While Deadpool may be a powerful figure in Marvel Comics, there is actually a tinier version of him that is even stronger. This version of him was nicknamed Widdle Wade, and while he didn’t appear in the comics for very long, he made a big impact on his larger counterpart. Both on a physical and emotional level.
Deadpool is the alias of Wade Wilson, a mercenary who acquired superpowers after being experimented on by the governmental program Weapon X. While he had already possessed excellent physical abilities, these powers enhance his strength and agility and give him a healing factor on par with Wolverine’s. His powers also give him an awareness of the Fourth Wall, but this power is generally more finicky and less useful than his physical powers. In addition to his superpowers, Deadpool is also a deadly fighter, possessing mastery of a myriad of weapons and martial arts. All these abilities were vital in surviving an encounter with one of his most dangerous foes: himself.
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A Deadpool Team-Up comic from 1998 written by James Felder and penciled by Pete Woods introduced a new version of the Merc with a Mouth named Widdle Wade. Widdle Wade is a clone of Deadpool created by the Japanese Yakuza to serve as their personal assassin. While he may only be the size of a child, the scientists who create him remark that he has greater strength, reflexes, and stamina than the original Deadpool. Deadpool even admits this himself when they fight, saying that Widdle Wade’s genetic advantages even allow him to wield any weapon better than the original. However, despite having better natural powers Widdle Wade lacks one key advantage that causes him to lose in the end.
Although Widdle Wade has
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