Marvel kills off major character in its Civil War II comic storyline

Straight off the back of their major Captain America twist - Marvel are at it once more

Clarisse Loughrey
Wednesday 13 July 2016 10:58 BST
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*WARNING: Major spoilers ahead for Marvel's Civil War II, No. 3 issue*

Marvel aren't giving their fans any restful moments in their current storyline - it's all the feels, all the time here. A near-uproar rippled through the comics community when the final page of Captain America: Steve Rogers #1 saw the story whirled back to the 1940s, where a pre-bulked Rogers reveals himself as an apparent servant to the enemy; with those two unforgettable words, "Hail Hydra".

After War Machine fell to Thanos in the Free Comic Book Day preview issue and with She-Hulk currently in a coma, Issue No. 3 of Civil War II has now dropped a bombshell of a major death on the Marvel universe: Bruce Banner is gone. The Hulk will hulk no more. Murdered at the hands of none other than fellow Avenger Clint Barton, AKA Hawkeye.

It's a death inevitably set-up by the events of the last issue, with Captain Marvel visiting Bruce Banner after Ulysses - an Inhuman with the ability to predict the future - revealed the Hulk would explode into a murderous rampage, slaughtering the Avengers. Hawkeye had made a pact to kill Bruce if he ever became angry enough to hulk out; though what he didn't know was Banner had been taking medication to keep the Hulk at bay for the past year.

However, really, we're only mourning the death of Bruce Banner here; the Hulk is still technically around, albeit in a different form. The Totally Awesome Hulk series has been focusing on one Amadeus Cho, a teen genius who saved the day when Banner threatened to explode the world, having absorbed too much radiation; though he subsequently absorbed the excess radiation and transformed into a version of the Hulk himself.

That said, you can likely expect Banner to make his return at some point in the future, just like Steve Rogers returned from the grave after his death at the end of the first Civil War; a fact made increasingly likely considering Banner is set to make a cinematic return in Thor: Ragnarok.

Major changes are also happening elsewhere in the Marvel universe; Tony Stark is handing over the Iron Man suit to the 15-year-old Riri Williams.

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