What was the name of the magical robot from Dr. Strange?

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP





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When my father was a teenager in the 60’s, he and his friends loved Dr. Strange more than any other comics. Then one day, Dr. Strange was attacked by some kind of magically powered robot. Issue after issue, Strange would try everything to defeat the robot but every one of his spells bounced off the robot, and still it kept coming. Finally, the showdown came to an end, Strange was cornered with nothing else left to him- and the robot tripped over its own feet, fell down, and broke into pieces.



My father carried the outrage at this until the day he died, feeling betrayed by his favorite character. He refused to even see the new movie two years ago, still nursing his grudge.



I thought his memory of the scene might be inaccurate, and looked up the scene in question. I managed to find the comic, and sure enough on page 2 or 3, the robot tripped over its own feet and fell apart. Strange then goes on as if nothing happened.



I wanted to look up the comic again, but I don’t remember the name of the robot, and obviously my father isn’t around anymore to ask.



I am fairly certain the issue was from the 60’s, from my memory of the artwork. It would also fit with my father being a teenager or early 20’s still at that time. By the late 60’s he had dropped out of comics and turned onto other things, so to speak, so I think it’s no later than 1967-ish if that helps at all.










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  • Lucius Dilby's Robot? marvunapp.com/Appendix7/dilby-lucius-robot.jpg
    – Valorum
    1 hour ago










  • Grutan (AKA The Hulk)? vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/marveldatabase/images/b/b3/…
    – Valorum
    1 hour ago










  • “feeling betrayed by his favorite character” — out of interest, how come he felt betrayed?
    – Paul D. Waite
    48 mins ago
















up vote
8
down vote

favorite












When my father was a teenager in the 60’s, he and his friends loved Dr. Strange more than any other comics. Then one day, Dr. Strange was attacked by some kind of magically powered robot. Issue after issue, Strange would try everything to defeat the robot but every one of his spells bounced off the robot, and still it kept coming. Finally, the showdown came to an end, Strange was cornered with nothing else left to him- and the robot tripped over its own feet, fell down, and broke into pieces.



My father carried the outrage at this until the day he died, feeling betrayed by his favorite character. He refused to even see the new movie two years ago, still nursing his grudge.



I thought his memory of the scene might be inaccurate, and looked up the scene in question. I managed to find the comic, and sure enough on page 2 or 3, the robot tripped over its own feet and fell apart. Strange then goes on as if nothing happened.



I wanted to look up the comic again, but I don’t remember the name of the robot, and obviously my father isn’t around anymore to ask.



I am fairly certain the issue was from the 60’s, from my memory of the artwork. It would also fit with my father being a teenager or early 20’s still at that time. By the late 60’s he had dropped out of comics and turned onto other things, so to speak, so I think it’s no later than 1967-ish if that helps at all.










share|improve this question























  • Lucius Dilby's Robot? marvunapp.com/Appendix7/dilby-lucius-robot.jpg
    – Valorum
    1 hour ago










  • Grutan (AKA The Hulk)? vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/marveldatabase/images/b/b3/…
    – Valorum
    1 hour ago










  • “feeling betrayed by his favorite character” — out of interest, how come he felt betrayed?
    – Paul D. Waite
    48 mins ago












up vote
8
down vote

favorite









up vote
8
down vote

favorite











When my father was a teenager in the 60’s, he and his friends loved Dr. Strange more than any other comics. Then one day, Dr. Strange was attacked by some kind of magically powered robot. Issue after issue, Strange would try everything to defeat the robot but every one of his spells bounced off the robot, and still it kept coming. Finally, the showdown came to an end, Strange was cornered with nothing else left to him- and the robot tripped over its own feet, fell down, and broke into pieces.



My father carried the outrage at this until the day he died, feeling betrayed by his favorite character. He refused to even see the new movie two years ago, still nursing his grudge.



I thought his memory of the scene might be inaccurate, and looked up the scene in question. I managed to find the comic, and sure enough on page 2 or 3, the robot tripped over its own feet and fell apart. Strange then goes on as if nothing happened.



I wanted to look up the comic again, but I don’t remember the name of the robot, and obviously my father isn’t around anymore to ask.



I am fairly certain the issue was from the 60’s, from my memory of the artwork. It would also fit with my father being a teenager or early 20’s still at that time. By the late 60’s he had dropped out of comics and turned onto other things, so to speak, so I think it’s no later than 1967-ish if that helps at all.










share|improve this question















When my father was a teenager in the 60’s, he and his friends loved Dr. Strange more than any other comics. Then one day, Dr. Strange was attacked by some kind of magically powered robot. Issue after issue, Strange would try everything to defeat the robot but every one of his spells bounced off the robot, and still it kept coming. Finally, the showdown came to an end, Strange was cornered with nothing else left to him- and the robot tripped over its own feet, fell down, and broke into pieces.



My father carried the outrage at this until the day he died, feeling betrayed by his favorite character. He refused to even see the new movie two years ago, still nursing his grudge.



I thought his memory of the scene might be inaccurate, and looked up the scene in question. I managed to find the comic, and sure enough on page 2 or 3, the robot tripped over its own feet and fell apart. Strange then goes on as if nothing happened.



I wanted to look up the comic again, but I don’t remember the name of the robot, and obviously my father isn’t around anymore to ask.



I am fairly certain the issue was from the 60’s, from my memory of the artwork. It would also fit with my father being a teenager or early 20’s still at that time. By the late 60’s he had dropped out of comics and turned onto other things, so to speak, so I think it’s no later than 1967-ish if that helps at all.







marvel comics character-identification doctor-strange






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edited 22 mins ago









Jenayah

7,20733862




7,20733862










asked 1 hour ago









Broklynite

15.6k35277




15.6k35277











  • Lucius Dilby's Robot? marvunapp.com/Appendix7/dilby-lucius-robot.jpg
    – Valorum
    1 hour ago










  • Grutan (AKA The Hulk)? vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/marveldatabase/images/b/b3/…
    – Valorum
    1 hour ago










  • “feeling betrayed by his favorite character” — out of interest, how come he felt betrayed?
    – Paul D. Waite
    48 mins ago
















  • Lucius Dilby's Robot? marvunapp.com/Appendix7/dilby-lucius-robot.jpg
    – Valorum
    1 hour ago










  • Grutan (AKA The Hulk)? vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/marveldatabase/images/b/b3/…
    – Valorum
    1 hour ago










  • “feeling betrayed by his favorite character” — out of interest, how come he felt betrayed?
    – Paul D. Waite
    48 mins ago















Lucius Dilby's Robot? marvunapp.com/Appendix7/dilby-lucius-robot.jpg
– Valorum
1 hour ago




Lucius Dilby's Robot? marvunapp.com/Appendix7/dilby-lucius-robot.jpg
– Valorum
1 hour ago












Grutan (AKA The Hulk)? vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/marveldatabase/images/b/b3/…
– Valorum
1 hour ago




Grutan (AKA The Hulk)? vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/marveldatabase/images/b/b3/…
– Valorum
1 hour ago












“feeling betrayed by his favorite character” — out of interest, how come he felt betrayed?
– Paul D. Waite
48 mins ago




“feeling betrayed by his favorite character” — out of interest, how come he felt betrayed?
– Paul D. Waite
48 mins ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
2
down vote













Maybe Voltorr, also known as Voltorg?



In Strange Tales #165 (1968), Doctor Strange went against Yandroth, Scientist Supreme. They fight the good old way (read: lots of punching), and Strange has the upper hand, but the issue ends with the reveal of Yandroth's latest creation, the robot Voltorr. Voltorr's source of power is the "lightning of the universe", which can "obliterate human life".



To be honest, given that Yandroth is the "Scientist Supreme" I'm not sure if it's supposed to be some kind of magic, but then again, the idea that 60s comic books writers had of science was sometimes borderline magic.



Voltorr



The next issue has Strange trying out some spells against the robot (now named Voltorg), and he does manage to "blank out its scanner circuits", but in the meantime he also gets thrown around a lot, dodging blasts at the very last moment (or not), and eventually realizes that the robot only has one weak point: his eyes. He proceeds to strike Voltorg right in the face.



Dr Strange blinds Voltorg



The now blind robot wanders around, trying to blast Strange, but eventually hits a wall, making one big hole in the process, falls down and breaks into pieces. Strange then goes away to try and catch Yandroth.



Voltorg is destroyed






share|improve this answer




















  • To be honest, I'm not sure that is the one, because even if "robot breaks after falling over" and timeframe are right, Strange did manage to hold his own against the thing, and wasn't really cornered when the robot tripped. Still worth mentioning this issue, though!
    – Jenayah
    19 mins ago










  • Is that Voltorr or Voltorg? Both name are use in those picture.
    – Drag and Drop
    21 secs ago











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
2
down vote













Maybe Voltorr, also known as Voltorg?



In Strange Tales #165 (1968), Doctor Strange went against Yandroth, Scientist Supreme. They fight the good old way (read: lots of punching), and Strange has the upper hand, but the issue ends with the reveal of Yandroth's latest creation, the robot Voltorr. Voltorr's source of power is the "lightning of the universe", which can "obliterate human life".



To be honest, given that Yandroth is the "Scientist Supreme" I'm not sure if it's supposed to be some kind of magic, but then again, the idea that 60s comic books writers had of science was sometimes borderline magic.



Voltorr



The next issue has Strange trying out some spells against the robot (now named Voltorg), and he does manage to "blank out its scanner circuits", but in the meantime he also gets thrown around a lot, dodging blasts at the very last moment (or not), and eventually realizes that the robot only has one weak point: his eyes. He proceeds to strike Voltorg right in the face.



Dr Strange blinds Voltorg



The now blind robot wanders around, trying to blast Strange, but eventually hits a wall, making one big hole in the process, falls down and breaks into pieces. Strange then goes away to try and catch Yandroth.



Voltorg is destroyed






share|improve this answer




















  • To be honest, I'm not sure that is the one, because even if "robot breaks after falling over" and timeframe are right, Strange did manage to hold his own against the thing, and wasn't really cornered when the robot tripped. Still worth mentioning this issue, though!
    – Jenayah
    19 mins ago










  • Is that Voltorr or Voltorg? Both name are use in those picture.
    – Drag and Drop
    21 secs ago















up vote
2
down vote













Maybe Voltorr, also known as Voltorg?



In Strange Tales #165 (1968), Doctor Strange went against Yandroth, Scientist Supreme. They fight the good old way (read: lots of punching), and Strange has the upper hand, but the issue ends with the reveal of Yandroth's latest creation, the robot Voltorr. Voltorr's source of power is the "lightning of the universe", which can "obliterate human life".



To be honest, given that Yandroth is the "Scientist Supreme" I'm not sure if it's supposed to be some kind of magic, but then again, the idea that 60s comic books writers had of science was sometimes borderline magic.



Voltorr



The next issue has Strange trying out some spells against the robot (now named Voltorg), and he does manage to "blank out its scanner circuits", but in the meantime he also gets thrown around a lot, dodging blasts at the very last moment (or not), and eventually realizes that the robot only has one weak point: his eyes. He proceeds to strike Voltorg right in the face.



Dr Strange blinds Voltorg



The now blind robot wanders around, trying to blast Strange, but eventually hits a wall, making one big hole in the process, falls down and breaks into pieces. Strange then goes away to try and catch Yandroth.



Voltorg is destroyed






share|improve this answer




















  • To be honest, I'm not sure that is the one, because even if "robot breaks after falling over" and timeframe are right, Strange did manage to hold his own against the thing, and wasn't really cornered when the robot tripped. Still worth mentioning this issue, though!
    – Jenayah
    19 mins ago










  • Is that Voltorr or Voltorg? Both name are use in those picture.
    – Drag and Drop
    21 secs ago













up vote
2
down vote










up vote
2
down vote









Maybe Voltorr, also known as Voltorg?



In Strange Tales #165 (1968), Doctor Strange went against Yandroth, Scientist Supreme. They fight the good old way (read: lots of punching), and Strange has the upper hand, but the issue ends with the reveal of Yandroth's latest creation, the robot Voltorr. Voltorr's source of power is the "lightning of the universe", which can "obliterate human life".



To be honest, given that Yandroth is the "Scientist Supreme" I'm not sure if it's supposed to be some kind of magic, but then again, the idea that 60s comic books writers had of science was sometimes borderline magic.



Voltorr



The next issue has Strange trying out some spells against the robot (now named Voltorg), and he does manage to "blank out its scanner circuits", but in the meantime he also gets thrown around a lot, dodging blasts at the very last moment (or not), and eventually realizes that the robot only has one weak point: his eyes. He proceeds to strike Voltorg right in the face.



Dr Strange blinds Voltorg



The now blind robot wanders around, trying to blast Strange, but eventually hits a wall, making one big hole in the process, falls down and breaks into pieces. Strange then goes away to try and catch Yandroth.



Voltorg is destroyed






share|improve this answer












Maybe Voltorr, also known as Voltorg?



In Strange Tales #165 (1968), Doctor Strange went against Yandroth, Scientist Supreme. They fight the good old way (read: lots of punching), and Strange has the upper hand, but the issue ends with the reveal of Yandroth's latest creation, the robot Voltorr. Voltorr's source of power is the "lightning of the universe", which can "obliterate human life".



To be honest, given that Yandroth is the "Scientist Supreme" I'm not sure if it's supposed to be some kind of magic, but then again, the idea that 60s comic books writers had of science was sometimes borderline magic.



Voltorr



The next issue has Strange trying out some spells against the robot (now named Voltorg), and he does manage to "blank out its scanner circuits", but in the meantime he also gets thrown around a lot, dodging blasts at the very last moment (or not), and eventually realizes that the robot only has one weak point: his eyes. He proceeds to strike Voltorg right in the face.



Dr Strange blinds Voltorg



The now blind robot wanders around, trying to blast Strange, but eventually hits a wall, making one big hole in the process, falls down and breaks into pieces. Strange then goes away to try and catch Yandroth.



Voltorg is destroyed







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 22 mins ago









Jenayah

7,20733862




7,20733862











  • To be honest, I'm not sure that is the one, because even if "robot breaks after falling over" and timeframe are right, Strange did manage to hold his own against the thing, and wasn't really cornered when the robot tripped. Still worth mentioning this issue, though!
    – Jenayah
    19 mins ago










  • Is that Voltorr or Voltorg? Both name are use in those picture.
    – Drag and Drop
    21 secs ago

















  • To be honest, I'm not sure that is the one, because even if "robot breaks after falling over" and timeframe are right, Strange did manage to hold his own against the thing, and wasn't really cornered when the robot tripped. Still worth mentioning this issue, though!
    – Jenayah
    19 mins ago










  • Is that Voltorr or Voltorg? Both name are use in those picture.
    – Drag and Drop
    21 secs ago
















To be honest, I'm not sure that is the one, because even if "robot breaks after falling over" and timeframe are right, Strange did manage to hold his own against the thing, and wasn't really cornered when the robot tripped. Still worth mentioning this issue, though!
– Jenayah
19 mins ago




To be honest, I'm not sure that is the one, because even if "robot breaks after falling over" and timeframe are right, Strange did manage to hold his own against the thing, and wasn't really cornered when the robot tripped. Still worth mentioning this issue, though!
– Jenayah
19 mins ago












Is that Voltorr or Voltorg? Both name are use in those picture.
– Drag and Drop
21 secs ago





Is that Voltorr or Voltorg? Both name are use in those picture.
– Drag and Drop
21 secs ago


















 

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