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Peepers (Marvel Comics)

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Peepers
Peepers as depicted in S.W.O.R.D. vol. 2 #1 (December 2020). Art by Valerio Schiti.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceCaptain America Annual #4 (1977)
Created byJack Kirby
In-story information
Alter egoPeter Quinn
SpeciesHuman Mutant
Team affiliationsThe 198
Brotherhood of Evil Mutants
Mutant Force
Resistants
Secret Empire
Notable aliasesOccult, Peeper
AbilitiesTelescopic/microscopic eyesight
X-ray vision
Eye beams

Peepers (Peter Quinn) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. He first appeared in Captain America Annual #4 and was created by Jack Kirby.

Fictional character biography

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Peter Quinn was born in Cedar City, Utah. He was recruited by Magneto as a mercenary and professional criminal to be part of his new Brotherhood of Evil Mutants. He takes the name Peeper and joins Slither, Shocker, Lifter and Burner. After the group fails their first mission, Magneto abandons them.[1]

The group changed their name to Mutant Force and offered their services to the Mandrill and battled Defenders for him in his scheme to take over the U.S. Peeper became the field leader of the team, his powers allowing him to see his enemy's movements and plan for them. They battled Valkyrie, Wasp, Hellcat, Nighthawk, and Yellowjacket. Despite being successful at first in defeating the Defenders and capturing the female Defenders so that the Mandrill could enslave them, the group was defeated by the Defenders during their third encounter.[2] Mutant Force was arrested, but they bargained with the U.S. government and became their agents in exchange for their presidential pardon. Their tenure as government agents was short. They battled the Hulk, and later testified before a secret tribunal against the Defenders.[3] Peeper and Mutant Force were later employed by Professor Power's Secret Empire. Alongside Mutant Force and Mad Dog, he battled the Defenders once again.[4]

The Red Skull became the group's new sponsor. They form a terrorist group called the Resistants who pose as mutant rights advocates. To avoid being associated with their old criminal group, many of the members changed their identities. It was later revealed that the Resistants were one of many groups that was unknowingly controlled by the newly resurrected Red Skull. Peeper now called himself Occult and wore a helmet to hide his features. The group rescued the mutant Quill from the custody of the new Captain America, John Walker, and Battle Star.[5] The group fought Captain America again and claimed that their actions were all to oppose the Mutant Registration Act. They were soon joined by various new members, including Mentallo who posed as Think Tank. This time they came into conflict with Freedom Force,[volume & issue needed] a group who ironically enough, had been another incarnation of the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants, but had now become government agents.

The new Captain America, John Walker, lost control during a battle near Carson City, Nevada, and seemingly killed Occult along with several other members of the Resistants due to his recent violent streak as the result of the death of his parents at the hand of the Watchdogs, another group the Red Skull had formed to discredit the image of Captain America. During the fight, Quinn was seriously injured after hitting high tension power lines and was electrocuted and believed dead.[6]

These injuries may have been the cause of his later mental problems: in his next appearance Quinn would never speak.[7] Another mission as the Resistants was a failure as well, so the team changed its name back to Mutant Force, but by now Peeper was becoming afraid during combat. Mutant Force was defeated and Quinn, now calling himself Peepers, was imprisoned at The Cage.[8] Wolverine and the Beast met him and befriended Peepers, who by now was a stuttering, nervous mutant who had become mentally unbalanced. Peepers repeatedly stabbed a prisoner who tried to kill Beast at this time.[9] Shortly afterwards he was released and became a bartender at Satan's Circus, a bar for supervillains.[10]

Post M-Day

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Peepers is among the 198 mutants who retain their powers after M-Day, when the Scarlet Witch depowers most mutants on Earth.[11][12][13]

Messiah Complex

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In X-Men: Messiah Complex, Peepers is killed by Predator X.[14] However, he later appears alive as a resident of Murderworld in All-New, All-Different Marvel.[15]

Powers and abilities

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Peepers is a mutant with "telescopic eyesight" that enables him to see through solid objects as well as see things that are miles beyond normal vision range or too small for ordinary vision. He can also project beams of energy from his eyes.

Other versions

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An alternate universe variant of Peepers from Earth-58163 appears in House of M as a member of Magneto's mutant army.[16][17]

References

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  1. ^ Captain America Annual #4
  2. ^ Defenders #78-80
  3. ^ Defenders #87
  4. ^ Defenders #129-130
  5. ^ Captain America #343
  6. ^ Captain America #346
  7. ^ Captain America #426
  8. ^ New Warriors vol.2 #6
  9. ^ Wolverine vol.2 #164-165
  10. ^ Weapon X vol.2 #26-28
  11. ^ Decimation: House of M - the Day After #1
  12. ^ X-Men vol.2 #179
  13. ^ X-Men: The 198 #1-5
  14. ^ X-Factor vol.3 #26
  15. ^ Christopher Hastings (w), Alti Firmansyan and Gurihiru (p), Alti Firmansyan and Gurihiru (i), Rachelle Rosenberg and Gurihiru (col), VC's Clayton Cowles (let), Heather Antos (ed). The Unbelievable Gwenpool, vol. 1, no. 13 (8 March 2017). United States: Marvel Comics.
  16. ^ Civil War: House of M #1
  17. ^ Thunderbolts Vol 2 #11
[edit]
  • Peepers at Marvel.com
  • Peepers at The Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe