

Black Widow
Natasha Romanova was a Soviet spy trained to perfection in the KGB's covert Red Room program, emerging as the Black Widow — a supremely skilled espionage operative and hand-to-hand combatant. She first appeared as an adversary of Iron Man before eventually defecting to the West.
Few characters in Marvel's long history have proven as enduringly magnetic as Black Widow, who first slipped onto the scene in Tales of Suspense #52 in 1964, courtesy of Stan Lee and L. D. Lieber — a Silver Age debut that launched one of comics' most compelling figures. Nearly six decades and 929 catalog appearances later, she remains a constant presence across the Marvel universe, most deeply woven into the pages of Daredevil, The Avengers, and Captain America, sharing adventures with titans like Captain America, Iron Man, and Spider-Man. With 41 key issues to her name, collectors have long recognized that her appearances carry genuine weight. She is, simply put, one of Marvel's great survivors — a character born in the early Silver Age who has only grown more fascinating with every passing era.
Real name. Natalia Alianovna "Natasha" Romanova

Trivia
- Natasha's history runs deeper and darker than it first appeared — later comics exposed that chunks of her childhood and training were never real at all, built instead from implanted false memories, meaning certain long-accepted backstory details were intentionally fabricated in-universe.screenrant.com
- Marvel made a significant continuity shift by upgrading Natasha from a purely human spy into a character possessing biochemical enhancement and slowed aging, a retcon that finally accounts for why she has aged unusually slowly across decades of stories.screenrant.com
- Brian Michael Bendis has written more of Black Widow's comics than any other writer in our catalog — 34 issues.
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Covers through the years — 1964–2024
★ 1964
★ 1969
★ 1973
★ 1979
★ 1983
★ 1989
★ 1992
★ 1995
2000
★ 2006
★ 2009
★ 2013
2018
★ 2024