Card draw simulator
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Isra_Cartujo · 2
Captain America, Fury Force
Fury Force (*) is a seven-member rapid tactical response team, led by Captain America, built in the spirit of the Howling Commandos of World War II, but updated to the Marvel Champions universe. All the allies in the deck are soldiers or S.H.I.E.L.D. agents, belonging to Steve Rogers' circle. Cap's hero deck is so well-balanced that just a few cards with the Aggression trait are enough to give him what he needs.
Team Members
Captain America: World War II veteran, Avenger, S.H.I.E.L.D. agent, and leader of Fury Force.
Agent 13: Specialist in infiltration and assassination.
Dum Dum Dugan: Heavy weapons specialist.
Melinda May: Intelligence and espionage.
Nick Fury (father): Expert in strategy, logistics, and organization.
Mockingbird: Harasser.
Winter Soldier: World War II veteran, presumed dead during the conflict, who has undergone a rigorous retraining process to become a super-soldier in the Red Room.
War Support
S.H.I.E.L.D. has equipped the group with a range of advanced vehicles and a state-of-the-art arsenal. Captain America's Hand Cannon, mounted on his hip, provides him with a devastating attack boost. The rest of the team members can be equipped with secondary weapons and have been trained in Martial Prowess and Counterattack, enhancing their responsiveness. And, as if that weren't enough, they have two Government Laisons, a Sky-Destroyer, and the fearsome Bellerophon. The Helitransport allows them to afford two copies of Fusillade and the rest of the cards. To improve their intervention capabilities, the team has been trained in Looking for Trouble, a strategy in which they engage minions to remove threats.
(*) The team's name (and the deck) is a tribute to writer Larry Hama, who in 1981 pitched a comic book project to Marvel that was never produced. In it, Nick Fury Jr., son of the director of S.H.I.E.L.D., would lead a top-secret, seven-member elite strike force, whose headquarters were located in the basement of a motor pool. At some point, he had told editor-in-chief Jim Shooter what he was working on, but it wasn't ready for publication and no resources had been allocated for its development. This project was eventually reworked into the G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero comics.