The Collective Man (Sun, Chang, Ho, Lin, and Han Tao-Yu) is a Chinese superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The Collective Man is actually an identity shared by the Tao-Yu brothers, a set of quintuplets. They possess the mutant power to merge into one body, which variously possesses the collective abilities of all five men or all the people of China. The brothers also share a psychic/spiritual link that allows them to telepathically communicate and teleport to one another.

Collective Man
Collective Man as depicted in All-New Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe #2 (February 2006). Art by Salvador Larroca (penciller), Danny Miki (inker), and Chris Sotomayor (colorist).
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceThe Incredible Hulk vol. 2 #250 (Aug. 1980)
Created byBill Mantlo
Sal Buscema
In-story information
Alter egoSun, Chang, Ho, Lin, and Han Tao-Yu
SpeciesHuman Mutants
Team affiliationsPeople's Defense Force
The 198
Mutant Liberation Front
3-Peace
Death's Champions
AbilitiesAbility to merge into a single being possessing five times the physical and mental ability of a single Tao-Yu brother
Ability to temporarily increase these powers by mentally drawing upon outside energy, while in a collective state
Ability to communicate telepathically and teleport to each other via psychic/spiritual-link
Infectious replication
Assimilative size alteration.

Publication history

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The Collective Man first appeared in The Incredible Hulk vol. 2 #250 (Aug. 1980), and was created by Bill Mantlo and Sal Buscema.

Fictional character biography

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The five Tao-Yu brothers are Chinese farmers who were taken into government custody after their mutant abilities manifested and trained to be government agents. They first appear as enemies of the Hulk before participating in the "Contest of Champions" event as a soldier of Death.[1]

When their superiors in the Chinese military prevent them from visiting their dying mother, Mary, the brothers rebel and battle the god Ho-Ti, who was apparently working with the government. Ho remained to fight the god, but Ho-Ti saw the futility of the battle and surrendered. After the brothers discover how China had mistreated their other mutant citizens, they join the revolutionary group 3-Peace to fight the Mutant Liberation Front and the nationalistic China Force.[2]

Later, the Collective Man, now restored to full power, is mystically altered by the god Marduk and transformed into a gigantic, deformed form. He then battles Citizen V and the V-Battalion before exploding when they puncture his skin. However, Collective Man survives and gains the additional ability to clone himself. He later battles the X-Men on behalf of the Chinese government when they attempt to free Xorn from Chinese custody.

The brothers retain their powers following M-Day, when the Scarlet Witch depowers most mutants on Earth, and joins the Xavier Institute as part of the 198.[3]

The Collective Man, as part of China's version of the People's Defense Force, join The Mighty Avengers and other assembled Avengers teams in defeating The Unspoken, an exiled Inhuman king seeking to enslave the Earth.[4]

Months later, the Collective Man invades San Francisco's organized crime circuit,[5] while its protector, Wolverine[6] was incapacitated by a "mutant flu" bioweapon released as part of the X-Men: Quarantine storyline. He engaged and was defeated by a group of "substitute" X-Men consisting of Angel, Storm, Dazzler, Pixie, and Northstar.

Collective Man and the People's Defense Force meet Crystal and her team of All-New Inhumans as they investigate a mysterious "skyspear" in China. The "skyspear" causes him to lose his powers and split into his quintuplet form. Flint, not aware that he is depowered, attacks and nearly kills one of the brothers.[7]

Collective Man later represents the Chinese government and attends Black Panther's meeting in the Eden Room of Avengers Mountain.[8]

Powers and abilities

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The five Tao-Yu brothers possess the mutant ability to fuse into a superhuman physical form. It is possible for only a few brothers to merge into this collective being, however, they prefer to merge all at once. The Collective Man is capable of further increasing these traits to vast levels by drawing power from the collective Chinese population, but this is physically draining and could potentially kill him.[9]

The brothers also possess a psi/spiritual link that lets them communicate telepathically and teleport to each other's location. Sometime later they displayed the ability of self-spawning, where the brothers in separate or unified form can convert others into collective man clones who follow their every directive.[10] These overwritten clones can also fuse into the prime Collective Man to become a massive giant, pooling all their variable physical abilities into it.[11]

This turning ability seems to have no discernible limits as he/they were capable of converting and assimilating near the entire population of China to become a continent spanning kaiju.[12] But maintaining his enlarged form is also strenuous; prolonged use causes their construct to collapse due to the strain.

In addition, they have also been shown to be decently skilled martial artists in peak human physical condition.

References

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  1. ^ Zachary, Brandon (July 19, 2021). "Marvel's First Contest Of Champions Was Its ORIGINAL Civil War". CBR. Retrieved October 6, 2024.
  2. ^ X-Force Annual #3 (Oct. 1994). Marvel Comics.
  3. ^ Civil War: X-Men #1. Marvel Comics.
  4. ^ The Mighty Avengers #28. Marvel Comics.
  5. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #531. Marvel Comics.
  6. ^ Wolverine: Manifest Destiny
  7. ^ All-new Inhumans #5-6. Marvel Comics.
  8. ^ Avengers vol. 8 #11. Marvel Comics.
  9. ^ Marvel Super-Heroes Contest of Champions #3. Marvel Comics.
  10. ^ X-Men #159 (Sept. 2004). Marvel Comics.
  11. ^ X-Men #160 (Oct. 2004). Marvel Comics.
  12. ^ Citizen V and the V-Battalion: the Everlasting #2 (May, 2002). Marvel Comics.
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