Lloyd Bloch Explained

Character Name:Nefarius
Real Name:Lloyd Bloch
Publisher:Marvel Comics
Debut:Captain America #169 (1974)
Creators:Steve Englehart and Mike Friedrich (story) & Sal Buscema (art)
Alliances:Secret Empire
Maggia
Aliases:Moonstone, Byron Becton
Species:Human mutate
Powers:As Nefarius:
  • Superhuman strength, durability, speed, and stamina
  • Laser vision

As Moonstone:

  • Gravimetric powers derived from alien gem

Nefarius (Lloyd Bloch), previously known as Moonstone, is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

Publication history

The character first appeared in Captain America #169 (1974) and was created by writers Steve Englehart and Mike Friedrich and artist Sal Buscema.[1]

Fictional character biography

Lloyd Bloch is an agent of the second Secret Empire, who intend to discredit Captain America and take his place as America's "symbolic" hero. The Empire had previously damaged Captain America's reputation by accusing him of vigilantism and framing him for the death of small-time criminal the Tumbler.[2] Empowered by a lunar stone, he becomes Moonstone and battles Captain America before being defeated and arrested.[3] Subsequently, his psychiatrist, Karla Sofen, steals his stone and becomes the second Moonstone.[4]

Bloch later resurfaces, now possessing ionic powers similar to those of Wonder Man and known as Nefarius. He kidnaps Sofen and plans to kill her in revenge before being killed by Count Nefaria, who drains his energy.[5] [6]

Powers and abilities

Bloch possesses superhuman physical abilities derived from a lunar stone that is imbued with unknown energy. After losing the stone, he regains his powers via a mutagenic process created by Dr. Kenneth Sturdy and gains the additional ability to generate intense heat beams from his eyes.

Bloch is a formidable hand-to-hand combatant, and received extensive unarmed combat training from the second Secret Empire.

Other versions

Counter-Earth

During the Thunderbolts' sojourn on Counter-Earth, Sofen encountered Bloch's counterpart who went by the codename Phantom Eagle. The alternate Bloch became obsessed with Moonstone and began experiencing psychotic episodes and was exposed as a serial killer. Sofen proceeded to steal his equivalent stone too.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Rovin, Jeff . Jeff Rovin

    . . 1987 . Facts on File . 0-8160-1356-X . New York . 234 . Jeff Rovin. https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofsu0000rovi_h5r9/page/234/mode/2up

  2. Book: Brevoort . Tom . DeFalco . Tom . Manning . Matthew K. . Sanderson . Peter . Wiacek . Win . Marvel Year By Year: A Visual History . 2017 . DK Publishing . 978-1465455505 . 164.
  3. Captain America and the Falcon #169-175. Marvel Comics.
  4. as revealed in Incredible Hulk #229. Marvel Comics.
  5. Captain America #379. Marvel Comics.
  6. Iron Man Annual '99. Marvel Comics.