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Publisher |
Marvel |
Writer |
Roy Thomas |
Writer |
Al Milgrom |
Artist |
Al Milgrom |
Artist |
John Buscema |
Cover Artist |
John Buscema |
Colorist |
John Kalisz |
Colorist |
Mike Marts |
Letterer |
Ken Lopez |
Letterer |
Susan Crespi |
Published | August 1994 |
STRANGERS ON AN ASTRAL PLANE Pluto and Loki meet as astral projections in an interdimensional void and after realizing they can’t hurt each other, they agree to swap enemies; Loki will mastermind an attack on Hercules’s life, while Pluto will attack Thor. In Avengers mansion, the team has a training session while Cap and Hercules are both depressed. Loki descends into Hades to find Typhon, whom he charges with the assassination of Hercules, with several other imprisoned titans as his minions. They are transported to Earth and attack him in the middle of a restaurant where he has taken two ladies. They successfully defeat Hercules, despite the Avengers showing up, and Typhon absconds with Hercules. He takes him to Hades and forces him under the waters of Lethe, making him forget his anger toward Typhon and directing that anger instead toward Zeus. Loki watches as Typhon reaches Olympus and extinguishes the Promethean flame, which causes all the Olympian gods to vanish. The Avengers arrive and once again battle Typhon’s minions, whom they defeat. Cap ends up having to fight the brain-addled Hercules. Badly beaten, he reminds Hercules of his Twelve Labors, undertaken as penance for the slaying of his wife Megara and children. This causes the enraged Hercules to unleash a river towards Cap, but once submerged he regains his proper memory, and turns his rage on Typhon. Typhon soon manifests his true, serpent-legged form, and all the Avengers together battle and defeat him. They manage to send his axe back into the braxier of the Promethean flame, which reignites it, returning the Olympians to corporeality. Zeus demands to know how he was freed from hades, and summons his brother Pluto, who denies all knowledge of the escapade. Loki, meanwhile, regrets Typhon’s failure, but is satisfied that Pluto will succeed in destroying Thor. MASTER OF HIS OWN DESITY After a training session with Giant Man, Vision taps into the Internet, where a computer virus gains sentience, names itself Gliitch [sic], and stealthily invades Vision’s mind. The next day Vision is shocked to find his reaction times considerably bogged down by the glitch implanted by Gliitch. Eventually Vision’s mental functioning slows to the point where Gliitch can take over his body without activating his defenses. The possessed Vision attacks Pym, but the previously-implanted virus affects him once again, shutting down his mental functions and this time taking Gliitch with it, after which Vision reverts to his usual self.