Cyber (Silas Burr) is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character is usually depicted as an enemy of Wolverine from the X-Men.

Publication history

Created by writer Peter David and artist Sam Kieth, Cyber first appeared in Marvel Comics Presents #85 (Sept. 1991), though his physical appearance was obscured by a trench coat and hat. He was first fully seen and named in Marvel Comics Presents #86 (Sept. 1991).[1]

Cyber was traditionally depicted as being augmented by adamantium, the same metal that Wolverine was bonded with. Cyber appeared in the 2024 Wolverine series, where he bonded with a new metal called adamantine.[2]

Fictional character biography

Origin

Silas Burr is a former agent of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency. In 1912, Burr escapes execution after being found guilty on 22 counts of murder. He travels to a Canadian military base, where employer Frederick Hudson took a special interest in Burr's ability to push the men under his command beyond their moral and emotional limits.

In 1959, Burr trains Daken, who is ordered to destroy the training camp. Burr is mortally wounded by Daken, but is saved by Romulus, who chooses him to be the prototype for a process that binds adamantium to his skin.[3][4][1]

Modern era

In the modern era, Cyber resurfaces in Madripoor, as an enforcer for an unnamed drug cartel, where he interferes between the rival crime cartels of Wolverine's ally Tyger Tiger and General Coy. Tyger bites out the villain's left eye before he falls into a truck containing hallucinogens he had earlier used on Wolverine, leading Cyber to flee.[5]

Resurrection

Cyber resurfaced in astral form and possesses the mutant Milo Gunderson, who has superhuman strength and childlike intelligence. Intent on revenge, he sets off for the Tinkerer, who bonds adamantium to his new body. Unbeknownst to Cyber, Milo's body has a weak heart, which causes him to have a heart attack during a battle. His condition worsens, and Wolverine is forced to bring him to the Tinkerer to treat him. The Tinkerer agrees to construct a pacemaker to stabilize Cyber's heart condition in exchange for the use of Logan's carbonadium synthesizer.[6]

Cyber is later killed by Ogun, who tries to sell his adamantium carapace to Abraham Cornelius after dissolving the rest of his body in an acid bath.[7]

Hornet

Under unknown circumstances, Cyber returns to life and masquerades as Hornet, a member of the Slingers. He is first seen in Las Vegas following Hydra's takeover of America, having been hired by Forbidden City casino owner Silas Thorne to stage a robbery of a food delivery being sent to the casino of Cassandra Mercury.[8][1] Hornet summons the Fhtagn, a demonic creature, to attack Scarlet Spider and Ricochet, but is forced to work with them when the Fhtahn grows out of control.[9][10] It is later revealed that Cyber was resurrected by a demon who had been impersonating Black Marvel.[11]

Possessed by Adamantine

Some time after abandoning his Hornet identity, Cyber decides to hunt down Wolverine to settle the score with his old foe just before Wolverine relocates to Krakoa. Despite him and all other mutants being granted amnesty on Krakoa, Cyber does not visit Krakoa due to the presence of more powerful mutants in Wolverine's company. After Krakoa's fall, Cyber ambushes Wolverine while he is living in solitude in Canada, but is fought off. The fight between the two unearths a mass of adamantine, which possesses Cyber and turns his adamantium implants into adamantine.[12][13][14][15][16] Romulus later absorbs the adamantine from Cyber and others possessed by it to empower himself.[17]

Powers and abilities

Silas Burr is a mutant who possesses a number of superhuman abilities, some due to his natural mutation and some due to artificial enhancement. He naturally possesses a degree of superhuman strength.[18] Cyber's skin was bonded with adamantium, making it virtually invulnerable and resistant to physical injury. Cyber wields retractable adamantium claws that are tipped in a powerful hallucinogen capable of affecting Wolverine.

Cyber also possesses a psionic ability that allows him to track specific brainwave patterns across great distances. This ability enabled him to survive in astral form following the attack by the Dark Riders.[19]

In other media

References

  1. 1 2 3 Dodge, John (September 11, 2024). "One of Wolverine's Most Underrated Enemies Got a Powerful Upgrade". CBR. Retrieved May 10, 2026.
  2. Brooke, David (September 11, 2024). "'Wolverine' #1 delivers action and plenty of internal monologuing". AIPT. Retrieved May 10, 2026.
  3. Wolverine: Origins #27 (September 2008)
  4. Wolverine: Origins #32 (March 2009)
  5. Marvel Comics Presents #85-92 (Summer 1991)
  6. Wolverine: Origins #11-15 (April–August 2007)
  7. Death of Wolverine #3 (November 2014)
  8. Ben Reilly: Scarlet Spider #8 (November 2017)
  9. Ben Reilly: Scarlet Spider #9 (December 2017)
  10. Ben Reilly: Scarlet Spider #10 (January 2018)
  11. Ben Reilly: Scarlet Spider #13 (March 2018)
  12. Wolverine (vol. 8) #1 (November 2024)
  13. Wood, Robert (September 13, 2024). "Wolverine Lore Changes Forever with Introduction of GOLD ADAMANTIUM". Screen Rant. Retrieved May 10, 2026.
  14. Wood, Robert (September 29, 2024). "Wolverine Lore Changes Forever as Marvel Debuts Unbreakable Metal Better Than Adamantium". Screen Rant. Retrieved May 10, 2026.
  15. Bonomolo, Cameron (January 8, 2025). "Marvel Teases a Controversial Version of Wolverine and a Shocking Return in Key Issue". ComicBook.com. Retrieved May 10, 2026.
  16. Harth, David (February 6, 2025). "One of Wolverine's Deadliest Villains Makes Surprising Return". ComicBook.com. Retrieved May 10, 2026.
  17. Wolverine (vol. 8) #5-8 (January - April 2025)
  18. Wolverine (vol. 2) #79 (March 1994)
  19. Wolverine: Origins #12 (May 2007)