| Bushwacker | |
 Bushwacker, by Rick Leonardi Image File history File links Bushwacker1. ...
Rick Leonardi is an American comic book illustrator. ...
| | | | Characteristics | | Alter ego | Carl Burbank | | Affiliations | none,, Kingpin, Electro | | Abilities | Ability to reshape cybernetic arms into various balistic weapons and flamethrower, Regenerative healing factor | | Bushwacker is a fictional character, a supervillain in the Marvel Comics universe who is primarily an enemy of Daredevil, although he has had dealings with The Punisher. Marvel Comics is an American comic book line published by Marvel Entertainment, Inc. ...
In comic books, first appearance refers to the date or issue of a characters first appearance. ...
This article is about the Marvel Comics superhero. ...
Ann Nocenti is an American journalist, writer and editor known for her work on comic books and magazines. ...
Rick Leonardi is an American comic book illustrator. ...
The Kingpin (Wilson Fisk) is a fictional character, a Marvel Comics villain who has battled many Marvel crime-fighters, most often The Punisher, Spider-Man, and Daredevil. ...
Electro is the name of several fictional comic book characters in the Marvel Comics universe, including two from Marvels predecessors, Timely Comics and Atlas Comics. ...
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. ...
Look up bushwhacker in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
A fictional character is any person who appears in a work of fiction. ...
Doctor Doom, one of the most archetypal supervillains and his arch-enemies The Fantastic Four (in background). ...
Marvel Comics is an American comic book line published by Marvel Entertainment, Inc. ...
It has been suggested that Earth-616 be merged into this article or section. ...
This article is about the Marvel Comics superhero. ...
The Punisher (Frank Castle) is a Marvel Comics anti-hero. ...
Character biography
Originally a priest, Carl Burbank abandoned his vows following the drug-related deaths of young parishioners. He joined the C.I.A., which outfitted him with a cybernetic arm and made him an assassin under the codename Bushwacker, but ultimately he became a freelancer. CIA, see CIA (disambiguation). ...
At some point, an event took place that compelled Bushwacker to begin a war against all mutants. Bushwacker began hunting and murdering mutants, most often those mutants whose abilities Bushwacker perceived as making them especially talented in the arts. (Bushwacker also claimed that he was paid large sums of money to kill mutants, but this has yet to be verified.) Burbank's killing spree brought him into conflict with both Wolverine and Daredevil. Wolverine learned of Bushwacker's activities and began to hunt the killer himself. At the same time, Bushwacker's wife believed her husband was insane and needed to be placed in a hospital. She saught aid from lawyer Matt Murdock (secretly the hero Daredevil). Daredevil found Wolverine fighting Bushwacker, and he would have killed him if Daredevil hadn’t stopped him. Unfortunately, this allowed Bushwacker to escape and continue his rampage. Bushwacker was ultimately tracked down and defeated by the two heroes, which left the right side of his face horribly scarred, and he was placed in police custody. For other uses, see Wolverine (disambiguation). ...
Later, Bushwacker joined with Typhoid Mary and other Daredevil-foes in a plan to beat up their common enemy. After the completion of the plan, Mary took Daredevil's body, and Bushwacker was left to his own activities. Typhoid Mary (real name Mary Walker) is the name of a fictional mutant character in the Marvel Comics Universe, most commonly associated with Daredevil. ...
Entering the Kingpin's employ, Burbank attacked the Punisher but was left for dead. It was during this time that his wife finally left him. He reappeared in the employ of a drug lord who hired Bushwacker to kill reporter Ben Urich who was about to run a story of his illegal activities. Instead, when Burbank learned the truth, he allowed Urich to live and to complete the exposee. However, it was Bushwacker that was proved right, as the drug lord managed to bribe himself out of jail. Bushwacker shot him, instead. The Kingpin (Wilson Fisk) is a fictional character, a Marvel Comics villain who has battled many Marvel crime-fighters, most often The Punisher, Spider-Man, and Daredevil. ...
Ben Urich is a Marvel Comics character, usually appearing in comic books featuring Daredevil and Spider-Man. ...
Subsequent jobs brought him into conflict with Daredevil, Nomad, the Punisher, Deathlok, Boomerang, and Elektra. His run-in with Nomad, in particular, was over the life of a young baby that Nomad had taken under his care. The baby was the daughter of Troy Donohue, Burbank’s ex-brother-in-law, and Bushwacker hope was that his wife would have approved of the rescue and welcome him back. Nomad is the name of a number of superhero characters who have appeared in comic books published by Marvel Comics. ...
Deathlok (sometimes also referred to as The Demolisher) is a Marvel Comics character, a cyborg, created by Rich Buckler and Doug Moench. ...
Boomerang is a supervillain in the Marvel Universe. ...
Elektra Natchios, usually known only by her first name Elektra, is a fictional supervillain and anti-hero from Marvel Comics. ...
Imprisoned in the Raft, Burbank escaped during the mass breakout engineered by Electro and was subsequently employed by the Jackal to kill the Punisher, but he was defeated once again by Daredevil. The Raft is a fictional comic book prison, created to house super-villains and rogue super-heroes in the Marvel Universe. ...
Electro is the name of several fictional comic book characters in the Marvel Comics universe, including two from Marvels predecessors, Timely Comics and Atlas Comics. ...
The Jackal (Dr. Miles Warren) is a Marvel Comics supervillain, an enemy of Spider-Man. ...
Powers and abilities Skin can liquefy to seal wounds; given cybernetic arms that he can transform into a variety of guns. Bushwacker is a trained military agent specializing in infiltration and assassination. He employs powerful gadgets and weapons, most notably a flamethrower, all of which can be created by the mechanical prostheses that have replaced his forearms. He manages to load the weapons by swallowing ammo such as bullets or flamethrower fuel.
In other media He's also an ordained minister who hunted Marvel Mutants during his early career. Bushwacker played a role in The Punisher video game, working for the Gnucci family. He first appears after having kidnapped Punisher's neighbor, Joan, and threatening to kill her in Central Zoo. After Punisher rescues Joan, Punisher kills off Eddie Gnucci (at his brother's funeral), forcing Ma Gnucci to call Bushwacker to her house to protect her. Bushwacker attacks Punisher in the library, causing a fire that burned down Ma's mansion. Before the fire spread, Punisher yanked off Bushwacker's right arm and shot him with the cannon it contained out of the mansion, into the garden, to ensure that Bushwacker was disarmed, fell to his death (causing severe damage and disabilities if he were revived), bled out (so that he would need a major blood transfusion to survive) and burned down in the garden, destroying a good majority of the electronics in him(to ensure that no one would "patch up" Bushwacker). It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Punisher (game). ...
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