The Vision
If you're looking for the Young Avengers version of Vision, go here.
The Vision is a Marvel Comics superhero created by Roy Thomas and John Buscema. A synthetic humanoid built from the remains of the android Human Torch, the Vision made his debut in The Avengers #57 (October, 1968) as a creation of the super-villain Ultron. The Vision is convinced to rebel against his creator after encountering The Avengers, who invite him to join the team. Named by the The Wasp, who described him as an "unearthly, inhuman vision", the Vision becomes one of Avengers' longest-serving members until his death during Avengers Disassembled.
Comics
- The Vision and the Scarlet Witch vol. 1 (1982-1983)
- The Vision and the Scarlet Witch vol. 2 (1985-1986)
- The Vision vol. 1 (1994-1995)
- The Vision vol. 2 (2002-2003)
Storylines
- JLA-Avengers
- Avengers Disassembled
- Chaos War
Video Games
- Captain America and The Avengers: Vision is one of the four playable characters.
- Avengers In Galactic Storm: Vision appears as an Assist Character.
- Marvel Ultimate Alliance: Vision appears as a striker on the PSP version of the game.
Western Animation
- Fantastic Four
- The Avengers: United They Stand
- The Superhero Squad Show
- The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes
- Badass Automaton
- Battle Couple: Vision and Scarlet Witch
- Becoming the Costume: Three trick-or-treaters were transformed into a ghost, a goblin, and a Jack O'Lantern headed monster in The Vision and the Scarlet Witch #1 after Samhein escapes from the Druid Tome.
- Best Served Cold: Dr. I.S. Bishoff, aka the supervillain Isbisa, waited thirty years to take revenge on Robert Frank.
- Black Eyes
- Blinded by the Light: The Vision can emit a flash of solar energy from his forehead jewel bright enough to temporarily blind Thor.
- Boom! Headshot!: Battling three children transformed into their costumes during Halloween, the Vision violently blasts the pumpkinheaded "Jack O'Lantern" right in the head, blasting it into pieces. Instead of killing the child, the shot actually broke the spell and returned the child to normal.
- Brain Uploading: The Vision originally possessed the brain patterns of Simon Williams, the then-deceased hero known as Wonder Man. Later, after the U.S. government dismantles him, the rebuilt Vision would use the brain patterns of the dead scientist Alex Lipton until Simon's patterns reemerge.
- Comic Book Fantasy Casting: An earlier example, the Vision's features were modeled on Leonard Nimoy.
- The Computer Is Your Friend
- Continuity Snarl: Was the Vision's body rebuilt from the 1940's Human Torch? Avengers Forever spends an inordinate amount of time untangling this question. (The answer: Immortus used Applied Phlebotinum to allow the Human Torch's body to exist twice in the same timeline, one of which was used to build the Vision and the other of which remained the Torch.)
- Empty Shell: Averted. Ultron-5 designed the Vision to be a "nameless, soulless imitation", but the synthezoid's time with the Avengers gave him a name and a purpose. Vision did spend a brief period in The Nineties as an Empty Shell after being taken apart and rebuilt.
- Eye Beams: The Vision can fire solar energy beams from his "thermo-scopic eyes".
- Fantastic Racism: The Vision ran into a group of angry citizens in Avengers #59 who claimed that he was too "awful" to walk the streets with "decent folk". One woman shielded her child with her body while an older man said that "crummy androids" should be strung up by their jumper cables.
- For Halloween I Am Going as Myself: Moving into a new neightborhood after leaving the Avengers, the Vision and Wanda had a good laugh in The Vision and Scarlet Witch #1 once the townpeople felt comfortable enough to approach the couple. The night: Halloween.
- Flight: Vision can fly by lowering his density to minimal levels.
- Half the Man He Used To Be: Vision experiences this at the hands of She Hulk during Avengers Disassembled.
- Heel Face Turn
- Heroic Sacrifice: In JLA/Avengers and Chaos War.
- Hollywood Density
- Intangible Man: Possessing complete density control, the Vision can shunt enough of his mass into another dimension to become completely intangible.
- Journey to the Center of the Mind: Comatose after the battle with Dr. I.S. Bishoff, the Vision's dreams are explored in The Vision and the Scarlet Witch #3.
- Made of Iron / Nigh Invulnerable: The Vision's durability depends on his density. At his maximum density, the Vision weighs 90 tons and becomes as hard as diamond.
- Man in White: The Vision spent some time as a ghostly white version of himself after his skin was damaged by the U.S. government. Having lost his personality matrix prior to his reconstruction, the Vision was rendered cold and emotionless during this period.
- Mind Control Device: Ultron-5 installed a control crystal in Vision's head that has been exploited over the years.
- Not So Different: Ultron-5 was destroyed by its own rage after taunting the Vision for having emotions.
Vision: You ridiculed me for having emotions yet you possess them no less than I! Or else you would not have leaped at me in your rage to your own utter annihilation!
- The Paralyzer: Called "physical disruption", the Vision can stun opponents by solidifying part of his intangible form inside their bodies to produce a sudden shock to the nervous system and excruciating pain.
- Phlebotinum Battery: The Vision is solar-powered and functions something like a solar battery, capable of sharing his power reserves during emergencies.
- Power Crystal: The Vision has a solar jewel on his forehead that absorbs ambient solar energy, even at night. Solar energy can be fired from this jewel at greater intensity than his eye beams, but it taxes his power supply at a higher rate.
- Power Parasite: Dr. I.S. Bishoff from The Vision and the Scarlet Witch #2 siphons radioactive energy from the superpowered manchild Nuklo in order to seek revenge against the child's father, Robert Frost.
- Projected Man: The Vision temporarily assumed a holographic form after his physical body was paralyzed during a battle with Annihilus.
- Ridiculously Human Robot: From Avengers #57:
Hank Pym: According to my examination, he's every inch a human being... except that all his bodily organs are constructed of synthetic materials!
- Robosexual: The Vision has been in relationships with the Scarlet Witch, Ms. Marvel, and Mantis.
- The Smart Guy
- Speed Blitz: The Vision once stunned half a dozen escaped prisoners by flying through their bodies faster than they could react, ending the blitz with a full-density punch to the villain Klaw.
- The Stoic
- Suicide Attack: During Chaos War, the Vision defeats super-villain Grim Reaper in this manner.
- Super Reflexes: Vision's reflexes are more than twice as fast as the average human.
- Super Senses: Of the technological variety, naturally.
- Super Strength: The Vision's strength increases with his density, maxing out at 75 tons.
- Tangled Family Tree
- Technopath
- Ten-Minute Retirement
- Tome of Eldritch Lore: An ancient, leather-clad book called the Druid Tome appears in The Vision and the Scarlet Witch #1. The tome held the spirit of Samhein, who escaped from the book on All Hallows Eve after sensing the Scarlet Witch's power.
- Voice Changeling: The Vision can replicate nearly any voice he's heard.
- What Measure Is a Non-Human?
- Why Isn't It Attacking?: In The Avengers #57, Black Panther noticed that the Vision was programmed to kill the Avengers, but the synthezoid wasn't actually making any moves against the team.
- Working with the Ex: After his marriage with the Scarlet Witch goes south, the two Avengers worked together off and on.
- Xanatos Gambit: Ultron-5's plan regarding the Vision had two intended outcomes: the Vision kills the Avengers or the Vision leads the Avengers into a death trap. The Vision takes a third option, but Ultron still wins thanks to the control crystal in the synthezoid's head.