rick_jones

Rick Jones

  • Core Identity: Rick Jones is the quintessential everyman of the Marvel Universe, a perpetual sidekick and human catalyst whose loyalty and proximity to pivotal events have inexorably linked him to the origins and legacies of the Hulk, the Avengers, and multiple generations of Captain Marvel. * Key Takeaways: * The Ultimate Sidekick: More than any other character, Rick Jones embodies the role of the loyal partner to superheroes. He served as a confidant to the Hulk, trained as the new Bucky under Captain America, and was physically and spiritually bonded to Captain Mar-Vell and his son Genis-Vell. * Cosmic Keystone: Despite his humble origins, Rick was the central human figure in the legendary Kree-Skrull War. He was the vessel for the Destiny Force, a powerful cosmic energy that he used to single-handedly stop the warring alien fleets, establishing him as a figure of galactic importance. * A History of Transformation: Rick Jones has undergone more radical physical changes than most super-powered individuals. He has been bonded to Kree warriors via the Nega-Bands, temporarily merged with the Hulk, and later transformed into the gamma-powered behemoth known as A-Bomb and the cybernetic information broker called the Whisperer. * MCU Absence: Critically, Rick Jones has never made a formal appearance in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). While his name has appeared in background Easter eggs, the character and his profound impact on the universe's heroes exist entirely within the comics and other media. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== Rick Jones made his debut alongside the titular character in The Incredible Hulk #1 (May 1962). He was created by the legendary duo of writer Stan Lee and artist Jack Kirby. In the cultural context of the Silver Age of Comics, Jones was conceived as a modern-day teen sidekick, a figure meant to provide a relatable point-of-view for the young readership. His character archetype was a direct evolution of figures like Bucky Barnes and Robin, but with a rebellious, rock-and-roll sensibility that mirrored the burgeoning youth culture of the 1960s. Initially, his role was simple: he was the walking, talking embodiment of Bruce Banner's guilt. A reckless teenager who trespassed onto a military test site on a dare, Rick was the reason Dr. Banner was caught in the gamma bomb explosion. This shared trauma and responsibility forged an immediate, if tumultuous, bond between the two, making Rick the Hulk's first and only friend. Over the decades, writers such as Roy Thomas, Peter David, and Bill Mantlo would dramatically expand Rick's role, elevating him from a simple sidekick to a cosmic player and a hero in his own right, using him as a unique narrative thread to connect the street-level happenings of Earth to the grand, cosmic sagas of the Marvel Universe. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== The origin of Rick Jones is inseparable from the origin of the Incredible Hulk. His story is one of a single, life-altering mistake that cascades into a lifetime of adventure, tragedy, and heroism. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === Richard Milhouse “Rick” Jones was an orphan growing up in Scarsdale, Arizona. A rebellious and headstrong teenager, he was goaded by friends into driving onto a restricted military desert testing ground as a show of bravado. Unbeknownst to Rick, this was the test site for Dr. Bruce Banner's experimental Gamma Bomb. Spotting Rick's car on the field through his binoculars just moments before detonation, Dr. Banner ordered his colleague Igor Starsky to halt the countdown. When the treacherous Starsky (a Soviet agent) refused, Banner raced onto the field himself. He managed to push the oblivious Rick into a protective trench just as the bomb detonated. While Rick was shielded from the initial blast, Banner absorbed the full, catastrophic dose of gamma radiation, transforming him for the first time into the monstrous Hulk. Wracked with guilt over his role in Banner's fate, Rick dedicated himself to helping his new friend. He was the first person to learn of Banner's secret, and he often tried to guide or contain the Hulk's rampages, a dangerous and often thankless task. It was during this period that Rick, seeking help to stop a rampaging Hulk, formed the Teen Brigade, a network of amateur radio enthusiasts. In a fateful attempt to contact the Fantastic Four for assistance, his signal was diverted by Loki, which inadvertently led to Thor, Iron Man, Ant-Man, and the Wasp assembling to fight the Hulk, who they believed was the threat. After clearing up the misunderstanding and defeating Loki, this group of heroes officially formed the Avengers, making Rick Jones the indirect founder of Earth's Mightiest Heroes. His journey as a professional sidekick truly began when he sought out Captain America, who had recently been discovered frozen in ice. Seeing a kindred spirit in the man out of time, and feeling abandoned by the Hulk, Rick revealed his identity and insisted on becoming the new Bucky. Steve Rogers, still grieving for his original partner, reluctantly agreed. He trained Rick rigorously in gymnastics, hand-to-hand combat, and strategy. For a time, Rick fought valiantly by Captain America's side, but the shadow of Bucky Barnes loomed large. The partnership ended when the Red Skull, using the Cosmic Cube, restored Bucky to life only to taunt Captain America before sending him away again, a cruel act that made Steve realize he could not risk losing another young partner. Rick's life took a cosmic turn when he discovered a pair of ancient Kree artifacts known as the Nega-Bands in a hidden Kree outpost. Donning the bands and striking them together, he found himself instantly transported to the Negative Zone, while the Kree warrior Captain Mar-Vell, who was imprisoned there, materialized in his place on Earth. For years, the two shared a unique symbiotic existence. They could communicate telepathically, but only one of them could exist in the positive-matter universe at a time. By clanging the Nega-Bands together, they would swap places. This bond made Rick a direct participant in Mar-Vell's adventures and, most significantly, positioned him as a central figure in the galactic Kree-Skrull War. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === To date, Rick Jones has not appeared as a character in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. His role as the catalyst for the Hulk's creation and the founder of the Avengers was completely written out of the MCU's narrative. In the MCU's continuity, Bruce Banner's transformation into the Hulk (as depicted in The Incredible Hulk, 2008) was the result of a military experiment to recreate the Super-Soldier Serum, with Banner experimenting on himself with gamma radiation. There was no civilian on the test site, and thus Rick Jones played no part in his origin. Similarly, the Avengers were formed by S.H.I.E.L.D. Director Nick Fury as a direct response to Loki's invasion of Earth, with no involvement from a “Teen Brigade” or any accidental radio summons. There have been minor Easter eggs alluding to the character: * In the opening credits of The Incredible Hulk (2008), Rick Jones's name briefly appears on a list of known associates of Bruce Banner on a S.H.I.E.L.D. computer screen. * In Spider-Man: Homecoming (2017), a student at the Midtown School of Science and Technology is named “Jason Ionello,” but a picture in a yearbook in a deleted scene shows a student named Rick Jones. These fleeting references are the extent of his presence. The decision to omit him was likely made to streamline the origins of both the Hulk and the Avengers for a cinematic audience, focusing more directly on the core heroes and S.H.I.E.L.D.'s role in assembling the team. As a result, one of the most important connective characters in Marvel Comics history is entirely absent from its most popular adaptation. ===== Part 3: Abilities, Equipment & Personality ===== Rick Jones's capabilities have varied wildly throughout his history, ranging from a baseline human to a cosmic entity to a gamma-powered monster. His personality, however, has remained a consistent bedrock of loyalty and resilience. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === ==== Powers and Abilities ==== * Baseline Human Abilities: As a normal human, Rick possessed no superhuman powers. However, through his experiences, he became: * Adept Strategist: Years of operating alongside heroes like Captain America and Mar-Vell gave him a keen understanding of battlefield tactics. * Skilled Combatant: He received extensive combat and acrobatic training from Captain America, making him a proficient fighter on par with a top-level athlete. * Gifted Musician: Rick is a talented singer and guitarist, achieving professional success as a rock star at one point in his life. * Expert Hacker: As the founder of the Teen Brigade, he demonstrated an early aptitude for manipulating radio and computer networks. * Destiny Force: During the Kree-Skrull War, the Kree Supreme Intelligence attempted to unlock the latent psychic potential of humanity, believing it was the key to reigniting Kree evolution. The process unexpectedly centered on Rick, awakening a god-like power within him known as the Destiny Force. In this state, he could manifest soldiers from the past, freeze entire alien armadas in place, and perform reality-altering feats on a massive scale. This power was temporary and uncontrollable, burning out after he used it to end the war. * Hulk/Banner Bond: For a period, Rick was mentally and physically linked to the “Professor Hulk” incarnation. This bond allowed them to share a mental space and for Rick to physically anchor the Hulk in his intelligent state. A later, more traumatic event saw Rick temporarily become a Hulk-like creature himself before Banner absorbed the excess gamma radiation to save him. * As A-Bomb: After being targeted by the Intelligencia and subjected to a massive dose of gamma radiation by M.O.D.O.K., Rick was transformed into a creature resembling the Abomination, which he wryly named A-Bomb. In this form, he possessed: * Superhuman Strength and Durability: His strength was comparable to other gamma mutates like the Hulk and Red Hulk, allowing him to trade blows with incredibly powerful beings. His armored hide was nearly invulnerable. * Active Camouflage: Unlike other Hulks, A-Bomb could alter his skin color and texture to perfectly blend in with his surroundings, rendering him effectively invisible. * Claws and Defensive Spikes: His hands and feet possessed sharp claws, and he could manifest spikes from his body for defense. * Gamma Radiation Absorption: He was able to absorb gamma radiation from others, which he once used to drain the Red Hulk, temporarily reverting him to his human form. ==== Equipment ==== * Nega-Bands: These Kree artifacts were Rick's most famous accessory for years. By striking the golden bracelets together, he could swap his physical location with whoever wore the corresponding pair (first Mar-Vell, then Genis-Vell). While wearing them, the user gained flight, enhanced strength, and the ability to project energy blasts, though Rick himself rarely used these powers, as he was typically the one in the Negative Zone. * The Whisperer's Tech: In his final incarnation as the Whisperer, Rick was equipped with advanced cybernetics and technology that allowed him to be a master hacker and information broker for the superhero community. This included advanced cloaking technology and a direct neural interface with global information networks. ==== Personality ==== Rick's defining trait is his unwavering, almost self-destructive loyalty. He feels an immense sense of responsibility for those he cares about, stemming from the guilt he carries over creating the Hulk. He is brave to a fault, willing to stand up to cosmic gods and gamma monsters with little more than courage and conviction. Despite the immense trauma he has endured—being bonded to aliens, dying and being resurrected, being transformed into a monster—he has largely maintained a core of optimism and a wry sense of humor. He is the ultimate “friend,” the person who always shows up, no matter the odds. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === As Rick Jones does not exist as a character in the MCU, there is no information on his potential abilities, equipment, or personality within this continuity. ===== Part 4: Key Relationships & Network ===== Rick Jones is the nexus of the Marvel Universe, a character defined almost entirely by his relationships with its greatest heroes and villains. ==== Core Allies ==== * Bruce Banner / The Hulk: This is the foundational relationship of Rick's life. It began with Rick's guilt and Banner's resentment but evolved into a deep, familial bond. Rick was the Hulk's first friend and human anchor. He saw the good man inside the monster and fought tirelessly to protect both Banner and the world from the Hulk's destructive potential. Their connection has been tested by transformations, betrayals, and even death, but they remain inextricably linked as brothers forged in a gamma fire. * Captain America (Steve Rogers): Rick looked up to Captain America as a father figure and the ultimate hero. Their partnership as Cap and the new “Bucky” was a formative experience for Rick, teaching him discipline and courage. For Steve, Rick was both a reminder of his greatest failure (the loss of the original Bucky) and a chance at redemption. Though their time as partners was short, the mutual respect and affection they developed lasted a lifetime. * Captain Mar-Vell: The bond between Rick and the Kree hero Mar-Vell was one of Marvel's most unique partnerships. Sharing a single existence, they were closer than brothers, telepathically linked across dimensions. Rick was not just Mar-Vell's anchor to Earth but his window into humanity, teaching the alien warrior what it meant to be a hero for a world that was not his own. Rick was at Mar-Vell's side during his final battle with cancer, a heartbreaking vigil that cemented their bond as one of the most poignant in comics history. He would later forge a similar, though more contentious, bond with Mar-Vell's son, Genis-Vell. * Marlo Chandler: Marlo was the love of Rick's life. Their relationship grounded him, offering a semblance of normalcy amidst the chaos of his superhero-adjacent life. He stood by her when she was killed by a deranged woman and later resurrected, and he married her, facing down supervillains, cosmic threats, and even her brief stint as the host for the entity of Death. Their love story was a central focus of Peter David's acclaimed run on The Incredible Hulk. ==== Arch-Enemies ==== * The Leader (Samuel Sterns): As the Hulk's primary intellectual foe, the Leader frequently targeted Rick Jones as a way to manipulate or harm Bruce Banner. He saw Rick as a pawn, a weakness to be exploited, and was responsible for numerous schemes that placed Rick in mortal danger. * The Kree Supreme Intelligence and Ronan the Accuser: During his bond with Mar-Vell, Rick became a direct enemy of the Kree Empire's despotic ruler. The Supreme Intelligence manipulated Rick, Mar-Vell, and the entire Kree-Skrull War for its own evolutionary ends, viewing Rick as nothing more than a tool. Ronan, as a Kree Accuser, often came into direct conflict with the renegade Mar-Vell and his human host. ==== Affiliations ==== * The Avengers: Rick is an honorary Avenger and was granted the official rank of “Avenger” by Captain America. His accidental summons brought the team together, and he has been a trusted ally and confidant to the group for decades, often serving as their communications link or helping them on missions from their headquarters. * The Teen Brigade: The amateur radio enthusiast group Rick founded in his youth, which served as an early warning system for superhuman threats. * The Pantheon: During the era when he was bonded with the intelligent Professor Hulk, Rick lived and worked alongside the Pantheon, a secretive organization of super-powered, god-like beings who sought to shape the world's future. * The Agents of S.M.A.S.H.: In some continuities, particularly the animated series Hulk and the Agents of S.M.A.S.H., Rick as A-Bomb is a core member of a team of “Hulks” that includes Hulk, Red Hulk, She-Hulk, and Skaar. ===== Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines ===== Rick's history is a highlight reel of the Marvel Universe's most critical moments. He was not just a witness to history; he often shaped it. ==== The Kree-Skrull War (Avengers #89-97) ==== This is arguably Rick Jones's most important story. Caught in the middle of a galaxy-spanning conflict between the militaristic Kree and the shapeshifting Skrulls, Rick was abducted by both sides multiple times. The Skrulls sought the Kree technology of the Nega-Bands he wore, while the Kree Supreme Intelligence planned to use him as a catalyst. The climax of the war saw the Supreme Intelligence unlock Rick's latent “Destiny Force,” a near-infinite power. Overwhelmed but guided by his conscience, Rick projected a single, powerful image of golden-age heroes into the minds of every combatant and froze both the Kree and Skrull fleets in space, forcing an end to the hostilities. It was a moment that elevated the eternal sidekick into a cosmic savior. ==== The Death of Captain Marvel (Marvel Graphic Novel #1) ==== In one of the most celebrated and mature stories in comic book history, Captain Mar-Vell succumbs not to a supervillain, but to cancer. Rick Jones plays a crucial, heartbreaking role in the narrative. Having been separated from Mar-Vell for some time, he returns to his friend's deathbed on Titan. The story is told largely through the eyes of those who loved Mar-Vell, and Rick represents the human connection, the “little brother” forced to watch his hero fade away. His presence grounds the cosmic tragedy in real, relatable human emotion. ==== Future Imperfect (Hulk: Future Imperfect #1-2) ==== In this dark, dystopian future, a version of the Hulk has become the tyrannical ruler known as the Maestro. A small band of rebels uses Doctor Doom's time machine to bring the Professor Hulk of the present to their time, hoping he can defeat his future self. The leader of this rebellion is a very old, bitter, and wheelchair-bound Rick Jones. This version of Rick is a master strategist who has spent decades fighting a losing battle. He is surrounded by the memorabilia of his fallen friends—Captain America's shield, Thor's hammer, etc.—in his base. This story presents a haunting look at what a lifetime of loss and failure could turn Rick into, while still showcasing his indomitable will to fight for what's right. ==== World War Hulk (2007) ==== During the Hulk's vengeful return to Earth after his exile by the Illuminati, Rick Jones stands as one of the few people who attempts to reason with him. He tries to appeal to the Bruce Banner he knows is still inside the enraged Worldbreaker, but fails. Rick's loyalty is on full display as he refuses to abandon his friend, even as the Hulk's actions threaten the entire planet. The aftermath of this event leads directly to the creation of the Red Hulk and Rick's own transformation into A-Bomb, as the villains known as the Intelligencia target him specifically because of his connection to Banner. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== * Ultimate Universe (Earth-1610): In this alternate reality, Rick Jones is a teenager who gains superpowers after being chosen by the mysterious Watchers to be the herald of the Gah Lak Tus swarm (that universe's version of Galactus). He briefly acts as a new Captain Marvel, possessing immense cosmic power, a stark contrast to his powerless 616 counterpart. His career is short-lived but impactful. * Hulk: The End: In this one-shot story depicting the absolute final days of the Earth, a lone Bruce Banner is the last living creature on a planet scoured by nuclear war. He is haunted by the specter of Rick Jones, who died years prior. A small robot with a recording of Rick's final message serves as Banner's only companion, a poignant testament to their enduring friendship even at the end of all things. * House of M (Earth-58163): In the reality created by the Scarlet Witch, Rick Jones was briefly seen as a human member of a resistance group led by Luke Cage. He also wrote an autobiography that exposed the fact that the reality's Hulk was actually Bruce Banner. * Hulk and the Agents of S.M.A.S.H. (Animated Series):** This popular animated series presents a very different version of Rick. He starts the series as a human vlogger trying to improve the Hulk's public image. He deliberately exposes himself to a gamma wave to gain powers, becoming A-Bomb. This version of A-Bomb is more comedic, acting as the team's comic relief and heart, and is significantly more popular with younger audiences than any of his comic book counterparts.

1)
Rick Jones was named, in part, after the singer Ricky Nelson, reflecting Stan Lee's desire to tap into the teen culture of the era.
2)
In the comics, Rick Jones wrote a best-selling autobiography about his life among superheroes, titled Sidekick.
3)
The character of Rick Jones was officially killed in the 2017 storyline Secret Empire. He was executed by a firing squad under the orders of the Hydra-controlled Captain America for refusing to betray his heroic ideals. He has not been resurrected since.
4)
Peter David, the writer most associated with Rick Jones's development, has stated that he views Rick as the true “soul” of the Marvel Universe, the human character who has seen it all from the most unique perspective possible.
5)
His full name, Richard Milhouse Jones, is a subtle political joke, referencing then-Vice President Richard Nixon, as “Milhous” was his middle name. This was common for Stan Lee, who often slipped in topical references.
6)
Before becoming A-Bomb, Rick was crippled for a time, confined to a wheelchair after a battle where the Hulk's “savage” persona re-emerged and attacked him. This mirrored his future self seen in the Future Imperfect storyline.