![]() However, that aspect of his character may have been completely wiped clean from his identity now that he no longer has to share his mind with a symbiote in order to possess their power. The very concept of symbiotes and their host hinged on the themes of duality, something that Sony Pictures' Venom and Venom: Let There Be Carnage films explored greatly with its interpretation of Eddie Brock. While his quest for revenge appears to be at the forefront of Eddie's mind, his immense transformation may have completely altered his character's identity within the Marvel Universe.Ī major part of Eddie Brock's character since his introduction has been the dichotomy he shared with whatever symbiote he was bonded to, whether it was Venom or the latest symbiote Bedlam. After escaping the Absent Throne facility his body was being kept, the newly empowered anti-hero commenced his new mission of revenge in search of the Bedlam symbiote. With this radical transformation, Eddie declared that he is now the 'Human Symbiote' to the Absent Throne scientists that were analyzing his body. This essentially evolved him from a human into a symbiote himself. ![]() He now had the ability to call upon every single power he had while bonded to the Venom symbiote, being able to shape-shift his body, perform feats of superhuman strength and the ability heal from any injury. ![]() However, after communing with the collective consciousness of the past Kings in Black, Eddie's soul was returned to his now destroyed body with all-new powers. After his body was taken over by the monstrous symbiote entity Bedlam in Venom #16 (by Al Ewing, Bryan Hitch, Andrew Currie, Alex Sinclair and VC's Clayton Cowles), Eddie's soul was sent through limbo into an alternate world known as the Qlippoth of Omega, which is the primordial center of the symbiote hive-mind.
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