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* In the ''[[Iron Man: Armored Adventures]]'' episode "Extremis," a Life Model Decoy of Nick Fury was used to confront ex-S.H.I.E.L.D. Agent [[Mallen (comics)|Mallen]] and ended up destroyed.
* In the ''[[Iron Man: Armored Adventures]]'' episode "Extremis," a Life Model Decoy of Nick Fury was used to confront ex-S.H.I.E.L.D. Agent [[Mallen (comics)|Mallen]] and ended up destroyed.


* The Life Model Decoys appear in the ''[[Ultimate Spider-Man (TV series)|Ultimate Spider-Man]]'' episode "The Man-Wolf." Here, they are used to train Spider-Man and his team and are able to roughly duplicate the powers of whoever they are disguised as. In "Game Over," Spider-Man's team fights standard Life Model Decoy in the first round and deadlier LMD models in the second round. This training was to prepare Spider-Man's team to take on [[Arcade (Marvel Comics)|Arcade]]. When Captain America and Spider-Man arrive in Madripoor, they find the entrance to Arcade's lair where Wolverine is fighting LMD ninjas. They discover Arcade had stolen some of S.H.I.E.L.D.'s Life Model Decoys when the heroes defeated their LMD counterparts. Arcade then unleashes multiple Hulk Life Model Decoys, which are defeated by Captain America and Wolverine.
* The Life Model Decoys appear in the ''[[Ultimate Spider-Man (TV series)|Ultimate Spider-Man]]'' episode "The Man-Wolf." Here, they are used to train Spider-Man and his team and are able to roughly duplicate the powers of whoever they are disguised as. In "Game Over," Spider-Man's team fights standard Life Model Decoy in the first round and deadlier Life Model Decoy models in the second round. This training was to prepare Spider-Man's team to take on [[Arcade (Marvel Comics)|Arcade]]. When Captain America and Spider-Man arrive in Madripoor, they find the entrance to Arcade's lair where Wolverine is fighting Life Model Decoy ninjas. They discover that Arcade had stolen some of S.H.I.E.L.D.'s Life Model Decoys when the heroes defeated their Life Model Decoy counterparts. Arcade then unleashes multiple Hulk Life Model Decoys, which are defeated by Captain America and Wolverine. Captain America, Spider-Man, and Wolverine leave to the next area when Arcade unleashes multiple Red Hulk Life Model Decoys on them.


===Film===
===Film===

Revision as of 20:01, 26 December 2013

A Life Model Decoy (frequently known by the abbreviation LMD) is one type of the fictional androids appearing in comic books published by Marvel Comics.

History

A Life Model Decoy (or LMD for short) is a S.H.I.E.L.D.-designed robot that duplicates all outward aspects of a living person. The owner can see through, speak through, and control everything the Life Model Decoy does. Nick Fury's Life Model Decoys are probably the most common in the Marvel Universe.

It is designed to function as an exact body double for VIPs. Their design is such that they mimic the subject's outer appearance (i.e., fingerprints, hair, all details of the skin), speech patterns, scent, iris and retina patterns, body language, thought patterns (to fool telepaths), and any other biological indicators. Aside from any invasive procedure or strong EMP, they are indistinguishable from the original.

LMDs first appeared in Strange Tales #135 (August 1965), in which the spy agency S.H.I.E.L.D. created LMDs of agent Nick Fury to use as decoys for an attack by HYDRA.

Powers and abilities

As an android, a Life-Model Decoy possesses all of the various superhuman attributes:

  • Superhuman Strength - An LMD is super-strong and possesses strength beyond the human limit.
  • Superhuman Speed - An LMD can run and move at speeds that are beyond human physical limits.
  • Superhuman Durability - An LMD's construction makes them very durable.
  • Superhuman Stamina - An LMD can exert itself well beyond a normal human's limit.
  • Superhuman Agility - An LMD's agility, balance and coordination are enhanced to levels that are beyond natural human physical limits.
  • Quick Repair - Nanites working within the LMD allow for self-repair similar to an enhanced Healing Factor.

Known Life Model Decoys

There were some known Life Model Decoys that were modeled after different people. Here are the ones that were seen:

  • Amber D’Alexis - The Life Model Decoy of the mother of Mikel Fury.[4]
  • Ant-Man III - A Life Model Decoy created by Father.[7]
  • Chuck - A Life Model Decoy who was the driver for Red Hulk and Annie. He was destroyed by Black Fog.[10]
  • Deadpool - Someone had created a bunch of Deadpool Life Model Decoys that attacked Deadpool.[11]
  • Joanie - A Life Model Decoy created by A.I.M. to infiltrate the youth culture in the 1970s. She later became an ally of Dimitrios.[15]
  • Maria Hill - Had a Life Model Decoy during her tenure as the Director of S.H.I.E.L.D.
  • Max Fury - An enhanced S.H.I.E.L.D. Life Model Decoy of Nick Fury that was stolen by Scorpio.[16] It later took on the name of Max Fury when it was recruited into the Shadow Council.[17]
  • Nick Fury - Nick Fury had a lot of Life Model Decoys which were common in the Marvel Universe.[18]
  • Thunderbolt Ross - A Life Model Decoy of General Thaddeus "Thunderbolt" Ross, which replaced the General to cover up his transformations into the Red Hulk.[25]
  • Tony Stark - He used a number of Life Model Decoys.
  • Valentina Rychenko - [26]

Other versions

Heroes Reborn

In the "Heroes Reborn" universe, Captain America was brainwashed into quietly living in the suburbs, for his protection, and his wife and son were LMDs. Nick Fury used an LMD for the captain during secret missions.

Livewires

The protagonists from Project Livewire are descended from LMD technology and Mannite technology. It turns out that the main antagonist of the series are rogue Nick Fury LMDs as well.

In other media

Television

  • The Life Model Decoys appear in the Ultimate Spider-Man episode "The Man-Wolf." Here, they are used to train Spider-Man and his team and are able to roughly duplicate the powers of whoever they are disguised as. In "Game Over," Spider-Man's team fights standard Life Model Decoy in the first round and deadlier Life Model Decoy models in the second round. This training was to prepare Spider-Man's team to take on Arcade. When Captain America and Spider-Man arrive in Madripoor, they find the entrance to Arcade's lair where Wolverine is fighting Life Model Decoy ninjas. They discover that Arcade had stolen some of S.H.I.E.L.D.'s Life Model Decoys when the heroes defeated their Life Model Decoy counterparts. Arcade then unleashes multiple Hulk Life Model Decoys, which are defeated by Captain America and Wolverine. Captain America, Spider-Man, and Wolverine leave to the next area when Arcade unleashes multiple Red Hulk Life Model Decoys on them.

Film

Video games

References

  1. ^ a b Hulk Vol. 2 #37
  2. ^ a b c Hulk Vol. 2 #29
  3. ^ Hulk Vol. 2 #38
  4. ^ Wolverine/Nick Fury: Scorpio Rising #1
  5. ^ Hulk Vol. 2 #30.1
  6. ^ Parker Hounds "Hulk" with an Army of Adversaries
  7. ^ Secret Avengers #32
  8. ^ Fear Itself: Black Widow #1
  9. ^ Fear Itself #7.1
  10. ^ Hulk Vol. 2 #33
  11. ^ Hulk Vol. 2 #14
  12. ^ Iron Man: The Iron Age #2
  13. ^ Iron Man vol.1 #17 (September 1969)
  14. ^ Iron Man and Philosophy: Facing the Stark Reality
  15. ^ Avengers A.I. #2
  16. ^ Defenders #46
  17. ^ Secret Avengers #1
  18. ^ Marvel Graphic Novels and Related Publications: An Annotated Guide to Comics, Prose Novels, Children's Books, Articles, Criticism and Reference Works, 1965-2005
  19. ^ Villains for Hire #1
  20. ^ Captain America #108
  21. ^ Captain America #106
  22. ^ Captain America and the Struggle of the Superhero: Critical Essays
  23. ^ US Icons and Iconicity
  24. ^ Avengers #145
  25. ^ Incredible Hulk #600
  26. ^ X-Force #110
  27. ^ Teasers & Cameos (The Avengers)