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63.63% Marvel: Character template. / Chapter 21: Don't read again because I am shameless

Capítulo 21: Don't read again because I am shameless

"Every villain is a hero in their own mind." – Tom Hiddleston, Interview on Collider (2012)

The Incredible Hulk is a fictional character, a superhero who appears in comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, the character first appeared in The Incredible Hulk #1 (May 1962).

He is a gigantic, green, irradiated, mutated humanoid monster with incredible strength and an inability to control his rage. The Hulk is sometimes characterized as hyper-aggressive and brutal, other times as cunning, brilliant, and scheming. He is often portrayed as an antihero. The Hulk is cast as the emotional and impulsive alter ego of the withdrawn and reserved physicist Dr. Bruce Banner. Lee said the Hulk's creation was inspired by a combination of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and Frankenstein.

He has two main catchphrases: "Hulk is strongest there is!" and the better-known "HULK SMASH!"

HULK WIKI

HULK WIKI

The Incredible Hulk (Comics)

EDIT

Cover of The Incredible Hulk #1 (May 1962)

Cover of The Incredible Hulk #1 (May 1962)

The Incredible Hulk is a fictional character, a superhero who appears in comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, the character first appeared in The Incredible Hulk #1 (May 1962).

He is a gigantic, green, irradiated, mutated humanoid monster with incredible strength and an inability to control his rage. The Hulk is sometimes characterized as hyper-aggressive and brutal, other times as cunning, brilliant, and scheming. He is often portrayed as an antihero. The Hulk is cast as the emotional and impulsive alter ego of the withdrawn and reserved physicist Dr. Bruce Banner. Lee said the Hulk's creation was inspired by a combination of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and Frankenstein.

He has two main catchphrases: "Hulk is strongest there is!" and the better-known "HULK SMASH!"

Powers

Bruce Banner has the gamma-induced ability to transform into his alter-ego, the monster known as the Hulk. Conditions which have triggered the transformation vary: initially, it was the sunset when the Hulk assumed form, and the dawn when Banner reverted. Later, the transformation would be triggered by an intense rush of adrenaline. Banner has found himself in various distinct forms, based on facets of Banner's personality: Banner himself but repressed emotionally. a green-skinned Hulk with the mind of a child and fueled by rage, a grey-skinned Hulk with Banner's intelligence but limited morals, and a green-skinned Hulk with a balanced merger of all of the above.

Banner's Hulk-form possesses a monstrous frame and visage, great strength, invulnerability, and superhuman regenerative abilities.

The Hulk's powerful leg muscles provide him with phenomenal leaping ability, mimicking near-flight capabilities in terms of sheer distance. In times of great stress, the Hulk's physiology is fueled by adrenaline, so that the longer Hulk fights, the greater his strength increases.

As the Hulk, Banner has exhibited a wide range of other powers as well. He has proven able to see and touch astral forms as if they were real, an ability due to the effects of gamma radiation somehow in conjunction with the fact that Bruce accidentally killed his father and he believed that he would come back to seek revenge. He also has a homing ability that helps him to locate people while tunneling underground or sense the area they are in which borders on the supernatural. Due to a mystic air around him, it is suggested the Hulk has an untapped potential yet to be revealed.

Robert Bruce Banner was born in Dayton, Ohio, to Dr. Brian and Rebecca Banner. As a child, Bruce was abused by his alcoholic father, who killed his wife when she and Bruce tried to escape from one of his drunken rages. Later, Bruce was raised by his aunt when his father became institutionalized. Burying his emotions throughout his childhood, Banner had developed over time a deep and repressive personality.

A genius in nuclear physics, Robert Bruce Banner went to work for the United States Defense Department nuclear research facility at Desert Base, New Mexico. There, Banner met General Thaddeus E. "Thunderbolt" Ross, the Air Force officer in command of the base, and Ross' daughter Betty. Banner and Betty Ross eventually fell in love with each other. Banner designed and oversaw the construction of the "gamma bomb" or "G-bomb," a nuclear weapon that had a high gamma radiation output. At one point, Bruce's father was released from his mental facility. Reluctantly Bruce agreed to let his father live with him, although he again acted belligerently towards Bruce. On the anniversary of his mother's death, Bruce visited her grave but was attacked by his father. Fighting back, Bruce accidentally killed his father by causing him to fall and crack his skull on Rebecca's tombstone. Bruce repressed the memory of his actions and the police dismissed the death as a random mugging.

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Polish writer and filmmaker Bolesław Matuszewski was among those who identified the mode of documentary film. He wrote two of the earliest texts on cinema, Une nouvelle source de l'histoire ("A New Source of History") and La photographie animée ("Animated photography"). Both were published in 1898 in French and were among the earliest written works to consider the historical and documentary value of the film.[3] Matuszewski is also among the first filmmakers to propose the creation of a Film Archive to collect and keep safe visual materials.[4]

The word "documentary" was coined by Scottish documentary filmmaker John Grierson in his review of Robert Flaherty's film Moana (1926), published in the New York Sun on 8 February 1926, written by "The Moviegoer" (a pen name for Grierson).[5][6]

Grierson's principles of documentary were that cinema's potential for observing life could be exploited in a new art form; that the "original" actor and "original" scene are better guides than their fiction counterparts for interpreting the modern world; and that materials "thus taken from the raw" can be more real than the acted article. In this regard, Grierson's definition of documentary as "creative treatment of actuality"[7] has gained some acceptance; however, this position is at variance with Soviet film-maker Dziga Vertov's credos of provocation to present "life as it is" (that is, life filmed surreptitiously), and "life caught unawares" (life provoked or surprised by the camera).

The American film critic Pare Lorentz defines a documentary film as "a factual film which is dramatic."[8] Others further state that a documentary stands out from the other types of non-fiction films for providing an opinion, and a specific message, along with the facts it presents.[9] Scholar Betsy McLane asserted that documentaries are for filmmakers to convey their views about historical events, people, and places which they find significant.[10] Therefore, the advantage of documentaries lies in introducing new perspectives which may not be prevalent in traditional media such as written publications and school curricula.[11]

Documentary practice is the complex process of creating documentary projects. It refers to what people do with media devices, content, form, and production strategies to address the creative, ethical, and conceptual problems and choices that arise as they make documentaries.

Documentary filmmaking can be used as a form of journalism, advocacy, or personal expression.

Early film (pre-1900) was dominated by the novelty of showing an event. Single-shot moments were captured on film, such as a train entering a station, a boat docking, or factory workers leaving work. These short films were called "actuality" films; the term "documentary" was not coined until 1926. Many of the first films, such as those made by Auguste and Louis Lumière, were a minute or less in length, due to technological limitations. Examples can be viewed on YouTube.

Films showing many people (for example, leaving a factory) were often made for commercial reasons: the people being filmed were eager to see, for payment, the film showing them. One notable film clocked in at over an hour and a half, The Corbett-Fitzsimmons Fight. Using pioneering film-looping technology, Enoch J. Rector presented the entirety of a famous 1897 prize-fight on cinema screens across the United States.

In May 1896, Bolesław Matuszewski recorded on film a few surgical operations in Warsaw and Saint Petersburg hospitals. In 1898, French surgeon Eugène-Louis Doyen invited Matuszewski and Clément Maurice to record his surgical operations. They started in Paris a series of surgical films sometime before July 1898.[12] Until 1906, the year of his last film, Doyen recorded more than 60 operations. Doyen said that his first films taught him how to correct professional errors he had been unaware of. For scientific purposes, after 1906, Doyen combined 15 of his films into three compilations, two of which survive, the six-film series Extirpation des tumeurs encapsulées (1906), and the four-film Les Opérations sur la cavité crânienne (1911). These and five other of Doyen's films survive.[

Between July 1898 and 1901, the Romanian professor Gheorghe Marinescu made several science films in his neurology clinic in Bucharest:[14] Walking Troubles of Organic Hemiplegy (1898), The Walking Troubles of Organic Paraplegies (1899), A Case of Hysteric Hemiplegy Healed Through Hypnosis (1899), The Walking Troubles of Progressive Locomotion Ataxy (1900), and Illnesses of the Muscles (1901). All these short films have been preserved. The professor called his works "studies with the help of the cinematograph," and published the results, along with several consecutive frames, in issues of La Semaine Médicale magazine from Paris, between 1899 and 1902.[15] In 1924, Auguste Lumière recognized the merits of Marinescu's science films: "I've seen your scientific reports about the usage of the cinematograph in studies of nervous illnesses, when I was still receiving La Semaine Médicale, but back then I had other concerns, which left me no spare time to begin biological studies. I must say I forgot those works and I am thankful to you that you reminded them to me. Unfortunately, not many scientists have followed your way

THE BOYS WIKI

THE BOYS WIKI

Compound V

EDIT

Compound_V_TBS_1

STATUS

Limited Supply

THE BOYS

FIRST APPEARANCE

"Cherry"

GEN V

ONLY APPEARANCE

"Jumanji"

(Flashback)

USERS

Vought International

Homelander

A-Train

Popclaw

Other V-addicted supes

The Boys

Billy Butcher

Hughie Campbell (on his father Hugh Campbell Sr.)

Kimiko Miyashiro (by the Shining Light Liberation Army)

Supe-Terrorists

Kenji Miyashiro (by the Shining Light Liberation Army)

Naqib

MORE

Others like you also viewed

Billy Butcher

Billy Butcher

Homelander

Homelander

Soldier Boy

Soldier Boy

Stormfront

Stormfront

Starlight

Starlight

Victoria Neuman

Victoria Neuman

Hughie Campbell

Hughie Campbell

A-Train

A-Train

Kimiko Miyashiro

Kimiko Miyashiro

For the Dynamite version, see Compound V/Comics.

It's this drug. It, um... It gives the Supes their powers.

HUGHIE CAMPBELL TO ANNIE JANUARY.

Compound V is a mysterious chemical substance that was created by German geneticist Frederick Vought. The serum mutates organic compounds by granting them profound and strange characteristics. It was originally intended to be utilized by Germany during the Second World War in order to create super soldiers for the Nazi government, but Vought realized that the German war effort was doomed and defected to the Allies, leading to the United States utilizing it instead.

In modern times, the serum is manufactured by Vought International geneticists to transform ordinary humans into extraordinary "heroes".

Overview

They call it Compound V. It's some kind of booster or steroid for Supes. Jacks 'em right up.

BILLY BUTCHER TO SUSAN RAYNOR

Compound V appears as a dark blue liquid and is usually contained within metal vials. It grants extraordinary abilities when injected into the circulatory system of living things, including animals. These abilities ("superpowers") are generally random, although certain factors can influence their exhibition.

Although intravenous injection seems to be the preferred method, it can also be ingested, as seen when many farm animals were turned after drinking contaminated water.

Effects

Compound V has a much higher success rate on younger people. Adult subjects have a high risk of fatality, though it appears this does not apply to depowered and existing adult supes, and they can take it again without immediate risk. Children and infants who are exposed to the serum may not immediately have powers, with some showing signs after a few years, whereas adults will gain powers immediately. Because the abilities granted by Compound V are generally random, there is a chance that the superpowers given may be "undesirable" and may also come with unexpected or unwanted side effects. Strangely, by Season 4, Compound V appears to no longer kill adults and instead reliably gives them powers; it is possible the formula has been improved over time.

Compound V's manifestation is influenced partially by a person's genetics. This is affirmed by the observations of the Shining Light Liberation Army, who correctly assumed that since Kimiko was successfully turned into a supe when injected as an adult, her brother Kenji would too. As such, individuals who share DNA may sometimes inherit the same powers. Polarity and his son Andre have identical powers, as do the fraternal twins the TNT Twins as well as Translucent and his son Maverick. This is not always the case though, as seen with Neuman and her daughter Zoe. Furthermore, it appears that personality and mindset may also affect powers received. Hugh Campbell Sr. gained intangibility, which seemed to be based on his feelings of being ignored and isolated after his wife had left and his son focused on his life. Billy Butcher, who displays many of the opposite but equally extreme beliefs as his arch-nemesis Homelander, gained powers very similar to the latter while on Temp V; while on Compound V proper, Butcher instead develops sapient super-cancer.

Compound V is sometimes falsely believed to have healing properties, but usually only has limited effects and unforeseen consequences. For example, Hugh Campbell Sr was given Compound V in an attempt to save him from his stroke. The V woke him up but didn't reverse the stroke-induced brain damage, leading to Hugh Sr's mind quickly deteriorating and him causing chaos with his new powers. If someone has another organism within their body, like a tumor or a parasite, the power may go to said organism instead of or in addition to its host, who usually retains only the enhanced physiology, as seen with Billy Butcher, Mr. Fuzzy Buzzy in "Beware the Jabberwock, My Son", and Sun-Hee in The Boys Presents: Diabolical. Should this happen, the organism may gain an ego of its own and begin manipulating its host into embracing their worst qualities, as seen with Butcher's tumor, or simply go on a rampage, as seen with Sun-Hee's tumor. In short, using Compound V as a medical treatment is a terrible idea because it will extremely likely, if not inevitably, horrifically backfire.

As seen with A-Train and Popclaw, the recreational use of Compound V can induce a euphoric high and temporarily enhance a supe's abilities, but it will ironically weaken and harm them over time. Billy notes that Compound V acts in a very similar way to steroids when injected into a supe's bloodstream, as A-Train has suffered from testicular atrophy, low bone density, and heart problems as a consequence of his abuse of the drug.

As shown in "Beware the Jabberwock, My Son", when the V leaked into the local water supply and infected the estate's farm livestock, Compound V, and even V24, can work on animals, randomly mutating them and granting them some violent and strange mutant abilities, in addition to making their behavior increasingly unstable and extremely aggressive, even making normally docile and passive animals like sheep into monstrous, carnivorous predators. A small herd of adult sheep are all given identical abilities, this may mean that for simple minded animals the psychological aspect is null, leaving it a matter of genetics.

History

Background

Compound V was originally created by a Nazi scientist named Frederick Vought at some point during the Second World War, who experimented with the formula through the use of human prisoners at Dachau concentration camp. He eventually gave the first completed dose to his wife Klara, who became the first successful superhuman with extraordinary powers. She would eventually go on to adopt the superhero identity of "Liberty". When Frederick realized that the German war effort was doomed, he defected to the United States, bringing his knowledge of the drug with him where he would continue to experiment with it. Soon after his arrival, he was able to successfully administer it to a young army volunteer named Benjamin, who became America's first superhero under the identity of "Soldier Boy". For his contribution to the war effort, he was pardoned and rehabilitated as an American icon. Furthermore, his Nazi past was scrubbed from public knowledge, only disclosed to high-ranking Vought International employees like Stan Edgar.[1] Following Fredrick's death, Vought would continue to manufacture the drug in secrecy and eliminate all signs of its existence from public knowledge and history.

Gen V

It is revealed that Compound V remains intact in the bloodstream of supes. As such, certain aspects of their physiology can be identified and exploited. Marie Moreau is able to identify the Compound V in Victoria Neuman's blood. Dr. Edison Cardosa is able to create a virus that binds specifically to the Compound V in supes, leaving normal humans unaffected. It is also shown that Luke Riordan was being unknowingly transfused with the Compound V laden blood of his younger brother Sam in order to augment his powers and transform him into a more iconic Godolkin student.

Season One

Samaritan's Embrace is a Christian charity that is sponsored by Vought International. On the surface, it is a charity committed to helping those in need. However, unbeknownst to the public, it is actually used to ship Compound V to hospitals across the United States, where newborns are injected with the approval of their parents.

This was done primarily so Vought can keep up the illusion that the superhuman powers given to Supes are God-given gifts or a natural genetic leap of mankind, instead of the disturbing truth that Vought is administering drugs to children without their consent.

Season Two

In season two, it is revealed that Vought has been secretly trying for years to rectify the low survival rate of Compound V in adults by establishing the Sage Grove Center; a psychiatric hospital in Pennsylvania where Vought scientists have been illegally injecting their adult patients with updated variations of the Compound V formula with the hopes of creating a perfected serum that can successfully transform fully grown adults into well-functioning Supes with minimal negative side effects.

Following the reveal of the existence of Compound V to the public, Vought was forced to temporarily halt all research and production of the drug.

THE BOYS WIKI

THE BOYS WIKI

Compound V

EDIT

Compound_V_TBS_1

STATUS

Limited Supply

THE BOYS

FIRST APPEARANCE

"Cherry"

GEN V

ONLY APPEARANCE

"Jumanji"

(Flashback)

USERS

Vought International

Homelander

A-Train

Popclaw

Other V-addicted supes

The Boys

Billy Butcher

Hughie Campbell (on his father Hugh Campbell Sr.)

Kimiko Miyashiro (by the Shining Light Liberation Army)

Supe-Terrorists

Kenji Miyashiro (by the Shining Light Liberation Army)

Naqib

MORE

Others like you also viewed

Billy Butcher

Billy Butcher

Homelander

Homelander

Soldier Boy

Soldier Boy

Stormfront

Stormfront

Starlight

Starlight

Victoria Neuman

Victoria Neuman

Hughie Campbell

Hughie Campbell

A-Train

A-Train

Kimiko Miyashiro

Kimiko Miyashiro

For the Dynamite version, see Compound V/Comics.

It's this drug. It, um... It gives the Supes their powers.

HUGHIE CAMPBELL TO ANNIE JANUARY.

Compound V is a mysterious chemical substance that was created by German geneticist Frederick Vought. The serum mutates organic compounds by granting them profound and strange characteristics. It was originally intended to be utilized by Germany during the Second World War in order to create super soldiers for the Nazi government, but Vought realized that the German war effort was doomed and defected to the Allies, leading to the United States utilizing it instead.

In modern times, the serum is manufactured by Vought International geneticists to transform ordinary humans into extraordinary "heroes".

Overview

They call it Compound V. It's some kind of booster or steroid for Supes. Jacks 'em right up.

BILLY BUTCHER TO SUSAN RAYNOR

Compound V appears as a dark blue liquid and is usually contained within metal vials. It grants extraordinary abilities when injected into the circulatory system of living things, including animals. These abilities ("superpowers") are generally random, although certain factors can influence their exhibition.

Although intravenous injection seems to be the preferred method, it can also be ingested, as seen when many farm animals were turned after drinking contaminated water.

Effects

Compound V has a much higher success rate on younger people. Adult subjects have a high risk of fatality, though it appears this does not apply to depowered and existing adult supes, and they can take it again without immediate risk. Children and infants who are exposed to the serum may not immediately have powers, with some showing signs after a few years, whereas adults will gain powers immediately. Because the abilities granted by Compound V are generally random, there is a chance that the superpowers given may be "undesirable" and may also come with unexpected or unwanted side effects. Strangely, by Season 4, Compound V appears to no longer kill adults and instead reliably gives them powers; it is possible the formula has been improved over time.

Compound V's manifestation is influenced partially by a person's genetics. This is affirmed by the observations of the Shining Light Liberation Army, who correctly assumed that since Kimiko was successfully turned into a supe when injected as an adult, her brother Kenji would too. As such, individuals who share DNA may sometimes inherit the same powers. Polarity and his son Andre have identical powers, as do the fraternal twins the TNT Twins as well as Translucent and his son Maverick. This is not always the case though, as seen with Neuman and her daughter Zoe. Furthermore, it appears that personality and mindset may also affect powers received. Hugh Campbell Sr. gained intangibility, which seemed to be based on his feelings of being ignored and isolated after his wife had left and his son focused on his life. Billy Butcher, who displays many of the opposite but equally extreme beliefs as his arch-nemesis Homelander, gained powers very similar to the latter while on Temp V; while on Compound V proper, Butcher instead develops sapient super-cancer.

Compound V is sometimes falsely believed to have healing properties, but usually only has limited effects and unforeseen consequences. For example, Hugh Campbell Sr was given Compound V in an attempt to save him from his stroke. The V woke him up but didn't reverse the stroke-induced brain damage, leading to Hugh Sr's mind quickly deteriorating and him causing chaos with his new powers. If someone has another organism within their body, like a tumor or a parasite, the power may go to said organism instead of or in addition to its host, who usually retains only the enhanced physiology, as seen with Billy Butcher, Mr. Fuzzy Buzzy in "Beware the Jabberwock, My Son", and Sun-Hee in The Boys Presents: Diabolical. Should this happen, the organism may gain an ego of its own and begin manipulating its host into embracing their worst qualities, as seen with Butcher's tumor, or simply go on a rampage, as seen with Sun-Hee's tumor. In short, using Compound V as a medical treatment is a terrible idea because it will extremely likely, if not inevitably, horrifically backfire.

As seen with A-Train and Popclaw, the recreational use of Compound V can induce a euphoric high and temporarily enhance a supe's abilities, but it will ironically weaken and harm them over time. Billy notes that Compound V acts in a very similar way to steroids when injected into a supe's bloodstream, as A-Train has suffered from testicular atrophy, low bone density, and heart problems as a consequence of his abuse of the drug.

As shown in "Beware the Jabberwock, My Son", when the V leaked into the local water supply and infected the estate's farm livestock, Compound V, and even V24, can work on animals, randomly mutating them and granting them some violent and strange mutant abilities, in addition to making their behavior increasingly unstable and extremely aggressive, even making normally docile and passive animals like sheep into monstrous, carnivorous predators. A small herd of adult sheep are all given identical abilities, this may mean that for simple minded animals the psychological aspect is null, leaving it a matter of genetics.

History

Background

Compound V was originally created by a Nazi scientist named Frederick Vought at some point during the Second World War, who experimented with the formula through the use of human prisoners at Dachau concentration camp. He eventually gave the first completed dose to his wife Klara, who became the first successful superhuman with extraordinary powers. She would eventually go on to adopt the superhero identity of "Liberty". When Frederick realized that the German war effort was doomed, he defected to the United States, bringing his knowledge of the drug with him where he would continue to experiment with it. Soon after his arrival, he was able to successfully administer it to a young army volunteer named Benjamin, who became America's first superhero under the identity of "Soldier Boy". For his contribution to the war effort, he was pardoned and rehabilitated as an American icon. Furthermore, his Nazi past was scrubbed from public knowledge, only disclosed to high-ranking Vought International employees like Stan Edgar.[1] Following Fredrick's death, Vought would continue to manufacture the drug in secrecy and eliminate all signs of its existence from public knowledge and history.

Gen V

It is revealed that Compound V remains intact in the bloodstream of supes. As such, certain aspects of their physiology can be identified and exploited. Marie Moreau is able to identify the Compound V in Victoria Neuman's blood. Dr. Edison Cardosa is able to create a virus that binds specifically to the Compound V in supes, leaving normal humans unaffected. It is also shown that Luke Riordan was being unknowingly transfused with the Compound V laden blood of his younger brother Sam in order to augment his powers and transform him into a more iconic Godolkin student.

Season One

Samaritan's Embrace is a Christian charity that is sponsored by Vought International. On the surface, it is a charity committed to helping those in need. However, unbeknownst to the public, it is actually used to ship Compound V to hospitals across the United States, where newborns are injected with the approval of their parents.

This was done primarily so Vought can keep up the illusion that the superhuman powers given to Supes are God-given gifts or a natural genetic leap of mankind, instead of the disturbing truth that Vought is administering drugs to children without their consent.

Season Two

In season two, it is revealed that Vought has been secretly trying for years to rectify the low survival rate of Compound V in adults by establishing the Sage Grove Center; a psychiatric hospital in Pennsylvania where Vought scientists have been illegally injecting their adult patients with updated variations of the Compound V formula with the hopes of creating a perfected serum that can successfully transform fully grown adults into well-functioning Supes with minimal negative side effects.

Following the reveal of the existence of Compound V to the public, Vought was forced to temporarily halt all research and production of the drug.

Season Three

With the test results provided by Sage Grove Center, Vought's scientists were able to create a prototype of a new variation of the original Compound V formula. This new drug had the ability to give adults temporary superpowers with no risk of dying immediately. However, it still contained harmful side-effects and its development ultimately halted due to recent events. Soldier Boy possessed the ability to generate a radiation blast which could not only could kill his victims, but also allowed him to turn Supes back into normal humans by burning the Compound V out of their system. Primary examples include Kimiko Miyashiro and Queen Maeve, although the former was able to regain her powers after she injected herself with another dose of Compound V.

Season Four

Compound V is shown to be able to alter the biology of children in pre-teenage and teenage stages of life not only on the level of durability, strength and possible powers, as seen in the case of Zoe Neuman.

Compound V and V24 "Temp V" may have both ceased to be produced in Wisdom of the Ages because Vought's monopolistic practices backfired on them through Homelander killing all but one of the scientists working on producing the chemical supply (it is never made clear what exactly those scientists were currently working on when they were massacred). Homelander then holds a personal monopoly on the drug by stashing all the Compound V away in his apartment.[2] It is unknown if the only people who had the resources and expertise to make Compound V were killed. Vought recruitment of new scientists to create the compound seems unlikely, as Homelander's motivations and aspirations to re-create and resupply Compound V are nonexistent.[3]

Later, it was revealed that Sameer Shah, the leading R&D Scientist of Vought, had a large supply of both Compound V and V24 for experimental purposes; he injected both into animals to use as test subjects for the virus created by Edison Cardosa. Due to him being a Vought scientist and the leading scientist for its R&D division, as well as having Victoria's backing, its likely that Sameer has the knowledge of how to make both Compound V and V24.[4]

Variations

Temp V

V24 Vials

Vials of Temp V

It's Temp V. One shot makes you a Supe for 24 hours. I mean, they think. It's still in R&D."

"Oh, great, so powers, maybe. Maybe my bollocks swell up like footballs. Yeah?

QUEEN MAEVE AND BILLY BUTCHER

Temp V, is a modified version of Compound V. As implied by its name, the serum provides an ordinary person with superpowers for approximately 24 hours. Temp V has ceased to be produced.[2]

Due to the legal implications that were brought on by the public revelation of Compound V, all testing of the serum was forcibly halted. As a result, Temp V is still considered unstable and continues to exhibit numerous side effects including migraines, muscle spasms, nausea, and projectile vomiting. Further testing of the drug has recently revealed the fatal effect of causing brain lesions.

Vought geneticists have estimated that the use of three to five doses will become lethal to the patient. These estimates were confirmed after Billy Butcher developed numerous tumors in his brain after his sixth dose of the serum and was given 18 months to live.

G Fuel Compound V

Vought has partnered with the energy drink company G Fuel to bring you a brand new beverage inspired by Compound V. The delicious blue drink will sharpen your focus and increase your energy, but word on the street is that this high-tech formula may have some other effects some may find surprising.

CAMERON COLEMAN

G Fuel Compound V

A new energy drink Vought has partnered with G Fuel, inspired by Compound V. it sharpens focus, increases energy, and in select cases, turns those who drink it into Supes. Some of the superpowers developed by its consumers include telekinesis, invisibility, and laser eyes. The drink is unconfirmed to contain either V24 or the legitimate Compound V. It has a low chance of giving people superpowers, meaning that buyers may need to consume multiple doses before becoming a Supe. It's worth noting that some people may have difficulty controlling their powers and may potentially harm themselves or others because of it. At some point, G Fuel V ceased to be produced or, at the very least, the available version that is still being sold no longer gives superpowers.[2]

Trivia

Compound V is likely based off the Super-Soldier Serum from the Marvel Universe. The temporary, yet consistent, properties of the V24 variant can also be compared to the performance-enhancing drug known as Miraclo from the DC Universe.

Similar to how the Super-Soldier Serum was created in Marvel Comics, Compound V was also created during the Second World War by a Central European scientist who later defected to the Allies.

Notes

THE BOYS WIKI

THE BOYS WIKI

Compound V

EDIT

Compound_V_TBS_1

STATUS

Limited Supply

THE BOYS

FIRST APPEARANCE

"Cherry"

GEN V

ONLY APPEARANCE

"Jumanji"

(Flashback)

USERS

Vought International

Homelander

A-Train

Popclaw

Other V-addicted supes

The Boys

Billy Butcher

Hughie Campbell (on his father Hugh Campbell Sr.)

Kimiko Miyashiro (by the Shining Light Liberation Army)

Supe-Terrorists

Kenji Miyashiro (by the Shining Light Liberation Army)

Naqib

MORE

Others like you also viewed

Billy Butcher

Billy Butcher

Homelander

Homelander

Soldier Boy

Soldier Boy

Stormfront

Stormfront

Starlight

Starlight

Victoria Neuman

Victoria Neuman

Hughie Campbell

Hughie Campbell

A-Train

A-Train

Kimiko Miyashiro

Kimiko Miyashiro

For the Dynamite version, see Compound V/Comics.

It's this drug. It, um... It gives the Supes their powers.

HUGHIE CAMPBELL TO ANNIE JANUARY.

Compound V is a mysterious chemical substance that was created by German geneticist Frederick Vought. The serum mutates organic compounds by granting them profound and strange characteristics. It was originally intended to be utilized by Germany during the Second World War in order to create super soldiers for the Nazi government, but Vought realized that the German war effort was doomed and defected to the Allies, leading to the United States utilizing it instead.

In modern times, the serum is manufactured by Vought International geneticists to transform ordinary humans into extraordinary "heroes".

Overview

They call it Compound V. It's some kind of booster or steroid for Supes. Jacks 'em right up.

BILLY BUTCHER TO SUSAN RAYNOR

Compound V appears as a dark blue liquid and is usually contained within metal vials. It grants extraordinary abilities when injected into the circulatory system of living things, including animals. These abilities ("superpowers") are generally random, although certain factors can influence their exhibition.

Although intravenous injection seems to be the preferred method, it can also be ingested, as seen when many farm animals were turned after drinking contaminated water.

Effects

Compound V has a much higher success rate on younger people. Adult subjects have a high risk of fatality, though it appears this does not apply to depowered and existing adult supes, and they can take it again without immediate risk. Children and infants who are exposed to the serum may not immediately have powers, with some showing signs after a few years, whereas adults will gain powers immediately. Because the abilities granted by Compound V are generally random, there is a chance that the superpowers given may be "undesirable" and may also come with unexpected or unwanted side effects. Strangely, by Season 4, Compound V appears to no longer kill adults and instead reliably gives them powers; it is possible the formula has been improved over time.

Compound V's manifestation is influenced partially by a person's genetics. This is affirmed by the observations of the Shining Light Liberation Army, who correctly assumed that since Kimiko was successfully turned into a supe when injected as an adult, her brother Kenji would too. As such, individuals who share DNA may sometimes inherit the same powers. Polarity and his son Andre have identical powers, as do the fraternal twins the TNT Twins as well as Translucent and his son Maverick. This is not always the case though, as seen with Neuman and her daughter Zoe. Furthermore, it appears that personality and mindset may also affect powers received. Hugh Campbell Sr. gained intangibility, which seemed to be based on his feelings of being ignored and isolated after his wife had left and his son focused on his life. Billy Butcher, who displays many of the opposite but equally extreme beliefs as his arch-nemesis Homelander, gained powers very similar to the latter while on Temp V; while on Compound V proper, Butcher instead develops sapient super-cancer.

Compound V is sometimes falsely believed to have healing properties, but usually only has limited effects and unforeseen consequences. For example, Hugh Campbell Sr was given Compound V in an attempt to save him from his stroke. The V woke him up but didn't reverse the stroke-induced brain damage, leading to Hugh Sr's mind quickly deteriorating and him causing chaos with his new powers. If someone has another organism within their body, like a tumor or a parasite, the power may go to said organism instead of or in addition to its host, who usually retains only the enhanced physiology, as seen with Billy Butcher, Mr. Fuzzy Buzzy in "Beware the Jabberwock, My Son", and Sun-Hee in The Boys Presents: Diabolical. Should this happen, the organism may gain an ego of its own and begin manipulating its host into embracing their worst qualities, as seen with Butcher's tumor, or simply go on a rampage, as seen with Sun-Hee's tumor. In short, using Compound V as a medical treatment is a terrible idea because it will extremely likely, if not inevitably, horrifically backfire.

As seen with A-Train and Popclaw, the recreational use of Compound V can induce a euphoric high and temporarily enhance a supe's abilities, but it will ironically weaken and harm them over time. Billy notes that Compound V acts in a very similar way to steroids when injected into a supe's bloodstream, as A-Train has suffered from testicular atrophy, low bone density, and heart problems as a consequence of his abuse of the drug.

As shown in "Beware the Jabberwock, My Son", when the V leaked into the local water supply and infected the estate's farm livestock, Compound V, and even V24, can work on animals, randomly mutating them and granting them some violent and strange mutant abilities, in addition to making their behavior increasingly unstable and extremely aggressive, even making normally docile and passive animals like sheep into monstrous, carnivorous predators. A small herd of adult sheep are all given identical abilities, this may mean that for simple minded animals the psychological aspect is null, leaving it a matter of genetics.

History

Background

Compound V was originally created by a Nazi scientist named Frederick Vought at some point during the Second World War, who experimented with the formula through the use of human prisoners at Dachau concentration camp. He eventually gave the first completed dose to his wife Klara, who became the first successful superhuman with extraordinary powers. She would eventually go on to adopt the superhero identity of "Liberty". When Frederick realized that the German war effort was doomed, he defected to the United States, bringing his knowledge of the drug with him where he would continue to experiment with it. Soon after his arrival, he was able to successfully administer it to a young army volunteer named Benjamin, who became America's first superhero under the identity of "Soldier Boy". For his contribution to the war effort, he was pardoned and rehabilitated as an American icon. Furthermore, his Nazi past was scrubbed from public knowledge, only disclosed to high-ranking Vought International employees like Stan Edgar.[1] Following Fredrick's death, Vought would continue to manufacture the drug in secrecy and eliminate all signs of its existence from public knowledge and history.

Gen V

It is revealed that Compound V remains intact in the bloodstream of supes. As such, certain aspects of their physiology can be identified and exploited. Marie Moreau is able to identify the Compound V in Victoria Neuman's blood. Dr. Edison Cardosa is able to create a virus that binds specifically to the Compound V in supes, leaving normal humans unaffected. It is also shown that Luke Riordan was being unknowingly transfused with the Compound V laden blood of his younger brother Sam in order to augment his powers and transform him into a more iconic Godolkin student.

Season One

Samaritan's Embrace is a Christian charity that is sponsored by Vought International. On the surface, it is a charity committed to helping those in need. However, unbeknownst to the public, it is actually used to ship Compound V to hospitals across the United States, where newborns are injected with the approval of their parents.

This was done primarily so Vought can keep up the illusion that the superhuman powers given to Supes are God-given gifts or a natural genetic leap of mankind, instead of the disturbing truth that Vought is administering drugs to children without their consent.

Season Two

In season two, it is revealed that Vought has been secretly trying for years to rectify the low survival rate of Compound V in adults by establishing the Sage Grove Center; a psychiatric hospital in Pennsylvania where Vought scientists have been illegally injecting their adult patients with updated variations of the Compound V formula with the hopes of creating a perfected serum that can successfully transform fully grown adults into well-functioning Supes with minimal negative side effects.

Following the reveal of the existence of Compound V to the public, Vought was forced to temporarily halt all research and production of the drug.

Season Three

With the test results provided by Sage Grove Center, Vought's scientists were able to create a prototype of a new variation of the original Compound V formula. This new drug had the ability to give adults temporary superpowers with no risk of dying immediately. However, it still contained harmful side-effects and its development ultimately halted due to recent events. Soldier Boy possessed the ability to generate a radiation blast which could not only could kill his victims, but also allowed him to turn Supes back into normal humans by burning the Compound V out of their system. Primary examples include Kimiko Miyashiro and Queen Maeve, although the former was able to regain her powers after she injected herself with another dose of Compound V.

Season Four

Compound V is shown to be able to alter the biology of children in pre-teenage and teenage stages of life not only on the level of durability, strength and possible powers, as seen in the case of Zoe Neuman.

Compound V and V24 "Temp V" may have both ceased to be produced in Wisdom of the Ages because Vought's monopolistic practices backfired on them through Homelander killing all but one of the scientists working on producing the chemical supply (it is never made clear what exactly those scientists were currently working on when they were massacred). Homelander then holds a personal monopoly on the drug by stashing all the Compound V away in his apartment.[2] It is unknown if the only people who had the resources and expertise to make Compound V were killed. Vought recruitment of new scientists to create the compound seems unlikely, as Homelander's motivations and aspirations to re-create and resupply Compound V are nonexistent.[3]

Later, it was revealed that Sameer Shah, the leading R&D Scientist of Vought, had a large supply of both Compound V and V24 for experimental purposes; he injected both into animals to use as test subjects for the virus created by Edison Cardosa. Due to him being a Vought scientist and the leading scientist for its R&D division, as well as having Victoria's backing, its likely that Sameer has the knowledge of how to make both Compound V and V24.[4]

Variations

Temp V

V24 Vials

Vials of Temp V

It's Temp V. One shot makes you a Supe for 24 hours. I mean, they think. It's still in R&D."

"Oh, great, so powers, maybe. Maybe my bollocks swell up like footballs. Yeah?

QUEEN MAEVE AND BILLY BUTCHER

Temp V, is a modified version of Compound V. As implied by its name, the serum provides an ordinary person with superpowers for approximately 24 hours. Temp V has ceased to be produced.[2]

Due to the legal implications that were brought on by the public revelation of Compound V, all testing of the serum was forcibly halted. As a result, Temp V is still considered unstable and continues to exhibit numerous side effects including migraines, muscle spasms, nausea, and projectile vomiting. Further testing of the drug has recently revealed the fatal effect of causing brain lesions.

Vought geneticists have estimated that the use of three to five doses will become lethal to the patient. These estimates were confirmed after Billy Butcher developed numerous tumors in his brain after his sixth dose of the serum and was given 18 months to live.

G Fuel Compound V

Vought has partnered with the energy drink company G Fuel to bring you a brand new beverage inspired by Compound V. The delicious blue drink will sharpen your focus and increase your energy, but word on the street is that this high-tech formula may have some other effects some may find surprising.

CAMERON COLEMAN

G Fuel Compound V

A new energy drink Vought has partnered with G Fuel, inspired by Compound V. it sharpens focus, increases energy, and in select cases, turns those who drink it into Supes. Some of the superpowers developed by its consumers include telekinesis, invisibility, and laser eyes. The drink is unconfirmed to contain either V24 or the legitimate Compound V. It has a low chance of giving people superpowers, meaning that buyers may need to consume multiple doses before becoming a Supe. It's worth noting that some people may have difficulty controlling their powers and may potentially harm themselves or others because of it. At some point, G Fuel V ceased to be produced or, at the very least, the available version that is still being sold no longer gives superpowers.[2]

Trivia

Compound V is likely based off the Super-Soldier Serum from the Marvel Universe. The temporary, yet consistent, properties of the V24 variant can also be compared to the performance-enhancing drug known as Miraclo from the DC Universe.

Similar to how the Super-Soldier Serum was created in Marvel Comics, Compound V was also created during the Second World War by a Central European scientist who later defected to the Allies WIKI

THE BOYS WIKI

Compound V

EDIT

Compound_V_TBS_1

STATUS

Limited Supply

THE BOYS

FIRST APPEARANCE

"Cherry"

GEN V

ONLY APPEARANCE

"Jumanji"

(Flashback)

USERS

Vought International

Homelander

A-Train

Popclaw

Other V-addicted supes

The Boys

Billy Butcher

Hughie Campbell (on his father Hugh Campbell Sr.)

Kimiko Miyashiro (by the Shining Light Liberation Army)

Supe-Terrorists

Kenji Miyashiro (by the Shining Light Liberation Army)

Naqib

MORE

Others like you also viewed

Billy Butcher

Billy Butcher

Homelander

Homelander

Soldier Boy

Soldier Boy

Stormfront

Stormfront

Starlight

Starlight

Victoria Neuman

Victoria Neuman

Hughie Campbell

Hughie Campbell

A-Train

A-Train

Kimiko Miyashiro

Kimiko Miyashiro

For the Dynamite version, see Compound V/Comics.

It's this drug. It, um... It gives the Supes their powers.

HUGHIE CAMPBELL TO ANNIE JANUARY.

Compound V is a mysterious chemical substance that was created by German geneticist Frederick Vought. The serum mutates organic compounds by granting them profound and strange characteristics. It was originally intended to be utilized by Germany during the Second World War in order to create super soldiers for the Nazi government, but Vought realized that the German war effort was doomed and defected to the Allies, leading to the United States utilizing it instead.

In modern times, the serum is manufactured by Vought International geneticists to transform ordinary humans into extraordinary "heroes".

Overview

They call it Compound V. It's some kind of booster or steroid for Supes. Jacks 'em right up.

BILLY BUTCHER TO SUSAN RAYNOR

Compound V appears as a dark blue liquid and is usually contained within metal vials. It grants extraordinary abilities when injected into the circulatory system of living things, including animals. These abilities ("superpowers") are generally random, although certain factors can influence their exhibition.

Although intravenous injection seems to be the preferred method, it can also be ingested, as seen when many farm animals were turned after drinking contaminated water.

Effects

Compound V has a much higher success rate on younger people. Adult subjects have a high risk of fatality, though it appears this does not apply to depowered and existing adult supes, and they can take it again without immediate risk. Children and infants who are exposed to the serum may not immediately have powers, with some showing signs after a few years, whereas adults will gain powers immediately. Because the abilities granted by Compound V are generally random, there is a chance that the superpowers given may be "undesirable" and may also come with unexpected or unwanted side effects. Strangely, by Season 4, Compound V appears to no longer kill adults and instead reliably gives them powers; it is possible the formula has been improved over time.

Compound V's manifestation is influenced partially by a person's genetics. This is affirmed by the observations of the Shining Light Liberation Army, who correctly assumed that since Kimiko was successfully turned into a supe when injected as an adult, her brother Kenji would too. As such, individuals who share DNA may sometimes inherit the same powers. Polarity and his son Andre have identical powers, as do the fraternal twins the TNT Twins as well as Translucent and his son Maverick. This is not always the case though, as seen with Neuman and her daughter Zoe. Furthermore, it appears that personality and mindset may also affect powers received. Hugh Campbell Sr. gained intangibility, which seemed to be based on his feelings of being ignored and isolated after his wife had left and his son focused on his life. Billy Butcher, who displays many of the opposite but equally extreme beliefs as his arch-nemesis Homelander, gained powers very similar to the latter while on Temp V; while on Compound V proper, Butcher instead develops sapient super-cancer.

Compound V is sometimes falsely believed to have healing properties, but usually only has limited effects and unforeseen consequences. For example, Hugh Campbell Sr was given Compound V in an attempt to save him from his stroke. The V woke him up but didn't reverse the stroke-induced brain damage, leading to Hugh Sr's mind quickly deteriorating and him causing chaos with his new powers. If someone has another organism within their body, like a tumor or a parasite, the power may go to said organism instead of or in addition to its host, who usually retains only the enhanced physiology, as seen with Billy Butcher, Mr. Fuzzy Buzzy in "Beware the Jabberwock, My Son", and Sun-Hee in The Boys Presents: Diabolical. Should this happen, the organism may gain an ego of its own and begin manipulating its host into embracing their worst qualities, as seen with Butcher's tumor, or simply go on a rampage, as seen with Sun-Hee's tumor. In short, using Compound V as a medical treatment is a terrible idea because it will extremely likely, if not inevitably, horrifically backfire.

As seen with A-Train and Popclaw, the recreational use of Compound V can induce a euphoric high and temporarily enhance a supe's abilities, but it will ironically weaken and harm them over time. Billy notes that Compound V acts in a very similar way to steroids when injected into a supe's bloodstream, as A-Train has suffered from testicular atrophy, low bone density, and heart problems as a consequence of his abuse of the drug.

As shown in "Beware the Jabberwock, My Son", when the V leaked into the local water supply and infected the estate's farm livestock, Compound V, and even V24, can work on animals, randomly mutating them and granting them some violent and strange mutant abilities, in addition to making their behavior increasingly unstable and extremely aggressive, even making normally docile and passive animals like sheep into monstrous, carnivorous predators. A small herd of adult sheep are all given identical abilities, this may mean that for simple minded animals the psychological aspect is null, leaving it a matter of genetics.

History

Background

Compound V was originally created by a Nazi scientist named Frederick Vought at some point during the Second World War, who experimented with the formula through the use of human prisoners at Dachau concentration camp. He eventually gave the first completed dose to his wife Klara, who became the first successful superhuman with extraordinary powers. She would eventually go on to adopt the superhero identity of "Liberty". When Frederick realized that the German war effort was doomed, he defected to the United States, bringing his knowledge of the drug with him where he would continue to experiment with it. Soon after his arrival, he was able to successfully administer it to a young army volunteer named Benjamin, who became America's first superhero under the identity of "Soldier Boy". For his contribution to the war effort, he was pardoned and rehabilitated as an American icon. Furthermore, his Nazi past was scrubbed from public knowledge, only disclosed to high-ranking Vought International employees like Stan Edgar.[1] Following Fredrick's death, Vought would continue to manufacture the drug in secrecy and eliminate all signs of its existence from public knowledge and history.

Gen V

It is revealed that Compound V remains intact in the bloodstream of supes. As such, certain aspects of their physiology can be identified and exploited. Marie Moreau is able to identify the Compound V in Victoria Neuman's blood. Dr. Edison Cardosa is able to create a virus that binds specifically to the Compound V in supes, leaving normal humans unaffected. It is also shown that Luke Riordan was being unknowingly transfused with the Compound V laden blood of his younger brother Sam in order to augment his powers and transform him into a more iconic Godolkin student.

Season One

Samaritan's Embrace is a Christian charity that is sponsored by Vought International. On the surface, it is a charity committed to helping those in need. However, unbeknownst to the public, it is actually used to ship Compound V to hospitals across the United States, where newborns are injected with the approval of their parents.

This was done primarily so Vought can keep up the illusion that the superhuman powers given to Supes are God-given gifts or a natural genetic leap of mankind, instead of the disturbing truth that Vought is administering drugs to children without their consent.

Season Two

In season two, it is revealed that Vought has been secretly trying for years to rectify the low survival rate of Compound V in adults by establishing the Sage Grove Center; a psychiatric hospital in Pennsylvania where Vought scientists have been illegally injecting their adult patients with updated variations of the Compound V formula with the hopes of creating a perfected serum that can successfully transform fully grown adults into well-functioning Supes with minimal negative side effects.

Following the reveal of the existence of Compound V to the public, Vought was forced to temporarily halt all research and production of the drug.

Season Three

With the test results provided by Sage Grove Center, Vought's scientists were able to create a prototype of a new variation of the original Compound V formula. This new drug had the ability to give adults temporary superpowers with no risk of dying immediately. However, it still contained harmful side-effects and its development ultimately halted due to recent events. Soldier Boy possessed the ability to generate a radiation blast which could not only could kill his victims, but also allowed him to turn Supes back into normal humans by burning the Compound V out of their system. Primary examples include Kimiko Miyashiro and Queen Maeve, although the former was able to regain her powers after she injected herself with another dose of Compound V.

Season Four

Compound V is shown to be able to alter the biology of children in pre-teenage and teenage stages of life not only on the level of durability, strength and possible powers, as seen in the case of Zoe Neuman.

Compound V and V24 "Temp V" may have both ceased to be produced in Wisdom of the Ages because Vought's monopolistic practices backfired on them through Homelander killing all but one of the scientists working on producing the chemical supply (it is never made clear what exactly those scientists were currently working on when they were massacred). Homelander then holds a personal monopoly on the drug by stashing all the Compound V away in his apartment.[2] It is unknown if the only people who had the resources and expertise to make Compound V were killed. Vought recruitment of new scientists to create the compound seems unlikely, as Homelander's motivations and aspirations to re-create and resupply Compound V are nonexistent.[3]

Later, it was revealed that Sameer Shah, the leading R&D Scientist of Vought, had a large supply of both Compound V and V24 for experimental purposes; he injected both into animals to use as test subjects for the virus created by Edison Cardosa. Due to him being a Vought scientist and the leading scientist for its R&D division, as well as having Victoria's backing, its likely that Sameer has the knowledge of how to make both Compound V and V24.[4]

Variations

Temp V

V24 Vials

Vials of Temp V

It's Temp V. One shot makes you a Supe for 24 hours. I mean, they think. It's still in R&D."

"Oh, great, so powers, maybe. Maybe my bollocks swell up like footballs. Yeah?

QUEEN MAEVE AND BILLY BUTCHER

Temp V, is a modified version of Compound V. As implied by its name, the serum provides an ordinary person with superpowers for approximately 24 hours. Temp V has ceased to be produced.[2]

Due to the legal implications that were brought on by the public revelation of Compound V, all testing of the serum was forcibly halted. As a result, Temp V is still considered unstable and continues to exhibit numerous side effects including migraines, muscle spasms, nausea, and projectile vomiting. Further testing of the drug has recently revealed the fatal effect of causing brain lesions.

Vought geneticists have estimated that the use of three to five doses will become lethal to the patient. These estimates were confirmed after Billy Butcher developed numerous tumors in his brain after his sixth dose of the serum and was given 18 months to live.

G Fuel Compound V

Vought has partnered with the energy drink company G Fuel to bring you a brand new beverage inspired by Compound V. The delicious blue drink will sharpen your focus and increase your energy, but word on the street is that this high-tech formula may have some other effects some may find surprising.

CAMERON COLEMAN

G Fuel Compound V

A new energy drink Vought has partnered with G Fuel, inspired by Compound V. it sharpens focus, increases energy, and in select cases, turns those who drink it into Supes. Some of the superpowers developed by its consumers include telekinesis, invisibility, and laser eyes. The drink is unconfirmed to contain either V24 or the legitimate Compound V. It has a low chance of giving people superpowers, meaning that buyers may need to consume multiple doses before becoming a Supe. It's worth noting that some people may have difficulty controlling their powers and may potentially harm themselves or others because of it. At some point, G Fuel V ceased to be produced or, at the very least, the available version that is still being sold no longer gives superpowers.[2]

Trivia

Compound V is likely based off the Super-Soldier Serum from the Marvel Universe. The temporary, yet consistent, properties of the V24 variant can also be compared to the performance-enhancing drug known as Miraclo from the DC Universe.

Similar to how the Super-Soldier Serum was created in Marvel Comics, Compound V was also created during the Second World War by a Central European scientist who later defected to the Allies.

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-------------------

(A/N):Hahahaha ten times more words than before!!


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