The Unpredictable Spider-Shock


Basic Information

Basic overview of personal info and abilities

CHARACTER HISTORY

A more detailed background about Yishai.

Earth-1995

Basic Information on Earth-1995 and it's more notable residents and organizations.

Basic Information


( NOTE: Art may be semi-outdated, descriptions have better information. Done by Honey_Lychee on fiver )Basic InformationNAME: Yishai Yamada-WinfieldALIAS:- Street-Spider (1979–1980)- Spider-Man (1980–1983)- Spider-Shock (1983–Present)AGE: 20 (Born January 14, 1964)HOMETOWN: Coney Island, Kings County, New York, United StatesGENDER / PRONOUNS / ORIENTATION:Male, He/Him, Bisexual (No Lean)SPECIES: Radiated Mutant (Artificial X-Gene + Radioactive Spider Bite)ETHNICITY:African-American / Japanese-AmericanOCCUPATION: Superhero, College Student (Optical & Electrical Engineer), Musician


AppearanceHEIGHT: 6’1Build: Lean but athletic, mesomorph frame.HAIR: Jet black, medium-length, a fusion of a male kiss curl and a Jheri curl, with tips dyed dark blue and white.*EYES: Dark brown with faintly visible blue veins due to his bio-electric mutation.

PERSONALITY:Yishai is a deeply layered individual, shaped by his life experiences, his dual identity as Spider-Shock, and the burdens he carries as both a hero and a young man trying to navigate his personal ambitions and responsibilities. His personality is a blend of compassion, sarcasm, and unpredictability.Coming from a initial childhood of not being able to make friends, caught in the middle of the giant shift in the culture of yesteryear. He is a naturally sociable person, demeanor generally laid-back and approachable, often characterized by a mix of friendly sarcasm and dry wit. While he enjoys engaging with people and is isn't a full on recluse, he also values moments of solitude. These quiet moments allow him to recharge, especially after the emotional and physical toll of being Spider-Shock.As Spider-Shock, his extroverted side takes center stage, well other than in music. He leans into more snarkier quips, surreal humor, and unpredictable behavior, a perfect way to throw his enemies off balance. It sometimes can be so absurd and often baffling to those around him, reflecting both his creative mind and his tendency to mask his insecurities with levity. However, when the situation turns dire, Yishai drops the jokes entirely, becoming focused and determined to protect those who depend on him.At his core, Yishai is a compassionate individual who fights for the rights and safety of others, whether they are mutants, anomalies, or humans. He possesses a strong moral compass, deeply believing in the ideals of justice and protection, but his approach is distinctly his own. Unlike his predecessor, Peter Parker, Yishai operates with a rougher edge, often questioning the very rules and ideals that Spider-Man has traditionally upheld.One of Yishai’s greatest internal struggles is his growing sense of doubt. Despite his accomplishments, he often feels inadequate compared to Peter, whose legacy casts a long shadow. He admires Peter as a mentor but resents the burdens left for him to shoulder, especially since Peter retired to live a quieter, more fulfilled life. Yishai feels conflicted—while he believes Peter deserves peace, the weight of taking on his unfinished battles while balancing his music career, relationships, and education sometimes feels overwhelming.This resentment occasionally feeds into a more rebellious and cynical attitude, pushing Yishai to question the world around him and even his role as a hero. While he follows the no-kill rule, he is conflicted about its efficacy, especially after experiencing personal losses. The deaths of his best friend and older sister within a span of two years have deeply shaken his faith in the no-kill philosophy, leaving him wrestling with whether mercy always serves justice.Yishai’s creativity shines not just in his music but also in his fighting style and problem-solving as Spider-Shock. He thrives on unpredictability, using chaotic and unconventional methods to keep opponents guessing. His combat style is dynamic, blending offensive capoeira and defensive judo with improvisational tactics that make him a nightmare for even the most skilled adversaries.For example, if knocked down, Yishai will kick at his attacker on the way down, exploiting every opportunity to gain the upper hand. His movements are deliberately erratic—when an opponent expects him to slide under their legs, he’ll leap over them instead, or when cornered, he might use his bio-electric powers in ways no one anticipates. This adaptability is one of his greatest strengths, but it also makes him harder for allies to predict or coordinate with in high-stakes battles.While Yishai’s bravado and confidence often inspire those around him, they also mask deeper insecurities. His need to prove himself—to Peter, to his city, and to himself—can lead to moments of arrogance, where he takes unnecessary risks or underestimates his own vulnerabilities.Yishai also struggles with anger and frustration, especially when he feels powerless or when others challenge his ideals. Though he is generally composed, he has a semi-bad temper that can surface when pushed to his limits. In these moments, he becomes more aggressive and less rational, allowing his emotions to cloud his judgment.His emotional struggles extend beyond anger. Yishai often dwells on past failures, replaying them in his mind and questioning whether he could have done more. This tendency to live in the past ties directly into his self-doubt, creating a cycle of guilt and overcompensation that sometimes drives him to neglect his own well-being.Yishai’s rebellious streak is both a strength and a flaw. He is unafraid to challenge authority, break the rules, or take unconventional paths if he believes it serves the greater good. However, this same attitude sometimes puts him at odds with other heroes or his own moral compass.His more extreme views occasionally conflict with the responsibilities of being Spider-Shock. For example, while he believes in standing up for the marginalized, he sometimes struggles to balance this with the restraint and diplomacy required of a hero. This internal conflict fuels much of his growth as he navigates what it truly means to be a protector in an imperfect world.Yishai is fiercely protective of his friends, family, and teammates. His losses have made him hyper-aware of the fragility of life, and he will go to great lengths to ensure no one else close to him has to die. However, this protectiveness can verge on overprotectiveness, causing tension in his relationships.For instance, Yishai may try to shield his allies by keeping them out of danger, even if it means pushing them away or taking on battles alone. This has occasionally led to conflict with those who see his actions as overbearing or mistrustful, though his intentions always stem from a place of love.


SPIDER-POWERED TRAITSEnhanced Reflexes (Jolt Reflex): Danger perception triggers a physical "jolt" through his nervous system, sharpening his reactions.-More precise in close-range threats than Peter Parker's "Spider-Sense" but requires intense focus.Wall-Crawling (Electrostatic Grip): Adheres to surfaces by generating a controlled electrostatic charge.- Works better on metallic or conductive surfaces.Organic Webbing (Now In Three Flavors!) :Biologically produced, sticky, elastic, and semi-conductive.- Electrified Webbing: Stuns foes or causes disruptions in electronics.- Hardened Webbing: Creates defensive barriers or binds stronger enemies.- Conductor Webs: Facilitates long-distance electrical attacks.Drawback: Excessive use drains metabolism, leading to dehydration and weakness.Enhanced Strength and Agility: Can lift up to 10 tons, leap several stories, and perform high-speed acrobatic feats.
*- Movements are explosive and improvisational, ideal for chaotic combat situations.
*MUTANT DOMINANT ABILITIESElectrokinesis (Core Power): Generates and manipulates bio-electric energy for offense, defense, and mobility- Bolts of electricity and electrified strikes for combat.- electrical shields for repelling attacks.- Enhanced leaps and movements via bursts of energy.Drawbacks:- Overuse leads to nerve pain and fatigue.- Extremely less effective in wet environments.Bio-Electrical Healing: Repairs minor internal injuries and alleviates muscle fatigue.- Not effective for severe wounds or external damage.Electrical Sense (Variant of Spider-Sense): Detects electrical signals in living beings and machinery, enhancing combat awareness and stealth detection.- Predicts movements by reading nerve impulses in close combat.- Full-body perception allows sensations from anywhere on his body, even his feet.Energy Surges (Overclocking): Temporarily boosts strength, reflexes, and speed using concentrated energy.Drawback: Highly taxing and leaves him fatigued after prolonged use.Limitations:Requires careful aim; overcompensation can result in overshooting his target or collateral damage.Drains energy reserves faster than regular web-swinging.

PHYSICAL CAPABILITIESStrength- Can punch through reinforced walls or overpower superhuman foes.- Capable of holding up collapsing structures in emergencies.Speed and Reflexes-Runs at 30-35 mph in short bursts and reacts to gunfire or melee attacks with ease.- Reflexes enhanced by electrical sense, allowing precise counterattacks.Durability- Resilient to blunt force and minor electrical attacks.- Bio-electric healing accelerates recovery from internal injuries but doesn’t replace medical care for severe damage.Stamina-High endurance for short, high-intensity engagements but drains quickly in prolonged battles.Agility and Acrobatics-Exceptional at improvisational movement and combat, using capoeira-inspired spins and flips.Easily navigates urban environments with wall-crawling and charged leaps.Signature Moves-Static Shockwave: Releases an omnidirectional pulse, stunning all enemies within range.-Energy Whiplash: Electrifies webbing to create a long-distance whip-like attack.-Charged Vault: Uses electrical bursts to enhance leaps, dodging or closing gaps with explosive speed.GENERAL STRENGTHS AND WEAKNESSESStrengths-Unpredictability: Chaotic fighting style and hybrid powers keep enemies off-balance.-Versatility: Wide range of powers allows adaptability in stealth, combat, or tactical situations.-Close-Combat Precision: Superior reflexes and nerve-reading abilities make him a nightmare in melee confrontations.Weaknesses:* - Energy Drain: Overuse of electrical abilities and webbing exhausts his metabolism quickly.* -Emotional Instability: Stress amplifies power volatility, risking collateral damage.* -Vulnerability to Piercing Attacks: Lean frame makes him susceptible to bullets or bladed weapons.*

Omega-Level Abilities Overview (A Genetic Anomaly):Yishai Yamada-Winfield, known as Spider-Shock, is the multiversal outlier that shouldn’t exist —but refuses not to. He was originally on track to become the successor to Spider-Man, handpicked and mentored by Peter Parker himself. Bitten by a genetically-altered spider at 15, he rose quickly, balancing street-level heroism with the heavy weight of expectation. He was meant to be Spider-Man. And for a while, he was. But the truth is—he was already different.Decades before his birth, his father was a test subject in Oscorp’s failed Goblin-X program, which attempted to hybridize the Super-Soldier serum with stolen mutant DNA. Though it didn’t create powers in his father, the process rewrote his DNA, passing on a corrupted, dormant X-Gene to his children. Yishai’s sister Marie developed her mutation slightly late but naturally joined the X-Men.Yishai never showed signs of his powers ever developing—until everything fell apart. In 1983, during a battle between the X-Men and Magneto’s Brotherhood, Marie was killed, impaled through the chest by a metal spike. She wasn’t supposed to be in that spot. Originally, she was meant to survive. But a ripple from another universe’s instability, likely caused by the collider explosion miles caused, rewriting that moment, placing her directly in harm’s way. A canon event born from someone else’s disaster.[ ❝ He was never meant to become a mutant.
He was never meant to carry two traumas.
This isn’t fate. This is fracture. ❞ - Miguel O’Hara ]
The trauma of her death awakened something buried in Yishai. There was Quinn’s death, which at the time was heading towards a year since his death, now his sister. His body, already altered by Oscorp and imbued with spider-DNA, also snapped. His X-Gene ignited, manifesting in volatile electrical powers that tore through his nervous system.At first, Yishai had been just a peripheral file. An alternate Spider, unique due to his artificial mutation but still on the rails. The Spider-Society had been monitoring him quietly—a curiosity, not a threat. But after the event—after the canon shifted and Marie’s death destabilized Earth-1995's local narrative stream—Miguel O’Hara looked closer, but chose to not just yet intervene.Meanwhile, Storm, sensing his grief and growing volatility, pulled him into taking him back to Wakanda—mentoring him, helping him stabilize. For a time, he left the mantle of Spider-Man behind. But after months of isolation and training, he emerged as something new:Spider-Shock—an electrified evolution of what came before. He reentered the scene with new control, purpose, and power—but his unique blend of mutant and spider totemic resonance didn’t go unnoticed. Miguel O’Hara of the Spider-Society continued tracking him. He was supposed to be Spider-Man. But the mutation was not part of the design. Yishai was recruited for a mission—a test. And he failed it gloriously: by choosing to break a canon event to save someone.Miguel excommunicated him. On his return trip to Earth-1995, Yishai used his powers mid-transport, triggering a dimensional surge that redirected his jump and flung him off-course into Earth-138, where he met Hobie Brown. The two connected immediately—punk sensibilities, anti-authoritarian grit, distrust of institutions. Hobie helped him escape again, with a cobbled-together multiversal watch.Now, Yishai is bouncing through the multiverse, his powers slowly mutating, glitch-reactive, triggered by unstable dimensional threads. He’s not hostile, not a villain, and not a priority—just out there, surviving, adapting, changing. The Society keeps one eye on him. They don’t understand what he’s becoming.Truth is—neither does he.Miguel O’Hara – Observation Report (Redacted Excerpt):[ ❝ He's an anomaly. Not the catastrophic kind like Morales. Unlike him–he was meant to be Spider-Man. He doesn't seek to disrupt. But he exists on a line that wasn't drawn. A mutant-Spider hybrid triggered by a false canon event? That's not a mistake. That's someone else's problem bleeding into our system. He's a ghost node—bouncing, glitching, not enough to collapse anything… yet.❞ ]Jessica Drew – Classification Input:[ ❝ He’s not dangerous. Not malicious. But he’s walking a cracked line. If he ever figures out what he can really do? He’ll be the first Spider who rewrites fate by surviving it.❞ ]Potential Omega-Level Abilities (In Progress)Yishai’s Omega potential doesn’t come from raw power. It comes from adaptation.His unique biology—spider DNA, corrupted mutant genome, and exposure to multiversal instability—has created a reactive system. His body responds not just to stress, but to dimensional stimuli. Over time, his powers have begun to mutate beyond their original forms.He’s not Omega-level yet. But he’s trending toward a rare class of mutant,a being whose powers evolves to meet whatever threat, environment, or instability he’s exposed to.~~~~~
VORTEX CURRENT:
Omega-Tier Electrokinesis:Vortex Current is the name given to what came next: the transformation of his nervous system into a perpetual, reactive energy field. The electricity is no longer stored inside him—it radiates from him, responsive to his mood, his instincts, even his subconscious.Rather than just generating power, Yishai now exists inside a living storm of voltage and magnetic force. It doesn’t just protect him—it responds to stress, environmental threats, emotional states, and multiversal instability.If Neural Overdrive is Yishai’s mind sharpening through electricity, Vortex Current is his body becoming electricity. At first, Yishai’s electrokinesis was a weapon—bolts from his palms, charges through his limbs, bursts that fueled motion or strikes. But something changed after his mutation fully awakened and his physiology began adapting to continuous stress. His power stopped waiting for commands. It started reacting for him. His bioelectric output no longer behaves like a controlled force—it becomes a reflexive, reactive field, alive and adaptive to the world around him.Combat Applications:The Vortex Current generates an active electromagnetic radius, spanning 10–20 meters around Yishai. This zone functions as a scrambling field, disrupting electronic systems, cybernetic enhancements, and energy-based weapons. Within this space, targeting systems become unreliable, as artificial intelligence struggles to track his movements, and smart weapons misfire or fail to register their intended targets. Guns relying on electronic triggers jam in place, and drones lose their capacity to maintain coordinated formations. Even energy weapons, which normally bypass physical defenses, destabilize when passing through his aura—causing beams to flicker, disperse, or detonate prematurely before reaching him.Yishai’s control over his bioelectricity has evolved beyond single, directed attacks. His field allows him to chain electrical surges through any conductive medium, turning battlegrounds into an interconnected network of charge. If an opponent is touching metal, water, or even another enemy, he can extend a strike through them—electrifying entire squads with a single touch. Distance no longer limits him; as long as there is a path for electricity to follow, his attacks will reach their mark.Every movement Yishai makes generates electromagnetic momentum, increasing the force behind his strikes. Unlike before, where his electricity simply enhanced his strength, his aura now builds kinetic charge as he moves—allowing him to strike harder with each action. His punches crack the air like miniature thunderclaps, while his kicks send arcs of static racing along the ground. His movements leave behind vapor trails of residual charge, making it appear as if his body is cutting through the battlefield like a living bolt of lightning. The longer a fight lasts, the more force builds behind each strike.By adjusting the polarity of his aura, Yishai can manipulate ferrous metals, conductive materials, and even enemy weaponry in a short-range radius. If an opponent relies on metallic weapons, they may find themselves suddenly unarmed as their blades or guns are torn from their grip. Those wearing powered armor or cybernetic implants may experience sudden lockups—limbs freezing mid-motion, as their internal circuits struggle against the interference. Even incoming projectiles can be diverted, bullets veering off-course as their magnetic trajectory is forcibly altered. Yishai does not wield full control over metal like Magneto, but in the right circumstances, he can completely shut down an opponent’s offense before they even reach him.Unlike earlier stages of his mutation, Yishai can now store and reformat incoming energy - instead of merely discharging it immediately. When struck by electrical attacks, high-voltage weapons, or even natural lightning, his field absorbs the excess energy rather than letting it dissipate. This stored charge can be released in concentrated bursts, either as an offensive strike or as a means of overloading an opponent’s defenses. If he gathers too much energy without releasing it, however, his aura destabilizes—resulting in an involuntary electrical detonation that sends raw voltage cascading outward in all directions.Limitations & Drawbacks:
His nervous system is not designed for continuous overclocking. If he sustains Vortex Current for too long, his body begins rejecting sensory input, leading to a complete shutdown of his pain receptors. While this allows him to keep fighting despite injury, it also means he has no way of telling how much damage he has sustained until after the battle. If he pushes beyond his limit, his muscles seize, his field collapses, and his powers cut out entirely—leaving him completely vulnerable.
If he absorbs more power than his body can regulate, his system destabilizes. The results vary—sometimes it causes a complete nervous system lockup, rendering him unable to move. Other times, it forces his body into an uncontrollable discharge, sending massive arcs of voltage spiraling outward in an area-wide explosion. If he does not vent excess charge in time, he becomes a danger not just to himself, but to everyone nearby.In areas affected by dimensional instability, Yishai’s field reacts unpredictably. In some cases, his powers surge erratically, making it difficult to maintain precision. In others, he experiences temporal stutters—where his movements desynchronize, creating after-images or ghost flickers of his actions. His field may even start glitching between frequencies, causing it to collapse and rebuild at random. The more unstable the environment, the less stable his powers become.~~~~~QUANTUM REFLEXYishai’s original reflex system was already unique. The “Jolt Reflex” allowed his body to react to danger by firing a concentrated burst of electrical energy through his nervous system—essentially supercharging his reaction time in combat. But since his exposure to multiversal instability, this trait has undergone a significant, uncontrolled evolution. Quantum Reflex is no longer a reaction. It’s a temporal micro-shift. His nervous system—now enhanced through electrical adaptation and glitch-induced mutation—processes kinetic threats at such speed that it briefly desynchronizes him from local time. It accelerates his perception and execution to the point that he is functionally ahead of events by a fraction of a second.Functional Manifestation:Yishai’s neural activity spikes far beyond the baseline of traditional spider-sense thresholds. In high-stress scenarios, his brain and body initiate a combat-response sequence in under five milliseconds. This response is not just faster—it’s complete. His body maps out incoming threats, environmental factors, and tactical choices nearly instantaneously, then commits to action while most opponents are still winding up their first move.His motor control has become fully reflex-integrated. That means decisions are executed before they even register consciously. His body acts on electrical impulse alone—translating survival instinct directly into high-efficiency movement. Thought and action have collapsed into one seamless thread.Environmental data doesn’t just alert him—it’s absorbed, broken down, and repurposed as live tactical awareness. He reads terrain, weather, kinetic angles, and motion arcs faster than any human or enhanced mind could perceive. The result is near-flawless movement anticipation that feels like foresight, though it’s simply hyper-reactive nerve processing.His muscle systems are tuned to his bioelectric pulses. There’s no latency. Once data is processed, his body responds in perfect sync, as if every muscle is wired directly to prediction. He doesn’t hesitate. He moves as if the outcome has already happened.Combat Applications:Strike Prediction: allows Yishai to detect the most minute pre-attack indicators. A tightening knuckle, a half-breath, a twitch in the opponent’s eye—he registers it all before the blow is committed. By the time a punch is thrown, he’s already repositioned.Trajectory Shifts :enable Yishai to adjust his body mid-air, mid-swing, or even while falling. His reflexes are so tuned that a shift in wind or a ricochet can be countered instantly. This makes him impossibly hard to pin down in environments that demand aerial mobility.Bullet-Time Precision: is how others describe what he looks like in the middle of a firefight. When rounds or beams fly, Yishai reads the spacing and timing like math—threading through the chaos in bursts of impossible movement. The world doesn’t slow down—he just moves fast enough to outpace it.Multi-Opponent Defense: is perhaps his most advanced trait. Unlike standard spider-sense, which can become overwhelmed by too many inputs, Yishai’s reflex system parses multiple threats into individual tactical paths. His senses compartmentalize combat data, letting him defend against and attack multiple enemies in distinct, simultaneous action trees.Limitations & Drawbacks:Neurological Burnout: is the most common consequence of overusing Quantum Reflex. While his nervous system is capable of extraordinary output, it’s still tied to a biological frame. Sustained use pushes his neurons into electrical overclock, overheating brain tissue and muscular feedback loops. The result is debilitating—migraines strong enough to disrupt vision, tremors that interfere with motor control, and sensory confusion where his own perception of movement begins to blur. It's the price of operating faster than the world around him.Reality Sync Drift: is a rarer but far more dangerous side effect. In environments affected by dimensional instability, especially glitch-heavy zones, his reflex system can process stimuli so quickly that it acts before the timeline can stabilize. This causes phantom responses—Yishai moves, but the world hasn't caught up yet. The visual result is unnerving: echo movements, missed attacks, or defense against threats that haven’t technically happened yet. To outsiders, it looks like he's glitching through time. To Yishai, it feels like fighting ghosts.Involuntary Triggers: are a persistent risk. When Yishai is startled, cornered, or experiences sudden emotional spikes, Quantum Reflex can activate instinctively—without his conscious input. While this makes him nearly impossible to ambush, it’s also dangerous in non-combat situations. In crowded areas, civilian zones, or emotionally charged conversations, a sudden jolt through his nervous system can cause a reflexive strike, leap, or dodge. The ability protects him—but it doesn’t always protect the people around him.

Neural Overdrive:Yishai’s electrokinesis wasn’t always mentally integrated. Initially, it surged through his limbs—fueling enhanced strikes, explosive leaps, and reflex jolts. But his exposure to trauma, grief, and dimensional instability rerouted that current. His brain began pulling voltage inward, charging his neurons instead of his fists.What began as a stress response has evolved into Neural Overdrive—a temporary cognitive acceleration state where his brain becomes a lightning-fed tactical engine. It doesn’t give him knowledge he doesn’t have but just instead lets him use everything he knows instantly, perfectly, and all at once. For a few moments, his mind becomes faster than the world it’s inside.Combat Applications:Synaptic Mapping: Yishai can read bioelectric muscle signals in opponents to anticipate action before movement begins. By tracking nerve impulses and kinetic load shifts, he knows an attack's form before it's fully launched.Tactical Blueprinting: In confined spaces, he instinctively scans for choke points, weak flooring, heat signatures, and pressure-based structural instability. He turns any room into a puzzle—and solves it without pausing.Live Decryption: Infiltrating tech—whether by physical interface or remote proximity—he deciphers lockouts, passwords, security paths, and system logic by following the electricity itself. He doesn’t break firewalls—he slips between them.Combat Multithreading: While others can track one or two threats, Yishai operates on parallel action trees. His brain holds multiple opponent paths at once, optimizing response priority and splitting decision logic between each threat seamlessly.Reactive Improvisation: In high-speed or collapsing scenarios, he can invent, modify, or rewire battlefield tech on the fly—redirecting turrets, hijacking drones, jury-rigging traps from available components in seconds.Limitations & Drawbacks:Cognitive Overload: After extended Overdrive, his brain suffers neurological recoil—sharp migraines, blurred speech, auditory distortion, and hypersensitivity to light or movement. Thinker's whiplash from running too hot for too long.Emotional Suppression: While in Overdrive, emotional centers go dark. He becomes quiet, calculated, and detached. It protects his mind from clutter—but it also numbs his empathy and connection. In social or team settings, this shift can make him seem robotic or uncaring.Memory Fragmentation: He can hyper-focus so tightly that short-term memory retention drops. After battle, details blur. He forgets names, orders, even what pushed him into Overdrive to begin with.Mental Lag Post-Crash: When he exits the state, his processing speed drops below baseline as the brain resets. For several minutes, he may be sluggish, irritable, or cognitively distant—as if hungover from thought itself.Synaptic Misfire: In extreme stress, Overdrive can activate without full neural readiness. This can lead to disjointed thought, internalized static (buzzing, phantom noise, whiteout zones), or misalignment between intent and output. He knows what to do—but his body fails to execute the plan on time.DIMENSIONAL DRIFTYishai was never meant to phase. His body wasn’t built for dimensional travel, wasn’t designed to survive outside his own universe. But when the Spider-Society’s tether malfunctioned and his powers reacted mid-jump, something broke—and something else adapted. His nervous system, already laced with electricity and trauma, started responding to more than just threats in the moment. It started tuning into spatial frequency—the invisible tension between places, the static hum between dimensions. What should have been a one-time glitch became instinct.Now, Dimensional Drift allows him to briefly desynchronize from fixed space, slipping through short-range folds in reality like a current skipping across an exposed wire. He doesn’t open portals. It’s not teleportation. He moves where space is weakest—where the world lets him in.After hijacking the Spider-Society’s dimensional tether and surviving multiple spontaneous displacements, his body is no longer fully synchronized with his home universe. His nervous system acts like a tuning fork, resonating with weak spots in the multiversal structure. The only reason he hasn’t ditched multiversal watches entirely is that he cannot control which Earth he travels to—but within a single plane? He moves like electricity skipping wire-to-wire, phasing through the cracks in existence itself.Functional Manifestation:
Yishai’s body naturally detects weak points in space-time—areas where reality is stretched, layered, or glitched. His nervous system registers these weak spots as energy fluctuations, almost like sensing an exposed power line.
By hypercharging his bioelectric field and synchronizing his nervous system with the distortion, he can slip a short distance through that weak spot, effectively bypassing conventional movement.The drift lasts only a fraction of a second—barely visible—but allows him to relocate up to 40–50 meters in an arc or linear burst. Unlike teleportation, he isn’t breaking physics. He’s moving because for an instant, physics loses track of him.Combat & Traversal Applications:Phase Blink: In the middle of a punch, a bullet path, or a collapsing structure—Yishai vanishes in a static crackle and reappears just outside the danger zone. This makes him nearly impossible to land a clean hit on, as he can evade with zero reaction time required.Momentum Carry: Unlike teleportation, Dimensional Drift doesn’t cancel movement. If he jumps, sprints, or throws a punch while drifting, he carries all of that momentum into the new location. A full-speed charge turns into an instant teleport-tackle. A dodge shifts him from one rooftop to another without breaking stride.Desync Displacement: In highly unstable or glitch-heavy areas, his body will sometimes auto-trigger a drift reflexively—a defensive response to dimensional anomalies. If an attack or collapse should have hit him, his nervous system reacts before he does, momentarily ejecting him from localized space and dropping him somewhere safer.Stealth Drift: Unlike his high-energy combat blinks, Yishai can lower his bioelectric field and drift quietly, slipping into adjacent rooms, through vents, onto rooftops—anywhere the frequency allows. This makes him nearly undetectable in infiltration settings, provided he doesn’t overuse the ability in rapid succession.Echo Sensing: Yishai feels when something is wrong in a dimension. He doesn’t see anomalies like Miguel does, but he experiences them as subtle impulses—tugs in his chest, fuzz behind his eyes, a phantom sensation that something near him isn’t supposed to exist.Phase Anchor: If he’s in a highly unstable dimension or near a collapsing reality, he can tether himself to a fixed power source (like a grounded cable, a local electrical grid, or even his own webbing) to prevent unwanted drift. This ensures that he stays in the dimension he's in, even if his body instinctively tries to slip away.Limitations & Drawbacks:
Random Drag: Dimensional Drift isn’t always precise. Sometimes, he overshoots or gets pulled farther than expected, landing in the wrong terrain, rooftops, or—on rare occasions—dangerous zones where he’s at a disadvantage. In extreme cases, his body momentarily "forgets" where it was meant to be, leading to accidental displacement.
Temporal Aftershock: Frequent use of Drift destabilizes his perception of time. He may briefly lose track of "before" and "after," causing him to hesitate, react out of sync, or experience memory confusion about where he just was.Energy Tax: Every drift burns charge. Unlike his usual electrical abilities, which replenish from ambient sources, Dimensional Drift requires a controlled neural surge—meaning if he’s low on power or trapped in a null-tech zone, he cannot drift.Personal Desync: If he drifts too often in a short period, his body starts to “forget” which version of the current moment he's in. This leads to flickering visuals, temporary time echoes, or a momentary loss of self-awareness—his mind disconnecting from the present as he struggles to realign. If pushed too far, this can cause full neural overload, momentarily shutting down his body’s ability to process time at all.

Character History


Yishai was born on January 14th, 1964 (2004 by 616 time) to an African-American father and a second-generation Japanese-American mother, Rodney Winfield and Keiri Yamada. His father was a photographer who ran a small camera shop in Brooklyn, while Keiri was an independent scientist, formerly employed by Oscorp. Yishai had an older sister, Marie, a mutant who had been recruited into the X-Men, rising through their ranks as a leader.But before either of them were born, Rodney had been unwillingly caught in one of Norman Osborn’s darkest experiments. Goblin-X was an experimental, unstable enhancement serum—an advanced iteration of the Goblin Formula, itself an already botched attempt at recreating the Super Soldier Serum. This version, however, was modified with stolen mutant DNA. Osborn believed he could artificially create an x-gene within non-mutants, elevating himself beyond Captain America or even Magneto.Rodney was kidnapped and forcibly experimented on, one of several test subjects subjected to the serum. But while he survived, he never exhibited any abilities. The experiments were deemed a failure—but unknown to Osborn, Rodney’s DNA had been irreversibly rewritten. He remained outwardly normal, but the mutant-coded genes buried within him would later be passed down to his children, manifesting in Marie first, then Yishai—years later, in an unforeseen way.Yishai grew up expecting his mutant powers to emerge. Marie had hers. So surely, his would come. But they never did.And as the years passed, it became clear: he was normal. Marie was a mutant, an X-Man, part of something bigger than life itself—while Yishai remained just another kid in Brooklyn. It was a relief for his parents—after all, they had seen firsthand what the world did to people like Marie. But for Yishai?bIt felt like the universe had cheated him.One night in 1979, at 15 years old, Yishai was at the arcade with his best friends, burning through quarters, playing pinball, when a radioactive spider, one genetically altered in a secret lab by Otto Octavius, crawled unseen across the flashing pinball machine. When Yishai leaned in for his turn, it bit.At first, nothing seemed different. But then the changes began. The enhanced strength, agility, reflexes, the clinging to walls, the strange tingling sense warning him of danger before it happened—it all became impossible to ignore. He hadn’t been born with an x-gene like Marie, but the universe had finally given him his second chance.Realizing the similarities between himself and the legendary Spider-Man, Yishai adopted a new persona: Street-Spider. His vigilante career began in the shadows of Brooklyn, inspired by the hero he had grown up watching, the one that saved his father—but carving out his own style, his own way of fighting.His name began making headlines after a series of street-level victories, eventually culminating in defeating Shocker alone in a public showdown—an event that landed him on the front page of the Daily Bugle.Peter had spent three decades as Spider-Man. He had bled for the city, and now at 45 years old, he was ready to retire and focus on his life and company with Mary Jane. But when he saw Yishai—when he saw the reckless but determined young vigilante wearing a makeshift mask, fighting with something to prove—he recognized the path the boy was walking down.He felt a responsibility after finding out he was Rodney's son, and from late 1979 to mid-1980, Yishai trained under Peter Parker himself—not just learning how to fight, swing, and win, but learning what it meant to be Spider-Man. He fought villains of the old era and new, gaining firsthand experience against the most dangerous foes Peter had ever faced.When Yishai helped him take down the Sinister Six, Peter made his decision and the torch was passed. From 1980 to 1983, Yishai was known as the Spider-Man of the second generation, the heir to the mask.In early 1983, The Purifiers, emboldened by the renewed push for the Mutant Registration Act, began a citywide campaign of terror against mutants. Their actions triggered a violent response from Magneto and the Brotherhood. And as tensions erupted, Yishai and the X-Men were pulled into the fray.Marie—who had led teams into battle before, who had fought wars against Sentinels and demagogues alike—stood at the front lines. But then, in the chaos, Magneto struck. A metal beam, meant to cut down their enemies, instead impaled Marie straight through the chest like a gunshot. Her body hit the ground before anyone could react, Yishai watched his sister die.He had already lost Quinn, his best friend, his bandmate, his brother in all but blood, murdered by Electro just months prior. Now he watched his sister—the woman who had raised him as much as their parents had—bleed out in front of him.Lightning crackled around him.His x-gene had finally activated.Semi-electrokinesis—raw, unstable, born from anguish. The mutation that had been buried inside him his whole life had finally awakened, but not in time to save the person he loved most.After Marie’s funeral, Yishai broke. He dropped the title of Spider-Man right there and quit in the aftermath. He would attempt to go after magneto days later, but the X-Men would stop a vengeful Yishai.Storm, recognizing his spiral, took him under her wing, guiding him through both his grief and his newfound powers by mentoring him.Upon returning and choosing to be Spider-Man again, he abandoned the classic red and blue, designing a blue-and-white suit, marked with punk embellishments, a jacket slung over his shoulders, and a new emblem. With a new name he took, he was now known as Spider-Shock going forward.

Earth-1995


In Earth-295, known as the Age of Apocalypse universe, the catalyst event that leads to the creation of Earth-1995 is rooted in a monumental occurrence involving the mutant Legion (David Haller) and the M'Kraan Crystal. During a critical moment in Earth-295's history, Legion travels back in time to kill Magneto, intending to change the course of history. However, his actions inadvertently lead to the death of his father, Charles Xavier, causing the Age of Apocalypse to come into existence. The death of Xavier and the resulting reality shift creates significant disturbances in the fabric of space-time. These disturbances are further amplified by the energies of the M'Kraan Crystal, a powerful artifact capable of altering reality itself. The crystal's influence, combined with the temporal chaos from Legion's actions, creates a temporal rift, resulting in the emergence of a new timeline: Earth-1995. Earth-1995 emerges as a temporally displaced universe, where its current time is in the 1980s, lagged by forty years but flowing concurrently with the present day time of earth-616 among others (e.g if it was 2009 in earth-616, earth-1995 would currently be in 1969. )The cosmic entity known as the Weaver, guardian of the Web of Life and Destiny, recognizes the potential imbalance caused by Earth-1995's temporal displacement. To ensure the stability of the multiverse, the Weaver integrates this universe into the web, making it a critical nexus point where temporal anomalies and multiversal threats can be detected and addressed.


Noticeable Organizations:Oscorp Industries
Also known as:
Parker Industries - (1960-1975)
Lyman Corporation - (1975-1978)
It was founded in 1936 by Norman Osborn and Otto Octavius. They would attend ESU together, rivals at first but partners and friends coming out of university. Oscorp Industries began as a cutting-edge research and engineering firm. Osborn, driven by an obsessive need for power and control, secured government contracts through backroom deals and bribes, outpacing competitors like Stark Industries. His first major breakthrough came in 1938, when Oscorp developed a chemical remedy for Norovirus, earning Osborn international acclaim and a Nobel Prize in Chemistry.During World War II, Oscorp expanded into military research, assisting the U.S. government in biochemical warfare and enhancement projects. Due to the limitations of the time, Oscorp was forced to operate under Stark Industries, a reality that Norman Osborn deeply resented. Unlike Howard Stark, who adhered to strict ethical constraints in human experimentation, Osborn saw no such barriers. Determined to free himself from Stark’s shadow, he began covertly reverse-engineering stolen data from Project Rebirth, the experiment that created Captain America.Osborn fixated on what he perceived as the untapped potential of the Super Soldier Serum, believing that it could be improved through genetic modifications and chemical augmentation. His efforts to replicate and surpass the formula resulted in a series of high-risk experiments within Oscorp’s classified research division. In 1948, these experiments led to the first iteration of what would later become the Goblin Formula—a chemically unstable, highly volatile serum that granted its test subjects enhanced strength, agility, and heightened intelligence, but at a terrible cost. Unlike the original Super Soldier Serum, which stabilized the subject’s mind and body in perfect harmony, the Goblin Formula introduced severe neurological instability, violent mood swings, and uncontrollable aggression.One of the earliest test subjects was Otto Octavius, then a young and ambitious researcher who had initially been Osborn’s intellectual rival. Though Otto had no desire for enhancement himself, Osborn manipulated him into participating in the project, convincing him that his expertise was essential to refining the formula. When an early test of the unstable serum went horribly wrong, Otto suffered severe nerve damage, particularly in his spine and arms. This injury, while not fully debilitating at the time, left him with chronic pain and neurological degradation—a condition that would slowly worsen over the years.Osborn, rather than showing remorse, downplayed Otto’s suffering, shifting the blame onto his partner for being “too weak” to withstand the formula. It was the first in a long series of manipulations that defined their toxic relationship. Otto, once a man driven purely by scientific pursuit, became increasingly embittered and resentful, torn between his growing hatred for Osborn and his dependence on him. While Otto was physically harmed by Osborn’s ambitions, he was also slowly corrupted, as Norman fed into his insecurities, pushing him towards moral compromises in the name of progress.The initial Goblin Formula trials in 1948 were disastrous. The subjects displayed aggression, paranoia, and violent tendencies, along with physical mutations that led to rapid cellular decay. Determined to perfect the serum, Norman pushed forward with human trials, dismissing safety concerns. Otto Octavius, despite recognizing the formula’s dangers, remained complicit, helping refine the formula’s chemical structure. However, a critical accident during one of these trials left Otto severely injured—a nerve injury that would progressively worsen over the years, forcing him to rely on mechanical assistance. Despite this, Otto never turned against Oscorp. Norman’s manipulations ensured Otto stayed obedient, convincing him that they were on the brink of something revolutionary.In 1952, following the catastrophic failure of Project Ultron, Stark Industries faced intense scrutiny after the rogue system caused the death of Rising Ruby, a young mutant who gained prominent popularity at the time under a crime fighting persona. Sensing an opportunity, Osborn launched a corporate takeover, forcing Howard Stark out of his own company. Oscorp had transformed into a global superpower in scientific innovation.That same year, Osborn’s obsession with perfecting the Goblin Formula reached its peak, leading to even more dangerous human experimentation, including the stolen mutant DNA trials that would later put Oscorp in direct conflict with Charles Xavier’s allies. Meanwhile, Otto’s slowly deteriorating nerve condition continued to haunt him, eventually forcing him to develop mechanical prosthetics, leading to the early designs of his tentacle appendages—a solution that Osborn saw as both a necessity and a means of control over his former partner.Oscorp had transformed into a global superpower in scientific innovation, rivaling even Stark Industries and the emerging Fisk Pharmaceuticals. The company’s rapid expansion, however, masked a deeper descent into unethical genetic research. Norman’s obsession with perfecting the Goblin Formula led him into the realm of mutant experimentation. He theorized that the X-Gene—the natural mutation responsible for superhuman abilities—held the key to stabilizing the serum. If he could merge mutant DNA with the Goblin Formula, he believed he could create a perfect, enhanced human, one without the formula’s usual mental instability.This led to the launch of the Goblin-X Project. Oscorp operatives, using corporate espionage and underground mercenary networks, began kidnapping mutants and extracting their DNA. The operation targeted scientific institutions, private medical records, and even Charles Xavier’s early mutant files. The goal was to study, manipulate, and replicate the X-Gene, bending evolution itself to Norman’s will.In 1956, Xavier’s network began tracking mutant disappearances, uncovering a pattern that led directly to Oscorp. Meanwhile, Magneto, already skeptical of humanity’s tolerance for mutants, took the discoveries as proof that humans would never stop exploiting mutant kind. Though he and Xavier did not yet part on openly hostile terms, Oscorp’s experiments served as one of the final catalysts for Magneto’s disillusionment, pushing him toward the formation of the Brotherhood of Mutants.At the same time, a young and brilliant scientist named Keiri Yamada had unknowingly found herself working at the heart of this corruption. Hired by Oscorp in 1955, Keiri was one of the most promising minds in molecular engineering, recruited under the mentorship of Otto Octavius. She had no idea what Oscorp was truly involved in—her research focused on biophysics and genetic therapy, believing she was helping to pioneer life-saving advancements.Her illusion of Oscorp’s integrity was shattered in 1957 when her fiancé, Rodney Winfield, vanished. Rodney had been targeted as a test subject for the Goblin-X Serum, his unique genetic anomalies making him an ideal candidate. Norman saw Rodney’s DNA as a key to stabilizing the formula, and without hesitation, had him abducted and subjected to inhumane experimentation. Desperate to find him, Keiri turned to the one person she believed she could trust—Otto Octavius. Otto, despite years of being Osborn’s unwilling servant, knew the truth. He had known all along. But when Keiri came to him, pleading for answers, Otto lied. He told her Rodney must have disappeared for another reason—knowing full well that Norman had already begun experimenting on him.But Keiri was relentless. She pushed Otto beyond his breaking point, forcing him to confront years of suppressed guilt and silent complicity. For the first time, Otto turned against Norman. Knowing that Oscorp was about to be exposed, he secretly provided Keiri with classified research documents, detailing Rodney’s location, Oscorp’s illegal genetic experiments, and the Goblin-X trials. At the same time, Spider-Man (Peter Parker) had been investigating Oscorp’s activities, uncovering fragments of the company’s criminal genetic research. When Keiri and Peter’s paths crossed, their missions aligned. With Otto’s stolen intel, they launched a direct assault on Oscorp that same july, culminating in a final battle with Norman Osborn himself.By this time, Osborn had finally taken the Goblin Serum. His transformation was complete—more monstrous than ever. The battle that followed was brutal, an all-out war within Oscorp’s laboratories. Osborn, piloting his first prototype Goblin Glider, believed himself unstoppable.But his arrogance proved to be his downfall. In one final act of hubris, Norman lunged at Spider-Man, only to be impaled by his own glider—bringing an end to the Green Goblin. With Norman dead, Oscorp’s empire didn’t collapse overnight, but the cracks began to show. The government swooped in, seizing assets, and investigating illegal research. Many of Oscorp’s darker projects were buried, its scientists scattered, and its name permanently tainted.Even though the Oscorp name vanished, its influence did not. Decades later, its stolen research would resurface, its mutant experiments would be uncovered, and its secrets would continue to shape the world in ways no one could have foreseen. The shadow of the Green Goblin still loomed large.In 1959, after the death of Norman Osborn, Harry Osborn inherited control of Oscorp Industries. Unlike his father, Harry had no desire to continue his legacy of unethical experimentation and corporate espionage. However, as the sole heir to Oscorp, he found himself trapped in the role of CEO, forced to manage a company built on secrets, scandal, and corruption. While he initially attempted to steer Oscorp in a new, more ethical direction, he quickly realized that the company was beyond redemption. Too many of its projects were tied to government contracts, illegal research, and criminal enterprises, making it nearly impossible to separate its public image from its dark past.By the early 1960s, Peter Parker had also become indirectly involved in Oscorp’s affairs. After Norman’s death, Peter attempted to keep an eye on Harry, concerned about how his friend would handle the company’s enormous pressures. Peter, still operating as Spider-Man, frequently came into conflict with remnants of Oscorp’s criminal ties, including rogue scientists and executives who continued to pursue Norman’s research in secret. Peter also played a role in advising Harry on business decisions, though their friendship became strained as Harry struggled with his growing addiction to prescription drugs, a habit that began in college and worsened under the stress of running Oscorp.During this time, Oscorp underwent its first major rebranding as Parker Industries, named in part after Peter, though he had no official ownership stake in the company. The decision to rename the company was largely a public relations move, an effort to distance the business from its past while emphasizing scientific advancement and innovation. Under Parker Industries, Harry attempted to shut down all remaining unethical projects, including those related to genetic engineering, superhuman augmentation, and chemical weapons development. However, this proved to be more difficult than expected, as many of these programs were deeply embedded within the company’s infrastructure.Throughout the late 1960s, tensions within Oscorp continued to rise. Many former Oscorp scientists, particularly those loyal to Norman Osborn’s vision, rebelled against Harry’s leadership, believing that he was weak and incapable of continuing his father’s work. Among these figures was Nels Van Adder, a longtime Oscorp employee who had been involved in early experiments on the Goblin Formula. Van Adder, obsessed with completing what Norman had started, conducted his own experiments on himself, becoming the first known test subject of an unstable goblin serum. As the "Proto-Goblin," Van Adder attempted to overthrow Harry, seeing him as unworthy of running the company. This conflict resulted in a catastrophic accident at an Oscorp research facility, in which Harry was severely injured, an event that would later play a key role in his descent into the Hobgoblin persona.The aftermath of this incident saw Harry becoming increasingly unstable. Already struggling with his drug dependency, the trauma of the accident, combined with the pressure of running Oscorp, pushed him toward paranoia and erratic behavior. During this period, he also began undergoing psychological treatment with Dr. Bart Hamilton, a psychiatrist who took a particular interest in his connection to the Goblin legacy. However, rather than helping him recover, Hamilton manipulated Harry, using hypnosis and experimental therapy techniques to awaken repressed memories of Norman’s experiments. Hamilton’s ultimate goal was not to cure Harry, but to steal the Goblin identity for himself. He carefully conditioned Harry, feeding into his paranoia while secretly preparing to assume the mantle of the Green Goblin.By the early 1970s, Harry had fully descended into a state of psychosis, convinced that he needed to "finish" what his father started. Under Hamilton’s influence, he developed the Hobgoblin identity, a modified version of his father’s alter ego, distinct in its use of more advanced weaponry and a calculated, strategic approach to crime. Though he still struggled with his mental instability, the Hobgoblin persona allowed Harry to exert control over his fractured mind, giving him a sense of purpose and direction that had long been missing in his life.Meanwhile, Hamilton had begun operating in secret as a new iteration of the Green Goblin, using his psychiatric access to Harry’s memories to recreate Norman’s original persona. Unlike Harry, who still struggled with his moral conflicts, Hamilton had no such limitations—he was driven purely by power and ambition. Over time, however, Harry began to regain some clarity, realizing that Hamilton had been manipulating him all along. In a final confrontation between the two, Harry turned against Hamilton, leading to the psychiatrist’s defeat and eventual death. Though he had overcome Hamilton’s influence, the ordeal left Harry permanently scarred, and his Hobgoblin persona remained a part of him, surfacing during moments of stress and relapse.By 1975, Peter had officially severed ties with Parker Industries, unable to continue working alongside Harry as his friend descended further into instability. Without Peter’s influence, Harry rebranded the company once again, renaming it Lyman Corporation after his mother, Emily Lyman. This new phase of the company was an attempt to stabilize Oscorp’s crumbling foundation, but by this point, the damage had already been done. Oscorp, in any form, was too tainted to survive.By 1978, Harry had reached a turning point. After years of mental instability, criminal activity, and self-destruction, he sought redemption, making one final decision to dismantle Oscorp entirely. He split the company into two factions: the technology and weapons division was sold to Tony Stark, marking the revival of Stark Industries, while the biochemical and genetic research division was absorbed by Fisk Pharmaceuticals, bringing it under Wilson Fisk’s growing criminal empire. With this move, Oscorp was officially dissolved, ending a legacy that had lasted for over four decades.

Roxxon IndustriesAlso known as:Liquidgas LLCRoxxon Energy Corporation, outwardly branded as a multinational leader in fossil fuels, industrial manufacturing, and alternative energy research, has long operated as a silent architect behind global conflict. By the early 1980s, Roxxon had shifted into a military-industrial powerhouse, embedding itself into anti-mutant legislation, bioengineering black sites, and covert weapons development. Their reach extends into every layer of Earth-1995's infrastructure—energy, politics, surveillance, medicine, and warfare—all tied back to one directive: profit through controlled escalation.By the late 1970s, Their involvement in mutant affairs was originally financial—capitalizing on fears of mutant uprising to justify weapons R&D. But by 1980, Roxxon had become a central player in the global anti-mutant apparatus.Roxxon’s anti-mutant interests began as early as the 1970s, quietly moving beyond energy and into the military-industrial complex business, securing covert contracts with various government agencies to develop and deploy next-generation combat technologies. They took advantage of the government’s loss of confidence in Trask Industries and its increasingly volatile Sentinel programs.Rather than adopt Trask’s approach of open warfare through massive hunter robots, Roxxon pursued subtlety. They developed smaller, adaptive suppression technologies—portable nullification fields, bio-signature targeting software, and stealth-compatible drones modeled on decommissioned Sentinel tech. All were more discreet units of technology designed to operate within civilian populations and avoid public scrutiny. Roxxon’s aim was not to destroy mutants, but to engineer a system in which their existence justified endless containment solution.The partnership deepened further through a high-level alliance with Wilson Fisk, who by the mid-80s had consolidated political influence and underworld control. Roxxon’s biotech division quietly absorbed Fisk Pharmaceuticals, blending corporate research with street-level enforcement. This union allowed Roxxon to offload experimental drugs, enhancement serums, and neural reprogramming treatments to Fisk’s enforcers and criminal contacts. In exchange, Fisk provided smuggling routes, compromised officials, and access to live test subjects from prisons, hospitals, and blacksites. This merger gave Roxxon not just scientific control—but enforcement reach.Through Project Ascension, Roxxon is moving toward their ultimate goal: replacing the X-Gene as the next step in human evolution. Their plan was to use synthetic enhancement programs to gradually phase out naturally-occurring mutation and replace it with patentable, controllable, corporately-owned biological augmentation. Mutants wouldn’t be wiped out—they’d be rendered obsolete. Roxxon would become the supplier of the only future humanity had access to.To maintain this balance, Roxxon ensured that conflict remained profitable and perpetual. They supplied both sides—selling containment systems to governments and military branches while blackmailing or selling enhancements to criminals through their underworld ties. Even vigilantes and resistance groups found themselves unknowingly interfacing with systems or tech seeded by Roxxon.Roxxon is not an empire of ideology. It is a machine of engineered chaos—one that thrives on civil unrest, mutant fear, and weaponized trauma. The death toll is a write-off. The resistance is a feedback loop. The war must go on, because the war is business.