Kingpin (character)
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The '''Kingpin''' is a [[supervillain]] appearing in [[American comic book]]s published by [[Marvel Comics]]. The character was created by [[Stan Lee]] and [[John Romita Sr.]], and first appeared in ''[[The Amazing Spider-Man]]'' #50 ([[cover-date]]d July 1967). Introduced as an adversary of [[Spider-Man]], Fisk became the primary antagonist of [[Daredevil (Marvel Comics character)|Daredevil]] under [[Frank Miller]] beginning in 1981, and is regarded as one of that character's two archenemies, alongside [[Bullseye (Marvel Comics)|Bullseye]]. |
The '''Kingpin''' is a [[supervillain]] appearing in [[American comic book]]s published by [[Marvel Comics]]. The character was created by [[Stan Lee]] and [[John Romita Sr.]], and first appeared in ''[[The Amazing Spider-Man]]'' #50 ([[cover-date]]d July 1967). Introduced as an adversary of [[Spider-Man]], Fisk became the primary antagonist of [[Daredevil (Marvel Comics character)|Daredevil]] under [[Frank Miller]] beginning in 1981, and is regarded as one of that character's two archenemies, alongside [[Bullseye (Marvel Comics)|Bullseye]]. |
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'''Wilson Fisk''' presents himself publicly as a [[Businessperson|businessman]] and [[Philanthropy|philanthropist]] while running New York City's criminal underworld from behind that cover. He has no superpowers; most of his bulk is muscle rather than fat, and he has trained in unarmed combat disciplines including sumo wrestling. A network of lawyers, charitable donations, and carefully managed public appearances has allowed him to operate while law enforcement agencies from the NYPD to the FBI have tracked him for years without producing a successful prosecution. He is the father of [[Richard Fisk]], the former guardian of [[Echo (Marvel Comics)|Maya Lopez]], and was married first to [[Vanessa Fisk]] and later to [[Typhoid Mary (character)|Typhoid Mary]]. |
Kingpin is the persona of '''Wilson Fisk''', who presents himself publicly as a [[Businessperson|businessman]] and [[Philanthropy|philanthropist]] while running New York City's criminal underworld from behind that cover. He has no superpowers; most of his bulk is muscle rather than fat, and he has trained in unarmed combat disciplines including sumo wrestling. A network of lawyers, charitable donations, and carefully managed public appearances has allowed him to operate while law enforcement agencies from the NYPD to the FBI have tracked him for years without producing a successful prosecution. He is the father of [[Richard Fisk]], the former guardian of [[Echo (Marvel Comics)|Maya Lopez]], and was married first to [[Vanessa Fisk]] and later to [[Typhoid Mary (character)|Typhoid Mary]]. |
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Kingpin has been part of defining Daredevil and Spider-Man stories, including "[[Born Again (comics)|Born Again]]", the story most associated with the character's maturation into Daredevil's defining villain. In it, [[Karen Page]] sold Daredevil's secret identity to Fisk's organization, and Fisk responded by using political and legal contacts to disbar Matt Murdock, freeze his assets, and destroy his apartment before Murdock eventually recovered and exposed Fisk's criminal network. Other major storylines involving Fisk include the "Gang War" arc in ''The Amazing Spider-Man'' following "Born Again," the "Fall of the Kingpin" in ''Daredevil'' #300, and the "[[Back in Black (comics)|Back in Black]]" arc in which Spider-Man tracked him through the criminal underworld after a Fisk-ordered sniper attack left [[Aunt May]] hospitalized. His largest recent arc saw him elected [[Mayor of New York City]] on an anti-vigilante platform, subsequently outlawing superhero activity, before losing office during the "[[Devil's Reign]]''"'' event (2021–2022). While his primary antagonists are Daredevil and Spider-Man, Fisk has also come into conflict with the [[Punisher]], Echo, and street-level heroes including [[Luke Cage]], [[Iron Fist (character)|Iron Fist]], and [[Jessica Jones]]. |
Kingpin has been part of defining Daredevil and Spider-Man stories, including "[[Born Again (comics)|Born Again]]", the story most associated with the character's maturation into Daredevil's defining villain. In it, [[Karen Page]] sold Daredevil's secret identity to Fisk's organization, and Fisk responded by using political and legal contacts to disbar Matt Murdock, freeze his assets, and destroy his apartment before Murdock eventually recovered and exposed Fisk's criminal network. Other major storylines involving Fisk include the "Gang War" arc in ''The Amazing Spider-Man'' following "Born Again," the "Fall of the Kingpin" in ''Daredevil'' #300, and the "[[Back in Black (comics)|Back in Black]]" arc in which Spider-Man tracked him through the criminal underworld after a Fisk-ordered sniper attack left [[Aunt May]] hospitalized. His largest recent arc saw him elected [[Mayor of New York City]] on an anti-vigilante platform, subsequently outlawing superhero activity, before losing office during the "[[Devil's Reign]]''"'' event (2021–2022). While his primary antagonists are Daredevil and Spider-Man, Fisk has also come into conflict with the [[Punisher]], Echo, and street-level heroes including [[Luke Cage]], [[Iron Fist (character)|Iron Fist]], and [[Jessica Jones]]. |
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