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Fictional bounty hunters

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Deadpool
Deadpool is a character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by Fabian Nicieza and Rob Liefeld, the character first appeared in New Mutants #98 (December 1990). In his comic book appearances, Deadpool is initially depicted as a supervillain of the New Mutants and X-Force, though later stories would portray him as an antihero. Deadpool is the alter ego of Wade Wilson, a disfigured Canadian mercenary with superhuman regenerative healing abilities.
Wario
is a character in Nintendo's Mario franchise that was designed as an antithesis of Mario. Wario first appeared as the main antagonist and final boss in the 1992 Game Boy game Super Mario Land 2: 6 Golden Coins. His name is a portmanteau of the name Mario and the Japanese word warui (悪い), meaning "bad". He is usually portrayed as a selfish and greedy treasure hunter who, in karmic irony, routinely loses his spoils by adventure's end. Hiroji Kiyotake designed Wario, and Charles Martinet voiced the character from 1993 to 2023.
Roronoa Zoro
fictional character from One Piece
Geralt of Rivia
fictional character from the Witcher series
Battle Angel Alita
Japanese manga series
Deadshot
Deadshot is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. Created by writer David Vern Reed and artist Lew Sayre Schwartz based on a concept from Bob Kane, the character first appeared in Batman #59 (1950). Introduced as a gun-toting criminal in a tuxedo, top hat, and domino mask, Deadshot was only intended to be a one-off villain for the superhero Batman, but writer Steve Englehart and artist Marshall Rogers revived, redesigned, and popularized the character in Detective Comics #474 (1977), which featured the debut of his wrist-mounted guns, reticle emblem, and mask
Deathstroke
Deathstroke is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. Created by writer Marv Wolfman and artist George Pérez, the character first appeared in The New Teen Titans #2 (1980) as Deathstroke the Terminator.
Samus Aran
video game character
Asajj Ventress
fictional character in the Star Wars universe
Captain Cold
supervillain appearing in DC Comics publications and related media
Puss in Boots
main character in the Shrek franchise
Lobo
DC Comics character
Bishop
fictional character in Marvel Comics
Franky
fictional character from One Piece
The Fall Guy
TV series on ABC between 1981‒1986
Kirito
fictional character from Sword Art Online
Jessica Drew
fictional character in Marvel Comics
Gunsmith Cats
Japanese manga series
Silver Sable
fictional character in Marvel Comics
Gwenpool
Gwenpool (Gwendolyn "Gwen" Poole; colloquial: "GwenPool") is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Marvel initially produced two stories featuring Gwenpool, a girl from the real world transported to the Marvel Universe. The character, created by Christopher Hastings, Heather Antos and Jordan D. White, first appeared in a backup story in Howard the Duck, and a one-shot Gwenpool Holiday Special, illustrated by Gurihiru. Following the publication of the one-shot, an ongoing series titled The Unbelievable Gwenpool by the same creative team was announce
Angela
fictional character in the Image and Marvel Universes
IG-88
REDIRECT Droid (Star Wars)#IG-88
Greedo
REDIRECT List of Star Wars original trilogy characters#Mos Eisley
Captain Falcon
fictional character from the Nintendo video game F-Zero series
Yuna
fictional character in Final Fantasy X
Zam Wesell
character in Star Wars
Eat-Man
Eat-Man (stylized as EAT-MAN) is a Japanese manga series created by Akihito Yoshitomi in 1996 which was serialized by MediaWorks monthly in 19 volumes until 2003 in Dengeki Comic Gao! magazine. In 1997, Studio Deen adapted the manga into a 12-episode anime television series which was broadcast in Japan from January 9 to March 27, 1997, on TV Tokyo. A sequel, ''Eat-Man '98, was also animated by Studio Deen and ran from October 8 to December 23, 1998. Both anime series are licensed in North America by Discotek Media and the manga series was licensed by Viz Communications before it was dropped. A
Rick Deckard
fictional character from Blade Runner
Teenage Bounty Hunters
2020 American teen dramedy streaming television series
Bridget
fictional character from Guilty Gear
Iria: Zeiram the Animation
original video animation
Merlyn
fictional character in the DC Comics Universe
Hunter Prey
2010 film by Sandy Collora
Emma Swan-Jones
Fictional character on Once Upon a Time
Rikku
Rikku is a character in the Final Fantasy series, created by Tetsuya Nomura. Rikku first appears in Final Fantasy X as one of its protagonists, where she accompanies her cousin Yuna and others on a journey to defeat the monster Sin. Rikku again appears as a protagonist in the game's direct sequel, Final Fantasy X-2. In that game, she, Yuna, and new friend Paine journey to find missing FFX protagonist Tidus.
Fennec Shand
fictional character in Star Wars
Ilana Verdansky
character from the American mystery fiction television series Lost
Seiun Kamen Machineman
television series
Mazikeen
Mazikeen is a character who appears in American comic books published by DC Comics. She is one of the Lilim, a child of Lilith. She first appeared in The Sandman (vol. 2) #22 (December 1990), and was created by Neil Gaiman and Kelley Jones. Her name comes from the term "Mazzikin", invisible demons which can create minor annoyances or greater dangers according to Jewish mythology.
Durge
REDIRECT List of Star Wars Legends characters#D
My Dad the Bounty Hunter
animated television series
Hitpig!
Hitpig! is a 2024 animated comedy film directed by Cinzia Angelini and David Feiss. The film comes from an original story by Berkeley Breathed, rooted from his 2008 children's book Pete & Pickles. Breathed also wrote the screenplay alongside Dave Rosenbaum and Tyler Werrin. Produced by Aniventure and animated by Cinesite, the film features the voices of Jason Sudeikis, Lilly Singh, Rainn Wilson, Anitta, RuPaul, Hannah Gadsby and Charlie Adler.
Barb Wire
comics character