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Hank Pym
Hank PymHank Pym

Hank Pym

1,431 appearances Β· Silver Age Β· 1962–2026 Β· 73 key issues
Who is Hank Pym?

Brilliant biochemist Hank Pym discovered the subatomic 'Pym Particles,' which he harnessed to shrink or grow at will. After adventuring as Ant-Man and Giant-Man, he adopted the Goliath identity to battle threats as a towering founding member of the Avengers.

Few characters capture the restless, brilliant ambition of Marvel's Silver Age quite like Hank Pym, who burst onto the scene in Tales to Astonish #35 in 1962, conjured by the legendary team of Stan Lee and Steve Ditko. A founding Avenger, Pym has spent over six decades sharing panels with the mightiest names in the Marvel Universe β€” Captain America, Iron Man, and the Wasp among his most frequent companions β€” accumulating more than 1,100 catalog appearances and an impressive 73 key issues that collectors prize. His presence is woven deep into the fabric of The Avengers and Captain America, making him one of the most enduring scientific minds in superhero comics. Whether you're a seasoned collector or just discovering Marvel's Silver Age roots, Hank Pym rewards exploration at every turn.

Identity

Real name. Henry Jonathan "Hank" Pym

Powers. No innate powers; genius biochemist/inventor. Discovered "Pym Particles" enabling size-changing (shrinking to insect size as Ant-Man, growing to giant size as Giant-Man/Goliath); cybernetic helmet to communicate with/control ants and insects; later identities Yellowjacket (bio-stingers, flight) and the Wasp.

Teams & affiliations
Avengers
β˜… First appearance
Tales to Astonish #27
Jan 1962

Part of the Ant-Man legacy

Hank Pym is one of 3 heroes to carry the Ant-Man mantle. See the whole Ant-Man family β–Έ

Trivia

  • Hank Pym's Yellowjacket identity debuted in The Avengers as a dramatic, temporary 'new' persona, initially written as though Pym had undergone a complete personality change β€” a move later regarded as one of Marvel's more infamous identity shifts.marvel.fandom.com
  • Beyond his own heroic career, Pym holds the grim distinction of having created Ultron, making him one of the rare superheroes whose legacy includes inadvertently birthing his own archnemesis and one of Marvel's most enduring villains.marvel.fandom.com
  • Few Marvel characters can match Pym's roster of alter egos β€” Ant-Man, Giant-Man, Goliath, Yellowjacket, Wasp, and Scientific Adventurer β€” an unusually fluid string of identities even by Marvel standards that has become a defining thread of his history.marvel.fandom.com
  • No single panel has shadowed Hank Pym's comic history quite like the one depicting him striking Janet van Dyne β€” a domestic-violence controversy that became one of Marvel's most debated moments and permanently colored how later writers and readers approached the character.marvel.fandom.com
  • Stan Lee has written more of Hank Pym's comics than any other writer in our catalog β€” 141 issues.

Top series

Covers through the years β€” 1962–2023

Tales to Astonish #35 β˜… 1962
Tales to Astonish #35
The Avengers #47 β˜… 1967
The Avengers #47
The Avengers #114 β˜… 1973
The Avengers #114
The Avengers #162 β˜… 1977
The Avengers #162
The Avengers Annual #10 β˜… 1981
The Avengers Annual #10
The Avengers #300 β˜… 1989
The Avengers #300
Captain America #366 1990
Captain America #366
Marvels #2 β˜… 1994
Marvels #2
The Sentry #1 β˜… 2000
The Sentry #1
Marvel Holiday Special #1 β˜… 2006
Marvel Holiday Special #1
Avengers: The Initiative #8 β˜… 2008
Avengers: The Initiative #8
Age of Ultron #10 β˜… 2013
Age of Ultron #10
Jessica Jones #2 2017
Jessica Jones #2
X-Men #24 β˜… 2023
X-Men #24

Appearances (1–150 of 1,431, oldest first)

Fantastic Four (1961)
The X-Men (1963)
Tales of Suspense (1959)
The Amazing Spider-Man Annual (1964)
Journey into Mystery (1952)
The Amazing Spider-Man (1963)
Marvel Collectors' Item Classics (1965)
#1
Amazing Stories of Suspense (1963)
#37
Smash! (1966)
Daredevil (1964)
#21
Strange Tales (1951)
Hit Comics (1966)
HIP Comics (1966)
Capt. Savage and His Leatherneck Raiders (1968)
Captain America (1968)
CapitΓ£o Z (3Βͺ SΓ©rie) (1967)
#11
Fantastic! (1967)
Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD (1968)
Fantask (1969)
Sub-Mariner (1968)
#14
Marvel (1970)