Devil Hulk is a fictional villain in the Marvel Comics universe.
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The Devil Hulk was created by Paul Jenkins, Ron Garney, and Sal Buscema. He first appeared in The Incredible Hulk Vol.2 (1999).
He is the malevolent personality of Bruce Banner, personifying all of Banner's resentment at the way he is treated by the world. The Devil Hulk is also one of the Hulk's enemies, constantly threatening to escape confinement in Banner's mind and destroy the world that has tormented and abused them, simultaneously leaving nothing intact that Banner holds dear.
It first appeared when Banner was dying of Lou Gehrig's Disease, Banner using a machine to travel into his mind and make a deal with the three dominant Hulks that they would gain control of his body once the disease became too much for him to bear, while leaving him able to influence them enough to stop them from doing anything he wouldn't want them to do (If he hadn't done that, every Hulk in his subconscious would have gained access to the real world when his own mind 'died'). The Devil was revealed at this point, but he only escaped a short while afterwards, when the machinations of General Ryker shattered the barriers keeping the Devil imprisoned in Bruce's psyche. Fortunately, the Devil was contained long enough for a cure for Banner's condition to be found, before finally being contained in Banner's subconscious by Banner himself, the Savage Hulk and Joe Fixit, the Professor Hulk remaining out in the real world to help scientists such as Doc Samson and Reed Richards of the Fantastic Four find a cure for the disease using samples taken from the corpse of Brian Banner.
During the Chaos War storyline, Brian Banner returns from the dead and ends up becoming his version of the Devil Hulk.[1]
Like the traditional Hulk, he possesses superhuman strength and stamina. However, he appears to be stronger than any of the previously-introduced Hulks; when he attempted to escape while Banner was being treated for a presumably-incurable disease, it took both the Savage Hulk and the Joe Fixit Hulk to hold him down. However, since this was on the mental plane, it is most likely simply reflecting the force of the Devil's will compared to the more childish Hulks and the subsequent effort needed for the weaker-willed personas to hold him down rather than providing a clear indication of their actual physical strength.