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Honey Lemon

Honey Lemon
Honey Lemon (Marvel Comics).jpg
Honey Lemon
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance Sunfire & Big Hero 6 #1 (Sept. 1998)
Created by Steven T. Seagle, Duncan Rouleau
In-story information
Alter ego Aiko Miyazaki
Team affiliations Big Hero 6
Abilities Brilliant scientist
Extensively trained martial artist
Purse grants:
Ability to access another dimension and pull any item out of it
Honey Lemon
Big Hero 6 character
Honey Lemon from Disney's Big Hero 6.png
Walt Disney Animation Studios reimagining of Honey Lemon
First appearance Big Hero 6 (2014)
Voiced by Génesis Rodríguez
Information
Gender Female

Honey Lemon (Aiko Miyazaki) is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character is commonly associated with the Japanese team known as Big Hero 6. She was created by Steven T. Seagle and Duncan Rouleau, and first appeared in Sunfire & Big Hero 6 #1 (September 1998).

Created by Steven T. Seagle and Duncan Rouleau in their spare time while working on another project, Honey Lemon was first intended to appear with the rest of Big Hero 6 in Alpha Flight #17 (December 1998). However, the team first appeared in their own self-titled three-issue miniseries by writer Scott Lobdell and artist Gus Vasquez, which due to scheduling issues, was published before Alpha Flight #17. The character appeared with the team in a subsequent five-issue miniseries which was launched by Marvel Comics in September 2008.

Aiko Miyazaki was enrolled in the graduate program at the Tokyo University of Science when she was recruited by Naikaku Jōhō Chōsashitsu (Naichō), Japan's premiere intelligence agency. Miyazaki's sharp intellect and stunning looks made her a prime candidate for secret agent status, and she was promptly placed on a research and development team consisting of Naichō's top physicists, chemists, and mechanical engineers and put to work creating new technology for the government. Although Miyazaki's team was responsible for several innovations in surveillance technology, by far their most significant invention was a cluster of artificial, miniature wormholes—tiny warps and distortions in the fabric of space-time. At Miyazaki's suggestion, the wormholes were contained within an innocuous woman's purse so they could be applied in the field without attracting undue attention. It was soon discovered that the wormholes, in conjunction with Pym Particles and cutting-edge nanotechnology, served as ideal storage devices in the field—virtually any object, no matter how large, could be stored in Miyazaki's aptly-named "Power Purse" for later use.


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Wikipedia

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