Table of Contents

Black Mamba

Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary

Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines

Black Mamba's character has been shaped by several key story arcs that tested her powers, her loyalty, and her morality.

The Serpent Crown Affair (//Marvel Two-in-One #64-66//)

This storyline marks Black Mamba's first appearance. Hired by Roxxon, she and the new Serpent Squad are tasked with retrieving the powerful and corrupting Serpent Crown from its resting place in the Pacific Ocean. The mission puts them in direct conflict with the Thing, Stingray, and Triton. Here, readers see her powers for the first time as she incapacitates the Thing by projecting an illusion of his long-lost love, Alicia Masters. While the squad is ultimately defeated, the arc perfectly established her unique threat and her origins in corporate villainy.

The Society's Debut (//Captain America #307-310//)

After being freed from prison by Sidewinder, Tanya eagerly joins his new enterprise, the Serpent Society. Their grand debut involves a contract from A.I.M. to assassinate their former leader, M.O.D.O.K.. This ambitious undertaking showcases the Society's power, organization, and lethality. Black Mamba plays a key role, using her powers for infiltration and to disable guards. The successful assassination of a major Marvel villain immediately established the Serpent Society as a top-tier threat and solidified Mamba's place within the super-criminal ecosystem.

Serpent War (//Captain America #341-344//)

This is arguably the most important storyline for Black Mamba's character development. The ruthless terrorist Viper infiltrates the Serpent Society, poisoning the water supply of Washington D.C. and turning its citizens into snake-humanoids. She murders several members and seizes control, forcing the others to serve her. Disgusted by Viper's methods and ideology, and fiercely protective of her friend Diamondback (who was targeted by Viper), Black Mamba rebels. She, Asp, and Diamondback become fugitives from their own organization, eventually turning to their arch-nemesis, Captain America, for help. Her decision to side with a hero against a fellow villain demonstrated that her loyalty to her friends was her true guiding principle.

B.A.D. Girls, Inc. (//Captain America #394-397//)

Following the Serpent War and other internal conflicts, Black Mamba, Diamondback, and Asp officially strike out on their own, forming the mercenary outfit B.A.D. Girls, Inc. This period saw them take on a variety of odd jobs, blurring the line between villainy and heroism. They hunted bounties, performed freelance security, and occasionally found themselves fighting alongside Captain America. This era was crucial for developing Tanya's character beyond the confines of the Serpent Society, giving her more agency and exploring her complex morality in a world that wasn't strictly black and white.

Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions

While Black Mamba is primarily an Earth-616 character, a few versions have appeared in other media.

Marvel Future Avengers (Anime)

Black Mamba appears in the anime series Marvel Future Avengers as a member of the Serpent Society (re-named the “Serpent Squad” in the English dub). Her appearance is largely faithful to her comic book design, and she utilizes her signature Darkforce illusion powers. In the series, she and her teammates are hired by Kang the Conqueror and later work for hydra. She is depicted as a competent and dangerous villain, primarily serving as an antagonist for the young heroes of the Future Avengers to overcome.

Ultimate Universe (Earth-1610)

In the Ultimate Marvel Universe, a version of the Serpent Squad (calling themselves the Serpent Skulls) appears as a street gang. While the core members like Diamondback, Cobra, and Crossbones are present, a character explicitly identified as Tanya Sealy or Black Mamba is not among them. It is possible a counterpart exists within this reality but was never shown.

Video Games

Black Mamba has appeared as a minor boss character in the video game Marvel: Ultimate Alliance 2, as part of the “Pro-Registration” side of the Civil War storyline. She is encountered alongside other villains who have been co-opted into the government's hero-hunting forces.

See Also

Notes and Trivia

1) 2) 3) 4) 5)

1)
Tanya Sealy is named after the black mamba, a species of highly venomous snake native to parts of sub-Saharan Africa, known for its speed, aggression, and potent neurotoxic venom. Her powers, which induce a state of euphoric paralysis followed by death, are a thematic reflection of a neurotoxin's effects.
2)
Her real name, Tanya Sealy, is a slight alteration of the name of American actress and model Tanya Roberts, who was popular in the 1980s when the character was created. This was a common practice for creator Mark Gruenwald, who often used the names of friends, colleagues, and pop culture figures for his characters.
3)
Despite her powers originating from a technological implant, they tap into a mystical, extra-dimensional source. This makes Black Mamba a rare type of character who sits at the intersection of science fiction and magic within the Marvel Universe.
4)
The first appearance of B.A.D. Girls, Inc. in Captain America #394 was written by Mark Gruenwald and drawn by Rik Levins. The storyline was titled “The B.A.D. Girls.”
5)
Key Reading List: For her origin, see Marvel Two-in-One #64-66. For the formation of the Serpent Society, read Captain America #307-310. The essential “Serpent War” arc runs through Captain America #341-344. Her time with B.A.D. Girls, Inc. is highlighted in Captain America #394-397.