Head, torso: Serpentor v5, hair made with superglue, teeth are a slice of white plastic glued into mouth cavity
Waist, left thigh: Barbecue v4
Right thigh and holster: Gung Ho v18
Left holster: Duke v23
Lower legs, Arms, and hands: Serpentor v5
Pistols: Gung Ho v18 and Duke v23
Knife and sheath: Snake Eyes v28
Billy club: Barbecue v4's fire ax whittled down.
Flamethrower: Barbecue v4's tanks and scratch built the rest
Shotgun: bbi
Smiley Face button: Slice of a gun barrel
Cigar: Bit from model kit
Load-Carrying Equipment: Snake Eyes v32
Shoulder pad: Iron Grenadier v2
Left sleeve: Part of a small American flag bought at a hardware store


I was looking at the Comedian custom that I submitted a couple months ago and I said to myself: "Self, you can do a whole lot better." So, that's what I set out to do. Originally I didn't have very many spare 25th anniversary parts but, thanks in large part to the vehicle packs, I have been acquiring quite a few doubles. With a far more diverse assortment of parts to use, I made this gentlemen.


In 1939, at the age of 15, Edward Morgan Blake began terrorizing ne'er-do-wells in the New York City harbor area as the costumed vigilante "the Comedian." Efficient and ruthless, Blake all but drove organized crime from the area. That same year he joined the newly formed masked adventurer group, the Minutemen. After serving with the group for many months, Blake was expelled from the Minutemen after he was caught attempting to rape fellow member Sally Jupiter, alias "the Silk Spectre." Blake first began working for the United States government when, during the Second World War, he was deployed in the pacific theater. By the 1960's, Blake was an official government operative, doing everything from guarding future president Richard M. Nixon to personally fighting alongside Dr. Manhattan in Vietnam. His service continued well after the passing of the Keene act, his biggest accomplishment arguably being the swift and violent ending of the Iranian Hostage Crisis in 1980. Blake was active until his sudden death on October 11th, 1985. He truly was a real American hero, a few temporary lapses in judgment aside.

"He stood up for his country. . . Never let anyone retire him. Never cashed in on his reputation. Never set up a company selling posters and diet books and toy soldiers based on himself." - Walter Joseph Kovacs

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