Gwenpool

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Gwen Poole
Gwenpool 2.jpg
Gwen Poole on the cover to The Unbelievable Gwenpool #1 (April 2016)
Art by Gurihiru
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceCover:
Deadpool's Secret Secret Wars #2 (June 2015)
Full appearance:
[1]
Created byFull appearance: Christopher Hastings, Heather Antos and Jordan D. White
Design: Chris Bachalo
In-story information
Alter egoGwendolyn "Gwen" Poole
SpeciesHuman (temporarily self-retconned into a mutant)
Place of originBrooklyn, New York City, The Real World (Earth-TRN565)
Team affiliationsMercenary Organization Dedicated Only to Killing
Champions (briefly)
West Coast Avengers
The GwenHive
Notable aliasesGhostface No-Pants Killer
The Pink Ghost
Pink Slayer
GwenPool
Abilities
  • Brilliant tactician
  • Vast knowledge of the Marvel Universe
  • Use of extreme weaponry
  • Medium-Awareness and Interaction
  • Inter-Dimensional Travel
  • Reality Change

Gwenpool (Gwendolyn "Gwen" Poole) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. A girl from the real world transported to the Marvel Universe, her physical design originated as an amalgam of Gwen Stacy and Wade Wilson on a variant cover of Deadpool's Secret Secret Wars #2, which was one of twenty variant covers published due to the popularity of Spider-Gwen from June 2015.

Marvel initially produced two stories featuring Gwenpool as a character, a backup story in the series Howard the Duck,[2] and a one-shot Gwenpool Holiday Special. Following the publication of the one-shot, an ongoing series titled The Unbelievable Gwenpool by the same creative team was announced, which started in April 2016 and concluded in April 2018. The Unbelievable Gwenpool #0, collecting Poole's appearances from Howard the Duck and the first Gwenpool Holiday Special, was later released, as well as the limited series Gwenpool Strikes Back.

Publication history[]

Gwenpool on the cover of Deadpool's Secret Secret Wars #2

In June 2015, following the popularity of Spider-Gwen, all Marvel titles being published had alternate covers with Gwen Stacy reimagined as other characters, such as Doctor Strange, Groot and Wolverine.[3] One of those was Deadpool, featured on Chris Bachalo's variant cover for Deadpool's Secret Secret Wars #2.[4] After seeing how many fans were cosplaying as a character who was not even featured in any comic, Marvel editor Jordan White approached writer Christopher Hastings and editor Heather Antos with the task of creating a story around her. Initially the plan was to do one-shot comic Gwenpool Special #1 (December 2015), which was then followed by introducing the character prior to the special with a three-issue backup story in the ongoing volume of Howard the Duck (November 2015–January 2016).[5][6] After a meeting with White and Howard the Duck editor Will Moss, Hastings came out with the idea of a character aware of the fourth wall, "but it comes from this place of knowing she is in a comic book because she is from a world where the comic books actually exist", which would also initially lead to a cavalier attitude towards the world in which she inhabits "because she doesn’t believe there [are] any consequences to her actions", something Hastings summed as "she decides to [initially] use that [comic book] knowledge like she’s in Grand Theft Auto or something". A contrast would be that Gwenpool lacked any of the training or superpowers expected of Marvel characters.[7][8]

The Howard the Duck arc, from November 2015 to January 2016, was drawn by Brazilian artist Danilo Beyruth, and the holiday special, published in December 2015, had art by Japanese duo Gurihiru. Once Marvel decided to make a Gwenpool ongoing series (named The Unbelievable Gwenpool), starting in April 2016, Hastings asked for Gurihiru's return to the artwork team, with the title being edited by Antos.[5] The Unbelievable Gwenpool solo series ended at issue #25.[9] Gwenpool would then join the revamp of the West Coast Avengers in 2018. Once that book ended, the character starred in the 2019 limited series Gwenpool Strikes Back, written by Leah Williams and drawn by Spanish artist David Baldeon,[10] appearing in the 2020–21 promotional limited series MODOK: Head Games by M.O.D.O.K. showrunners Patton Oswalt and Jordan Blum (with art by Scott Hepburn) as a supporting character.

Fictional character biography[]

Backstory[]

Gwendolyn "Gwen" Poole arrived to the Marvel Universe from what she claims to be "the real world".[11] Unwilling to be an "extra", she went to a tailor for super-heroes and requested her own costume to stand out. The tailor (named Ronnie) complied, but misread Gwen's application form, and thought Gwen went by the alias of "Gwenpool", leading to a costume similar to Deadpool. Ronnie chose pink because of Gwen's pink highlights, but also wanted her costume to stand out and get rid of her excess pink fabric.[1] So far she has yet to reveal the details of her old life, though she told Rocket Raccoon that in this comic universe she is not lactose intolerant. All we know is that she felt erasing herself from her old life and her parents' memories was "for the best".[12] Upon gaining the ability to manipulate the borders of the fourth wall from an attempt to return her to reality, allowing her to travel in time, Gwen retcons the Marvel Universe into believing her to be a mutant after being given the idea by Kamala Khan, allowing her to enter the gates of Krakoa.[13]

Solo series[]

Gwenpool's first appearance as a character was in Howard the Duck Vol 6 #1 (later republished in The Unbelievable Gwenpool #0), when she was involved in stealing a humanity-destroying virus from Black Cat and selling it to Hydra to get money easily, believing that the Avengers would simply deal with any consequences. In order to prevent Black Cat's Gang from finding her, Gwenpool killed a corrupt member of the NYPD whom the Black Cat was going to ask for help. Believing (correctly) that Black Cat was going to resort to blackmailing Howard the Duck into helping her, Gwen broke into Howard's office and hid under his desk. Gwenpool then revealed herself after Hardy left, and attempted to assassinate Howard, reasoning that as Howard was a fictional character, he would most likely come back even from death. When she revealed the item she had stolen from Hardy and to whom she had sold it, Howard scolded her and informed her that the Avengers were not available to save the Earth from the virus. Guilt stricken, she then set out with Howard to retrieve the virus from a Hydra base. Gwenpool and Howard assaulted the Hydra base storing the virus and made their way to a laboratory where an agent was testing on it, with sights on releasing the virus. Gwenpool took the virus' container and drank it all, mistakenly believing it was the mumps, a virus she had been vaccinated from in her home reality. The virus started to mutate Gwenpool, and the Hydra agent gave her the cure to prevent her from infecting the base. When Howard met up with Hardy to return the box that supposedly contained the virus, Gwen appeared dressed up as one of the members of the organization that had sold the virus to the Black Cat, pretending to desire the box back. Using the money obtained from the transaction with Hydra, Gwen bought the box from Hardy, preventing her from discovering it was empty.[14]

In the 2015 Gwenpool Special, Gwenpool is hired to kill Orto, a snake/human hybrid assassin. She encounters him in his building and then kills him with a bomb. Gwenpool then attends a Christmas party hosted by She-Hulk, where she's seen talking to Ms. Marvel. They later go to the karaoke machine.[15]

Gwenpool unmasked

Following the events of Gwenpool Holiday Special #1, Gwenpool becomes a full-time mercenary, getting the news of different freelance jobs from her tailor, Ronnie.[16] While trying to deposit the money she made killing a giant snake-man named Orto, Gwen stops a bank robbery by killing all of the robbers, before getting arrested along with the gang's hacker Cecil. The arresting officer spontaneously decides to retire, and Gwenpool enlists a reluctant Cecil as her sidekick after the cop arresting them took her money and early retirement. After a mission revolving around extraterrestrial arms dealers where she killed MODOK Superior's best agent and took credit for his work, MODOK tracked Gwenpool down. He murdered Cecil in order to force her to become his henchman and an agent for his Mercenary Organization Dedicated Only to Killing.[17]

MODOK Superior then sends Gwenpool with his elite squad, which also features Batroc the Leaper, the alchemist Mega Tony, and the magician Terrible Eye, to find and kill the Seed of Pains, an evil Asgardian wizard who was under police custody. Upon getting the wizard away from the cops, they're ambushed by Thor, who needed him to save a dying elven colony from a rare root that infected them. Gwenpool distracts Thor and then kills the Seed of Pains with a bazooka. Mega Tony extracts the wizard's powers, places them in a spray bottle and gives it to Thor, who leaves to save the elves. While MODOK Superior and his squad celebrate, an upset Gwenpool is approached by Batroc, who threatens to expose her lack of powers and abilities to MODOK Superior, but agrees to give her basic combat and firearms training.[17]

Gwenpool then got Ronnie to set up a meeting between herself and Doctor Strange, in which she explained to him that she was from a reality where all Marvel characters are fictional characters in comic books. Doctor Strange agreed to transfer the data from Gwen's original world to create a fake background for her in the Marvel Universe, so that she could get her Social Security number, driver's license and other essential documents. However, MODOK Superior also discovers Gwen's background and swears to destroy Gwen. He sends the other mercenaries on a mission without her. When she questions him, MODOK Superior reveals that he knows who she is and believing her to be useless attempts to kill her. Gwen and MODOK then engage in battle, with Gwen using the skills she learned from Batroc to gain the upper hand. Eventually, MODOK Superior activates a rocket chair and sends a barrage of weapons against Gwen, but is defeated once Cecil's ghost hacks into MODOK Superior's defenses and sends him into space.[18]

After Gwen notices that the reality of the Marvel Universe has been altered, replacing several holidays (set during her time leading MODOK's former henchmen), she set out to find out what was wrong. Gwenpool discovers that Santa Claus is responsible for the changes, having erased himself from Christmas to have a vacation: Gwen was unaffected due to her being from another dimension. Gwen explains that as a side-effect of Santa's magic holidays, new holidays such as "Pantsgiving" and "Namor's Feast of Fish" have replaced the usual ones, with Christmas being replaced by "The Coming of Galactus, The Bringer of Gifts". Santa reveals that he was planning to restore the holidays after the New Year, but offers to restore them now instead. Although Gwen initially considers waiting until after New Year to have the holidays restored, as the new holidays would allow her to visit her family in her home dimension, she ultimately decides to restore Christmas, and returns to her headquarters to celebrate with her friends.[19]

Sometime later, Gwen heads to a meeting with MODOK Superior's mysterious client until she meets Miles Morales, the second Spider-Man, in the subway train. After an awkward introduction, Gwenpool follows Miles to his school until an explosion happens in one of the classrooms. Gwen and Spider-Man manage to rescue the students in time. Returning home, Miles finds Gwen in his house, who convinces him to investigate the explosion. They track it back to a classmate of Miles, who Gwen attempts to shoot. Spider-Man scolds Gwen for the murder attempt and, after a brief fight, webs her and leaves her for the police.[20]

Gwen is busted out of jail by Batroc and reunited with the others and sent to meet the client in his Brooklyn home. The client, named Vincent, asks Gwen to assume command of the MODOK organization and kill the alien arms dealers, known as Teuthidans. In the meantime, the Teuthidans, attack New York, discover Gwenpool's identity with the help of the NYPD and ask them to send their cops after Gwen. Gwen escapes the police by jumping on a moving subway train, and once back at the base, she forms a plan to defeat the Teuthidans: while the others distract the cops with a fake crime wave, Gwen will kill the Teuthidans.[21]

Arriving at Times Square, Gwen tries to call the others until Vincent appears behind her. When Cecil arrives and tells Gwen that the others were captured by the Teuthidans, Vincent reveals that he told the aliens, believing that the MODOK mercenaries were the real problem with the world and is obsessed to learn about Gwenpool's world without superheroes. Gwen then grabs her gun and shoots him in the face, while discovering that Vincent is a Doombot in the process. Vincent reveals he survived a time-travelling elderly Squirrel Girl's hobby of ruining Doctor Doom's plans, and turned against heroes and other weirdness when living with a younger Tinkerer, before attacking Gwenpool, who escapes with Cecil on their cop car.[22]

Back to the mobile base, Gwenpool transports it to Vincent's house, where the Teuthidans are hiding with Gwen's team. Assisted by Vincent (when Gwen threatens to kill his elderly neighbors if he does not assist) and MODOK's other agents, Gwenpool defeats the Teuthidans, but destroys the MODOK base in the process. After escaping, Batroc and the others decide to disband, despite Gwen's attempts to keep them together.[23]

During the Civil War II storyline, Gwenpool appears in Georgia attempting to catch an alien smuggler named Chammy, who was living in a rural neighborhood under the name Chandler and was trying to leave Earth, only to discover that Rocket Raccoon and Groot are also after him. After an intense fight between them, they manage to catch up to him and end up fighting Reeve, an alien that can absorb memories out of heads, who put the bounty on Chammy. After Reeve defeats them and escapes, Chammy tells Rocket, Groot and Gwen that Reeve is looking for a formula that could temporarily neutralize Captain Marvel's powers, allowing him to kill her. Gwen refuses to help at first, under the logic that Captain Marvel, being one of most important "characters" in the current "story", would not be killed off in "a comic about a talking tree and raccoon". However, after coincidentally running into Kitty Pryde, Gwen falls under the mistaken impression that the comic she is currently in was being written by Brian Michael Bendis, a "big-deal comic book writer" with a fixation on Pryde who would have the authority to kill Captain Marvel. Convinced that Captain Marvel’s life is actually in danger, Gwen accompanies Rocket & Groot to the Triskelion, where they manage to catch up to Reeve but he knocks them down. Just when he's about to kill Captain Marvel, Reeve is defeated by Chammy. While Chammy returns home with his human girlfriend Ruth, Rocket, Groot and Gwen part ways, as Gwen realizes that the real writer put Kitty Pryde on the street to trick her into helping.[24]

Gwen appears in Champions vol. 2 #5 along with Ms. Marvel, (whom she met and befriended at She-Hulk's Christmas party in Gwenpool's Holiday Special #1) and every Champion minus Spider-Man, whom Gwenpool says (and whom Gwenpool assumes is absent due to their conflict in her solo series) hates her. She claims she's joining the Champions, attacking the police officers (and blowing up their cars) who were ignoring hate crimes in the area due to their sheriff being responsible. Gwen assumes that these dirty cops will turn out to be super villains, as that is usually the case in comics like these. Her attempts to use comic book logic run up against the others' realistic expectations of non-super villain racism and bigotry being the cause, going to try and find "Mesmero or some other villain" behind it all (she believes that all evil is caused by super villains). They demand proof that the dirty cops are controlling people's minds, only to be provided with "the air of fear" as an explanation by Viv Vision. Gwenpool and the Champions eventually convince the sheriff's deputy to expose him.[25]

Gwen is then hired to kill a vampire in a small town, until she discovers that the mayor is a necromancer who was resurrecting the town's dead citizens and the one she was hired to kill was Blade. After a brief fight, Gwen manages to explain everything to Blade, who gives her his cellphone number and then leaves, offering to train her as the "Pink Slayer". She calls Blade when she discovers that the mayor is actually draining the life of the undead's descendants to keep them alive.[26]

During the events of Secret Empire, Gwenpool appears as a guest in a talk show talking in a positive way about the Hydra Empire while being threatened by a Hydra soldier.[27]

Gwen reunites with the MODOK crew once Arcade and puts them in a Murderworld shaped like a medieval dungeon, where they end up battling Deadpool. Gwen then helps Mega Tony get a job at Parker Industries and rescues Cecil, who was being chased by his frightened family members.[28]

After rescuing Cecil they went to Terrible Eye's apartment to ask how to make Cecil corporeal if not actually alive. Terrible Eye discovers a mystical gem being held by dwarves that could help, and opened a portal to a "moving door" that would lead to it, that Gwen quickly jumped through, with Cecil going after. She emerged inside Ghost Rider's trunk in Los Angeles while he and Hawkeye were both trying to stop the dwarves from completing a mystical ritual. Cecil ended up trapped in the mystical gem, which Ghost Rider put in his trunk as he drove away hearing the police sirens arriving. The next day, Gwen and Hawkeye go to Robbie Reyes' high school to retrieve the gem, but it ends up grabbed by the dwarves. Gwen enlists Ghost Rider to rescue Cecil, and it culminates in a battle at the Port of Los Angeles. During the battle, the dwarves release a giant creature to defeat the heroes. Cecil convinces Gwen to place the crystal on the creature's head, enabling him to possess its body.

Gwen goes to visit the Earth-616 version of the Poole family despite MODOK's inability to find any records of Gwen existing before Doctor Strange's intervention, where she is greeted by her brother Teddy, who, for some unknown reason and with no real explanation, drags her back to her world (or a reasonable facsimile) before she can meet the Marvel version of her parents. She's then transported back to her universe, where she begins to live her normal life from the moment she left (2015) again with apparently no memory of her time in the Marvel Universe, which she hates. Gwen is drawn to a machine in a sleep study she volunteered for that could get her back to the Marvel Universe. Gwen is stopped from jumping into the vortex by her brother, who implies it's different to the way she originally entered the Marvel Universe, prompting her to reluctantly deactivate the machine and decide to go home. Then, while breaking the fourth wall and being confused by this, she sees a "The End" lying on the floor and picks it up before dropping and breaking it. It is then replaced by "to be continued" and a preview for #17, confusing Gwen.[29]

Gwen continues her life; by 2016 she is working at a cinema screening Captain America: Civil War. Becoming aware that she is still in a comic book, yet unaware of her time in the Marvel Universe, Gwen sees a giant title appearing behind her and realises that she can see her spoken words in balloons and thoughts in pink boxes. After some experimenting she thinks so much that her thought-box actually pushes her out of her bedroom window, making her "parents" think she tried to kill herself. After waking up in the hospital it becomes clear that she's being recommended for "observation". She mentions to her brother that she thinks she is in a comic book and questions him on what he knows. Nervous, he gives Gwen her notebook, who notices that the pages of her notebook where she drew MODOK and Batroc have been removed. Gwen then begins experimenting with the fourth wall again and successfully erases the walls between panels, leaving her with various versions of herself for company. Hearing a voice outside her door, Gwen climbs out of the panels, finding herself looking in on her life.

Watching the past from outside the borders, Gwen sees in the "extra pages" of her Holiday Special, in which when her brother Teddy was sucked into the Marvel Universe, he ended up working for Orto the snake swordsman. Upon seeing her kill Orto's henchmen, Teddy runs into versions of Spider-Man, The Terrible Eye, and Vincent Doonan, who claim to be from a future where Gwen becomes a huge threat and destroys their lives. They offer him the chance to "return home" with his sister and fix things. Being concerned for Gwen's mental health, and having had a terrible time, he readily agrees. On finding this out Gwen, with her memory and costume restored, re-enters the borders, confronts Teddy for trying to undo the past and steal her dream of living in a comic, and shows him that their "parents" aren't real, and they never even left the comic.

Terrible Eye explained that their attempts to send the Pooles to their home dimension created a pocket dimension almost identical to their real one created from their memories. The three realize that trapping Gwen was what led to her gaining her powers over reality in the first place. As they plan to undo it, Spider-Man takes Gwen to a remote cliff, intending to kill her after explaining why he feels she needs to die; which involves her having revealed his secret identity to the world, getting his family killed, and kicking off Civil War III. Explaining that the future evil Gwen was unable to follow them due to being unable to track Teddy, Gwen realizes that she can see Miles' flashback and that the future evil Gwen, giant sized, has followed him to the present, who promptly frees her.

Future Gwen battles Spider-Man, Terrible Eye, and Doonan, while each side tries to convince the present Gwen to join their cause. Future Gwen turns out to be weakened by Present Gwen’s doubt but gradually re-strengthening nonetheless. She then effortlessly kills Doonan, Terrible Eye, and Spider-Man, horrifying Present Gwen, before explaining to her past self that she became a villain because she was tired of her good deeds being undone as the plot progressed, so she turned to committing evil that could always be undone on characters that “matter”, demonstrated when Spider-Man’s death is retconned a moment later because he’s too important for the story to kill. However, Present Gwen is disgusted at the idea of hurting the characters she’s grown to love, and wipes her future self from existence. This comes at the cost of erasing all of the Evil Gwen stories and so dramatically shortening Present Gwen’s lifespan.

Having made friends in Marvel and learning that the universe is attempting to make her into a joke villain, Gwen wants to make sure her evil self never comes to be. To catch the attention of the Avengers she decides to go on a trip to Latveria in an ill-advised attempted face off with Doctor Doom, still thinking him to be evil, having never read Infamous Iron Man. It is revealed that she and Cecil, now in his mystical monster body, share an apartment and since she has given up killing people is hacking to pay the bills. She then faces off with a snake-man in the sewers, somehow making him vanish much to the surprise of the police, especially Officer Gray who still does not understand why she seems unable to arrest Gwen and her fellow cops even let her go. Gwen's comment about cops not working like that in "real life" seems to have connected with her. A short time later after rescuing Vincent Doonan from Paste Pot Pete and throwing him into the void between comic panels as a demonstration of her new superpower (which is apparently okay since he's only a D-ranked and rarely used villain), Gwen asked Vincent where to find the real Doctor Doom so she can defeat him and join the Avengers. But, it turns out Doom was watching through Vincent the entire time and thinks he is ready for her. Using Vincent he traps Gwen in a cell and is not a little bit surprised when she escapes and appears just as he is telling his AI doombot how proud he is of him. He explains he's reformed, but Gwen still wants to defeat him. Doom sees her disappear around "a corner of reality", but is unable to predict where her attack comes from. using a sword she cuts him, releasing the evil Doctor Doom from within him. Said Doctor, palming the current version's face like a basketball, threatens to give Gwen exactly what she wanted: DOOM!

After a brief fight in which she realizes she can't kill him the real Doom shows up outside the comic and destroys his evil past self doppelganger. He and Gwen have a chat about why she wanted to kill him, which turns out to be because since destroying her evil destiny self, her comic pages are running out and she believes she is doomed to be cancelled. With only a few pages left, once Doom is gone, she wonders if she has to become a super villain. In the next issue she teams up with Batroc and the two rob a casino, but he reveals that it was owned by a bad guy so her attempts to be a villain fail. Bidding him a fond farewell, certain that another author will make him into a jerk again, Gwen is about to give up when a version of herself from the future appears.

In the final 25th chapter of Unbelievable Gwenpool as the Gwen from the future (who looks just like current Gwen but with slightly longer hair because according to her Marvel characters don't age unless it's in the title) describes it, she explains that while her first comic series has ended, she's already in several other comics, toys, games and so on not to mention fan art and the like. Even if she doesn't keep going right now she and her side characters will return. Meanwhile, in between these pages, Gwen carries out a plan using a mystical rocket launcher to defeat and embarrass Dormammu to retrieve a device Dr. Doom, Stephen Strange, Terrible Eye, and Vincent Doonan use to restore Cecil to human form and make his monster body friendly. She is given a watch that counts down her pages and uses the rest, one page at a time, to see old friends, team up with new superheroes, rescue her brother from Hell, explain her and Teddy to the Marvel Universe counterparts of her parents, and chase off M.O.D.O.K. one more time. Then we see that in the future one of Gwen's fans, a young girl is picked on and Gwen flies in on Fin Fang Foom in a parody of The Never Ending Story to chase the villains into a garbage can. Decades later when the little girl is old and dying in a hospital, the Future Gwen is with her sad to see her go but the girl understands because after all, she's an extra. Future Gwen then goes back to where the chapter started to talk to her past self, creating a loop.

West Coast Avengers Vol. 3[]

After having been recently beaten up by a clone of Squirrel Girl,[30] and then having subsequently attended the funeral of a separate Skrull duplicate of Squirrel Girl, both times under the impression of their being the same person, Gwen visits Kate Bishop in Los Angeles, before being drafted to join the accidentally reformed West Coast Avengers. She instantly enters into conflict with one of the members, Quentin Quire, but was still the one who had to save him when he was swatted away by a giant Tigra. Their clashes and shouting matches eventually evolve into passionate kisses. However, Gwen later informs the camera crew following the team that she only started a relationship with Quentin as she felt a romantic plot would make her less of a supporting player and thus less threatened to die, having also considered establishing a romantic relationship with America Chavez.[31] Along with the other Avengers, Gwen helped stop giant monsters created by the original M.O.D.O.K., adopting a baby land-shark she names Jeff, and is captured by an alliance of villains headed by Madame Masque before being saved by Kate.[32] Following the cancellation of West Coast Avengers, a Gutter-trapped Gwenpool helps Spider-Man and Deadpool cope with the cancellation of their own Spider-Man/Deadpool series by simulating a fight between themselves and a version of their comic's writer (under the alias of "The Manipulator"), in addition using the subsequent pocket dimension to watch all Marvel Cinematic Universe entries up to Avengers: Endgame.[33] Later, during the War of the Realms, Gwen and the West Coast Avengers assist Otto Octavius in protecting San Francisco, and in his coming to terms with his lack of a role in the event.

Gwenpool Strikes Back (2019)[]

In this miniseries, after firstly breaking up with Quentin and using encounters with Peter Parker, Wade Wilson, and the Fantastic Four as filler for its first two issues,[34] Gwen uses a new ability to create flashbacks to things that had previously never happened (allowing her to manipulate reality) to acquire a fortune from Tony Stark post-Civil War II to allow her to pit the heroes of the Marvel Universe against one another.[35] After accidentally setting herself to combat the Immortal Hulk, Gwen pulls previous versions of her writing from the Gutter, splitting her individual being into six separate people including herself, known as the GwenHive. Gwen subsequently leaves the GwenHive to enter combat with the Hulk while she dives into continuity, leading to the death of the Gwen from Champions, while the Gwen of The Unbelievable Gwenpool escapes unharmed, having identified the current Gwen as a new take on "Evil Gwen". Gwen returns, having stolen Mjolnir and the severed arm of Thor Odinson from Malekith, and uses it to defeat the Hulk, before returning it to the past. As the remaining three Gwens (being the Gwen of Rocket Raccoon & Groot, dubbed "Harley Gwen", and the Gwens of West Coast Avengers Vol. 3 and The Superior Spider-Man Vol. 2) flee the scene unnoticed through the Gutter, Gwen finds herself faced by Kamala Khan.[36] Fearing for her continued existence, and upon being accidentally inspired by Khan, Gwen uses the thought bubble ability to convince Khan and the wider Marvel Universe that she is a mutant, hoping that as a "mutant" resident of Krakoa she will remain "in continuity"; upon arriving, she encounters James "Logan" Howlett and Quentin.[13] Upon leaving Jeff with Wade while dressed in her original Chris Bachalo design,[37] Gwen later avoids participating in a Fortnite tie-in while out drinking with Kwannon, Mystique, Storm and Domino.[38] After being hired by A.I.M. Scientist Supreme Monica Rappaccini to kill MODOK (after being accredited for having briefly killed him when she first launched him into space) and befriending an editor's note box controlled by Jordan White while deriding the inconsistency of how she is being written, Gwen realizes she can speak any language by changing the font of her text bubble, speaking Krakoan to travel to the Caribbean to hunt MODOK. Assuming that she has been given a new ongoing Gwenpool series, Gwen narrates as MODOK destroys his ZOODOK experiments before elaborately killing him while quipping, only to realize with a sigh (upon viewing his projected memories of a family) that he is being humanised, and she is merely a guest star in his book, being written as the villain of his story. Entering the Gutter, Gwen proceeds to her desk to rearrange the comic's pages to retcon MODOK's death to having been merely knocked out by an EMP, before restoring MODOK's memory banks to more of a working order. Upon discovering from Gwen that his family's home from his memories is real, MODOK grants Gwen his respect and "permission to live" before departing.[39]

Other versions[]

Venomverse (2017)[]

After nearly being killed, an alternative version of Gwen merges with the Venom Symbiote. As two thugs prepare to make an arms deal, this Gwen recounts how she "was originally from the real world but was transported into the world of Marvel Comics, became a mercenary to have fun killing fictional characters, and became the main character of her own series", unaware that she is not the real Gwen. This Gwen speaks of having been a mercenary but gave it up to become a superhero after bonding with the Venom Symbiote, its original owner having been "real eager" to give it away. She approaches the two thugs, who tell her to leave. When she challenges them, narrating that her one weakness is that she doesn't have superpowers, they open fire on her and riddle her with bullets.

With Gwenpool seemingly dead, the two thugs continue to prepare to make the arms deal. However, Gwen narrates that she used to not have powers as black ooze emerges from her wounds, expelling the bullets and transforming her into a monstrous version of herself. She notes that she acquired the Venom symbiote from someone desperate to get rid of it, and finally had the powers she needed to become a real superhero. Getting up, the Venomized Gwenpool gleefully confronts the thugs before being attacked from behind by shuriken. Turning, she sees a group of Hand ninja, which the symbiote tells her to eat. Devouring them, Gwenpool gloats about how foolish they were to attack her in a group, invoking the "Inverse Ninja Law". The remaining Hand ninja flee, much to her disappointment, as the symbiote is still hungry. Daredevil then appears behind her, irately noting he wanted to interrogate one of them, and Gwenpool is smitten by how handsome he is. When Daredevil asks who she is, Gwenpool admits she hasn't thought up a new codename for herself, considering "Venompool" and "Venpool", while apologising for killing them all. Daredevil states that much as he loves beating up the Hand, he's trying to investigate their increase in opioid sales. Daredevil bids her goodnight, resolving to continue his search the next day. The symbiote chides Gwen for her being disappointed that Daredevil is leaving, accusing her of going soft and saying it needs her vicious.

Gwenpool abruptly realizes she's going to be late for work, wondering why Daredevil looked so much younger than she had thought he would be. The symbiote tells her that this is because they're living in an alternate universe rather than Earth-616, to her surprise. The symbiote tells her that bonding to her has given it unique medium awareness and knowledge of the Marvel Multiverse, though Gwen laughs off the idea that they're living in a What If?. As Gwenpool lands on the roof of her place of employment, the rooftop access door opens and she quickly transforms the symbiote into a black suit, pink shirt, black skirt, and glasses. As she converses with her coworker, who remarks on her resemblance to Gwenpool, the symbiote sardonically mocks her insistence on maintaining a secret identity, particularly her choice to wear glasses.

Gwen's boss, a lawyer named Mr. Melville, berates her for being late as she enters carrying his paperwork and a pot of coffee. However, she is dumbstruck when she sees Matt Murdock seated at the table. She expresses concern that he'll sense the symbiote, which informs her that it's replicated the scent of a tasteful perfume just for her. While Murdock grills Mr. Melville over his client's hot sauce facility producing toxic substances, Gwen doodles childish pictures of herself and Daredevil as a couple. Gwen angrily watches as Mr. Melville mocks and insults Murdock, who leaves threatening to bring the case before a judge. The symbiote suggests they kill Mr. Melville for being mean to her crush, and Gwen admits that she's strongly tempted to go through with its suggestion. Mr. Melville takes his notes from her and leaves, with Gwen realizing seconds later that she'd accidentally left her doodle - which reveals Matt Murdock is Daredevil—inside the folder. When she tries to get the folder back, Mr. Melville brushes her off and leaves. As Gwen panics, the Venom symbiote suggests killing him again, then pulls the fire alarm. Mr. Melville leaves to work from his home, with the symbiote suggesting they follow him and kill him there. When Gwen refuses, it points out that they needed to go there anyway to retrieve the folder.

Gwenpool tails Mr. Melville to his penthouse apartment, not noticing she herself is being followed by Daredevil. She plans on simply grabbing the folder and escaping, but the symbiote points out that he may have already seen her drawing and that they should kill him to be sure. When Gwen asks why it's obsessed with killing her boss, the symbiote points out that she hates Mr. Melville herself, and that none of the events occurring around them are canon - by all rights, she shouldn't even be bonded to it - and that therefore they can kill anyone they want without it mattering. Noticing the file on Mr. Melville's desk, Gwenpool finally gives in the symbiote's urging to kill her boss but is attacked from behind by Daredevil. Daredevil reveals he knows who she is based on the awful perfume she was wearing. Annoyed at the symbiote, Gwenpool scraps with Daredevil while trying to tell him she's trying to protect him, just as Mr. Melville finds her drawing. As the fight between Gwenpool and Daredevil spills into his apartment, he calls out for assistance from his ninja, to Gwen's confusion. Seconds later, a group of Hand ninja emerges from various secret entrances to Gwen's outrage. As Gwenpool and Daredevil fight the Hand ninja back to back, the symbiote urges her to kill Mr. Melville before he figures out who she is. Gwen tells it that she's not about to do something that'll make Daredevil mad at her, confronting her boss over his dealings with the Hand. Mr. Melville pulls out a pistol and shoots at Daredevil, but Gwenpool morphs her arm into a shield and the bullet ricochets back and kills him. As Mr. Melville topples out the window, Gwenpool snags the drawing and leaves with Daredevil.

Sitting together on a rooftop, Gwen apologises for almost revealing his secret identity, though Daredevil is more amused than upset and commends her for not killing anyone. As he leaves to patrol the streets, the symbiote notes it is happy that her boss died, though Gwen scolds it, saying she needs to find a new job now. Daredevil seemingly returns, asking if Gwen wants to accompany him. The symbiote warns her that something is wrong, but she ignores it and follows him around a corner, where she meets an uncertain fate. The real Daredevil arrives looking for her.[40]

It is later revealed that Gwen was attacked and absorbed by the "Poisons" and that the reality this Gwen comes from is the reality in which the majority of the events of Venomverse are set. She is killed by that dimension's Deadpool who has been infected by and is successfully resisting the Poisons after she explains the Poison's purpose. Deadpool describes her as simply having been a "knockoff of a knockoff".[41]

Deadpool Kills the Marvel Universe Again (2017)[]

An alternate version of Gwen appears in the third issue of this miniseries. Gwen is hired by Moon Knight and the Punisher to find the location of definitely evil versions of Magneto, the Red Skull, the Abomination and Doctor Doom, who are controlling Deadpool to kill that Marvel Universe's heroes. As Gwen sends the photos, the Abomination proclaims "I've got her", leaving her fate unknown. Losing reception, Moon Knight remarks: "Until we hear from her again, we should assume Gwenpool's DEAD." In the same issue, it is revealed that the series takes place in a reality similar to that of Old Man Logan, as Deadpool comes across the X-Men's Mansion after Mysterio tricks Laura Kinney / Wolverine into slaughtering the X-Men. Old Man Logan realizes that this is what is happening over the course of the issue. Later, in the fourth issue, Gwenpool is revealed to be alive, asking the Tinkerer to ask her "a few quick questions". Gwen proceeds to torture the Tinkerer, realizing that her "super-hero pals" aren't answering any of her texts and calls and that the Tinkerer's masters have been using Deadpool to kill them. Gwenpool threatens the Tinkerer with more torture if he doesn't tell her how to break Deadpool's trance to stop him from killing everyone. Gwenpool then comes across Deadpool as he kills Nova, the last remaining superhero other than Gwenpool, and attempts to knock him out of his trance. Deadpool mocks Gwen as simply being a "variant cover knockoff" and "a Deadpool -- in pink!". Gwenpool, suddenly impaled, uses her last moments to reverse Deadpool's trance, redirecting him towards the supervillains using the trigger phrases she learned from the Tinkerer. Gwenpool begs Deadpool "don't let them get away with it", as he proclaims: "Bring on the Bad Guys".[42]

Powers and abilities[]

Gwenpool originally had no real superpowers, having vast knowledge of the Marvel Universe from comic books in her universe, such as every secret identity of both heroes and villains. She has used this information to take down Black Cat's criminal empire[1] and to stop Thor from attacking her.[17] She is able to exploit her fourth-wall knowledge to her advantage, understanding when comic-book tropes will allow her to avoid unpleasant or life-threatening consequences. Gwen has repeatedly demonstrated that she can't be arrested for long due to her superhero status and has also, on several occasions, survived falls that should have killed her. In fact she specifically told Howard the Duck that one of her favorite things was leaping from tall things and not dying. Things that should injure her sometimes have no effect, and when she is injured she heals quickly.[citation needed] She can also jump from high places and grab a moving train without serious injury, has hefted/thrown several large bags of gold bars (each bar weighing roughly fifty pounds or more), and demonstrated that as long as she perceives herself to be a hero it makes her enemies look like idiots who cannot seem to shoot her or land any serious blows.

Gwenpool is trained in hand to hand combat by Batroc during The Unbelievable Gwenpool vol. 2. Apparently, Batroc trained her in Savate and some swordplay. She continued to train after she left Batroc and with her skills much improved, she was able to take out a group of minions by herself while on the West Coast Avengers by jumping, kicking, and using her Katanas fluidly.[43] Blade also offered to teach her to fight vampires.

Gwenpool is fully-aware that she is in a comic,[44] meaning she can step out of and into comic panels, alter fictional characters (such as she does to Doctor Doom), dump characters into the "gutter space" between panels, interact with word bubbles or use her knowledge of the Marvel Universe to determine characters’ weaknesses. In West Coast Avengers, Gwen notes she is not fully able to exploit the comics medium with her powers as she did in her own title, making her think it was part of a character reboot. Later she says it does not work as well when people watch, but Ms. Marvel did admit that Gwen obviously has powers and came up with a theory that Gwen is a mutant based on everyone's (with the exception of other characters who can interact with the fourth wall) disbelief that they live in a comic.

Gwen is independently wealthy, having had run a successful career as a mercenary, and later having stolen a large number of gold bricks from an illegal casino run by Chance.[45] She recently used her reality manipulating abilities in Gwenpool Strikes Back to rewrite history so before one of his deaths Ironman gave her a large sum of money that she put up as a prize in a winner take all brawl with other superheroes. Ms. Marvel (Kamala Khan) won but it is unknown if she got the money. In the end she solidified her status as a recurring marvel character and gave a list of permanent facts about herself along with an addendum that the authors could not control her and she would never die.

Relationships[]

Teddy Poole: Gwen's brother who was also brought to the Marvel universe. He is less prone to seeing the world as a comic book and has yet to show any of Gwen's powers, but seems immune to her ability to alter reality. He briefly took work for a snake man named Orto before Gwen killed him. On seeing her slaughter the villain's minions he was horrified and could not bring himself to talk to her before she rushed off to the She-Hulk X-mas party. Almost immediately he was contacted by some future versions of Gwen's friends who had seen her destroy their future. They had no problem convincing Teddy they were right and he helped lure Gwen into a trap, only to have it not work as the two cannot be returned to their real world. Later, after she escaped, Gwen looked for him and finally found Teddy in Hell being tortured by Mephisto, for no apparent reason, though presumably even in Marvel people do not go to Hell for no reason. She and Squirrel Girl rescued him and then, as she was dealing with the end of her series and was afraid she would be forgotten, forgot about him. In Gwenpool Strikes Back she did mention him and that the whole thing was still unresolved.

Her "Parents": Copies of her parents were found living in the Marvel universe. At first they showed up at Officer Gray's police precinct thinking Gwen might be their daughter. Then it turned out they rented their home to Gwen's future friends and Teddy, completely unaware of their existence and joking about how the renters of their house were probably supervillains using it as a lair. Later after they had been apparently retconned to have no memory of her at all, Gwen introduced herself to them and told them about Teddy right before Moon Girl and The Power Pack broke through the wall. They took it in stride and even seemed happy, though slightly worried that their house would be blown up a lot more in the future. Gwen probably paid to have the place fixed, since she is quite wealthy these days.

Big Ronnie: A woman who sells "battle spandex" costumes and runs a mercenary for hire business. She made Gwen's suit and gave her her superhero name by accident. Somehow she is an old friend of Fin Fang Foom and is the one who made the dragon-alien's pants.

Cecil: The son of rednecks who ran away to the city to be a hacker and got forcibly inducted into his uncle's gang, Gwenpool killed the gang and basically took Cecil hostage as her helper. He was briefly killed by M.O.D.O.K. only to be brought back first as a giant monster and then himself by Gwen because she felt bad for getting him killed. He's an elite hacker and has a giant purple dog monster for a loyal pet.

Terrible Eye: Sarah, Gwen's only girl friend on the merc crew they were all forcibly forced to join she has a mask that allows her mystical access to knowledge beyond the ken of man. She has to take breaks from it though because she starts going mad if it is worn too long and having long conversations with rocks. She usually casts spells with rhymes but a future version of her who was one of Dr. Strange's eventual replacements did once say "Are you there Hoary Hosts of Hogath? It's me, Sara." Free from her previous unwanted employment she now has a small apartment and is attending a school for witchcraft in New York.

MegaTony: An Alchemist former team member of Gwen's. He had a hard time adjusting to life in the super community when their mercenary team fell apart, but Gwen helped get him a job working for Peter Parker. it is not said where he has gone since Parker Industries closed.

Batroc the Leaper: A semi-major supervillain and sort of a big brother to Gwen, in her comics he's reasonably nice and helpful at least to her and her friends. But only in her comics. Elsewhere he's a dangerous killer. He along with Blade has helped train Gwen to fight. When Gwen expressed a desire for supervillainy he helped her Robin Hood some gold from an illegal casino, making her independently wealthy and no longer needing to worry about money, at least for a while. He is undecided on whether he believes Gwen's claims that they are comic characters despite using it to his advantage, mostly because he dislikes the idea that he was originally meant to be a French stereotype.

Vincent Doonan: A rogue Doombot who first hired Gwen when she defeated M.O.D.O.K. and then turned against her when he decide she was the biggest threat to his quiet small town life style. This resulted in him getting credit for saving his neighborhood from the alien arms dealers he was actually working with and unwanted attention as a hero. After trying to take out Dr. Doom together the two seem to have reconciled and become friends. He's allowed Squirrel Girl to access his systems for her computer class and helped resurrect her friend Cecil.

Officer Gray: A policewoman who tried to arrest Gwenpool, despite the rogue Doombot attacking her at the time. Gwen, not wanting to see her dead, asked her name and declared her no longer a mere extra, so she wouldn't be easily killed. Gwen called her in after defeating the aliens in Vincent Doonan's neighborhood, which Gray appreciated. Later she tried to arrest Gwen for fighting an evil snake man only to be told by the other cops that they were letting her go. She seemed to hear Gwen mention that they were in a comic and unlike other characters in Marvel, actually seemed to believe her for a second. She also briefly tried to get Gwen to do some community service, but was again thwarted since the universe would not let Gwen do anything that boring.

Various Heroes and Villains: Gwen has made friends and enemies among various heroes and villains. So far however they only seem to remember her in her actual presence and she has surprisingly not yet got a main nemesis, though she tried to make Dr. Doom into one and ended up befriending him instead. None of them believe Gwen when she tells them she is in a comic and Ms. Marvel even suggested she might be a reality altering mutant, ending in Gwen getting rewritten into that role, even though Gwen does not really believe it and only accepted it because it opened up a lot of paths for her comic to continue. However Doctor Strange, Deadpool, Howard the Duck (himself from an alternate universe), Santa Claus, and potentially other fourth-wall breaking heroes have proven that they not only believe her but have been able to peer into her old life in "the real world" and even alter it. Doctor Strange gave Gwen an identity in the Marvel universe by taking it from hers. Presumably her brother Teddy was not offered the same deal.

Pool-Boys: More all male mercenaries working for M.O.D.O.K. they were the backup squad and rarely used by him as Gwenpool's team were the A-listers. After Gwen dressed them as her in order to keep them invulnerable as a funny and unique one-time fight against the alien arms dealers, they were subsequently arrested. Later they met up with Gwen and her friends in the park, still wearing her costume, and helped drive off their former boss. It is unclear what eventually happened to them.

Gwen-Pig: To fool the aliens who were after her Gwen dressed a pig up in her costume. The pig was later adopted by MegaTony and apparently insists on still wearing the costume.

Alternate Gwens Various other versions of Gwen have been known to come visit from other comics, the future, and even the past when she uses her powers.

In other media[]

Web series[]

  • In the Marvel TL;DR web series, an episode is dedicated to the first Gwenpool Holiday Special, in which she is voiced by Brenna Hines.

Video games[]

The Unbelievable Gwenpool promotional art for Marvel Future Fight
  • Gwenpool appears as a playable character in Marvel Future Fight.
  • Gwenpool is featured in Marvel Puzzle Quest.
  • Gwenpool appears as a playable character in Marvel Contest of Champions. During the game, there's also an antagonistic Gwenperion, which M.O.D.O.K. has infused with Hyperion's powers.
  • Gwenpool appears in Lego Marvel Super Heroes 2, voiced by Becca Stewart. She replaces Deadpool as the host of the bonus missions, and continues to have medium awareness, as her introduction has Gwen noting her body is now the one of a minifigure.
  • Gwenpool is featured prominently in the mobile card game Marvel Duel. The game's story mode focuses on Gwenpool working with different heroes to get their equipment back after it was stolen by her evil future self.

Other[]

  • In various animated series such as Marvel Rising and Marvel's Spidey and His Amazing Friends, Ghost-Spider's civilian identity Gwen Stacy has Gwen Poole's pink highlights in her blonde hair. This was cited by a character designer for Marvel Rising having mistaken an image of Gwen Poole by Gurihiru for Gwen Stacy while using Google Images to reference the former character's physical appearance during the series' development.
  • In the fourth issue of Gwenpool Strikes Back, the role-playing Twitter account @gwenpool_ebooks is referenced as an alternate-dimension Gwenpool.

Collected editions[]

The series has been collected into trade paperbacks:

# Title Material collected Pages Publication date ISBN
1 Believe It The Unbelievable Gwenpool #0–4 152 November 29, 2016 978-1302901769
2 Head of M.O.D.O.K. The Unbelievable Gwenpool #5–10 136 March 28, 2017 978-1302901776
3 Totally in Continuity The Unbelievable Gwenpool #11–15, and material from Gwenpool Holiday Special: Merry Mix-Up #1 160 August 29, 2017 978-1302905477
4 Beyond the Fourth Wall The Unbelievable Gwenpool #16–20 112 January 2, 2018 978-1302905484
5 Lost in the Plot The Unbelievable Gwenpool #21–25 April 24, 2018 978-1302910402
6 Gwenpool Strikes Back Gwenpool Strikes Back #1–5 February 19, 2020 978-1302919238

The Japanese release of the first volume came with a different trade cover.[46]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c Howard the Duck vol. 6 #1
  2. ^ DeFalco, Tom; Sanderson, Peter; Brevoort, Tom; Teitelbaum, Michael; Wallace, Daniel; Darling, Andrew; Forbeck, Matt; Cowsill, Alan; Bray, Adam (2019). The Marvel Encyclopedia. DK Publishing. p. 272. ISBN 978-1-4654-7890-0.
  3. ^ "Gwen Takes Over | News | Marvel.com". Archived from the original on 16 April 2015. Retrieved 4 July 2016.CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  4. ^ Johnston, Rich (August 21, 2015). "And Finally… Has Marvel Noticed That Gwenpool Is A Thing Now?R". BleedingCool.com.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b "Marvel announces new Gwenpool series". Entertainment Weekly. December 22, 2015.
  6. ^ "Marvel Announces "Gwenpool Holiday Special," "Howard the Duck" Backup Stories". Comic Book Resources. September 11, 2015.
  7. ^ "Writer Christopher Hastings Provides An Exclusive Look At Marvel's 'Gwenpool #2'". Mass Appeal. Archived from the original on 2017-10-19. Retrieved 2017-05-06.
  8. ^ Interview: Christopher Hastings on creating Gwenpool and writing Vote Loki
  9. ^ "Marvel Cancels Gwenpool, Generation X, Hawkeye and Potentially More". CBR. 2017-12-19. Retrieved 2017-12-20.
  10. ^ Terror, Jude (May 22, 2019). "Gwenpool Strikes Back in New Mini From Leah Williams and David Baldeon". Bleeding Cool. Retrieved 2019-12-20.
  11. ^ Christopher Hastings made the deliberate choice not to explain the mechanics of how Gwen Poole crossed into the Marvel Universe. In a farewell letter in The Unbelievable Gwenpool #25, he revealed it was the fans, making content based around Gwenpool that elevated her from a simple idea for a variant cover, thus creating a collective force that pried open the walls of the Marvel Universe and shoved Gwen inside.
  12. ^ The Unbelievable Gwenpool #3. Marvel. 2016.
  13. ^ Jump up to: a b Gwenpool Strikes Back #5. Marvel. 2019.
  14. ^ Howard the Duck Vol. 6 #1–3. Marvel Comics.
  15. ^ Gwenpool Special #1 (February 2015). Marvel Comics.
  16. ^ The Unbelievable Gwenpool #1. Marvel. 2016.
  17. ^ Jump up to: a b c The Unbelievable Gwenpool #2. Marvel. 2016.
  18. ^ The Unbelievable Gwenpool #4. Marvel. 2016.
  19. ^ Gwenpool Holiday Special: Merry Mix-Up. December 2016. Marvel Comics.
  20. ^ The Unbelievable Gwenpool #6. Marvel. 2017.
  21. ^ The Unbelievable Gwenpool #7. Marvel. 2017.
  22. ^ The Unbelievable Gwenpool #9. Marvel. 2017.
  23. ^ The Unbelievable Gwenpool #10. Marvel. 2017.
  24. ^ Rocket Raccoon & Groot #8–10. Marvel Comics.
  25. ^ Champions vol. 2 #5. Marvel Comics.
  26. ^ The Unbelievable Gwenpool #11. Marvel. 2017.
  27. ^ Secret Empire: Brave New World #1. Marvel. 2017.
  28. ^ The Unbelievable Gwenpool #12. Marvel. 2017.
  29. ^ The Unbelievable Gwenpool #16. Marvel. 2017.
  30. ^ The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl Beats Up the Marvel Universe Marvel Comics. (October 2016)
  31. ^ West Coast Avengers vol. 3 #1–#5
  32. ^ West Coast Avengers vol. 3 #6–#10
  33. ^ Spider-Man/Deadpool #48–#50
  34. ^ Gwenpool Strikes Back #1–2. Marvel Comics.
  35. ^ Gwenpool Strikes Back #3. Marvel Comics.
  36. ^ Gwenpool Strikes Back #4. Marvel Comics.
  37. ^ Deadpool vol. 8 #1 (November 2019)
  38. ^ X-Factor vol. 4 #3 (September 2020)
  39. ^ MODOK: Head Games #2–3 (January–February 2021)
  40. ^ Edge of Venomverse #2. Marvel Comics.
  41. ^ Venomverse #4. Marvel Comics.
  42. ^ Deadpool Kills the Marvel Universe Again #3–4. Marvel Comics.
  43. ^ West Coast Avengers vol. 3 #8. Marvel Comics.
  44. ^ "Gwenpool In Comics Profile | Marvel". Marvel.com. Retrieved 2018-08-11.
  45. ^ The Unbelievable Gwenpool #25. Marvel Comics.
  46. ^ http://68.media.tumblr.com/001eb0e643a4ab1883798fa20ad694a6/tumblr_owwd389Yh91sq4537o1_1280.jpg

External links[]

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