Ghost Rider Is The Marvel Universe's New Most Dangerous Weapon

Ghost Rider Is The Marvel Universe's New Most Dangerous Weapon


Warning: contains spoilers for Ghost Rider #17!

Ghost Rider has the potential to become the Marvel Universe’s most dangerous weapon, as the notorious Weapons Plus program seeks to harness his great powers for evil ends in Ghost Rider #17, part two of the "Weapons of Vengeance” storyline, which features the Spirit of Vengeance teaming up with Wolverine.

Ghost Rider #17 – written by Benjamin Percy, drawn by Geoff Shaw, colored by Rain Beredo and lettered by Travis Lanham – has Johnny Blaze and Wolverine teaming up to uncover a special Weapons Plus facility, one that specializes in Hellfire research, after unknowingly coming into contact with it years before while protecting a young boy named Bram.

The Weapon Plus Program is Bad News


The “Weapons of Vengeance" storyline, which began in Ghost Rider #16, reveals that Ghost Rider and Wolverine once worked together to save Bram, a boy being menaced by a supernatural entity. In the present, the two check the facility Bram was kept at, and after discovering the child was subject to torture, Blaze transforms into the Ghost Rider. Using his Penance Stare, Ghost Rider extracts information from the facility’s groundskeeper, learning that the child is being targeted by a governmental agency, rather than a demon.. Ghost Rider and Wolverine then set off to Utah, where it becomes clear who they are after: Weapon Plus.

Ghost Rider is Irresistible to Weapon Plus


The Weapon Plus program has a long history in the Marvel Universe, stretching back to its earliest days. Its purpose is to create super-soldiers to fight in wars –namely against mutants. The first product of the Weapon Plus program, or Weapon One, was Captain America. Other products of Weapon Plus include Man-Thing, Luke Cage and of course, Wolverine, who was designated Weapon X. While these various incarnations of the Weapon Plus program have appeared throughout Marvel history, Weapon Plus was not revealed until Grant Morrison’s seminal New X-Men. The Weapon Plus program’s legacy proliferates the Marvel Universe – and now it has set its sights on Ghost Rider.

A being as powerful as Ghost Rider has undeniable appeal to the Weapon Plus program, and his ability to control Hellfire ups the ante even more. Hellfire is a potent weapon, and if Weapon Plus was to find a way to control it for their own ends, it could spell bad news for both mutants and humanity; very few can withstand the heat of Hellfire. Ghost Rider’s Penance Stare could also be effectively weaponized as well–in this issue it was used to extract information. The Weapon Plus program has a long history of experimenting and torturing its subjects; a modified Penance Stare could prove useful in this area too.

The Weapon Plus’ program’s interest in Ghost Rider comes at one of the worst times for mutants. Orchis, an anti-mutant extremist organization, launched an all-out assault at the Hellfire Gala, causing the Fall of Krakoa and leading to a new mutant Diaspora. Nations around the world, including Canada, are rejecting mutants once more, threatening to hunt them done. The Weapon Plus program, created to fight mutants, has now set its sights on Ghost Rider, seeking to weaponize his Hellfire powers. If Weapon Plus, or Orchis, obtained this ability, the balance of power could shift even further in an dangerous direction for mutantkind worldwide.

Ghost Rider #17 is available now from Marvel Comics!

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Marvel Just Introduced a Whole New Kind of Ghost Rider

Marvel Just Introduced a Whole New Kind of Ghost Rider



Earth's Mightiest Heroes have had no shortage of terrifying threats to deal with as of late, most of all, that of Mephisto and his Council of Red. As Mephisto's army terrorizes their predecessors throughout history, the Avengers of today have embarked on a race through history to save those very same heroes. When it seems as though the demon finally has them cornered, a new figure emerges from the past to stave off the impending onslaught. As much as the Avengers would like to think they've come to save one of their own, the Samurai of Vengeance is actually the one who saves the day.

Avengers #58 (by Jason Aaron, Javier Garron, David Curiel and VC's Cory Petit) finds the eponymous team separated in the middle of feudal Japan before being beset on all sides by time-displaced minions of Mephisto. Before Captain America and the Avengers' most recent addition Nighthawk can come to any harm, this era's Ghost Rider, or rather Ghost Ronin, emerges to cut down their assailants. His presence is short-lived on that particular battlefield, as he quickly dissipates before appearing to stop the Viking ship headed straight for Namor and Echo. After yet another gruesome disappearing act, the Samurai of Vengeance has finally cleared the way for the Avengers to reassemble so he can point them in the right direction.


It turns out that the cursed swords which have kept the once deceased Ghost Ronin fighting are more than just the source of his infernal abilities. He tells the Avengers that the swords are also aware of their mission as if the blades had a mind of their own. This isn't too far off from the most well-known Ghost Rider, Johnny Blaze, whose own Spirit of Vengeance came to him in the form of his Hellish motorcycle. There is a major difference between the two though, the spirits who speak to the Samurai of Vengeance seem to have a benevolent, almost advisor-like relationship with the one who wields them.

This doesn't just separate the Ghost Ronin from the likes of Johnny Blaze or Daniel Ketch, but nearly every other iteration of the Ghost Rider that fans have seen. Even the Ghost Rider of the Hyborian Age was more analogous to his modern-day counterparts. Rather than seeking out vengeance or any sort of infernal retribution, this version of the character is only concerned with protecting the world around him and helping those who would do the same. In spite of whatever menace it may invoke, his cool blue flames are better suited to illuminate the Avengers' path than they are to burn away the stain of Mephisto.


This doesn't mean that Ghost Ronin isn't suited for the fight, but that the insight he provides the Avengers is a far more potent weapon for them to carry than his cursed blades ever could be. The Samurai of Vengeance doesn't know how they will get there, but he knows that the heroes and their enemy are headed towards the genesis of their legacies. The Stone Age Avengers, the very first of Earth's Mightiest Heroes, are Mephisto's ultimate target, and with Ghost Ronin's help, the heroes now have a trail to follow.

The wandering Samurai of Vengeance may seem anathema to what the Ghost Rider is supposed to be, yet his subversion of those expectations is exactly what the Avengers were in need of. By taking so many steps away from the prototypical Ghost Rider, Ghost Ronin hasn't just redefined what a Spirit of Vengeance can be, but what the legacies in the Marvel Universe are capable of. Despite any aesthetic changes or shifts in the personality that is expected, Ghost Ronin is still very much the kind of infernal hero that the Avengers are used to fighting alongside. Hopefully, for the sake of the universe, it will be the last time any of them have to.

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