Wolverine

Wolverine (birth name: James Howlett; alias: Logan and Weapon X) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, mostly in association with the X-Men. He is a mutant who possesses animal-keen senses, enhanced physical capabilities, a powerful regenerative ability known as a healing factor, and three retractable claws in each hand. Wolverine has been depicted variously as a member of the X-Men, Alpha Flight, and the Avengers.

The character appeared in the last panel of The Incredible Hulk #180 before having a larger role in #181 (cover-dated Nov. 1974). He was created by Marvel editor-in-chief Roy Thomas, writer Len Wein, and Marvel art director John Romita Sr. Romita designed the character, although he was first drawn for publication by Herb Trimpe. Wolverine then joined a revamped version of the superhero team the X-Men, where eventually writer Chris Claremont and artist-writer John Byrne would play significant roles in the character's development. Artist Frank Miller collaborated with Claremont and helped revise the character with a four-part eponymous limited series from September to December 1982, which debuted Wolverine's catchphrase, "I'm the best there is at what I do, but what I do best isn't very nice."

Wolverine is typical of the many tough antiheroes that emerged in American popular culture after the Vietnam War; his willingness to use deadly force and his brooding nature became standard characteristics for comic book antiheroes by the end of the 1980s. As a result, the character became a fan favorite of the increasingly popular X-Men franchise, and has been featured in his own solo comic book series since 1988.

He has appeared in most X-Men adaptations, including animated television series, video games and the 2000-20 live-action 20th Century Fox X-Men film series, in which he is played by Hugh Jackman. Troye Sivan portrayed a younger version in the 2009 film X-Men Origins: Wolverine. The character is highly rated in many comics best-of lists, ranked #1 in Wizard magazine's 2008 Top 200 Comic Book Characters; 4th in Empire 's 2008 Greatest Comic Characters; and 4th on IGN's 2011 Top 100 Comic Book Heroes.

Iago PUC

 * Wolverine appears as a supporting character in Marvel: All New, All Different Chronicles and its Disney+-exclusive spin-off All New, All Different Mutants, voiced by Steve Blum.
 * Wolverine also appears in Marvel's Spider-Man: Webbed Champion, voiced again by Blum. He first makes a silent appearance in "City of Heroes, Part 4: More Than Human", kn which he and his fellow X-Men congratulate Spider-Man for preserving the peace between Mutants and Inhumans by protecting Kit Renner the Werefox. He later makes a speaking appearance in "What Girls Are Made Of", on which he accompanies his fellow X-Men on stopping the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants from breaking Magneto out of prison, while Kitty Pryde / Shadowcat goes with Mary Jane Watson / Tigra stop Mystique. In "Road to the Legendary Universes", Wolverine teams up with Spider-Man, Ms. Marvel, and Groot on the hunt for Man-Wolf. Wolverine later appears alongside his fellow X-Men in "Legendary Universes, Part 6: Ultimate Alliance", among the many heroes who join the battle against the Regent and his army of Insectoids from the Negative Zone.
 * He also has a non-speaking role in the show's follow-up TV movie A Marvel Christmas Carol. He is first seen battling alongside the superheroes against Frost Giants in New York. Later, during Cloak's act as the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come/Future and Dagger's second act as the "Soul Chain" and their show of an alternate future (which would occur had Franklin Todd not changed his ways), Logan is shown with Drax the Destroyer digging a grave for Rocket and Hulk to bury Todd. Later in the end, he is shown enjoying the Christmas party at F.E.A.S.T. along with the featured heroes.
 * Wolverine returns in the second follow-up TV movie Marvel's Superhero Adventures: Infinity War, voiced again by Steve Blum.
 * Wolverine returns in the show's Disney+ sequel miniseries Marvel's All-Star Multiverse, voiced again by Steve Blum.

Moon Silvight

 * In one of his many Video Game appearances, Kazuhiro Yamaji and Steven Blum would voice him in Japanese and English, once again, with Hugh Jackman (particularly in his Live-Action Old Man Logan form) occasionally voicing him as a Premier Skin/Alter-Ego in Fighters such as Disney vs. Capcom: Warriors of Weirdmageddon.
 * Yamaji, Blum and Jackman would also do the same in one of his other appearances as well.

Joint ideas

 * TBD