Videos by ComicBook.com
Just because these examples aren’t all a carbon copy of Task Force X, it’s generally a lot of fun having a team of villains. Wanting to do good or being forced to be good, the Suicide Squad concept has been flipped or remixed into these 5 Marvel teams.
5) The Thunderbolts (Masters of Evil)

Easily the best-known example of Marvel’s Suicide Squad would have to be the original lineup of the Thunderbolts. Sold as a group of “heroes” to be the public’s first line of defense after the Avengers “died,” the big twist was that these weren’t heroes but, in fact, the Masters of Evil in disguise. Led (and controlled) by Baron Zemo, who was parading around as patriotic hero Citizen V, eventually, most of the group discovered that they genuinely wanted to fill in the gap the Avengers left, and actually became heroes.
They’d eventually be found out and would split up, but at the time, it was one of the coolest twists in all of comics. Having the new heroes secretly be villains was a great reversal and created some fun new power dynamics. Especially since they were led by one of the biggest haters of the Avengers in Baron Zemo. It was a great story.
5) Ultimate Sinister Six

The Jonathan Hickman version of the Sinister Six, led by Wilson Fisk as part of the Maker’s Council, has become iconic in the pages of Ultimate Spider-Man. It’s a drastically different take on Spider-Man foes like Kingpin, Mr. Negative, Kraven, Mysterio, Black Cat, and Mole Man (of all characters). They work more like a cabal of gangsters running New York City, but as the series has progressed, they’ve proven to be terrible at it, with each member slowly fracturing or going their own way, in an effort to betray and dethrone the Kingpin. Meanwhile, Fisk is the “Amanda Waller” of the group, controlling his lieutenants with the threat of annihilation should they move against him.
While they have become a shell of themselves, they really have been a fun team to read. Despite being new and never actually seeing them together in an issue, they have quickly become a fan-favorite version of the Sinister Six, and echo Task Force X stories in having some members genuinely working for the good of the group, while others have their own schemes that eventually turn the squad against one another.
3) Freedom Force

Originally conceived as Mystique’s version of the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants, Freedom Force became the government-sponsored mutant squad. Now calling themselves heroes, they were the furthest thing from it: basically a task force comprised of villains, operating like bad cops on (literal) power trips. They were a public antithesis to the “mutant menace” represented by unchecked groups like the X-Men and Magneto’s Brotherhood.
The kick with this team was, they were fairly well balanced. Everyone having a specialty echoes the Suicide Squad needing one person of every type. While this team isn’t active much anymore, it was a fun sight anytime they popped up, purely to see them get the tar knocked out of them by the X-Men (or other X-teams).










