Comics

7 Marvel Characters Who Were Best in the Silver Age

Marvel Comics has become a juggernaut in the entertainment world. The Marvel Cinematic Universe brought them to masses, using decades of comic history to inform their films. Looking at the history of the House of Ideas, there’s one era that made them into the titan they are right now: the Silver Age of comics. This era began in 1956, with DC Comics’ Showcase #4, bringing more sci-fi into superhero comics, and taking them in new directions. Marvel joined their distinguished competition in 1961 with Fantastic Four #1, a book by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby that grabbed fans and never let go.

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The publisher’s greatest characters were born during this period, their adventures molding them into the fan-favorite legends they’ve become. As great as the intervening years have been for many, there are some who were objectively at their best in the Silver Age. These seven Marvel characters were at their greatest in the Silver Age, their early adventures overshadowing what came next.

7) Mister Fantastic

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Reed Richards is Marvel’s greatest genius and has been changed by the years of adventures he’s had with the Fantastic Four. Mister Fantastic in 2026 is one of the greatest leaders in comics history, but he’s not looked at as some amazing hero; he’s more of a pragmatic problem solver who goes too far. However, in the Silver Age, he was at his finest. He was the perfect American Cold Warrior, a man who used his intellect to make the world a better place. He was the dad, the leader, and one of the most beloved characters of the era.

6) Kang the Conqueror

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Kang the Conqueror is one of the Avengers’ greatest villains. He was tailor-made for the Silver Age, a hyperbolic villain who ranted and raged, throwing complex but kind of stupid plans against Earth’s Mightiest Heroes, making massive mistakes, and then losing, all while swearing revenge. Kang is still a great character, but the character was defined by the way that writers like Stan Lee and Roy Thomas wrote in the Silver Age. He’s the definition of over the top, even more so than Silver Age Doctor Doom in my opinion and that’s saying something. He belongs in that kind of bombastic era, when his brand of campy villainy was the rule of the day.

5) Hank Pym

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Hank Pym was one of the first superheroes, his mantle of Ant-Man fitting into the sci-fi horror-type stories that Marvel was still putting out in the early days of their Silver Age push. Pym was able to create Pym Particles, allowing him shrink and grow, as well as ways to communicate with insects, wings for flight, and weapons that fired energy “stings”. Much like Reed Richards, he was another perfect American Cold Warrior, a scientist on the cutting edge using good old-fashioned American gumption to save the day and get the girl. He rose to his highest level during this period, becoming one of the most important Avengers ever. Since then, he’s fallen from his high perch in the superhero community, some of his complexities ruining the simple science hero he used to be.

4) Rick Jones

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The Silver Age was still the era of the sidekick, and Marvel created one of the best. Rick Jones would first appear in The Incredible Hulk #1, a teen beatnik who decided that a bombing range was the best place to honk his bobo (I’m so sorry for that). He’d play a huge role in the creation of the Avengers, becoming their sidekick and being considered a member of the team, and even put on Bucky’s costume to work with Captain America. He was one of the cornerstones of the Silver Age Marvel Universe, but has lost nearly all of his importance in the modern day. He was left behind by superheroes, but was one of the best parts of Silver Age Marvel.

3) The Thing

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The Fantastic Four were generally better in the Silver Age, but this goes doubly for the Thing. Ben Grimm became a monster helping his friend Reed Richards get into space, his new life in the Fantastic Four quite different from that of his compatriots. In the Silver Age, he was dealing with all of this for the first time, his stories reaching a level of poignancy that made him a legend. Lee and Kirby’s Ben was an amazing character; he was funny, he was tough, and he was tragic. The beginning of his love with Alicia Masters was beautiful, and watching him learning to enjoy his new life at times was a joy that could never be replicated in any other era.

2) Iron Man

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Iron Man has become one of Marvel’s most popular characters, and many fans out there would say that his best time came because of the MCU. However, comic fans know this isn’t the case; it was the Silver Age. Tony Stark slotted perfectly in the Cold War American exceptionalism that was one of the main ingredients of the early Marvel Universe. The arms dealing engineer who became one of the world’s greatest heroes worked so well in the Silver Age, a redemption story of sorts that created a film icon. The world was way simpler back in the ’60s, so a weapon designing billionaire fighting communists could be a hero and no one would ask any questions. He was the perfect character for the time, something that would never happen again.

1) Spider-Man

Amazing Fantasy 15
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Spider-Man is Marvel’s most relatable hero, something that was baked into the character’s DNA. When Peter Parker got bitten by radioactive spider, teens weren’t often the stars of the story. However, Stan Lee and Steve Ditko decided to create a character that was basically the reader โ€“ a lower middle class, nerdy kid โ€“ and gave him the power to become everything he wanted to be. He became a cultural phenomena in the Silver Age, the character appealing to readers who saw themselves reflected in the pages of the comic. There’s a reason Marvel has gone back to the teen Spider-Man well so many times; it’s the purest representation of the character and when he was at his best (and I say that as someone who loves adult Spider-Man more than teen Spidey).

What Marvel heroes do you think were better in the Silver Age? Leave a comment in the comment section below and join the conversation on the ComicBook Forums!