Soon to enter the MCU in his dark reflection the Void.

In a recent interview with Popverse, Sentry co-creator Rick Veitch bemoans his treatment by Marvel, branding the publisher "the House of Stolen Ideas" for allegedly erasing his credit for the character, conceived with Paul Jenkins and introduced in Sentry #1 by Jenkins and artist Jae Lee. However, while discussing his history with the character, Veitch also reveals the character's original codename.

Bob From Thunderbolts Next to Sentry from Marvel Comics

Custom Image by Milica Djordjevic

Veitch reveals that Sentry was developed to give Marvel its own "Superman class hero," with the key idea that the forgotten do-gooder had been erased from reality and existed with various different designs across the years. Sentry was intended to have a whole parallel history alongside Marvel's heroes that had been forgotten, including different depictions of the character as characterized by real-world comic-book eras. Veitch reveals:

I think it was Paul who came up with the Sentry. I think we both realized that the name he brought to it, and I can't what it was, it was like Crusader or something, it wasn't really good. And then he came up with the idea of Sentry, and I was like, 'Yeah, that's great.' We were really surprised that no one had ever done a superhero called the Sentry, so that was a really cool thing.

As part of the marketing around Sentry, Marvel initially pretended the character had been created and subsequently forgotten by Stan Lee.

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Sentry Was Almost The Crusader

The Hero's Name Nailed the Idea of a Long-Lost Character

MARVEL CRUSADER HEROES

Sentry is indeed the perfect name for a time-lost hero, striking the perfect balance between something that sounds genuinely cool in the modern day while also being tinged with the 'gee whiz' spirit of the 30s-50s, known as the Golden Age of comics. It's also unique, unlike the original suggestion of "Crusader." Over the years, Marvel has had several characters who use the codename 'Crusader,' including:

  • Rogue and Captain America's alt-universe daughter
  • A Skrull hero who can alter reality within a small radius around him
  • An anti-pagan villain who fought Thor

Sadly, while Veitch, Jenkins and Lee came up with a unique name and character, the former now feels disconnected from his alleged creation, confirming that he hasn't kept up with his character, and that beyond the initial miniseries, "I haven't really read those comics." Sadly, this is the latest in a long line of creators expressing frustration at their treatment by Marvel, raising the question of how much longer writers will risk taking their characters to the pulisher, no matter what their codename.

Source: Popverse