The “Goliath” identity was born during the Silver Age of comics, a period where superhero identities were often fluid as creators at Marvel Comics experimented with their flagship characters. The name first appeared when Dr. Hank Pym, already known as Ant-Man and Giant-Man, adopted the new moniker in Avengers #28 in May 1966. Created by the legendary team of writer Stan Lee and artist Don Heck, this change reflected Pym's ongoing psychological struggles and his desire to forge an identity separate from his earlier, less-powerful personas.
The legacy aspect began in earnest with Clint Barton. In Avengers #63 (April 1969), writer Roy Thomas and artist Gene Colan had Hawkeye trade his bow for Pym Particles. This was a dramatic character shift, elevating a non-powered hero to the powerhouse ranks of his teammates and exploring themes of inadequacy and reinvention.
The character most synonymous with the name, Dr. Bill Foster, was introduced first as a supporting character in Avengers #32 (September 1966) by Lee and Heck. He wouldn't adopt a costumed identity until years later. As Black Goliath, he debuted in his own short-lived series, Black Goliath #1 (February 1976), created by writer Tony Isabella and artist George Tuska. This was a significant moment during the Bronze Age, as Marvel made efforts to introduce more diverse lead characters. Foster would later officially shorten the name to simply “Goliath,” cementing his place as the definitive holder of the title for a generation of readers.
The legacy continued with Tom Foster, Bill's nephew, who first appeared in Black Panther Vol. 4 #23 (February 2007) and took on the Goliath mantle in World War Hulk: Aftersmash #1 (January 2008), a direct consequence of the tragic events of the Civil War storyline.
The origin of Goliath is not one story, but a tapestry woven through the lives of several individuals, each taking the name for deeply personal and vastly different reasons.
The history of Goliath in the prime Marvel Universe is a history of scientific ambition, personal crisis, and heroic sacrifice.
Dr. Henry “Hank” Pym, the brilliant but emotionally volatile biochemist who discovered the subatomic “Pym Particles,” was the first to use the Goliath name. After stints as the incredible shrinking Ant-Man and the towering Giant-Man, Pym found himself in a state of psychological turmoil. He felt overshadowed by his partner, Janet van Dyne (the Wasp), and his more famous avengers teammates like captain_america and iron_man. Seeking a more powerful and commanding presence, he developed a new formula that allowed him to grow to a stable height of 25 feet. He abandoned his previous identities and, in a moment of dramatic reinvention, declared himself Goliath. This era was defined by Pym's internal struggles, which would later contribute to severe mental breakdowns and even the creation of his greatest foe, ultron. His time as Goliath was an attempt to project an image of power and control that he rarely felt internally.
When the master archer Clint Barton, better known as hawkeye, lost his beloved bow, he felt stripped of his identity and his utility to the Avengers. At the same time, Hank Pym had decided to return to his shrinking roots, adopting the new identity of Yellowjacket. Seeing an opportunity, Pym offered his Goliath growth formula to Barton. Eager to prove he was more than just “the guy with the arrows,” Clint accepted. As the second Goliath, Barton was a boisterous, often reckless powerhouse. He reveled in his newfound strength, though he lacked the scientific mind of his predecessor to truly understand or refine the powers he wielded. His tenure as Goliath was a significant detour in his heroic career, a period of self-discovery that ultimately led him to realize his true strength had always been in his skill and determination, not in borrowed power. He eventually returned to his Hawkeye persona, having gained a new appreciation for his unique talents.
Dr. William “Bill” Foster was a genius biochemist who once worked as a lab assistant for Tony Stark at Stark Industries. When Hank Pym found himself stuck at a height of 10 feet as Giant-Man, he called upon Foster's expertise for help. Working closely with Pym, Foster became intimately familiar with Pym Particle science. He later relocated to the West Coast and, using his own refined version of the formula, gained the ability to grow to superhuman heights himself. Initially calling himself Black Goliath, he fought to protect his inner-city Los Angeles neighborhood. He later joined the champions_of_los_angeles and, after a time, officially shortened his heroic name to simply Goliath, viewing the racial qualifier as unnecessary. Foster's version of Goliath was defined by intellect, compassion, and a deep commitment to social justice. He was less volatile than Pym and more scientifically minded than Barton, creating the most stable and controlled version of the Goliath powers yet seen. It was this stability and his unimpeachable moral character that made his death during the Civil War so profoundly impactful.
Baron Zemo, seeking to create his own team of superhumans, empowered mercenary Erik Josten with ionic energy, turning him into the villain Power Man. After being defeated, Josten later sought out Dr. Karl Malus, who subjected him to a process that combined the ionic treatment with a stolen sample of Pym's growth formula. This turned him into the villainous Goliath, a powerhouse who served with the masters_of_evil. For years, Josten was a brutal mirror to the heroic Goliath legacy, using the powers for personal gain and destruction. He would eventually find a path to redemption as the hero Atlas with the thunderbolts.
After Bill Foster was brutally murdered by a cyborg clone of Thor during a battle in the first Superhuman Civil War, his nephew, Tom Foster, was left devastated and enraged. A brilliant MIT student in his own right, Tom vowed revenge on those he held responsible, primarily reed_richards, whose technology contributed to the clone's creation. He successfully reverse-engineered the Goliath formula from his uncle's notes and gained the same size-changing powers. Dubbing himself the new Goliath, Tom's early career was driven by anger. He joined anti-Registration forces and later even a new version of the Revengers, a team dedicated to bringing down the Avengers. His journey is one of wrestling with grief and legacy, attempting to honor his uncle's memory without being consumed by the tragedy that created him.
The MCU takes a significantly different approach, re-contextualizing “Goliath” from a superhero mantle into a top-secret S.H.I.E.L.D. research initiative.
The “Goliath” of the MCU is Dr. Bill Foster, portrayed by Laurence Fishburne in the film Ant-Man and the Wasp. In this continuity, Foster was a brilliant scientist and contemporary of Hank Pym, working alongside him at shield decades ago. While Pym was pioneering his Ant-Man technology, he and Foster collaborated on Project G.O.L.I.A.T.H. (Giant-Object-Location-And-Interaction-Tracking-Heuristic). This project was S.H.I.E.L.D.'s attempt to safely replicate and weaponize Pym's size-increasing technology.
Unlike in the comics, Foster was not a public-facing superhero. He was a scientist who experimented on himself. As he proudly recounts, he successfully reached a maximum height of 21 feet. However, the film strongly implies this process was unstable and had lasting negative effects on his body, preventing him from using the ability in the present day. This stands in stark contrast to the comic version, where Foster perfected a stable version of the formula.
Foster's modern-day story is tied to Ava Starr, the Ghost. After a quantum experiment gone wrong killed her parents (including Foster's colleague, Elihas Starr), Foster became a surrogate father to Ava. His primary motivation in the film is not heroics, but a desperate, morally ambiguous quest to save Ava from her painful, phasing condition, even if it means sacrificing Janet van Dyne. The MCU's Goliath is a figure of tragic potential—a man who achieved superhuman power but at a great cost, and whose legacy is defined by his scientific work and personal relationships rather than a career in a costume.
The powers of Goliath are derived from one of the most fantastic and versatile scientific discoveries in the Marvel Universe: Pym Particles.
The MCU's depiction of the Goliath abilities is far more grounded and limited, presented as a volatile and dangerous early-stage technology.
As a legacy mantle, Goliath's network of allies and enemies is a composite of the individuals who wore the mask. The relationships of Hank Pym and Bill Foster are the most defining.
The Goliath mantle has been present for some of the most pivotal moments in Marvel history, but three events in particular define its legacy.
One of the most celebrated and epic storylines of the Silver Age, the Kree-Skrull War (Avengers #89-97) saw the Avengers caught in the middle of a galaxy-spanning conflict between the two militaristic alien empires. Hank Pym, then operating as Goliath, was a central figure. His scientific acumen was crucial in understanding the alien technology they faced. More importantly, his immense size and power were one of the Avengers' greatest assets in large-scale battles against Kree Sentries and Skrull warships. This storyline solidified the Avengers' role as protectors of not just Earth, but the entire galaxy, and showcased Goliath as an indispensable member of the team.
This extended storyline, primarily featured in the pages of Marvel Two-in-One, was a defining period for Bill Foster. As head of security for a massive government energy research facility, Foster was thrust into a position of great responsibility. The project became a magnet for super-villains, and Foster, alongside his friend The Thing, was its first line of defense. He battled foes like Nuklo, Thundra, and the Grapplers, proving that he was a capable and formidable hero in his own right. The saga gave Foster a depth and agency he had not always been afforded on the larger Avengers roster, establishing him as a respected scientific mind and a reliable powerhouse.
This is, without question, the most important and tragic storyline in the history of the Goliath identity. When the U.S. government passed the Superhuman Registration Act, Bill Foster viewed it as an unforgivable infringement on personal liberty. He became one of the first and most vocal heroes to join Captain America's anti-Registration resistance. In the first major confrontation between the two sides (Civil War #4), Tony Stark's pro-Registration forces unveiled their secret weapon: a cyborg clone of the then-absent Thor. The clone, codenamed Ragnarok, proved unstable and lethally powerful. In a shocking moment that silenced the battlefield, it targeted Bill Foster and killed him with a single blast of lightning through his chest.
Foster's death was the point of no return for the conflict. It demonstrated that the “war” was no longer a metaphor and that heroes could die at the hands of their former friends. His final words, “They're not gonna stop… you've gotta get out of here, Cap. It's a trap,” were a warning that went unheeded. The image of his giant form lying dead on the battlefield became the single most iconic and heartbreaking symbol of the entire Civil War, forever cementing Bill Foster as a martyr for the cause of freedom.
Avengers #28 (1966); Clint Barton as Goliath in Avengers #63 (1969); Bill Foster as Black Goliath in Black Goliath #1 (1976); Tom Foster as Goliath in World War Hulk: Aftersmash #1 (2008).Avengers #21 (1965). He adopted this name years before Luke Cage, who would make the name famous. Josten became the villainous Goliath in Iron Man Annual #7 (1984).Ant-Man and the Wasp.