Contest of Champions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Contest of Champions

Cover of Contest of Champions #1. Art by John Romita, Jr. and Bob Layton.
Publisher Marvel Comics
Schedule Monthly
Publication date June - August 1982
Number of issues 3
Main character(s) See Text

Contest of Champions is a three-issue limited series published from June to August in 1982 by comics publisher Marvel Comics. The series was written by Mark Gruenwald with art by John Romita, Jr. and Bob Layton.

[edit] Publication history

This was significant as it was Marvel's first published limited series. An unrelated sequel, Contest of Champions II, was published in 1999.

[edit] Plot

The Elder of the Universe, the Grandmaster challenges a hooded female - revealed to be Death - to a game for the life of his fellow Elder, the Collector. [1] The pair decide to use various superheroes from around the world to collect the four pieces of a prize called the "Golden Globe of Life." If the Grandmaster's team win, the Collector will be resurrected; while a victory for Death's team will mean the Collector remains dead.

From the collected heroes, Grandmaster and Death select teams of 12 to compete in the four competitions for the sections of the Globe:

Grandmaster Death
Captain America Iron Man
Talisman Vanguard
Darkstar Iron Fist
Captain Britain Shamrock
Wolverine Storm
Defensor Arabian Knight
Sasquatch Sabra
Daredevil Invisible Woman
Peregrine Angel
She-Hulk Black Panther
Thing Sunfire
Blitzkrieg Collective Man

The Grandmaster's team is successful (although the actual comic depicts a tie), and the Grandmaster learns that for the Collector to be resurrected, he must take his fellow Elder's place in the Realm of the Dead. Although the Grandmaster accepts, this later proves to be a ruse as he is able to steal Death's powers and then through still another trick forces her into banishing all Elders from her realm - effectively making them immortal. [2]

The series featured the debut of six new international heroes - Blitzkrieg (Germany); Collective Man (China); Defensor (Argentina); Peregrine (France); Shamrock (Ireland) and Talisman (Australia). Each issue contained a catalogue of all featured heroes and was the prototype for the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe.

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Killed by the cosmic being Korvac in Avengers #175 (Sep. 1978)
  2. ^ Avengers Annual #16 (1987)