James Buchanan “Bucky” Barnes first appeared in Captain America Comics #1
in March 1941, created by the legendary duo of writer Joe Simon and artist Jack Kirby. In the Golden Age of comics, teen sidekicks were a popular trope, designed to give younger readers a relatable entry point into the adventures of adult heroes. Bucky was a quintessential example, a plucky, capable mascot for the U.S. Army's Camp Lehigh who discovers Captain America's secret identity and becomes his partner in fighting Nazis and Axis spies. He was immensely popular, appearing alongside Cap in virtually every story and even co-founding the All-Winners Squad.
When Captain America was revived in the Silver Age in The Avengers #4
(1964), his backstory was retconned. It was established that both he and Bucky had been presumed killed in the final days of World War II attempting to stop a drone plane launched by Baron Zemo. While Steve survived in suspended animation, Bucky was believed to have perished in the explosion. For decades, Bucky's death was considered one of the very few permanent deaths in mainstream comics, a foundational tragedy that defined Captain America's character, fueling his survivor's guilt and his status as a “man out of time.”
This status quo was shattered in 2005. In a landmark run on the Captain America
series, writer Ed Brubaker and artist Steve Epting introduced a mysterious Soviet assassin known as the Winter Soldier. Over a masterfully paced, noir-infused storyline, it was revealed that this enigmatic figure was none other than Bucky Barnes, who had survived the explosion, lost an arm, and been recovered by the Soviets. This retcon was not merely a revival; it was a complete reinvention. It transformed Bucky from a cheerful sidekick into one of Marvel's most complex and compelling anti-heroes, a decision that has profoundly shaped the Marvel Universe ever since.
The original origin of James Buchanan Barnes depicted him as an orphaned army brat, the son of a soldier killed in training at Camp Lehigh. The teenage Bucky became the camp's unofficial mascot, and through sheer coincidence, he walked in on Private Steve Rogers changing into his Captain America uniform. Pledging to keep the secret, Bucky was taken under Steve's wing. This version of Bucky was no mere follower; he was a prodigy of combat. Having been trained from a young age, he was an expert in hand-to-hand combat, marksmanship, and infiltration, performing the “dirty work” of an operative that the publicly symbolic Captain America could not. He was the covert blade to Steve's shining shield. Their partnership was one of the most effective of World War II. They fought alongside the Invaders against threats like the Red Skull and Baron Heinrich Zemo. In the closing days of the war in 1945, Cap and Bucky confronted Zemo, who had created an experimental, explosives-laden drone plane. While battling Zemo's forces atop the moving plane, Bucky attempted to defuse a bomb. It exploded in mid-air. Captain America was thrown into the freezing waters of the North Atlantic, where his super-soldier physiology allowed him to survive in suspended animation. Bucky was believed to have been instantly vaporized. However, he was not killed. The explosion ripped off his left arm, but the freezing water preserved his body much like it did Steve's. He was discovered by a Soviet patrol submarine under the command of General Vasily Karpov. Taken to Moscow, the amnesiac Bucky was given a rudimentary bionic arm and subjected to an intense brainwashing regimen. Codenamed the Winter Soldier, he was transformed into the Soviet Union's most effective covert weapon. For over 50 years, he was kept in cryogenic stasis between missions, being thawed out to perform high-profile assassinations and acts of sabotage. He was a ghost story among intelligence agencies, a perfect, untraceable killer. During this time, he was also a trainer in the infamous Red Room, where he had a tumultuous relationship with another top operative, Natasha Romanoff, the Black Widow. His modern re-emergence occurred when he was tasked by General Aleksander Lukin (secretly a pawn of the Red Skull) to assassinate his old enemy and acquire the Cosmic Cube. This brought him into direct conflict with a shocked Steve Rogers, who slowly pieced together the assassin's identity. Using the Cube's reality-warping power, Steve was able to restore Bucky's memories, shattering his programming. Overwhelmed by decades of guilt for the atrocities he was forced to commit, Bucky fled, beginning a long and painful journey to rediscover his identity and atone for the sins of the Winter Soldier.
In the MCU, the origin of James “Bucky” Barnes is fundamentally different and far more personal. He was not a teen sidekick but Steve Rogers' childhood best friend from Brooklyn. Born in 1917, Bucky was the charismatic, confident protector of the scrawny, often-bullied Steve. He was the one who stood up for Steve, looked out for him, and encouraged him. When World War II broke out, Sergeant Barnes was enlisted into the 107th Infantry Regiment and shipped off to Europe, leaving a determined but physically unfit Steve behind.
During a battle in Italy, Bucky's entire unit was captured by HYDRA forces under the command of Johann Schmidt (the Red Skull). He was taken to a HYDRA weapons facility overseen by Dr. Arnim Zola, where he was subjected to brutal experimentation meant to replicate the Super-Soldier Serum. This is a critical divergence from the comics: Bucky was enhanced with a variant of the serum before his transformation into the Winter Soldier. He was eventually rescued by a newly empowered Steve Rogers, who had become Captain America and led a solo mission to free the prisoners of war.
Reunited, Bucky became a key member of Steve's elite unit, the Howling Commandos. Their bond as brothers-in-arms was absolute. Their final mission together was an assault on a HYDRA train carrying Arnim Zola. During the fight, a blast from a HYDRA weapon blew a hole in the side of the car, and Bucky was thrown from the train. He clung desperately to a damaged rail, but it gave way, and he plummeted into an icy ravine below, seemingly to his death.
Just as in the comics, he survived. HYDRA forces, under Zola's direction, recovered his body. The fall had cost him his left arm. The nascent Super-Soldier Serum in his veins had kept him alive. He was taken to a HYDRA facility where Zola completed his work, erasing Bucky's memories, fitting him with a powerful cybernetic arm, and conditioning him to become their ultimate weapon: the Winter Soldier. For the next 70 years, he operated in the shadows as HYDRA's fist, responsible for countless assassinations that shaped the 20th century. Like his comic counterpart, he was kept on ice between missions to preserve his mind and body.
His existence was revealed to the world when he was deployed to assassinate Nick Fury. This led to a direct and brutal confrontation with Steve Rogers, who refused to believe his friend was truly gone. Unlike the comic version where a Cosmic Cube was needed, Steve's persistent appeals to their shared history were enough to begin cracking Bucky's mental conditioning, causing him to go on the run from his HYDRA masters at the end of Captain America: The Winter Soldier
.
Bucky Barnes' capabilities have evolved significantly, but he has always been one of the most formidable non-super-powered humans in the Marvel Universe, eventually gaining enhancements that put him on par with super-soldiers.
Bucky's personality is a layered tapestry of trauma and resilience. As a youth, he was confident, capable, and fiercely loyal. The Winter Soldier persona was a blank slate: cold, ruthlessly efficient, and utterly devoid of emotion or remorse—a perfect weapon. After regaining his memories, he became defined by immense guilt and self-loathing. He is typically brooding, cynical, and emotionally reserved, haunted by the faces of those he killed. However, beneath this grim exterior lies the determined and heroic man he once was. He possesses a dry, sarcastic wit and an unbreakable sense of duty. His journey is one of constant atonement, trying to use the deadly skills forced upon him to protect the world he once terrorized.
The MCU version of Bucky Barnes is a confirmed super-soldier, placing his physical abilities on a higher baseline than his comic counterpart's initial state.
The MCU Bucky is defined by his profound bond with Steve Rogers. Initially, he was a charismatic and protective older-brother figure. As the Winter Soldier, he was an emotionless specter, his mind a fractured mess of programming and fleeting memories. His journey post-de-programming is one of intense psychological recovery. He is wracked with guilt and PTSD from his time as an assassin, actively working through a list of amends to find peace. He is quieter and more introverted than he was before his fall, often struggling to connect with others. His relationship with Sam Wilson evolves from begrudging annoyance to a genuine, banter-filled friendship, showing that he is slowly rediscovering the man he used to be. His time in Wakanda gave him a period of peace and a new name, the White Wolf, signifying his rebirth and acceptance by a new family.
Captain America
film trilogy. For Bucky, Steve is his moral compass and the anchor to his lost identity.The Falcon and the Winter Soldier
. Their relationship evolves from antagonistic banter to a genuine partnership forged in shared loss and a desire to honor Steve's legacy. They challenge and support each other, with Sam helping Bucky find a path to peace and Bucky providing the hardened experience Sam needs to become the new Captain America.Infinity War
and Endgame
, but never an official member.This is the modern genesis. Writer Ed Brubaker masterfully weaves a conspiracy thriller that reveals a Soviet assassin called the Winter Soldier has been responsible for key political deaths for 50 years. Captain America investigates, refusing to believe S.H.I.E.L.D.'s intel that the killer is his long-dead partner, Bucky. The storyline features their brutal first confrontation, Steve's desperate attempts to reach the man inside the killer, and the ultimate climax where Steve uses the Cosmic Cube to restore Bucky's memories. The event permanently altered Captain America's history and re-established Bucky as a major A-list character.
Following the events of Civil War, Steve Rogers is assassinated on the steps of a courthouse. The world mourns, and the mantle of Captain America is left empty. Tony Stark, feeling the weight of his role in Steve's death, approaches Bucky with a letter from Steve requesting that Bucky take his place. Wracked with guilt and feeling unworthy, Bucky initially refuses. After foiling a plot by the Red Skull, he agrees, but on his own terms: he will not be a government agent and will have complete autonomy. This arc explores Bucky's difficult transition into a hero, as he struggles to honor his friend's legacy while fighting with a more brutal, pragmatic style.
This film places Bucky at the absolute center of the ideological and emotional conflict that tears the Avengers apart. When Bucky, still on the run and trying to piece his life together, is framed for the bombing of the UN, a global manhunt ensues. Steve Rogers defies international law and his own teammates to protect his friend, putting him in direct opposition to Tony Stark and the Sokovia Accords. The story's climax is the devastating revelation that a brainwashed Bucky murdered Tony's parents in 1991. The ensuing three-way fight between Iron Man, Captain America, and the Winter Soldier is one of the most personal and brutal conflicts in the MCU, shattering the team and leaving Bucky to voluntarily return to cryo-stasis in Wakanda until his mind can be healed.