ARCADE (COMICS)


'Arcade' is a fictional character and supervillain in the Marvel Comics universe. He first appeared in ''Marvel Team-Up'', Volume 1, Issue #65 (January 1978). Due to the unique nature of both his mannerisms and deathtraps, Arcade became one of the most popular villains in the Marvel Comics universe, and went on to do battle with many other superheroes. Although confrontations with him rarely last more than one or two issues (making him more of a "guest villain") he has done battle with more superheroes from more franchises than any other Marvel comics villain, although he has never once successfully defeated any of them.

Contents
Fictional character biography
New Warriors
Powers and abilities
Other versions
Ultimate Arcade
Marvel Adventures Fantastic Four
In other media
Television
Video games
External links

Fictional character biography


A combination of evil genius and hitman, Arcade affects a manner of dress and speech that makes him appear to be a comedic character. This is part of his overall theme, which extends into his preferred method of murder, an underground funhouse of colorful deathtraps, usually decked out in cheery colors and disguised as an amusement park, which he has dubbed "'Murderworld'".
Arcade's backstory, up to and including his real name, remains largely unknown even to this day. This is mainly the result of his uncanny knack for escaping once he has been defeated. Given his propensity for deception, this origin story can hardly be taken at face value.
According to the man himself, he was born into an extremely wealthy family and lived for much of his early life in, depending on the telling, a ranch in Texas or a mansion in Beverly Hills. At the age of either eighteen or twenty-one, again depending on the telling, his allowance was cut off by his father, who declared that he did not deserve it. In retaliation, Arcade murdered his father, thus inheriting all of the man's vast estate.
Now independently wealthy and free to do as he pleased, Arcade became a freelance assassin, traveling across the world, killing people in rather mundane fashions, and amassing even more wealth than he already had. But he quickly grew bored with doing business as an ordinary hired killer and resolved to find a way to continue his work in a manner more suited to his sensibilities.
Discovering an aptitude for technology, Arcade designed and built his first Murderworld, a subterranean evil lair disguised as a very deadly amusement park. From this base, and with the help of two mysterious assistants named 'Miss Locke' and 'Mr. Chambers', he reemerged as the world's most expensive hitman. For the price of $1 million (actually a token sum, since Arcade doesn't need the money and, in any case, never turns a profit due to the cost of maintaining a Murderworld), he will tailor Murderworld to exploit the specific weaknesses of his target and then watch, with unconcealed glee, as they are killed by the variety of colorful deathtraps strewn throughout the facility.
However, one of his "gimmicks" is that he always deliberately leaves each target a small chance of survival. In one instance, when the girlfriend of one of his captives begged him "If you're going to kill them, at least have the decency to do it quickly, painlessly!" Arcade laughed and replied, "Decency's dull... besides, miss, your way, they're dead and that's that. My way, they've got a chance. Not much of one, but a chance." This sets Arcade notably apart from most other villains who use deathtraps, because while most villains believe that their death machines are infallible (an overconfidence that usually betrays them), Arcade likes to give them a chance on purpose, for the sport of it. This is one similarity with Batman's nemesis, The Joker, another villain who uses deathtraps just for the challenge.
Since his first attempt to slay the unlikely duo of Spider-Man and Captain Britain, Arcade has tangled, at one time or another, with a large number of heroes and teams of heroes. In addition to battling the X-Men, X-Factor, Alpha Flight, and Excalibur as groups, he has attempted to kill many individual members, usually in pairs. Examples of this include Gambit and Wolverine, Colossus and Shadowcat, and Iceman and Angel. Other would-be victims of Murderworld have included Longshot, Green Goblin (Phil Urich), Doctor Doom, Johnny Blaze and the Micronauts. The battle with Ghost Rider came when Arcade, having taken his show on the road, joins up with Blaze's Quentin Carnival.
One of his old facillities was used as a headquarters by the superhero team X-Force, until he exploded it.
In ''Agent X'' #5, it was revealed that Arcade also has some medicinal skills which he used to save Agent X's life.
In recent comics, it was revealed that Madripoor Island-ruler Viper had bought one of Arcade's Murderworld facilities, and caught the Queen of England and Storm's X.S.E.-team in it, though they eventually managed to escape from it even without their powers.
It wasn't actually the queen, though, it was her handmaiden Ella Thurgood, who ends up on an Arcade-altered London Eye with two bombs. One, enough to kill Ella and the other, a small nuclear device. The X-Men, now able to access their powers, rescue Ella and neutralize the bomb.
Since then, Arcade has apparently returned to his criminal status, together with Ms. Locke, and had formed Murderland. He captured the Fantastic Four's Thing in it, together with some other costumed individuals, including the likes of Iron Man, Nighthawk and the Constrictor. He has the Thing battle robot-versions of all of the Hulk's past forms, such as Mr. Fixit and Maestro.
In the three-part miniseries called ''"Claws",'' Arcade secretly creates a Kraven the Hunter robot, with the "assistance" of White Rabbit, in an attempt to kill both Wolverine and the Black Cat on an island, but this backfires and the two end up stranded in the Savage Land.
New Warriors

Arcade has not been seen since then, but #3 of New Warriors (Vol. 4) reveals that one of his old murderworlds has been converted into a training room by the team's newest incarnation.

Powers and abilities


Arcade has no superhuman powers but is a bona fide genius with knowledge of technology far ahead of conventional science, particularly in the fields of robotics and mechanical and electrical engineering. Usually, when he appears to be captured it turns out to be a robot.

Other versions


Ultimate Arcade

In the Ultimate Universe, Arcade is portrayed as a gaming prodigy who invented a literal first-person shooter (which in this continuity, is called Murderworld). His sister was killed by Magneto in the bridge explosion in Ultimate War, giving him a hatred of mutants. When the Ultimate Universe version of Longshot is found guilty of murdering a Genoshan politician, he is sentenced to participate in a reality TV show in which he is stranded on an island and hunted by Arcade. As Arcade makes his way through the island jungle, he encounters three X-Men trying to save the prisoner. He dispatches them easily, though, and is about to kill Ultimate Nightcrawler when Longshot knocks him unconscious. He is last seen being tied to a tree by Colossus with some scraps of iron.
Ultimate Arcade is equipped with various high tech weapons and equipment, given his financial status, and is apparently a skilled hunter and tracker. During his fight on Krakoa, he is seen to employ an automatic rifle, handgun, sonic emitter, and web fluid ("one of my programmers reverse engineered this thing from some polymer he scraped off a wall in Manhattan").
Marvel Adventures Fantastic Four

In this version, Arcade has an actual amusement park in order to entertain the kids, he is skillful in robots and highly arrogant. After Mr. Fantastic ruins his robots, he decides to prove to be superior to Mr. Fantastic and lure him into his Murderworld. There Mr. Fantastic defeats all the traps and turns all the robots against Arcade. Arcade is taken into custody and Mr. Fantastic learns to be more tactful.

In other media


Television

The television series '' re-imagines Arcade (voiced by Gabe Khouth) as a high-school gamer named Webber Torque (who calls himself Arcade), who is tricked by a disguised Mystique into believing that the X-Men's mansion security console and Danger Room is an elaborate video game. He uses it to attack the X-Men, who he believes to be game characters. Despite nearly killing the X-Men, this version of Arcade is not evil, and apologizes for having played the "video game" without permission. Oddly, he does not recognize any of them to be the X-Men, or as his friends.
Video games


★ Arcade was one of the main villains in the video game ''.

★ Arcade appears as the main villain in the video game ''Spider-Man & X-Men: Arcade's Revenge'' (1992) for the Super Nintendo game system.

★ Arcade appears as one of the enemies in '' voiced by Quinton Flynn. He is a member of Dr. Doom's Masters of Evil. Here, Arcade and Baron Mordo divert the heroes from their attempt to attack Dr. Doom's castle to rescue the X-Men Nightcrawler and Jean Grey. Mordo uses his magic to disrupt Doctor Strange's Orb of Teleportation and send the heroes to Murderworld instead of Castle Doom. Although the first area is a replica of Castle Doom, players can tell something is wrong by a few minor details (such as the carnival-like music playing, treasure chests with mallets that pop out and skeletons with clown noses). Besides having the normal Murderworld traps, Arcade also has Shocker and Rhino working for him, uses mind control to force Jean Grey to attack the heroes, captures Blade and Senator Kelly, and finally attacks the heroes himself in a giant robot called the Arcade-Bot. After beating Arcade, he tells the player that Dr. Doom has Nightcrawler, and has taken him to Mephisto's Realm. Arcade is presumably arrested by S.H.I.E.L.D., killed by his exploding Arcade-Bot or escapes after. Arcade was also the villain on Deadpool's simulator disc, where he is irritated greatly by Deadpool's refusal to accept that Muderworld isn't a normal theme park (Although this ''probably'' is Deadpool's taunting rather than an actual lack of understanding, Deadpool's borderline insanity makes this uncertain), forcing the mercenary to fight Dark Spider-Man. He is also the villain in Black Panther's disc, threatening T'Challa to give the secret codes to Wakanda's vibrainium facility (which of course doesn't tell), forcing players to fight Dark Captain America. Storm's disc where she fights Hussar and the versus Mysterio simulator take place in Murderworld, as does Mr. Fantastic's in his fight against Bulldozer.

External links







Arcade on the Official Marvel Universe Character Bio Wiki

Profile at Spiderfan.org

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