A healing factor is a term used to describe the ability of some characters in fiction to recover from bodily injuries or disease at a superhuman rate. ... A healing factor is a term used to describe the ability of some characters in fiction to recover from bodily injuries or disease at a superhuman rate. ... In Marvel comic books, particularly those of the X-Men mythos, a mutant is a human being who is born with genetic modifications that allow for abilities not possessed by regular humans. ... A comic book is a magazine or book containing the art form of comics. ... This does not adequately cite its references or sources. ... This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...


There is also a character named Agent Zero in the J. Scott Campbell miniseries Danger Girl. He is not related to the Marvel character. Cover of Danger Girl: Back in Black, by J. Scott Campbell. ... cover to Danger Girl : Back in Black #1 by J. Scott Campbell Danger Girl is a best-selling comic book series created by J. Scott Campbell and Andy Hartnell. ...

Contents

Publication history

Nord has appeared in a self titled one-shot, Maverick as well as a self-titled limited series called Maverick. Later, as Agent Zero, he became a regular in the second series of Weapon X.


Fictional character biography

Cell Six

Christoph Nord was born in East Germany. His early history is clouded in mystery, though there are whispers that his parents were scientists for the Nazi regime. He also had an older brother, Andreas. A mutant, Christoph possessed the ability to absorb kinetic energy through impact with little to no harm. An idealist, he fought against the communist regime during the height of the Cold War, joining a West German black ops unit named Cell Six. On a mission in Italy, he was injured by a rival assassin codenamed the Confessor. GDR redirects here. ... National Socialism redirects here. ... Kinetic energy is the energy by virtue of the motion of an object. ... This article is about communism as a form of society and as a political movement. ... For other uses, see Cold War (disambiguation). ... West Germany was the informal but almost universally used name for the Federal Republic of Germany from 1949 until 1990, during which years the Federal Republic did not yet include East Germany. ... Jack Ruby murdered the assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, in a very public manner. ...


While recovering, he met a Russian nurse, Ginetta Lucia Barsalini, whom he fell in love with and married. Over the next three years, Cell Six's field agents were eliminated one by one, except for Nord. Nord realized the truth; Ginetta was a spy. Threatening to shoot her, he demanded to know her employer. Saying he didn't have the guts to shoot a defenseless woman in cold blood, she lunged at him with a knife, causing him to shoot her in self-defense. Dying, she revealed to him that in killing her, he had killed their unborn child as well. Long after this incident, Nord continues to be wracked with guilt about the betrayal and still seeks answers as to whom Barsalini was working for. This watershed moment left Nord cold and untrusting of everyone, especially women. Self defense refers to actions taken by a person to defend onself, ones property or ones home. ...


Weapon X

Fueled by the betrayal, Nord became one of the most efficient covert operatives in Germany. In the 1960s, his exploits caught the attention of the CIA, who offered him a spot in the clandestine Team X. He agreed, and at this time, changed his name to David North. As a part of Team X, he was one of several mutant operatives the government experimented on and utilized. Each member unknowingly received false memory implants, and North received an aging suppressant culled from Logan's mutant healing factor. North's immediate team consisted of three field agents: North, Logan (who later became Wolverine), and Victor Creed (who later became Sabretooth). The mutant teleporter John Wraith, also referred to as Kestrel, served as the team's intelligence man and extractor. It was at this time that North began wearing his signature yellow and black faceplate. On a mission in East Germany, both Creed and Logan were badly injured. Rather than follow protocol and leave them, North dragged them to the extraction point. Cornered by Andreas Nord, now an assassin, North saved his teammates the only way he could; killing his own brother in cold blood. Because of this incident, Logan holds North in very high regard. The CIA Seal The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) is an American intelligence agency, responsible for obtaining and analyzing information about foreign governments, corporations, and individuals, and reporting such information to the various branches of the U.S. Government. ... Team X is a fictional comic book group, owned by Marvel Comics and existing in the Marvel Universe. ... For other uses, see Wolverine (disambiguation). ... Sabretooth (Victor Creed) is a Marvel Comics character, an arch-enemy of the X-Men’s Wolverine. ... This article is about the satellite communications facility. ... John Wraith, a. ...


Another mission saw the three agents try to take down the Russian super soldier Omega Red. They succeeded in stealing the carbonadium synthesizer, which was necessary for the Russian to control his death factor pheromone. Taking down the psychopathic Omega Red, however, was not as easy. In the chaos, Creed panicked, killing a CIA mole. The team then escaped by jumping from a ten-story window. The synthesizer was thought lost, and a rift formed between Creed and Logan due to Creed's actions on the mission. Unbeknownst to the agency, Logan had recovered the synthesizer and hid it. North suspected as much at the time, but did not know for sure. Omega Red (Arkady Rossovich) is a comic book supervillain in the Marvel Comics universe and a foe of the X-Men. ... Adamantium is a fictional chemical substance and metal alloy in the Marvel comics universe. ... Fanning honeybee exposes Nasonov gland (white-at tip of abdomen) releasing pheromone to entice swarm into an empty hive A pheromone is any chemical or set of chemicals produced by a living organism that transmits a message to other members of the same species. ... See Also: Antisocial Personality Disorder Theoretically, psychopathy is a three-faceted disorder involving interpersonal, affective and behavioral characteristics. ... The CIA Seal The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) is an American intelligence agency, responsible for obtaining and analyzing information about foreign governments, corporations, and individuals, and reporting such information to the various branches of the U.S. Government. ... A mole is a spy who works for an enemy nation and works within his nations government. ...


By the early 1970s, Team X was summarily disbanded. However, the team's agents were captured by Weapon X to be used as test subjects. When Logan underwent the adamantium bonding, he went on a murderous rampage, allowing North and the others to escape. Around this time, North inexplicably lost his powers. Undaunted, North continued to work in espionage as a mercenary using the trade name Maverick. The inspiration for the name came in a conversation where North boasted that he neither trusted or needed anyone, to which Logan responded, "A regular maverick, eh?" Weapon X is a fictional clandestine government project in the Marvel Universe conducted by the Canadian Governments Department K (and secretly funded by the US government) which turns willing and unwilling beings into living weapons. ...

Maverick. Cover to Maverick #1. Art by Jim Cheung.
Maverick. Cover to Maverick #1. Art by Jim Cheung.

Download high resolution version (394x611, 58 KB)Cover to Maverick #1 (1997). ... Download high resolution version (394x611, 58 KB)Cover to Maverick #1 (1997). ...

Mercenary

Decades passed and Maverick developed a reputation as one of the best hired guns available. Maverick compensated for his lack of powers with meticulous planning and a reliance on the latest technology. His suit consisted of fiberglass armor, a padded kevlar lining, and airtight seals that allowed him to seal the suit for further protection. His mask contained a limited oxygen supply as well as infrared scanning and target systems. The suit's offensive capabilities were tailored to his missions' needs. Chemical structure of Kevlar. ...


He worked for private parties and governmental agencies alike, taking several contracts from retired Major Arthur Barrington, the man who had brought North into the CIA. When Omega Red captured Wolverine as well as several of the X-Men in an effort to locate the carbonadium synthesizer, Maverick was sent in by Barrington. Maverick tracked Sabretooth to Omega Red and with the X-Men's help, he obtained the device from Wolverine, and hid it once again. The X-Men are a group of comic book superheroes featured in Marvel Comics. ...


Barrington later sent him to acquire the Xavier Files, profiles of the powers and weaknesses of various mutants, which were compiled by the X-Men's founder. His enemy Warhawk exploded in the ensuing clash, seemingly destroying the files. Maverick was later hired by the US government to protect Aldo Ferro, a former Weapon X member. Former Team X alumni sought Ferro out after Mastodon died when his age suppression factor reversed. Unbeknownst to Team X, Ferro was responsible for the planting of false memories during their time with Weapon X. Betrayed by Ferro, Maverick then sided with his former teammates, and Ferro was seemingly killed in the subsequent battle. Mastodon is a fictional character in the Marvel Universe, primarily featured in the Wolverine comic books. ...


Maverick next sought to kill Sabretooth to make him pay for his numerous crimes. Against his better judgment, he joined forces with the X-Men to merely capture Sabretooth, setting in motion what became a failed attempt by Charles Xavier to rehabilitate the serial killer.


Legacy Virus

Maverick swiftly contracted the Legacy Virus, a terminal disease that only affected mutants. This development brought about the random return of his powers, but also a loss of energy and horrible scarring all over his body. At first, he tried to convince Wolverine to kill him, but Wolverine would not, and Maverick decided to make the best of it, and "fight the good fight." His health declining, he traveled the world from safe house to safe house, using his savings to procure treatment for his infection. A safe house is a location placed in the neighbourhood where a trusted adult or family or charity organization has agreed to provide a safe place for battered wives and abused children to go to, when they feel that their lives are threatened by domestic abuse. ...


While in New York, he saved a fellow Legacy Virus positive mutant, teenager Chris Bradley and his family from an attack by the Friends of Humanity, an anti-mutant group. The FOH retaliated by firebombing Bradley's home, spurring Maverick to use his connections to relocate the Bradley family to Florida under aliases. He also got Chris medical treatment, and set his parents up with new jobs. Bolt (real name Christopher Bradley) is a young mutant in the Marvel Universe with the ability to generate and expel electricity from his body. ... The Friends of Humanity are one of the many anti-mutant hate groups in the Marvel Universe. ...


He then left for Canada. While there, former KGB agent and mutant telepath Elena Ivanova found him, demanding he help her track down Sabretooth, who had killed her mother during his Weapon X years. Before he could answer her, they were attacked by Omega Red, who had tracked Ivanova to Maverick in hopes of recovering the carbonadium synthesizer. With the help of John Wraith, they succeeded in keeping the device away from the villain. Saved by Maverick, Ivanova felt that she owed him, and stuck by his side despite his icy demeanor. They traveled together for a time. The Legacy Virus then took hold, killing North. The KGB emblem and motto: The sword and the shield KGB (transliteration of КГБ) is the Russian-language abbreviation for Committee for State Security, (Russian: ; Komitet Gosudarstvennoy Bezopasnosti). ... Warning: This is NOT a scientific article. ...


Ivanova used her powers to resuscitate North. To his surprise, the virus seemingly went into remission, and his powers not only returned, but were enhanced. The kinetic energy his body absorbed could now be released as beams of concussive force or heat, or used to increase the strength of his physical attacks up to tenfold. His revival also cleared his mind of Weapon X's memory implants. He would later realize that the Legacy Virus made his new powers inconsistent, at times making his powers a danger to himself. Remission is the state of absence of disease activity in patients with known chronic illness. ...


Trouble soon found them in the form of Russian mob boss Ivan Pushkin. Sending his goons Hammer and Sickle to kidnap them both, Pushkin used Ivanova's powers to brainwash Maverick into killing Major Arthur Barrington, claiming it was Barrington who had set up Barsalini's betrayal all those years ago. In reality, Barrington was to deliver testimony at an inquest that would have been damaging to Pushkin's business interests. Attacking but not killing Barrington, Maverick quickly regained his senses. While he blinded the left eye of Sickle with his own weapon, Hammer finished the job and eliminated Barrington. Meanwhile, Chris Bradley ran from home, missing his girlfriend in New York. The FOH tapped his friends' phone and when he reached New York, they again tried to kill Chris. Maverick, Ivanova, and Wolverine saved him and his friend. Ivanova then used her abilities to make the FOH and Chris' girlfriend think he'd died in the scuffle.


Both shaken by the life threatening events of the past few days, Ivanova and North's relationship, platonic up to this point, became physical. The following morning, Ivanova still expressed the desire to go after Sabretooth. Maverick harshly warned that an assault against Sabretooth was a fool's errand, and implied she'd slept with him to coerce him to aid her goal. Angered, Ivanova left Maverick that night to continue her vendetta. A regretful Maverick traced Ivanova's steps and found her in the nick of time as she was rendered comatose by the mutant psychopath. Maverick stopped Sabretooth from delivering the killing blow, and left a badly injured Ivanova in the care of the Bradley family.


Maverick then renewed his vendetta with Ivan Pushkin, deseprate to avenge Barrington's death. Pushkin retained the Confessor's services to spring Sickle from jail, then go after Maverick. The Confessor defeated Maverick and brought him to Pushkin, who held him captive, still having hopes of coercing Maverick to work for him. However, Maverick would have none of it, freeing himself and then stopping Pushkin from stealing a huge payload of high tech weaponry from A.I.M. In the midst of achieving this goal, Sickle gained a measure of revenge, gouging out Maverick's left eye and stranding him in the Swiss Alps. A.I.M., or Advanced Idea Mechanics, is a fictional group in the Marvel Universe. ... The Swiss Alps are the central portion of the Alps mountain range that lies within Switzerland. ...


Agent Zero

The Weapon X project was soon reinvigorated, and having brought Sabretooth and Wraith back into the fold, they were sent to recruit Maverick. Wraith lured an unwitting Maverick into a rendezvous. Maverick refused to join, and a battle ensued. After believing to have defeated Sabretoooth, Maverick came to learn of his new healing factor which had been enhanced once again. Sabretooth caught him off guard, impaled him and then threw him off the roof of a 20 story building onto a car parked on the street below.

Zero's anti-healing factor corrosive.
Zero's anti-healing factor corrosive.

Taken to Weapon X near death, Malcolm Colcord again offered him the chance to join, as he could still be saved. This time, he reluctantly agreed, rationalizing it by saying he couldn't "fight the good fight" as a corpse. He was healed and then upgraded with explicit intent of assassinating Wolverine. He has no scent, makes no sound thanks to a vibranium suit, possesses an enhanced healing factor, and a corrosive was added to his concussive blasts that hinders a foes' healing factor. In addition, he was equipped with a wide array of weapons, from wrist-mounted plasma blasters, to an adamantium-coated knife. He was the agency's most potent weapon. Image File history File links Download high-resolution version (950x1503, 253 KB) source: http://i33. ... Image File history File links Download high-resolution version (950x1503, 253 KB) source: http://i33. ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ... Vibranium, is a fictional metal that appears in the Marvel Universe. ... A healing factor is a term used to describe the ability of some characters in fiction to recover from bodily injuries or disease at a superhuman rate. ...


As the world believed that Maverick was dead, a victim of Sabretooth's, Nord sought to keep it that way. He dyed his brown hair black and adopted a new alias, Agent Zero. After sending him on a few simple missions, the Director tried to break his will by sending him to kill his friend and former teammate Wolverine, a mission he purposely botched. Feeling guilty for joining the enemy, he contemplated suicide daily. His hatred for his teammate Sabretooth still ran deep, as he tried yet again to kill him, only to be stopped from dealing a fatal blow by the Director.


During a mission, Agent Zero encountered a new Maverick, who unbeknownst to Zero, was the same mutant he'd befriended years earlier, Chris Bradley. Bradley had infiltrated a mutant terrorist group called Gene Nation in an effort to destroy them from inside. Bradley had wanted revenge on Weapon X for 'killing' North. To achieve that goal, he received training in black ops by Cable and assumed the Maverick mantle. Zero, believing this new Maverick was a terrorist, shot and killed him, only to find the truth as Bradley lay dying. Returning to the base after this occurred, Zero found Weapon X had disappeared without a trace. Maverick then picked up Bradley's fight, attacking Gene Nation strongholds across the world and also searched for answers as to what happened to the program. On the annivesary of the Mutant Massacre, a horrific event in which Mr. ... Wikipedia does not yet have an article with this exact name. ... Cable (Nathan Christopher Summers, a. ...


It was revealed the reason that Zero doesn't know what happened to Weapon X was because he was being brainwashed by a fellow Weapon X member under orders from the Director, as Zero had become increasingly harder to control. Zero had gone after Gene Nation because of Weapon X's instruction. Without realizing it, Zero served as executioner at Neverland, a mutant concentration camp set up by Weapon X. But just as soon as Weapon X bothered to reveal these truths, they put him under again, and Zero went on, none the wiser. Brainwashing controversies According to research and forensic psychologist Dick Anthony, the CIA invented the brainwashing ideology as a propaganda strategy to undercut communist claims that American POWs in Korean communist camps had voluntarily expressed sympathy for communism and that definitive research demonstrated that collaboration by western POWs had been caused... It has been suggested that Internment be merged into this article or section. ...


Decimation

Agent Zero lost his powers on M-Day, as a result of Scarlet Witch's actions during the House Of M. It has been revealed that he is among the mutants who have been depowered.[1] Decimation event logo, as shown on the covers of tie-in comics Decimation is the name of the late 2005 Marvel Comics crossover spinning out of the House of M limited series, that focuses on the ramifications of the Scarlet Witchs stripping nearly all of the mutant population of... This article or section contains a plot summary that is overly long. ... House of M was an eight-part comic book crossover storyline published by Marvel Comics in 2005. ...


Recently, North is seen residing in a center for former mutants and once again using the Maverick alias.[2]


Alternate versions

An alternate version of Maverick was revealed to exist in Exiles #62. Maverick was forced to join Weapon X, a group of reality-hopping people who had to kill people in order to save realities. Little is known about Maverick, except that he apparently got killed by the bladed shield of an alternate version of Captain America. For a time, the body got trapped in the Timebroker's Crystal Palace until the Exiles send his body back home. On his homeworld of Earth-1287, Maverick was revealed to be an agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. before his abduction, working alongside Nick Fury, who later honored his best agent by giving him a proper funeral. This article is about the Marvel Comics team and series, for the Malibu teams and series, see Exiles (Malibu Comics) The Exiles are a group of fictional comic book superheroes created by writer Judd Winick and artist Mike McKone. ... This article is about the reality-jumping Weapon X, for the supersoldier program see Weapon X Weapon X is a team of comic book anti-heroes created by Judd Winick for the comic book Exiles. ... Captain America, the alter ego of Steve Rogers[1], is a fictional character, a superhero in the Marvel Comics universe. ... S.H.I.E.L.D. (originally an acronym for Supreme Headquarters, International Espionage, Law-Enforcement Division, changed in 1991 to Strategic Hazard Intervention, Espionage and Logistics Directorate) is a fictional counterterrorism and intelligence agency in the Marvel Universe that often deals with superhuman threats. ... Colonel Nicholas Joseph Nick Fury is a fictional World War II army hero and present-day superspy in the Marvel Comics universe Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, Fury first appeared in Sgt. ...


In a possible future timeline (Earth-5700), Agent Zero joined a Wolverine-led version of the X-Men, teaming with Archangel, Juggernaut, Sunfire, Mystique, Aurora, and Deadpool. After a time, the Director activated Zero's embedded mental directive, and Zero, against his will, slaughtered the X-Men, except for Wolverine. Unable to bring himself to kill his friend and teammate, he fought the mind control just long enough to commit suicide. Archangel (Warren Worthington III), originally and still occasionally known as Angel, is a Marvel Comics superhero, best known as one of the founding members of the mutant super-team known as the X-Men. ... Juggernaut (Cain Marko) is a fictional Marvel Comics character associated with the X-Men franchise. ... Sunfire (Shiro Yoshida )) is a Marvel Comics superhero,and former member of the X-Men. ... Mystique (Raven Darkholme) is a Marvel Comics character associated with the X-Men franchise. ... Aurora is a fictional character, a Canadian superheroine in the Marvel Comics universe. ... Deadpool is a Marvel Comics anti-hero, although he is sometimes portrayed as a villain. ...


In the NBA, Washington Wizards guard Gilbert Arenas is popularly being called "Agent Zero", but it is because of his number, 0, and not his likeness to Christopher Nord. Gilbert Jay Arenas Jr. ...


Television and film

Maverick and Silver Fox
Maverick and Silver Fox

Maverick appeared in one episode of the '90s X-Men cartoon, "Weapon X, Lies and Videotape", searching answers about his past and his involvement with Weapon X, teaming with Wolverine, Sabretooth and Silver Fox. In the episode "Whatever It Takes", the character Morph briefly turns into Maverick to taunt Wolverine. Maverick also appears in flashbacks that depict himself and Wolverine battling Omega Red, though that memory could be one of Weapon X's implanted memories. Image File history File links Sliver_Mar. ... Image File history File links Sliver_Mar. ... Silver Fox is a fictional mutant character in the Marvel Comics universe. ... X-Men, an animated series, debuted on October 31, 1992 (the 1993–1994 season) on the Fox Network as part of Fox’s “Fox Kids” Saturday morning lineup, which featured cartoons such as X-Men, Bobby’s World, and Life with Louie, and live-action programming such as VR Troopers... Morph is a fictional character, a comic book superhero in the Marvel Comics universe. ... In literature, film, television and other media, a flashback (also called analepsis) takes the narrative back in time from the point the story has reached, to recount events that happened before and give the back-story. ...


In X-Men Evolution, Omega Red tells Wolverine that he has a vendetta against him, Maverick and Sabretooth which Logan does not recall. X-Men: Evolution is an animated series containing the original cast of X-Men, mostly depicted as teenagers and some as adults. ...


Agent Zero is rumored to appear in the upcoming film Wolverine. Wolverine is a film in pre-production based on the fictional Marvel Comics superhero Wolverine. ...


Footnotes

  1. ^ New Avengers #18
  2. ^ Wolverine: Origins

External links

  • Official Marvel Bio

Bibliography

As Maverick

  • Maverick vol. 1 #1
  • Maverick vol. 2 #1–12
  • Weapon X: The Draft: Agent Zero
  • Wolverine vol. 2 #62–64, 67, 87, 162–166
  • Wolverine Annual 1995
  • X-Men vol. 2 #5, 10–11
  • X-Men Unlimited vol. 1 #2, 5–7, 15

As Agent Zero

  • New Avengers #18
  • Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe: Wolverine
  • Weapon X: The Draft: Agent Zero
  • Weapon X vol. 2 #2–3, 11, 19–21, 23–25

  Results from FactBites:
 
Agent Zero - Marvel Database (1494 words)
Agent Zero continued to serve the program by performing missions such as recruiting other mutants to join the program and even hunting innocent mutants for internment at the camp dubbed Neverland.
Zero then set about the task of wiping out Gene Nation with new zeal, although he declined to make Marrow a martyr.
Known Abilities: Agent Zero is a deadly hand-to-hand combatant, a precision marksman, and an expert in covert operations and demolitions.
Agent Zero - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (2047 words)
In Canada, former KGB agent and mutant telepath Elena Ivanova found him, demanding he help her find Sabretooth, who had killed her parents years previous.
Zero, believing this new Maverick was a terrorist, shot and killed him, only to find the truth as Bradley lay dying.
It was revealed the reason that Zero doesn't know what happened to Weapon X was because he was being brainwashed by a fellow Weapon X member under orders from the Director, as Zero had become increasingly harder to control.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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