Tri-Sentinel

Tri-Sentinel
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance The Amazing Spider-Man #329
Created by Erik Larsen
David Michelinie
In-story information
Species Sentinel

The Tri-Sentinel is a fictional robot who has appeared in the superhero comics of Marvel Comics.

History

The Tri-Sentinel's first appearance was in The Amazing Spider-Man #329, which followed on directly from the Acts of Vengeance storyline. In that storyline, several superheroes including Spider-Man, Captain America, Thor, Iron Man, and Cloak and Dagger came together to fight the Asgardian trickster god Loki. After Loki's defeat at the hands of Thor, Loki engaged in a final act of vengeance by creating the Tri-Sentinel by merging three Sentinels that belonged to Sebastian Shaw. The Tri-Sentinel was sent by Loki to attack a nuclear power plant and thereby destroy New York City. It was defeated by Spider-Man, who at that time possessed the powers of the Captain Universe entity.[1]

In a subsequent Spider-Man storyline, the villainous Life Foundation gathered the remains of the Tri-Sentinel and rebuilt it to serve them and provide security for their clients. When Carlton Drake turned it on, it rejected the Life Foundation's directives and reinstated Loki's. Spider-Man and Nova undertook to defeat the Tri-Sentinel. Nova used an aircraft-mounted magnetic cannon to slow it down, while Spider-Man penetrated to the inside of the Tri-Sentinel's armour, fought its automated internal defence systems, and opened a vibranium container at the Tri-Sentinel's core, causing the Tri-Sentinel to melt before reaching a heavily populated area.[2]

Powers and abilities

Tri-Sentinel's strength level is at Class 100 and it can fly. It can shoot bolts from its eyes, shoot tear gas from its hands, create energy fields to protect its interior and exterior, fire tentacles from its palms, and regenerate. Tri-Sentinel can override technological backup self-destruct devices. In the event that someone goes inside the Tri-Sentinel, it can use its internal components as projectiles.

References

  1. The Amazing Spider-Man #329
  2. The Amazing Spider-Man #351-352

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, March 25, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.