Hulk: Difference between revisions
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==Fiction== | ==Fiction== | ||
===Marvel Comics continuity=== | ===Marvel Comics continuity=== | ||
==== | ====Marvel ''The Transformers'' comics==== | ||
An image of the Hulk was imprinted on the walls of the [[Marvel Comics]] reception area. {{storylink|I, Robot-Master!}} | An image of the Hulk was imprinted on the walls of the [[Marvel Comics]] reception area. {{storylink|I, Robot-Master!}} | ||
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*'''Hulk''' (Marvel, 2008) | *'''Hulk''' (Marvel, 2008) | ||
[[File:Crossovers Hulk toy.jpg| | [[File:Crossovers Hulk toy.jpg|upright=1.1|thumb|HULK MAD!!! PUNY HUMANS SHOULD HAVE MADE HULK [[Trukk not munky|TRUKK, NOT MUNKY]]!!!]] | ||
:Hulk transforms from a big, green, shirtless man into a fanciful tank. The "mech mode" in the promo picture at right is incompletely transformed; the "wheel panels" of his shoulders should be rotated 90 degrees around his biceps, relative to the "tread panels". It also appears his shins have not been extended. | :Hulk transforms from a big, green, shirtless man into a fanciful tank. The "mech mode" in the promo picture at right is incompletely transformed; the "wheel panels" of his shoulders should be rotated 90 degrees around his biceps, relative to the "tread panels". It also appears his shins have not been extended. | ||
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{{-}} | {{-}} | ||
[[File:Marvel Crossovers Hulk Grey.jpg| | [[File:Marvel Crossovers Hulk Grey.jpg|upright=1.1|thumb|Can be customized with a coat to be Mr. Fixit.]] | ||
*'''Hulk''' (Marvel, 2008) | *'''Hulk''' (Marvel, 2008) | ||
:A redeco of the original toy, in gray and blue, probably in reference to the "Gray Hulk" persona. | :A redeco of the original toy, in gray and blue, probably in reference to the "Gray Hulk" persona. | ||
{{-}} | {{-}} | ||
[[File:Crossovers Hulk Bulldozer.jpg| | [[File:Crossovers Hulk Bulldozer.jpg|upright=1.1|thumb|"[[Bonecrusher (G1)|Bonecrusher]] ''SMAAASHHHH''."]] | ||
*'''Hulk''' (Marvel, 2010) | *'''Hulk''' (Marvel, 2010) | ||
:A new mold Hulk toy, which transforms into a bulldozer. His [[bio]] pointed out the absurdity of Reed Richards giving the Hulk an indestructible battlesuit that turns into a tank. | :A new mold Hulk toy, which transforms into a bulldozer. His [[bio]] pointed out the absurdity of Reed Richards giving the Hulk an indestructible battlesuit that turns into a tank. | ||
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*The Hulk had a pre-''Crossovers'' transforming robot toy in the Toy Biz ''Marvel Megamorphs'' line (back before [[Hasbro]] had the Marvel license), which used the scrapped design for ''[[Transtech]]'' [[Immorticon]] as its base. Why? Because [[Draxhall Jump]] worked on both ''Transtech'' and Megamorphs''. | *The Hulk had a pre-''Crossovers'' transforming robot toy in the Toy Biz ''Marvel Megamorphs'' line (back before [[Hasbro]] had the Marvel license), which used the scrapped design for ''[[Transtech]]'' [[Immorticon]] as its base. Why? Because [[Draxhall Jump]] worked on both ''Transtech'' and Megamorphs''. | ||
*[[Peter Cullen]] voiced The Hulk in ''[[Spider-Man]] and his Amazing Friends'', [[Rick Wasserman]] voiced Hulk in ''Planet Hulk'', [[Peter Lurie]] voiced Hulk in ''Marvel Ultimate Alliance'', [[Travis Willingham]] voiced Hulk in ''Superhero Squad Show'', and [[Fred Tatasciore]] has voiced the Hulk in almost anything else since ''The Ultimate [[Avengers]]''. | *[[Peter Cullen]] voiced The Hulk in ''[[Spider-Man]] and his Amazing Friends'', [[Rick Wasserman]] voiced Hulk in ''Planet Hulk'', [[Peter Lurie]] voiced Hulk in ''Marvel Ultimate Alliance'', [[Travis Willingham]] voiced Hulk in ''Superhero Squad Show'', and [[Fred Tatasciore]] has voiced the Hulk in almost anything else since ''The Ultimate [[Avengers]]''. | ||
*The 1978 Incredible Hulk series (and two of the three reunion movies) had among its large roster of guest stars people that would later be involved in Transformers: [[W. K. Stratton]] (Walla performer in [[Transformers The Game]]), [[Ernie Hudson]] ([[William Fowler|Fowler]] in [[Transformers: Prime (cartoon)|Transformers: Prime]]), [[Johnny Haymer]] ([[Swindle (G1)|Swindle]] in the [[The Transformers (cartoon)|original cartoon series]]), [[Markie Post]] ([[June Darby]] in Transformers: Prime), [[Scatman Crothers]] ([[Jazz (G1)|Jazz]] in the original cartoon series), [[Regis Cordic]] ([[Menasor (G1)|Menasor]] in the original cartoon series), [[Philece Sampler]] ([[Kelly (RID)|Kelly]] in [[Transformers: Robots in Disguise (cartoon)|Robots in Disguise]]), [[Mark Acheson]] ([[Unicron]] in [[Transformers: Armada (cartoon)|Armada]]), [[Richard Newman]] ([[Rhinox (BW)|Rhinox]] in [[Beast Wars: Transformers (cartoon)|Beast Wars]]) and [[French Tickner]] ([[Bulkhead (Energon)|Bulkhead]] in Energon). | *The 1978 Incredible Hulk series (and two of the three reunion movies) had among its large roster of guest stars people that would later be involved in Transformers: [[W. K. Stratton]] (Walla performer in [[Transformers The Game]]), [[Ernie Hudson]] ([[William Fowler|Fowler]] in [[Transformers: Prime (cartoon)|Transformers: Prime]]), [[Johnny Haymer]] ([[Swindle (G1)|Swindle]] in the [[The Transformers (cartoon)|original cartoon series]]), [[Markie Post]] ([[June Darby]] in Transformers: Prime), [[Scatman Crothers]] ([[Jazz (G1)|Jazz]] in the original cartoon series), [[Regis Cordic]] ([[Menasor (G1)|Menasor]] in the original cartoon series), [[Philece Sampler]] ([[Kelly (RID)|Kelly]] in [[Transformers: Robots in Disguise (2001 cartoon)|Robots in Disguise]]), [[Mark Acheson]] ([[Unicron]] in [[Transformers: Armada (cartoon)|Armada]]), [[Richard Newman]] ([[Rhinox (BW)|Rhinox]] in [[Beast Wars: Transformers (cartoon)|Beast Wars]]) and [[French Tickner]] ([[Bulkhead (Energon)|Bulkhead]] in Energon). | ||
===Foreign names=== | ===Foreign names=== | ||
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[[Category:Generation 1 humans]] | [[Category:Marvel Generation 1 humans]] | ||
[[Category:Marvel Crossovers characters]] | [[Category:Marvel Crossovers characters]] | ||
[[Category:Marvel properties]] | [[Category:Marvel properties]] | ||
[[Category:Superheroes]] | [[Category:Superheroes]] | ||
Revision as of 05:33, 4 January 2015
- Hulk is a character from the Marvel portion of the Crossovers continuity family.

The Hulk is a very angry man. A big green fellow literally fueled by unstoppable rage, notable for having no upper limit on his superhuman strength, which grows as he gets angrier. Most people would be satisfied with him causing property damage purely on an infantry level. Not Mister Fantastic, though. No, Mr. Fantastic has instead encased this furious, really quite angry guy in a mechanized suit of transforming armor encased in plates of the same indestructible material as Captain America's shield. As if this weren't an impressive, indeed inexplicable enough achievement, Mr. Fantastic has likewise fortified the mech's cockpit with hydraulic joint flexors, to allow the machine to absorb the Hulk's frantic thrashings and allow his battle suit to literally become stronger as its pilot grows angrier.
Some people might think this is overkill, but they're not Mr. Fantastic. Mr. Fantastic is a genius.
Fiction
Marvel Comics continuity
Marvel The Transformers comics
An image of the Hulk was imprinted on the walls of the Marvel Comics reception area. I, Robot-Master!
Combat Colin
When they were turned away from the Transformers' Christmas party, Colin and Steve organised their own party in the Combat Shed. The Hulk wasn't invited but gatecrashed anyway, hoping to dance with the Giggly sisters. Christmas with Combat Colin
Toys
Crossovers
- Hulk (Marvel, 2008)

- Hulk transforms from a big, green, shirtless man into a fanciful tank. The "mech mode" in the promo picture at right is incompletely transformed; the "wheel panels" of his shoulders should be rotated 90 degrees around his biceps, relative to the "tread panels". It also appears his shins have not been extended.
- He also has one tiny point of battle damage, a crater on one of the front tank tread covers. Apparently Hulk has been shot... once.

- Hulk (Marvel, 2008)
- A redeco of the original toy, in gray and blue, probably in reference to the "Gray Hulk" persona.

- Hulk (Marvel, 2010)
- A new mold Hulk toy, which transforms into a bulldozer. His bio pointed out the absurdity of Reed Richards giving the Hulk an indestructible battlesuit that turns into a tank.
- The robot head on this mold is a slight repaint of the head of the first Hulk toy.
- This mold was to be retooled to make the Thing.
Notes
- The Hulk was featured on the cover of Transformers #22, celebrating Marvel Comic's 25th anniversary.
- According to Beast Machines DVD commentary by Story Editor Bob Skir, Tankor is influenced by the Hulk.
- The creators of Transformers Animated likened Lugnut to the Hulk, while Bulkhead was likened to the Thing.
- The Hulk had a pre-Crossovers transforming robot toy in the Toy Biz Marvel Megamorphs line (back before Hasbro had the Marvel license), which used the scrapped design for Transtech Immorticon as its base. Why? Because Draxhall Jump worked on both Transtech and Megamorphs.
- Peter Cullen voiced The Hulk in Spider-Man and his Amazing Friends, Rick Wasserman voiced Hulk in Planet Hulk, Peter Lurie voiced Hulk in Marvel Ultimate Alliance, Travis Willingham voiced Hulk in Superhero Squad Show, and Fred Tatasciore has voiced the Hulk in almost anything else since The Ultimate Avengers.
- The 1978 Incredible Hulk series (and two of the three reunion movies) had among its large roster of guest stars people that would later be involved in Transformers: W. K. Stratton (Walla performer in Transformers The Game), Ernie Hudson (Fowler in Transformers: Prime), Johnny Haymer (Swindle in the original cartoon series), Markie Post (June Darby in Transformers: Prime), Scatman Crothers (Jazz in the original cartoon series), Regis Cordic (Menasor in the original cartoon series), Philece Sampler (Kelly in Robots in Disguise), Mark Acheson (Unicron in Armada), Richard Newman (Rhinox in Beast Wars) and French Tickner (Bulkhead in Energon).
Foreign names
- Japanese: Hulk (ハルク Haruku)


