S.H.I.E.L.D. (Marvel animated universe)
S.H.I.E.L.D. appears in the second season of Iron Man. It showed Tony Stark working with Nick Fury and Dum Dum Dugan.
S.H.I.E.L.D. also appears in Spider-Man: The Animated Series. It featured Nick Fury and "Agent 1" as its featured members.
Finally, S.H.I.E.L.D. appears in The INCredible Hulk: The Animated Series. S.H.I.E.L.D. Agent Gabriel Jones is also shown as a member of the Hulkbusters.
Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.
Sally Blevins
Skids made an appearance on the X-Men animated series in the episode "No Mutant is an Island." In the episode, Cyclops, still in mourning after Jean Grey's "death", quits the X-Men and returns to his orphanage home and encounters his friend Sarah. She tells him that a wealthy man (Zebediah Kilgrave, the Purple Man) has decided to adopt all the mutant children, but his intentions are to make them into his personal strike-force to attack humans. Skids is featured as one of the orphan mutants alongside Rusty, Boom Boom and Wiz Kid.
Carol Danvers
Ms. Marvel appears in the X-Men animated series (1992) VOICED by Roscoe Handford.
James Howlett
Cathal J. Dodd voice-acts as Wolverine in the 1990s X-Men animated television series, the Marvel vs. Capcom series of fighting games, two episodes of the Spider-Man animated series, and the X-Men Cartoon Maker PC game. Masashi Ebara voiced the character in the Japanese dub.
Gabe Jones
Gabriel Jones appeared in the 1996 animated series The Incredible Hulk voiced by Thom Barry. He is portrayed as a ruthless S.H.I.E.L.D. agent working with General Thunderbolt Ross' "Hulkbusters" team. In "Mission: Incredible," it was revealed that he was partially responsible for the accident that turned a double agent named Diana into the Hybrid when she fell into a tank of newly-discovered organisms (which S.H.I.E.L.D. was experimenting on) at a S.H.I.E.L.D. Sea Base when she was hired to steal one of those organism. Also in that episode, he starts hitting on She-Hulk.
Jamie Madrox
In the X-Men animated series, Multiple Man appeared in the episode "Cold Comfort" as a member of X-Factor led by Havok and Forge.
Richard and Mary Parker
The Richard and Mary Parker appeared in Spider-Man: The Animated Series as an illusion created by Baron Mordo in the third season premiere. In the fifth-season Six Forgotten Warriors saga, it is revealed that Peter's parents were spies investigating a machine called the Doomsday Device created by the Red Skull in Russia. After learning from Nick Fury of S.H.I.E.L.D. that his parents were traitors, Peter travelled to Russia and cleared their names. He had help from Uncle Ben's friend Keen Marlow, the Golden Age superhero the Destroyer.
Jennifer Walters
She-Hulk made a brief cameo with other members of The Avengers in the 1994 Fantastic Four animated series.
She-Hulk later appeared in the 1996 The Incredible Hulk and She-Hulk animated series, voiced by Lisa Zane in season one and Cree Summer in season two. The episodes follow the comic book origins, with Jennifer Walters as Bruce Banner's cousin who receives a blood transfusion in a life-and-death situation. Jennifer takes immediate delight in her transformed body (in the model of Sensational She-Hulk) and chooses to remain in her She-Hulk form full-time. Although she appears in only two episodes in season one, She-Hulk takes center stage in season two to the point that the new season renames the series The Incredible Hulk and the She-Hulk.
Sam Wilson
The Falcon (along with his bird Redwing) appeared as a member of the Avengers in the television series The Avengers: United They Stand voiced by Martin Roach.
Directors of S.H.I.E.L.D.
Sharon Carter
A red-haired S.H.I.E.L.D. agent resembling Sharon Carter appeared in several episodes of Spider-Man: The Animated Series as "Agent 1" or "Agent X", Nick Fury's second in command. She was voiced by Rachel Davies.
Dum Dum Dugan
Dum Dum Dugan appeared in the 1990s Iron Man animated series voiced by W. Morgan Sheppard.
Nick Fury
- Nick Fury appeared as a guest character in the Iron Man animated series, voiced by Philip Abbott.
- He appeared in X-Men: The Animated Series's season-five episode Old Soldiers with his World War II band of Howling Commandos. Captain America referred to him as "Sarge". Dum Dum Dugan, a member of the Howling Commandos, was present in the scene, with his derby and mustache, but had no dialogue.
- He appeared in episodes of Spider-Man: The Animated Series, initially voiced by Philip Abbott and later by Jack Angel. He confronts the identity-changing [...] the Chameleon in "Day of the Chameleon", "The Cat", and "The Black Cat". In the "Six Forgotten Warriors" six-part episode, Fury calls 1940s superhero Keane Marlow (the Destroyer) out of retirement.
- He appeared in the Spider-Man Unlimited episode "Worlds Apart" Pt. 1 voiced by Mark Gibbon. He appears to stop Spider-Man from commandeering a shuttle only to learn of Spider-Man's mission to rescue John Jameson.
Norman Osborn
The Green Goblin appears in the 1990s Spider-Man: The Animated Series, again voiced by English actor Neil Ross. Unlike his comic counterpart, Norman Osborn here is not an insane version of himself, and has instead developed a multiple personality disorder. His other personality is the Green Goblin, who acts on destroying everyone who has hurt Osborn throughout his life. In this incarnation, Osborn is a responsible father and inventor, though ruthless businessman, who gets caught up in the Kingpin's affairs. Also, unlike the comic book version, who considers his son weak, the animated series' Osborn cares deeply for Harry.
For the first two seasons of the show, Osborn appeared as a corrupt industrialist, pressured into supplying the Kingpin with weapons and chemicals. In the Goblin's debut episode, "Enter the Green Goblin", Norman Osborn is exposed to a gas that greatly increases his physical strength but also drives him insane. The gas also somehow alters the Hobgoblin's (who in the animated series came before the Green Goblin, unlike the comics) equipment, which had been created at OsCorp, and Norman dons it, becoming the Green Goblin. He then kidnaps various OsCorp stockholders (including Wilson Fisk (Kingpin) and Felicia Hardy's mother) that had tormented Norman. In "Goblin War!", Norman Osborn becomes the Green Goblin again, defeating the Hobgoblin and stealing his Time Dilation Accelerator, a machine capable of generating portals. In the next episode "Turning Point", the Green Goblin finds out Spider-Man's secret identity, kidnaps Mary Jane, and fights Spider-Man atop the George Washington Bridge. In the end, the Goblin gets stuck in another dimension, after his glider pushes him through a portal. In "The Return of the Green Goblin", the Green Goblin appears to Harry Osborn, and lures him into becoming the new Green Goblin. In "The Wedding", Green Goblin appears again to convince Harry Osborn to become the Green Goblin again when he hears that Peter Parker and Mary Jane are going to get married, but Liz Allan in the end convinces Harry that his real friends are Mary Jane and Peter, not the Green Goblin. With his connection to Harry broken, Norman Osborn remains trapped in limbo. The Green Goblin and Hobgoblin make their final appearance in "I Really, Really Hate Clones", the first part of the two-part series finale, in which they are working for Spider-Carnage and the Kingpin in an alternate reality.
Tony Stark
- In 1994, Iron Man starred in the animated series Iron Man, with Robert Hays voicing the title character. Iron Man served as part of a team consisting of Century, War Machine, Scarlet Witch, Hawkeye and Spider Woman. This show was part of the Marvel Action Hour, which packaged several animated versions of Marvel series, including the 1994 Fantastic Four, with two half-hour episodes from different series. Iron Man's origin was changed for this series: Instead of shrapnel near his heart, Stark has multiple slivers near his spine, threatening paralysis. Also, Stark and Yinsen are held captive not by Wong Chu but by the Mandarin, who had been altered by his rings to have green skin and a degree of super strength. The Mandarin leads a group of villains, consisting of Dreadknight, Hypnotia, Blizzard, Blacklash, Grey Gargoyle, Whirlwind, Living Laser, MODOK, and Justin Hammer against Iron Man and a team based on Force Works.
- Iron Man made a non-speaking cameo in some episodes of the 1990s Fantastic Four TV series.
- Iron Man appeared in some episodes of the mid-1990s Spider-Man The Animated Series. His first guest appearance was as Tony Stark in the episode "Venom Returns", with Robert Hays reprising the role. Stark appears in the next episode, "Carnage", and dons the Iron Man armor to help Spider-Man against Venom, Carnage, Mordo and Dormammu. Stark also appears briefly in "The Spot", ordering the interdimensional technology featured in the preceding episodes to be discontinued. ("The Spot" originally aired before "Venom Returns" and "Carnage", but is clearly set after them.) In the Secret Wars arc ("Arrival", "The Gauntlet of the Red Skull" and "Doom"), Spider-Man recalls those adventures and selects Iron Man to be apart of his team. Iron Man immediately agrees to help his friend and is a major player in the arc.
- Robert Hays reprised Iron Man again in a guest appearance in the 1996 animated series The Incredible Hulk.
- On The Avengers: United They Stand, Iron Man was voiced by Francis Diakowsky. He helps the Avengers thwart the Zodiac's plan to send radioactive satellite crashing to Earth. Like Captain America and Thor, Iron Man couldn't be used as a full-fledged member.
Enemies
Advanced Idea Mechanics
A.I.M. appear in some episodes of the 1994 Iron Man animated series' second season, during which the sabotage that killed Tony Stark's father, Howard Stark in the first season episode "The Origin of Iron Man". Although it was hinted to be caused by Justin Hammer, it is later revealed as having been caused by A.I.M.
HYDRA
In The Incredible Hulk episode "Enter: She-Hulk," Hulk and She-Hulk battle HYDRA's forces. The Supreme Hydra featured was Steve Perry.
MODOK
MODOK appears as a recurring character in the animated television series Iron Man (1994â1996) voiced by Jim Cummings.
Red Skull
In the animated X-Men series, the Red Skull appears in a flashback in the episode "Old Soldiers" voiced by Cedric Smith.
In the 1994 Spider-Man animated series, Red Skull makes a cameo in the second episode of Season 4 in the episode "The Cat", where a group of people working for him attempt to trick a younger Walter Hardy into reviewing the Super Soldier Serum and giving the information to them. After Walter figured out who the men were, he managed to successfully evade them.
Later on during the Six Forgotten Warriors story arc in Season 5, it is revealed that after Red Skull (voiced by Earl Boen) and Captain America fought, they were trapped in a vortex. Fifty years later, his son Rheinholt Kragov and stepson Chameleon frees him from the vortex only for one of the captive scientists to also free Captain America. Red Skull's doomsday weapon is that he turned Rheinholt into the series version of Electro. During the struggle, Red Skull and Captain America ended up trapped in the vortex.
Finally in Secret Wars, Red Skull is sent by the Beyonder to an alien planet to fight Spider-Man and his team of superheroes. He collaborated with Alistair Smythe and Doctor Octopus (who recently lost his kingdom of Octavia to Doctor Doom) to fight the resistance led by Storm and General Torg. Black Cat attempts to take revenge on Red Skull only for Doctor Octopus to intervene. Red Skull and Doctor Octopus managed to escape. He is sent back to Earth from with no memory of the events when Doctor Doom absorbs the powers of the Beyonder.
Silver Samuari
Silver Samurai has appeared in the X-Men episode "The Lotus and the Steel" voiced by Dennis Akiyama. He is simplified and portrayed as a gang leader whose thugs terrorize every village for tribute to him each year. Wolverine first encounters him while gathering timber as Silver Samurai warns him not to interfere with his gang's affairs. The villagers stand their ground with the help of Jubilee and Wolverine bests the Samurai in single combat by taking advantage of Samurai's habit of teleporting behind him: Wolverine anticipates the move and disables the teleportation device, humiliating the Silver Samurai.
Scorpio
Scorpio appears in The Avengers: United They Stand. He appears as a member of the Zodiac and Taurus' right hand man. He is depicted as an alien with scorpion mandibles on his jaw, a scorpion claw for a right hand, and a scorpion tail on the back of his head. He, like at least Taurus, can take human form, and has used the Jake Fury identity.
Zodiac
The Zodiac appear as aliens in the animated television series The Avengers: United They Stand (1999 - 2000).