Ace (G.I. Joe)

Ace is a fictional character from the G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero toyline, comic books and animated series. He is the G.I. Joe Team's original fighter pilot and debuted in 1983.

Ace
G.I. Joe character
Illustration of Ace from G.I. Joe: Order of Battle. Art by Herb Trimpe.
First appearance1983
Voiced byPat Fraley (Sunbow)
Alistair Abell (Valor vs. Venom)
In-universe information
AffiliationG.I. Joe
SpecialtyFighter Pilot
File nameArmbruster, Brad J.
Birth placeProvidence, Rhode Island
SNAF335986725
RankO-3 (Captain)
O-4 (Major) (1992, 1997 and 1998)
O-6 (Colonel) (Devil's Due comics)
Primary MOSFixed Wing Pilot
Secondary MOSIntelligence Operations

Profile

His real name is Brad J. Armbruster, and his rank is Air Force captain O-3 in his initial release and in 1993, and was listed as major or O-4 in 1992, 1997, and 1998. Ace was born in Providence, Rhode Island. His primary military specialty is fixed wing pilot (single or multiple engine) and his secondary military specialty is intelligence operations.

Ace was originally the pilot for the Skystriker. He would rather fly planes than anything else, and worked during high school to pay for flying lessons. He spent a year flying pipelines in Alaska and two years stunt flying for movies, before he enlisted at age 22 in the USAF, and later transferred to the G.I. Joe team. Prior to joining the Joe Team he worked as a senior instructor for the USAF Fighter Weapons Squadron "The Aggressors" (pilot combat training school). Ace is a qualified expert in flying the F-5E Tiger II; the F-15 Eagle; the F-16 Fighting Falcon; the XP-14; as well as any F-class fighter. He is also a cutthroat poker player, who apparently never loses.[1]

When G.I. Joe temporarily disbanded, Ace returned to flying stunts for movies. He gladly accepted the offer to return on reserve status when the team was reinstated.[2]

Toys

Ace was first released as an action figure in 1983, packaged with the Skystriker.[3] A new version of Ace was released as part of the Battle Copters line in 1992, this one with the name Wendall Armbruster.[4] The figure was repainted and released as part of the Battle Corps line in 1993, packaged with the Ghoststriker X-16 fighter jet.[5]

During the 30th Anniversary toy line, a new version of Ace has been released in 2011 contained in the Combat Jet Skystriker XP-14F.

Comics

Marvel Comics

In the Marvel Comics G.I. Joe series, he first appeared in issue #14 (August 1983). Ace is featured in issue #34, where he battles the Cobra pilot Wild Weasel in a dogfight over New Jersey. His co-pilot on the mission is fellow Joe member Lady Jaye, while Wild Weasel has The Baroness as his co-pilot. Both pilots run out of missiles and ammunition. As they limp back to their respective bases, they give each other a salute. Neither co-pilot understands what is going on.[6]

Ace is stationed aboard the USS Flagg when it is damaged by a tidal wave. It leaves the ship listing, thus increasing the danger of flight. Despite this, Ace takes off to give air cover to nearby endangered Joe members.[7]

Ace appears in G.I. Joe Special Missions #28. He is part of the crew of the Joe spacecraft, the Defiant. His mission is to test out various stealth technologies. He works closely with Payload.[8]

Devil's Due

Ace returns to the Joe team, after it reforms in the pages of the Devil's Due G.I. Joe series. He flies support when the Joes invade Cobra Island during their second civil war.[9] After another reformation of the team, Ace begins operating out of the Joe facility called "The Rock".[10] He's been promoted to colonel.[11]

In an alternate continuity, Ace first appears as one of the responding pilots to unknown aircraft violating Presidential airspace.[12]

Animated series

Sunbow

Ace first appeared in the Sunbow G.I. Joe animated series in the "A Real American Hero" mini-series, and was voiced by Pat Fraley.

Valor vs. Venom

Ace appeared in the direct-to-video CGI animated movie G.I. Joe: Valor vs. Venom, voiced by Alistair Abell.

Video games

Ace is one of the featured characters in the 1985 G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero computer game.[13]

gollark: Use vimcube.
gollark: Some osmarks.net algorithms run in O(TREE(n)) time, so we have to be careful to only feed them two (2) at once.
gollark: Not tetrational time? Weak.
gollark: Hmm. I'm unsure of how to do the highlighting search terms in a document thing even if the full text is stored.
gollark: And it has a fuzzy matcher module which could be connected to the search bit if you had a custom tokeniser.

References

  1. Hama, Larry (1987). Howard Mackie (ed.). G.I. Joe Order Of Battle. Marvel Entertainment Group. p. 2. ISBN 0-87135-288-5.
  2. Wherle, Scott (2002). G.I. Joe: Battle Files #1. Devil's Due Publishing. p. 1.
  3. Bellomo, Mark (2005). The Ultimate Guide to G.I. Joe 1982-1994. Krause Publications. p. 21. ISBN 978-0-89689-922-3.
  4. Bellomo, Mark (2005). The Ultimate Guide to G.I. Joe 1982-1994. Krause Publications. p. 193. ISBN 978-0-89689-922-3.
  5. Bellomo, Mark (2005). The Ultimate Guide to G.I. Joe 1982-1994. Krause Publications. p. 210. ISBN 978-0-89689-922-3.
  6. G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero #34 (April 1985)
  7. G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero #40-41 (October 1985)
  8. G.I. Joe Special Missions #28
  9. G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero vol. 2 #25-26
  10. G.I. Joe: America's Elite #14
  11. G.I. Joe: Battle Lines
  12. "G.I. Joe Vs. The Transformers" #1 Vol. 1 (June 2003)
  13. Roberts, Matt. "G.I. Joe for Personal Computers". YoJoe.com. Retrieved 2010-03-20.
  • Ace at JMM's G.I. Joe Comics Home Page
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