Information about Access (comics)

Access

Cover to DC/Marvel All Access #1
Art by Jackson Guice and Josef Rubinstein
Marvel Comics/DC Comics
First appearanceDC vs Marvel #1 (1996)
Characteristics
Alter egoAxel Asher
AbilitiesAbility to travel between the DC and Marvel universes,
Ability to sense when an individual is in the wrong universe,
Ability to physically merge two beings into a single being and separate them at any time


Access (Axel Asher) is a fictional character owned by both DC Comics and Marvel Comics. He made his first appearance in Marvel vs DC #1 (March 1996), a special crossover between the two companies. He was intended both as a way to explain the events of the story as well as a means to enable more such crossovers in the future.

Publication history

Access reappeared in two follow-up miniseries, DC/Marvel: All Access and Unlimited Access. In the first, Access helped prevent Dr. Strangefate from re-merging the two universes; in the second, he discovered that the "old bum" was actually his own future self, and that a variant version of himself had joined forces with Darkseid. He also discovered his powers were greater than he believed, and he absorbed his evil self within himself and helped the heroes of both universes defeat Darkseid's scheme.

Access is briefly mentioned in a Superman/Fantastic Four crossover. When Superman receives a (false) holographic message from his father Jor-El, stating that Galactus was the one who destroyed Krypton, he flies off, reflecting to himself "With the help of experts I'll find the monster. And to find them... I need Access."

Access is mentioned again in the crossover Superman/Silver Surfer: POP! by the Impossible Man.

Access' first appearance was foreshadowed in the 1995 DC/Marvel comic Green Lantern/Silver Surfer: Unholy Alliances, where the two heroes joined forces to stop Thanos and Parallax from destroying their universes. The final frames of the comic show an alleyway in New York where a large cardboard box is beginning to emit powerful beams of energy.

Access is now a native of both universes and his duty is to keep them separate. If they start to overlap, the universes will merge into the Amalgam Universe once again. Access must move from one universe to the other keeping people from crossing over. If he stays in one place too long, he can cause spontaneous crossovers to occur. Access usually works out situations like this without anyone noticing that he is involved (this is done to explain how the subsequent DC/Marvel crossovers occur. Stories where DC and Marvel heroes appear on a "shared Earth" are believed to be dimensional fluxes where the two universe have begun to merge again. It has also been explained that once Access has restored the timelines, the characters forget about the crossover).

Despite shared ownership between DC Comics and Marvel Comics, only DC has used the character in a non-crossover appearance. In Green Lantern #87, Access appears to the green-skinned Jade and claims to be looking for Kyle Rayner. Having no success, he decides to travel to the Marvel Comics universe in order to find the Silver Surfer.

Fictional character biography

Axel Asher first became aware of his extraordinary powers when the two cosmic entities called "The Brothers," who represent the DC Comics Multiverse and Marvel Comics Multiverse, became aware of each other (as a result of the events in crossovers previously published by the companies) and hurled their respective heroes into conflict with each other's to prove their superiority over their counterpart; eleven 'champions' from each universe were selected to fight, the winner being whoever immobilised the other first- some champions were too powerful to ever conclusively defeat their opponents- and the overall winner being the side with most victories.

Axel was just a normal teenager living in New York who came across an old bum in an alley, who protected what seemed to be a cardboard box but was actually a portal between the universes. He also revealed that Axel was next in line to bear the powers and responsibilities of being "The Access," the person in charge of preventing the universes from merging into one. This happens because they were originally one universe that split in two when The Brothers first fought; certain "fragments" of the original universe remained. The "box" was one of them—Access was another.

At the height of the Brothers' battle, when the last battle had ended- with the Marvel Universe being the overall winner with six victories to five-, the universes were combined into a single Amalgam Universe by The Spectre and the Living Tribunal to avert the end of existence. Access used shards of each universe hidden inside Batman and Captain America to separate and restore both universes. Aided by Batman and Captain America who, in many ways, were the Brothers in miniature, Access helped stop the fight between The Brothers, saving the two universes from destruction when the Brothers, looking at the two heroes, realised how foolish their conflict with each other truly was.

Powers and abilities

Access has the ability to create interdimensional gateways between the two universes. He can use these gateways to teleport himself as well as summon others to him. He also has the ability to travel in time when crossing universes. He can feel the presence of anything from one universe in the other. In addition, Access has recently learned that he can create an "amalgamation" of two people he touches from each universe.

Rift

Rift is the focal character of Worlds Collide, and like Access, lives in two universes. Unlike Access, Rift was a provocateur, and was defeated by being put in an eternal sleep.

Bibliography

  • DC vs. Marvel / Marvel vs. DC #1-4
  • Doctor Strangefate #1
  • DC/Marvel: All Access #1-4
  • Green Lantern #87
  • Unlimited Access #1-4
Jackson Guice

Born

Nationality American
Area(s) Penciller
Pseudonym(s) Butch Guice

Jackson Guice (sometimes credited as Butch Guice) is an American comic book artist.
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Marvel Comics

A subsidiary of Marvel Entertainment
Founded 1939 by Martin Goodman, as Timely Comics
Headquarters 417 5th Avenue, New York City, New York

Key people Joe Quesada, Editor-in-chief
Dan Buckley, Publisher, C.O.O.
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DC Comics

Subsidiary of Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc.
Founded 1934, by Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson (as National Allied Publications)
Headquarters 1700 Broadway, New York City, New York

Key people Paul Levitz (President and Publisher)
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In comic books, first appearance refers to the first comic book to feature a fictional character.

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First appearances of popular characters are among the most valuable comic books in existence.
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fictional character is any person, persona, identity, or entity whose existence originates from a work of fiction. The process of creating and developing characters in a work of fiction is called characterization.
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DC Comics

Subsidiary of Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc.
Founded 1934, by Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson (as National Allied Publications)
Headquarters 1700 Broadway, New York City, New York

Key people Paul Levitz (President and Publisher)
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Marvel Comics

A subsidiary of Marvel Entertainment
Founded 1939 by Martin Goodman, as Timely Comics
Headquarters 417 5th Avenue, New York City, New York

Key people Joe Quesada, Editor-in-chief
Dan Buckley, Publisher, C.O.O.
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DC vs Marvel Comics or Marvel Comics vs DC is a 4-issue limited series published by DC Comics and Marvel in 1996. The series is written by Ron Marz and Peter David, with art by Dan Jurgens and Claudio Castellini.
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Doctor Strangefate is an Amalgam Comics superhero who debuted in Doctor Strangefate #1, but his metafictional debut in Amalgam Comics continuity was More Strange Tales #110.
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Darkseid is a fictional character, an alien supervillain in the DC Comics Universe created by Jack Kirby as part of the Fourth World series of comic books in the early 1970s. He first appeared in Superman's Pal Jimmy Olsen #134 (November 1970).
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Jor-El is a fictional character. Appearing in comics published by DC Comics, he is a Kryptonian, the biological father of Superman, and the husband of Lara Lor-Van.

Jor-El was a highly respected scientist and leader on the planet Krypton before its destruction.
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Galactus is a fictional character, a cosmic entity in the Marvel Comics universe. Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby as an antagonist for the Fantastic Four, the character first appeared in Fantastic Four vol. 1, #48 (Mar.
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Silver Surfer (Norrin Radd) is a fictional character, a Marvel Comics superhero created by Jack Kirby and Stan Lee. The character first appears in the comic book Fantastic Four
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Impossible Man is a fictional character, a mischievous alien appearing in the Marvel Comics universe who is, on his rare appearances, usually an antagonist of the Fantastic Four.
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For the Marvel Comics supervillain, see Ion (Marvel Comics).


Kyle Rayner is a fictional character, a superhero from the DC Comics universe, known for most of his publication history as Green Lantern
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Thanos is a fictional character that appears in the Marvel Universe. Thanos is a Titanian Eternal, and is often referred to as the Mad Titan. The character's name is a derivation of Thanatos, the god of death in Greek mythology.
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Parallax is a fictional character, a supervillain from DC Comics. Created by writer Ron Marz and artist Darryl Banks for Green Lantern vol. 3, #48 (January 1994), Parallax was devised as the new supervillain identity for former Green Lantern protagonist
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Amalgam Comics was a metafictional American comic book publisher, and part of a collaboration between Marvel Comics and DC Comics, in which the two comic book publishers merged their characters to create new ones (e.g.
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A shared universe is a literary technique in which several different authors create works of fiction that share aspects such as settings or characters and that are intended to be read as taking place in a single universe.
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First appearance
Bill Finger
Martin Nodell

Characters
See also
Green Lantern Corps
List of Green Lanterns


Green Lantern
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Jade is the codename of Jennie-Lynn Hayden, a fictional character, a superhero from DC Comics. Known affectionately as "Jennie" or "Jen", she is the daughter of Alan Scott, the Golden Age Green Lantern who has also been known as Sentinel.
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For the Marvel Comics supervillain, see Ion (Marvel Comics).


Kyle Rayner is a fictional character, a superhero from the DC Comics universe, known for most of his publication history as Green Lantern
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Silver Surfer (Norrin Radd) is a fictional character, a Marvel Comics superhero created by Jack Kirby and Stan Lee. The character first appears in the comic book Fantastic Four
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In superhero comic books, a cosmic being (also referred to as a cosmic entity) is a fictional character possessing superpowers on a planetary, stellar or even universal level, far beyond those of humans or conventional superheroes.
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The DC Multiverse
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multiverse. Starting with issues of Captain Britain, the main continuity in which most Marvel storylines take place was designated Earth-616, and the multiverse was established as being protected by Merlyn.
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Spectre is a fictional cosmic entity and superhero who has appeared in numerous comic books published by DC Comics. The character first appeared in a next issue ad in More Fun Comics
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