Table of Contents

Orb

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

Part 2: Origin and Evolution

Publication History and Creation

The character of Orb first appeared in the Bronze Age of Comic Books, debuting in Marvel Team-Up #15 in November 1973. He was created by the prolific writer Len Wein and artist Ross Andru. This original incarnation, Drake Shannon, was a product of his time: a motorcycle stunt-themed villain designed as a perfect foil for the then-popular Ghost Rider (Johnny Blaze), with his debut issue also featuring a team-up with Spider-Man. His visual design, a man in a jumpsuit with a massive, perfectly spherical eyeball helmet, was striking and bizarre, fitting the surreal aesthetic of many 1970s Marvel villains. Decades later, the concept was radically reinvented for a modern, grittier era. The new, unnamed Orb debuted in Ghost Rider (Vol. 6) #26 in October 2008, created by writer Jason Aaron and artist Tan Eng Huat. Aaron's take stripped away the campiness of the original, replacing the helmet with a grotesque, biological reality: a man with a giant, fleshy eyeball for a head. This version was far more unhinged and mysterious, presented as a deeply disturbed individual with a lifelong obsession with eyes. This modern incarnation would rise from being a minor Ghost Rider foe to a character of immense cosmic importance during the 2014 crossover event, `Original Sin`.

In-Universe Origin Story

The history of the Orb is the story of two separate individuals who adopted the same bizarre mantle, separated by years and radically different circumstances.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

Drake Shannon: The Original Orb Drake Shannon's story is one of ambition, jealousy, and disfigurement. He was a talented motorcycle stunt rider and the business partner of Craig “Crash” Simpson, the owner of the “Crash Simpson Stunt Cycle Spectacular” and a mentor to a young Johnny Blaze. Shannon and Simpson were co-owners, but a daredevil challenge between them for sole ownership of the show went horribly wrong. The resulting crash left Shannon's face hideously scarred and twisted. Bitter and blaming Simpson for his fate, Shannon disappeared. He resurfaced years later, after Crash Simpson's death and Johnny Blaze's transformation into the Ghost Rider. Obsessed with reclaiming the stunt show he felt was rightfully his, Shannon adopted the persona of “The Orb.” He designed a distinctive helmet modeled after a giant eyeball, not only to hide his scarred face but also to house weaponry. This helmet could emit a powerful hypnotic ray, capable of rendering people suggestible to his commands, and a concussive laser blast. In his first appearance, The Orb attempted to seize control of the stunt show, which was then performing at Madison Square Garden. His plan brought him into direct conflict with both Spider-Man and Johnny Blaze as Ghost Rider. Though he was defeated, he would return multiple times, his obsession with Blaze and the stunt show never wavering. He was a persistent, if not A-list, thorn in Ghost Rider's side for years. His story seemingly came to an end when he was targeted and killed by the demonic entity known as Steel Vengeance. However, he was later revealed to have survived, only to be definitively killed years later by the father of Clint Barton, who was acting as a rogue agent. The Unnamed Successor: The Eye-Headed Man The origin of the second Orb is far more mysterious and disturbing. This individual, whose real name remains unknown, claims he was born “just like this,” hideously disfigured with a face that resembled a “liquid eye.” Shunned by society, he spent his youth in a traveling freak show, where his grotesque appearance was exploited for entertainment. This upbringing fostered a deep-seated psychosis and an all-consuming obsession with eyes—seeing them, collecting them, and understanding what they see. He eventually escaped the circus and became a mercenary, putting his formidable skills with firearms and his sheer unpredictability to use. He first came to the attention of the superhero community during a massive battle against the angel Zadkiel's forces, where he encountered Ghost Riders Johnny Blaze and Danny Ketch. He created a gang of other criminals, all wearing eyeball-themed helmets in tribute to the original Orb, whom he seemed to venerate. His defining characteristic was his manic energy and his disturbing habit of speaking in cryptic, eye-related metaphors. His true rise to universal significance came after he was hired by Doctor Midas. This mission led him and his compatriots to the Moon, where they discovered the slain body of Uatu the Watcher, the cosmic being who observed all events on Earth. While Midas's crew sought the Watcher's advanced technology, the Orb was drawn to something else: Uatu's massive, cosmic eyes. In a moment of supreme madness and obsession, he carved out one of the eyes for himself. The raw cosmic energy within the eye fused with him, seemingly consuming his head and replacing it entirely with the Watcher's own celestial organ. This transformation elevated him from a bizarre street-level criminal to a conduit for cosmic knowledge, a being who could now “see” the deepest, darkest secrets of the universe.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The Orb has not appeared in the Marvel Cinematic Universe in his true, super-powered comic book form. However, a character serving as an Easter egg reference appeared in the television series Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. in the Season 3 episode, “Watchdogs.” In this continuity, the character, credited as “The Orb,” is an ordinary human and a member of the Watchdogs, a radical anti-Inhuman hate group. He is depicted as a militant extremist who, along with his cell, attacks an ATCU facility. He wears a motorcycle helmet with a crude, spray-painted eyeball on the front—a clear visual nod to Drake Shannon's original helmet. This version has no powers, no hypnotic abilities, and no connection to Ghost Rider or cosmic entities. His inclusion is purely a deep-cut reference for dedicated comic fans. The adaptation choice reflects the more grounded, street-level tone of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. at that point in its run. A direct adaptation of either the helmeted villain or the literal eyeball-headed man would have been a significant tonal departure and required a much larger visual effects budget than a minor antagonist warranted. The MCU's version of Ghost Rider (Robbie Reyes) appeared later in the series, but there was no connection established between him and this version of the Orb.

Part 3: Abilities, Equipment & Personality

The capabilities and mindset of the two individuals to call themselves the Orb are drastically different, reflecting the eras in which they operated and their unique origins.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

Drake Shannon (The Original Orb)

The Unnamed Orb (The Modern Orb)

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The MCU's Orb, as seen in Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., is a baseline human with no superhuman abilities.

Part 4: Key Relationships & Network

Core Allies

The Orb, in both incarnations, is fundamentally a loner and an outcast, making true alliances rare. His relationships are almost always temporary, built on convenience or manipulation.

Arch-Enemies

Affiliations

Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines

Marvel Team-Up #15 - "The Killer With the Eye!"

This 1973 issue marks the debut of the original Orb, Drake Shannon. The story establishes his entire backstory: his partnership with Crash Simpson, the accident that disfigured him, and his subsequent obsession with revenge. With the “Crash Simpson Stunt Cycle Spectacular” now run by Johnny Blaze, Shannon returns as The Orb to seize control. He uses his helmet's hypnotic ray on the crowd at Madison Square Garden, turning them into a chaotic mob. His plan forces a confrontation with both Johnny Blaze and the visiting Spider-Man. The issue is a classic Bronze Age tale, perfectly capturing the era's blend of personal melodrama and quirky super-villainy. It defines Shannon's core motivations and establishes his primary place as a Ghost Rider foe.

Ghost Rider (Vol. 3) #14-15 - "Steel Vengeance"

In this storyline, a new demonic entity named Steel Vengeance, the sister of the original Ghost Rider villain Steel Wind, begins hunting down and killing Ghost Rider's enemies. The Orb is one of her primary targets. Drake Shannon is ambushed and, despite putting up a fight, is brutally murdered by Steel Vengeance. This was intended to be the definitive end for the original Orb, clearing the way for new villains. While comic book deaths are often temporary, and Shannon was later shown to have somehow survived this, the story was significant for its time in seemingly killing off a recurring Silver/Bronze Age character.

Original Sin

This 2014 company-wide crossover is the modern Orb's defining moment, elevating him from a D-list curiosity to a universe-altering threat. The story begins with the murder of Uatu the Watcher. The Orb, as part of Doctor Midas's crew, is present at the scene. While others look for weapons, Orb steals one of Uatu's eyes. The eye's cosmic power fuses with him, granting him access to all the secrets Uatu ever witnessed. In a climactic battle against the Avengers on the Moon, Nick Fury detonates the eye, causing it to release a “truth bomb” that reveals a deep, personal secret to everyone in its blast radius. This single act reshaped the Marvel landscape: Thor learned he was unworthy, Captain America's memories of the Illuminati were restored, and countless other heroes were confronted with buried truths. The Orb became a living, babbling MacGuffin, a key to the entire mystery, hunted by all sides. The event concluded with Orb being taken into custody, his mind permanently shattered but filled with the infinite secrets of a dead cosmic god.

Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions

While Orb is not a character with as many famous alternate versions as A-list heroes and villains, a few notable variants exist across the Marvel multiverse.

See Also

Notes and Trivia

1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6)

1)
First Appearance: (Drake Shannon) Marvel Team-Up #15 (November 1973); (Unnamed Successor) Ghost Rider (Vol. 6) #26 (October 2008).
2)
The visual design of the modern Orb, a man with a giant eyeball for a head, is heavily inspired by the artwork of The Residents, an avant-garde music and art collective famous for using eyeball-head imagery, particularly on their album cover for “Eskimo.”
3)
The drastic redesign and personality shift between Drake Shannon and his successor is a prime example of how Marvel has often reinvented older, sillier villains for a modern audience, infusing them with more horror and psychological depth.
4)
In Original Sin, the specific secret Nick Fury whispered to Thor that made him unworthy of Mjolnir was “Gorr was right,” referencing the villain Gorr the God Butcher's belief that gods are selfish and do not deserve the worship of mortals.
5)
The actor who portrayed the human version of Orb in Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. was Derek Phillips.
6)
Despite the sheer volume of cosmic secrets the modern Orb now possesses, very few of them have been explicitly revealed in comics since the end of `Original Sin`, leaving him as a powerful but rarely used plot device for future stories.