====== Midnighter ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity:** **Midnighter is a surgically and genetically enhanced anti-hero vigilante, a living weapon with a supercomputer brain that allows him to predict and win any fight before it begins.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **Role in the Universe:** Originally a core member of the black-ops team [[Stormwatch]] and a founding member of the world-changing superhero team [[The Authority]], Midnighter serves as the ultimate tactician and brutal enforcer, willing to use lethal force to protect the Earth from any threat, no matter the cost. * **Primary Impact:** Midnighter, along with his husband [[Apollo]], was one of the first and most prominent openly gay superheroes in mainstream comics, establishing a powerful and enduring legacy for LGBTQ+ representation. His "win-first" violent methodology constantly challenges the traditional moral boundaries of superheroism. * **Crucial Clarification: Non-Marvel Character:** It is essential to note that **Midnighter is not a character from the Marvel Universe**. He originated in the [[WildStorm]] Universe, which was later integrated into the broader [[DC Comics]] multiverse. Therefore, he has no connection to Earth-616 (the Prime Marvel Universe) or the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). This guide will detail his history across his primary continuities: WildStorm, The New 52, and DC Rebirth. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== Midnighter was created by writer [[Warren Ellis]] and artist [[Bryan Hitch]]. He first appeared in a cameo in ''Stormwatch'' (Vol. 2) #4 (February 1998) before making his full debut in ''Stormwatch'' (Vol. 2) #6 (April 1998). Ellis and Hitch designed Midnighter and his partner, Apollo, as deliberate analogues of DC's Batman and Superman, respectively, but with a starkly different, more cynical, and violent worldview. They were introduced as former members of a covert Stormwatch "Black" team, whose existence was a closely guarded secret. Their creation was part of Ellis's groundbreaking deconstruction of the superhero genre, which he would fully realize when he transitioned the surviving members of Stormwatch into the new team, The Authority. ''The Authority'' #1 (May 1999) cemented Midnighter's status as a major character, showcasing his brutal efficiency and unwavering commitment to his mission and his partner. His popularity led to several solo series and a prominent role throughout the DC Universe following its integration. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== Midnighter's origin is a tapestry of mystery and trauma, with key details shifting slightly between the major publishing eras of WildStorm and DC Comics. The core elements, however, remain consistent: he was an ordinary man who was abducted and transformed into the ultimate fighting machine. === WildStorm Universe (Earth-50) === In the original WildStorm continuity, Midnighter's past before his enhancements is almost entirely unknown, even to himself. He and his future husband, [[Apollo]], were two of the first recruits for a secret black-ops division of [[Stormwatch]], led by the manipulative [[Henry Bendix]]. Known only as "Midnighter" and "Apollo," they were subjected to a battery of horrific experiments, bio-engineering, and cybernetic augmentation. The process grafted a sophisticated combat computer directly into Midnighter's mind, granting him precognitive battle analysis. His nervous system was rewired, his pain receptors were altered, and his body was pushed far beyond peak human limits in every physical metric. He and Apollo were the only survivors of their seven-member team, a fact that forged an unbreakable bond between them. For years, they operated in the shadows, carrying out Bendix's dirty work, believing they were making the world a safer place. Eventually, they discovered the true extent of Bendix's depravity and the sheer evil of their missions. They escaped the program, erased their own memories to hide from Bendix, and spent five years living on the streets as amnesiacs, fighting crime together as "the cops" of the forgotten. They were eventually found and recruited by [[Jenny Sparks]] to form her new, proactive superhero team: [[The Authority]]. It was only after joining this team that they began to piece together the fragments of their past and reclaim their identities, all while forging a new, more hopeful, and far more public future together. === The New 52 (Prime Earth) === Following the DC Comics continuity-altering event ''[[Flashpoint]]'', the WildStorm Universe was merged into the main DC Universe, creating a new timeline. In this reality, Midnighter's origin was slightly tweaked. His real name is revealed to be **Lucas Trent**. Trent was an ordinary young man who willingly enlisted in a clandestine military program run by the Gardener, a powerful and enigmatic figure. He volunteered to become a living weapon to fight for what he believed was right. The enhancement process was still brutal and transformative, implanting the combat computer, tactical database, and physical upgrades. He met Andrew Pulaski, the man who would become Apollo, during this program. His history with [[Stormwatch]] was also reimagined. In this timeline, Stormwatch was an ancient organization that had protected Earth from alien threats for centuries. Midnighter was a key operative, but the team's dynamic was more fractious and covert. His relationship with Apollo was established but strained by the pressures of their work. After a series of betrayals and catastrophic events led to the dissolution of this version of Stormwatch, Midnighter went solo. His solo series in this era explored his attempts to find a new purpose, tracking down stolen alien technology and confronting his creator, the Gardener, while navigating a world without the structure of a team. === DC Rebirth & Infinite Frontier === The DC Rebirth initiative largely restored the pre-New 52 elements of many characters, and Midnighter was no exception. While the Lucas Trent name remained, his history with The Authority and his deep, unwavering romantic relationship with Apollo were brought back to the forefront. The series ''Midnighter and Apollo'' re-established their unbreakable bond, with Midnighter literally going to Hell to rescue Apollo's soul from the demon Neron. This era emphasizes the core of the WildStorm character: a man who loves a god, and who will tear apart heaven and hell to protect him. His history is now a synthesis of his previous versions. He was once a normal man, was horrifically transformed by Bendix, escaped, joined The Authority, and carved out a name for himself as the most dangerous tactician on the planet. His integration into the mainstream DC Universe is more complete, allowing him to interact with characters like [[Nightwing]] ([[Dick Grayson]]) and even serve on teams like [[Superman]]'s new version of The Authority. ===== Part 3: Abilities, Equipment & Personality ===== Midnighter's power set is not about raw strength or energy projection; it's about absolute tactical supremacy. His abilities make him one of the most feared and effective hand-to-hand combatants in any universe. === Powers & Abilities === * **Combat Precognition / Battle Computer:** This is Midnighter's signature ability. His brain is hardwired with a neural-interface combat computer that allows him to run millions of fight simulations in a nanosecond. He can predict every possible move an opponent can make—and every counter he can employ—before the first punch is even thrown. This allows him to see the "winning path" in any conflict. He doesn't just see the future; he sees //all possible futures// of the immediate engagement and chooses the one that leads to his victory. * //What are the limits of Midnighter's fight computer?// While incredibly powerful, it is not infallible. It primarily focuses on physical conflict. It can be overwhelmed by opponents who move faster than his brain can process (like [[The Flash]]), beings whose actions defy conventional physics, or powerful telepaths who can attack his mind directly. Furthermore, it is a predictive tool based on available data; if an opponent does something truly unpredictable or has a hidden power he is unaware of, it can lead to a miscalculation. * **Superhuman Physical Condition:** The augmentations he received pushed every aspect of his physiology to superhuman levels. * **Superhuman Strength:** While not on the level of Superman or Apollo, Midnighter is strong enough to rip open steel doors, break bones with ease, and trade blows with powerful metahumans. * **Superhuman Speed & Reflexes:** He can move and react faster than the human eye can follow, allowing him to dodge bullets and disarm multiple opponents simultaneously. His reflexes are perfectly in sync with his combat computer. * **Superhuman Durability & Endurance:** His body is incredibly resistant to injury. He can withstand impacts, falls, and blunt force trauma that would kill a normal person. He has survived being impaled, shot, and beaten by powerhouse beings. * **Enhanced Healing Factor:** He possesses a regenerative healing ability that allows him to recover from grievous injuries like broken bones and deep wounds in a remarkably short time. In some incarnations, he can even reset his own broken neck. * **Master Martial Artist & Tactician:** Even without his powers, Midnighter would be one of the world's most formidable fighters. His brain contains an encyclopedic knowledge of every fighting style and military strategy known to man. He is a master of both armed and unarmed combat. * **Pain Suppression:** His pain receptors were modified. While he can still feel pain, he can mentally suppress it, allowing him to fight on through injuries that would incapacitate anyone else. === Equipment & Weaponry === Midnighter is a pragmatist and will use any weapon available, but he has a few signature pieces of gear. * **Costume:** His iconic black leather costume is more than just an aesthetic. It's made of advanced, bulletproof, and stab-resistant materials, offering significant protection. His mask includes various sensory filters. * **Throwing Weapons:** He frequently uses a variety of custom-made shuriken, knives, and other throwing implements. * **Fighting Staff / Bo Staff:** A collapsible staff is one of his most common weapons, used for both offense and defense with incredible skill. * **Doors:** In The Authority, Midnighter had access to "Doors," a form of teleportation technology created by their base of operations, [[The Carrier]]. This allowed him and the team to teleport anywhere on Earth (or even to other dimensions) instantly, making them a truly global force. === Personality Analysis === Midnighter is defined by a brutal, pragmatic, and often cynical exterior that hides a deep well of loyalty and love, particularly for Apollo. He is a walking contradiction: a man who finds genuine joy and even artistic beauty in violence, yet channels that violence to protect the innocent. He is sarcastic, confrontational, and utterly unimpressed by authority figures, viewing most conventional superheroes as naive and ineffective. His defining psychological trait is his absolute confidence, born from his ability to know he will win. He doesn't hope for victory; he expects it as a mathematical certainty. This can manifest as arrogance, but it's rooted in the cold, hard logic of his internal computer. Beneath the violence and sarcasm is a man who was robbed of his identity and remade into a weapon. His relationship with Apollo and their adopted daughter, [[Jenny Quantum]], is the anchor of his humanity, the one thing he fights for with a ferocity that transcends tactical analysis. ===== Part 4: Key Relationships & Network ===== ==== Core Allies ==== * **[[Apollo]] (Andrew Pulaski):** Apollo is the love of Midnighter's life, his husband, and his partner in every sense of the word. As analogues for Superman and Batman, they are the "World's Finest" couple. Apollo's solar-powered abilities and bright, more optimistic disposition are the perfect counterbalance to Midnighter's dark, brutal pragmatism. Their relationship is the emotional core of Midnighter's story; his most extreme acts of violence are often in defense of Apollo, and his moments of greatest vulnerability are almost exclusively with him. * **[[Jenny Sparks]] (The Spirit of the 20th Century):** The chain-smoking, foul-mouthed British powerhouse who founded The Authority. Jenny was Midnighter's leader and one of the few people he unequivocally respected. She recognized the potential in him and Apollo, recruiting them from the streets and giving them a purpose beyond mere survival. Her belief in a "finer world" inspired Midnighter to use his violent skills for a greater good. * **[[Dick Grayson]] (Nightwing):** During his time in the mainstream DC Universe (New 52 era), Midnighter developed a complex and compelling relationship with Dick Grayson. While working as the superspy Agent 37 for the organization Spyral, Grayson was forced to team up with Midnighter. They initially clashed due to their vastly different moral codes—Grayson's non-lethal methods versus Midnighter's fatal solutions. However, they developed a mutual respect, recognizing each other's incredible skill and dedication. Midnighter saw in Grayson a level of acrobatic and fighting prowess that even his combat computer found fascinating. ==== Arch-Enemies ==== * **[[Henry Bendix]]:** The man who made Midnighter. Bendix was the Weatherman of Stormwatch and the architect of the horrific program that created Midnighter and Apollo. He is a brilliant, amoral, and utterly ruthless manipulator who sees people as tools to be used and discarded. Bendix represents Midnighter's traumatic past and the abuse of power he has sworn to fight against. He is Midnighter's most personal foe, the monster who created the monster-killer. * **The Gardener (N.O.W.H.E.R.E.):** In the New 52 continuity, the Gardener took on the role of Midnighter's creator. While less overtly sadistic than Bendix, she was a cold and pragmatic geneticist who saw Midnighter as her greatest creation and a tool to be controlled. Her attempts to manipulate and "reclaim" him formed the central conflict of his solo series in that era. * **Neron:** The powerful demon lord of Hell. When a villain managed to kill Apollo, his soul was sent to Neron's realm. Midnighter's response was not to grieve, but to wage a one-man war on Hell itself. He fought his way through demonic hordes and tricked Neron into a contract that forced the demon to release Apollo's soul, showcasing the absolute lengths Midnighter will go to for the man he loves. ==== Affiliations ==== * **[[Stormwatch]]:** Midnighter's first team, the covert black-ops unit he was literally built to serve. His time here was defined by violence, secrecy, and eventual betrayal. * **[[The Authority]]:** The team that defined him. As a founding member, Midnighter helped The Authority change the world through direct, often brutal intervention. The team operated from The Carrier, a sentient, dimension-hopping ship, and answered to no government, only their own conscience. * **Superman's Authority:** In the recent Infinite Frontier era, Superman recruits a new version of The Authority to proactively tackle global threats. Midnighter, alongside Apollo, joins this team, bringing his tactical genius and lethal methods to Superman's mission, creating a fascinating ideological tension within the group. ===== Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines ===== ==== The Authority: The Circle (Vol. 1, #1-4) ==== This opening story arc by Warren Ellis and Bryan Hitch immediately established what made The Authority—and Midnighter—so different. The team confronts Kaizen Gamorra, a superhuman terrorist who unleashes an army of clones to decimate Moscow. While other heroes would focus on evacuation and damage control, Midnighter and The Authority take the fight directly to Gamorra. The arc showcases Midnighter's terrifying efficiency, as he single-handedly slaughters dozens of super-powered clones. It perfectly establishes his role as the team's scalpel, the one who performs the bloody, necessary surgery to save the patient (in this case, the world). ==== The Authority: Outer Dark (Vol. 1, #13-16) ==== Written by Mark Millar, this storyline sees the Earth facing an invasion from a hostile, god-like cosmic entity from a previous universe. The entity is so powerful that it casually wipes out an entire alien fleet sent to warn Earth. When it arrives, it reshapes the planet and begins consuming it. Midnighter's role is crucial. He uses The Carrier to teleport inside the massive entity's brain, where he performs a "lobotomy" on a cosmic scale. This story highlights the sheer scale of threats The Authority faced and Midnighter's ability to apply his tactical mind to seemingly unwinnable, reality-bending scenarios. It also contains the iconic moment where he and Apollo get married amidst the chaos. ==== Midnighter: The Complete Series (Solo Series, 2015-2016) ==== Written by Steve Orlando, this New 52/DC You era series is considered a definitive take on the character. After breaking up with Apollo and going solo, Midnighter discovers that the Bioga, a vault containing all the dangerous tech from his time with the Gardener, has been stolen. The thief begins releasing this tech, forcing Midnighter on a global chase. The series is a masterclass in character exploration. It delves into his personal life, his attempts at dating, and his struggle to find an identity outside of his relationship with Apollo and his role as a living weapon. It features a fantastic supporting cast and a memorable confrontation with Dick Grayson, solidifying his place within the broader DC Universe. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== * **Flashpoint (Earth-13):** In the twisted timeline of ''Flashpoint'', Midnighter is a member of a massive resistance movement, though he plays a relatively minor role in the central conflict. This version is largely similar in concept but exists in a world on the brink of total collapse. * **DC vs. Vampires:** In this out-of-continuity series, Midnighter and Apollo are among the heroes defending a human settlement from the vampire apocalypse. Tragically, Apollo is turned into a vampire. When the vampiric Apollo tries to turn him, Midnighter is forced to kill the love of his life, exposing his own heart to the sun in a final act of grief and defiance. * **Injustice 2 (Video Game Comics):** A version of Midnighter is mentioned in the prequel comics to the video game ''Injustice 2''. He is revealed to be a captive of Ra's al Ghul, who uses him as a tactical template for his plans. This version exists within the universe of the game, separate from main comic continuity. ===== See Also ===== * [[The Authority]] * [[Apollo]] * [[WildStorm Universe]] * [[Warren Ellis]] * [[Stormwatch]] * [[Jenny Sparks]] * [[Henry Bendix]] * [[DC Comics]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((Midnighter and Apollo are widely considered to be the first openly gay superhero couple in mainstream comics to get married, which occurred in ''The Authority'' #29 (July 2002).)) ((The character's initial design by Bryan Hitch was meant to evoke a menacing, almost insect-like leather fetish aesthetic, contrasting with the bright, classic superhero look of Apollo.)) ((While the comparison to Batman is the most common, creator Warren Ellis has stated that Midnighter is more an analogue of The Shadow, a pulp-era vigilante known for his brutal methods and tactical mind.)) ((In a crossover with Aliens, ''WildC.A.T.S./Aliens'', a Xenomorph that gestated inside Midnighter inherited his combat computer, becoming a terrifyingly intelligent and predictive killer.)) ((A frequent fan debate and popular "who would win?" scenario pits Midnighter against Batman. While Batman is a brilliant strategist, Midnighter's superhuman enhancements and precognitive battle computer are generally considered to give him a significant edge in a direct, physical confrontation. Many writers, including Steve Orlando, have written scenes that respectfully showcase Midnighter's tactical superiority.)) ((The name "Lucas Trent" was introduced by writer Christos Gage in ''The Wild Storm'' miniseries, part of a modern reimagining of the WildStorm universe, and was later adopted into the mainstream DC continuity.))