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* Judge Death is portrayed this way in the ''ComicBook/JudgeDredd'' prequel arc ''Fall of Deadworld''. He's mostly an OrcusOnHisThrone and only makes sporadic appearances, but seems to be anticipating various events somehow. At one point, he's actually shown hunched over a chessboard with ghoulish pieces reflecting different characters, knocking one off the table after someone was just caught as a traitor.

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* Judge Death is portrayed this way in the ''ComicBook/JudgeDredd'' prequel arc ''Fall of Deadworld''.series ''ComicBook/TheFallOfDeadworld''. He's mostly an OrcusOnHisThrone and only makes sporadic appearances, but seems to be anticipating various events somehow. At one point, he's actually shown hunched over a chessboard with ghoulish pieces reflecting different characters, knocking one off the table after someone was just caught as a traitor.
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* Franchise/{{Batman}} villain ComicBook/TheRiddler is an accomplished chessmaster, notably for smooth sway over the media, especially post-reformation (a quality of VillainWithGoodPublicity), and for his previous yet strategically subtle maneuverings of other well-known manipulators and dangerous personas.

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* Franchise/{{Batman}} ComicBook/{{Batman}} villain ComicBook/TheRiddler is an accomplished chessmaster, notably for smooth sway over the media, especially post-reformation (a quality of VillainWithGoodPublicity), and for his previous yet strategically subtle maneuverings of other well-known manipulators and dangerous personas.



** You can't say Franchise/{{Batman}}, chessmaster, and villain in the same sentence without talking about ComicBook/{{Bane}}. He managed to beat fellow {{Chessmaster}}, ComicBook/RasAlGhul, at a game of Chess even though he's never seen a chessboard before. [[GeniusBruiser Coupled with his monstrous physical strength]], he's easily one of Batman's deadliest physical opponents. There's a reason he's known as "[[DefeatingTheUndefeatable The Man who Broke the Bat]]".

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** You can't say Franchise/{{Batman}}, ComicBook/{{Batman}}, chessmaster, and villain in the same sentence without talking about ComicBook/{{Bane}}. He managed to beat fellow {{Chessmaster}}, ComicBook/RasAlGhul, at a game of Chess even though he's never seen a chessboard before. [[GeniusBruiser Coupled with his monstrous physical strength]], he's easily one of Batman's deadliest physical opponents. There's a reason he's known as "[[DefeatingTheUndefeatable The Man who Broke the Bat]]".



** Franchise/{{Batman}} himself. He ''is'' the namesake of the BatmanGambit after all and he is pretty skilled in chess.

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** Franchise/{{Batman}} ComicBook/{{Batman}} himself. He ''is'' the namesake of the BatmanGambit after all and he is pretty skilled in chess.



** ''ComicBook/WonderWoman1987'': Athena's scheme to bring down Zeus required the resurrection of Medousa; the death, by Medousa's stone gaze, of a child of one of Franchise/WonderWoman's embassy workers to incense Diana into agreeing to a duel to the death, and then that duel culminating in Wonder Woman's blindness and the decapitation of Medousa. This entire chain of events was simply her way of obtaining a fresh gorgon's head (Medousa's previous head having rotted away to uselessness) to use on Zeus's champion, the hecatoncheires Briareos. And that doesn't even count the plot that she undergoes to consolidate her power once Zeus, Poseidon, and Hades try to rebel... Ares has a conversation with her over a chessboard with pieces reflecting all the players in her plan, and grins when she moves a model of himself before he'd agreed to play along.

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** ''ComicBook/WonderWoman1987'': Athena's scheme to bring down Zeus required the resurrection of Medousa; the death, by Medousa's stone gaze, of a child of one of Franchise/WonderWoman's ComicBook/WonderWoman's embassy workers to incense Diana into agreeing to a duel to the death, and then that duel culminating in Wonder Woman's blindness and the decapitation of Medousa. This entire chain of events was simply her way of obtaining a fresh gorgon's head (Medousa's previous head having rotted away to uselessness) to use on Zeus's champion, the hecatoncheires Briareos. And that doesn't even count the plot that she undergoes to consolidate her power once Zeus, Poseidon, and Hades try to rebel... Ares has a conversation with her over a chessboard with pieces reflecting all the players in her plan, and grins when she moves a model of himself before he'd agreed to play along.



* Metron of ''Comicbook/NewGods'', who is an EnsembleDarkHorse thanks to his unemotional, bipartisan manipulation of events.

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* Metron of ''Comicbook/NewGods'', ''ComicBook/NewGods'', who is an EnsembleDarkHorse thanks to his unemotional, bipartisan manipulation of events.



* ComicBook/NormanOsborn of ''Franchise/SpiderMan'' is another contender in this category. Brought BackFromTheDead when Marvel needed a "[[AuthorsSavingThrow Get Out Of Clone Saga Free]]" card, Osborn has more than made up for lost time. For a while, every other ComicBook/SpiderMan story was turning out to be some sub-sub-plan of Osborn's.

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* ''ComicBook/SpiderMan'': ComicBook/NormanOsborn of ''Franchise/SpiderMan'' is another contender in this category. Brought BackFromTheDead when Marvel needed a "[[AuthorsSavingThrow Get Out Of Clone Saga Free]]" card, Osborn has more than made up for lost time. For a while, every other ComicBook/SpiderMan story was turning out to be some sub-sub-plan of Osborn's.



* Franchise/{{Superman}} enemy ComicBook/{{Brainiac}} has often been this, in contrast to MagnificentBastard ComicBook/LexLuthor. Brainiac has frequently set up incredibly complex plans, using every character as a chesspiece in his efforts to [[PlanetLooters steal cities]] / [[AGodAmI become a god]]/absorb the sum total of all knowledge in the universe (his motive keeps on changing), but has trouble changing them once something goes wrong.

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* Franchise/{{Superman}} enemy ''ComicBook/{{Superman}}'': ComicBook/{{Brainiac}} has often been this, in contrast to MagnificentBastard ComicBook/LexLuthor. Brainiac has frequently set up incredibly complex plans, using every character as a chesspiece in his efforts to [[PlanetLooters steal cities]] / [[AGodAmI become a god]]/absorb the sum total of all knowledge in the universe (his motive keeps on changing), but has trouble changing them once something goes wrong.
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* The goddess Athena in the MarvelUniverse series ''ComicBook/TheIncredibleHercules'' is another heroic version of this trope; one of the series' major ongoing threads is a (and, as yet, largely unknown) BatmanGambit she is in the process of executing. Her brother Hercules, a frequent key piece on her chessboard, finds her refusal to be upfront with her plans annoying.

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* The goddess Athena in the MarvelUniverse Marvel Universe series ''ComicBook/TheIncredibleHercules'' is another heroic version of this trope; one of the series' major ongoing threads is a (and, as yet, largely unknown) BatmanGambit she is in the process of executing. Her brother Hercules, a frequent key piece on her chessboard, finds her refusal to be upfront with her plans annoying.



* ComicBook/{{Thanos}} is a staple Chessmaster in many cosmic [[CrisisCrossover crossovers]] in the MarvelUniverse. It's frequently [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] how other characters (especially heroes) exist solely to be manipulated by him for whatever agenda he might have at the moment.

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* ComicBook/{{Thanos}} is a staple Chessmaster in many cosmic [[CrisisCrossover crossovers]] in the MarvelUniverse.Marvel Universe. It's frequently [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] how other characters (especially heroes) exist solely to be manipulated by him for whatever agenda he might have at the moment.



*** The regular MarvelUniverse's Colonel ComicBook/NickFury is no slouch either, even when he loses the support of the US government.

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*** The regular MarvelUniverse's Marvel Universe's Colonel ComicBook/NickFury is no slouch either, even when he loses the support of the US government.
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* The ComicBook/BlackPanther of the MarvelUniverse is a rare example of this trope who's a traditional superhero, albeit one that is occasionally under fire from his more-idealistic peers, for obvious reasons.

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* The ComicBook/BlackPanther of the MarvelUniverse Franchise/MarvelUniverse is a rare example of this trope who's a traditional superhero, albeit one that is occasionally under fire from his more-idealistic peers, for obvious reasons.
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* In ''ComicBook/CivilWar'', Hammerhead organizes a meeting of all supervillains, to be their new leader, replacing the Kingpin. The Kingpin manages to have his plans thwarted... despite the minor inconvenience of being in prison at the time.

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* In ''ComicBook/CivilWar'', ''ComicBook/CivilWar2006'', Hammerhead organizes a meeting of all supervillains, to be their new leader, replacing the Kingpin. The Kingpin manages to have his plans thwarted... despite the minor inconvenience of being in prison at the time.
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[[quoteright:350:[[ComicBook/SpiderMan https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/hobgoblinmb_0.jpg]]]]

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[[quoteright:350:[[ComicBook/SpiderMan [[quoteright:350:[[ComicBook/SpiderGirl https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/hobgoblinmb_0.jpg]]]]

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* ''Comicbook/TheAvengers'' villain Immortus was always a Chessmaster in a big way, but in the ''ComicBook/AvengersForever'' series it turned out he was a Chessmaster on a far greater scale than anyone had imagined, he [[spoiler:had manipulated virtually every event in the history of the Avengers simply to prevent the human race from becoming dangerous enough that the malevolent Time Keepers would wipe them out to preserve their own existence]].

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* ''Comicbook/TheAvengers'' ''ComicBook/TheAvengers'' villain Immortus was always a Chessmaster in a big way, but in the ''ComicBook/AvengersForever'' series it turned out he was a Chessmaster on a far greater scale than anyone had imagined, he [[spoiler:had manipulated virtually every event in the history of the Avengers simply to prevent the human race from becoming dangerous enough that the malevolent Time Keepers would wipe them out to preserve their own existence]].



** The daughter of Ra's Al Ghul, ComicBook/TaliaAlGhul, [[ComicBook/GrantMorrisonsBatman has recently proven to be far more cunning than anyone could have suspected]]. It helps that she's just as CrazyPrepared as the Bat himself, and fueled by [[WomanScorned a lot more]] [[WellDoneSonGuy malice than]] [[VisionaryVillain Ra's ever was]]. Talia and her agents have proven so dangerous that [[spoiler: it turns out that the mysterious organization Batman thought dangerous enough to create a massive, worldwide organization of Batmen, Leviathan, [[TheReveal is controlled directly by Talia herself]]]].

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** The daughter of Ra's Al Ghul, ComicBook/TaliaAlGhul, [[ComicBook/GrantMorrisonsBatman [[ComicBook/BatmanGrantMorrison has recently proven to be far more cunning than anyone could have suspected]]. It helps that she's just as CrazyPrepared as the Bat himself, and fueled by [[WomanScorned a lot more]] [[WellDoneSonGuy malice than]] [[VisionaryVillain Ra's ever was]]. Talia and her agents have proven so dangerous that [[spoiler: it turns out that the mysterious organization Batman thought dangerous enough to create a massive, worldwide organization of Batmen, Leviathan, [[TheReveal is controlled directly by Talia herself]]]].



* The very first time we see ComicBook/DoctorDoom, he's toying with chess-piece replicas of the Comicbook/FantasticFour, so that tells you all you need to know. He's usually ranked as Reed Richards' evil ''doppelganger'' regarding intellect, and his plans range from the complicated to the ''really'' complicated to the one that played both [[{{Satan}} Mephisto]] and Comicbook/DoctorStrange like Stradivarius violins. Simultaneously. With one move.

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* The very first time we see ComicBook/DoctorDoom, he's toying with chess-piece replicas of the Comicbook/FantasticFour, ComicBook/FantasticFour, so that tells you all you need to know. He's usually ranked as Reed Richards' evil ''doppelganger'' regarding intellect, and his plans range from the complicated to the ''really'' complicated to the one that played both [[{{Satan}} Mephisto]] and Comicbook/DoctorStrange ComicBook/DoctorStrange like Stradivarius violins. Simultaneously. With one move.



** An issue of ''Comicbook/{{Excalibur}}'' parodied the characters-as-chess-pieces visual metaphor, with the characters standing on a chessboard, and Captain Britain saying "Call me paranoid, but I think we're being manipulated."

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** An issue of ''Comicbook/{{Excalibur}}'' ''ComicBook/{{Excalibur}}'' parodied the characters-as-chess-pieces visual metaphor, with the characters standing on a chessboard, and Captain Britain saying "Call me paranoid, but I think we're being manipulated."



* ''Comicbook/TheIncredibleHulk'': Bruce Banner is this, at least under Greg Pak's pen. As we learn in ''ComicBook/FallOfTheHulks'', Banner's just as dangerous as his savage green alter-ego -- if not more so.

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* ''Comicbook/TheIncredibleHulk'': ''ComicBook/TheIncredibleHulk'': Bruce Banner is this, at least under Greg Pak's pen. As we learn in ''ComicBook/FallOfTheHulks'', Banner's just as dangerous as his savage green alter-ego -- if not more so.



* ComicBook/NormanOsborn of ''Franchise/SpiderMan'' is another contender in this category. Brought BackFromTheDead when Marvel needed a "[[AuthorsSavingThrow Get Out Of Clone Saga Free]]" card, Osborn has more than made up for lost time. For a while, every other Comicbook/SpiderMan story was turning out to be some sub-sub-plan of Osborn's.

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* ComicBook/NormanOsborn of ''Franchise/SpiderMan'' is another contender in this category. Brought BackFromTheDead when Marvel needed a "[[AuthorsSavingThrow Get Out Of Clone Saga Free]]" card, Osborn has more than made up for lost time. For a while, every other Comicbook/SpiderMan ComicBook/SpiderMan story was turning out to be some sub-sub-plan of Osborn's.
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* ''Comicbook/IncredibleHulk'': Bruce Banner is this, at least under Greg Pak's pen. As we learn in ''ComicBook/FallOfTheHulks'', Banner's just as dangerous as his savage green alter-ego -- if not more so.

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* ''Comicbook/IncredibleHulk'': ''Comicbook/TheIncredibleHulk'': Bruce Banner is this, at least under Greg Pak's pen. As we learn in ''ComicBook/FallOfTheHulks'', Banner's just as dangerous as his savage green alter-ego -- if not more so.



* Obadiah Stane did a masterful job of bringing every part of [[ComicBook/IronMan Tony Stark's]] life crashing down. Chess was the theme of his campaign against Stark; he went so far as to outfit his henchmen as Knights, Bishops, and Rooks, with appropriate gimmicks. It's revealed in his origin story that he began playing chess at a young age, and at age eight won a school chess tournament by slitting the throat of his opponent's dog and stuffing the body into the kid's locker. The victory only cemented his obsession with the game.

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* ''ComicBook/IronMan'': Obadiah Stane did a masterful job of bringing every part of [[ComicBook/IronMan Tony Stark's]] Stark's life crashing down. Chess was the theme of his campaign against Stark; he went so far as to outfit his henchmen as Knights, Bishops, and Rooks, with appropriate gimmicks. It's revealed in his origin story that he began playing chess at a young age, and at age eight won a school chess tournament by slitting the throat of his opponent's dog and stuffing the body into the kid's locker. The victory only cemented his obsession with the game.



* In ComicBook/TheMightyThor, Odin has sometimes been seeing poring over a chessboard with the characters as the pieces (ususally to show he's going through a morally ambiguous phase).

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* In ComicBook/TheMightyThor, ''ComicBook/TheMightyThor'': Odin has sometimes been seeing poring over a chessboard with the characters as the pieces (ususally to show he's going through a morally ambiguous phase).

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%% Examples have been merged. Please note which examples have chess motifs, but do not separate them.



!!Examples With Chess Motifs

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!!Examples With Chess Motifs



* In the Franchise/{{Batman}} story ''Hush'', Hush is thought to be it, but it actually turns out to be [[spoiler:The Riddler]] who ironically, Batman had dismissed as a threat earlier on in the story.

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* In ''Comicbook/TheAvengers'' villain Immortus was always a Chessmaster in a big way, but in the ''ComicBook/AvengersForever'' series it turned out he was a Chessmaster on a far greater scale than anyone had imagined, he [[spoiler:had manipulated virtually every event in the history of the Avengers simply to prevent the human race from becoming dangerous enough that the malevolent Time Keepers would wipe them out to preserve their own existence]].
*
Franchise/{{Batman}} story ''Hush'', Hush villain ComicBook/TheRiddler is thought an accomplished chessmaster, notably for smooth sway over the media, especially post-reformation (a quality of VillainWithGoodPublicity), and for his previous yet strategically subtle maneuverings of other well-known manipulators and dangerous personas.
** [[spoiler: In Hush: The Riddler discovers Batman's secret identity and manipulates Bat's oldest friend and his old mechanic, Poison Ivy (who in turn uses Catwoman and SUPERMAN), Killer Croc, Harley Quinn, Clayface, Scarecrow, Ra's Al Ghul. Even the Joker was talked into going along with his scheme. However, Batman ensures his confidentiality when he exploits the Riddler's compulsion: he can't expose Batman because it would be like giving away the answer to a riddle]].
** ComicBook/TwoFace can also be a ChessMaster, usually having two plans in motion at once, one often entirely different (but also in some way linked) to the other.
** You can't say Franchise/{{Batman}}, chessmaster, and villain in the same sentence without talking about ComicBook/{{Bane}}. He managed to beat fellow {{Chessmaster}}, ComicBook/RasAlGhul, at a game of Chess even though he's never seen a chessboard before. [[GeniusBruiser Coupled with his monstrous physical strength]], he's easily one of Batman's deadliest physical opponents. There's a reason he's known as "[[DefeatingTheUndefeatable The Man who Broke the Bat]]".
*** Ironically, this could have backfired on him when he engineered his greatest scheme in ''ComicBook/{{Knightfall}}'', springing the entire RoguesGallery from Arkham Asylum knowing that Batman would physically exhaust himself trying to recapture them all, leaving him vulnerable to the above-mentioned back-breaking. A few of the villains manage to figure out they're being manipulated - and one of them, the Mad Hatter, enlists the help of Film Freak (by brainwashing him) into helping investigate who's behind the breakout. Film Freak discovers Bane and attempts to assassinate him, only
to be it, but it actually turns out beaten to be [[spoiler:The Riddler]] who death at Bane's own hands - thus, ironically, leaving Batman had dismissed with one less problem to handle.
** The daughter of Ra's Al Ghul, ComicBook/TaliaAlGhul, [[ComicBook/GrantMorrisonsBatman has recently proven to be far more cunning than anyone could have suspected]]. It helps that she's just
as a threat earlier on in CrazyPrepared as the story.Bat himself, and fueled by [[WomanScorned a lot more]] [[WellDoneSonGuy malice than]] [[VisionaryVillain Ra's ever was]]. Talia and her agents have proven so dangerous that [[spoiler: it turns out that the mysterious organization Batman thought dangerous enough to create a massive, worldwide organization of Batmen, Leviathan, [[TheReveal is controlled directly by Talia herself]]]].
** In ''ComicBook/RedRobin'' Tim proves himself to be taking after his adoptive father in stride when he sets up his own information network and a "hit list" arranged so that the capture of one criminal will lead to the arrests of about fifteen others, that can easily be tweaked and modified to the point that he can ''free'' a couple of the villains on it without it affecting the overall plan.
** Franchise/{{Batman}} himself. He ''is'' the namesake of the BatmanGambit after all and he is pretty skilled in chess.
* The ComicBook/BlackPanther of the MarvelUniverse is a rare example of this trope who's a traditional superhero, albeit one that is occasionally under fire from his more-idealistic peers, for obvious reasons.



--->'''Calvin:''' "[[BlatantLies Ah, you've fallen right into my trap!]] Perhaps you'd like to take that move over?"
--->'''Hobbes:''' "Your remaining piece must have one heck of a plan..."

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--->'''Calvin:''' -->'''Calvin:''' "[[BlatantLies Ah, you've fallen right into my trap!]] Perhaps you'd like to take that move over?"
--->'''Hobbes:'''
over?"\\
'''Hobbes:'''
"Your remaining piece must have one heck of a plan...""
* General Wade Eiling definitely fulfills this trope, given the way he manipulates ComicBook/CaptainAtom.
* In ''ComicBook/CivilWar'', Hammerhead organizes a meeting of all supervillains, to be their new leader, replacing the Kingpin. The Kingpin manages to have his plans thwarted... despite the minor inconvenience of being in prison at the time.
* In ''[[ComicBook/{{Convergence}} Convergence: Titans #1]]'', Dreamslayer of the Extremists sees himself as one. He recognizes that this whole situation is making pawns out of the heroes and villains, and he'd prefer to be the one manipulating said pawns. True to his word, he pits pre-ComicBook/{{Flashpoint}} Arsenal against Troia and Starfire by resurrecting Lian Harper and using her as leverage.
* ''ComicBook/{{Daredevil}}'': Just about every villain the titular hero faces. The most prominent is ComicBook/TheKingpin, with him and Matthew trying to destroy each other's lives' for ''years''. But beyond him, there's the Owl, the local Mafia gangs, whatever ComicBook/{{Elektra}} is scheming whenever she shows up... Even ''Mysterio'' resorted in such tactics when facing Daredevil, and he's just a two-bit villain in all other appearances.



* ComicBook/{{Deadpool}} has shown many times that, were it not for his insanity, he would be one of the Marvel Universe's greatest Chessmasters. And even with it, he's shown himself several times to be a cunning and dangerous opponent. In his tie-in to the ''Secret Invasion'' arc, he joins up with the Skrulls and gets them to add his regenerative abilities to their Super Skrulls, resulting in them regenerating so much that they explode due to not having Deadpool's cancer to keep the regeneration in check. He knew would happen. And this is all a cover so he can hack into the Skrulls' information and find out a way to defeat them for Nick Fury. And the plan was all his.



* The Phantom Blot is ([[DependingOnTheWriter often]]) at least as close to a Chessmaster as the writers of ''ComicBook/DisneyMouseAndDuckComics'' can manage. If there's an [[TheManBehindTheMan unseen mastermind]] affecting the events and leaving Mickey Mouse baffled for most of the story, it's probably the Blot.




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* Two-Edge of ''ComicBook/ElfQuest'' is probably one of the most ridiculously skilled chessmasters in fiction. He forges enough armor and weapons to fill an vault, them makes an exceptional weapon with a secret key to the vault in the pommel, gives it to someone who couldn't use it so that they would be quick to wager it in a game of dice, then tells a ''third, unrelated person'' about the key in order to lure the sword's owner into looking for it. That's the ''simplest and shortest'' chain of events that Two-Edge is explicitly responsible for. If you count the ones where he's only ''implied'' to have been involved, the only events in the entire plot that don't have his fingerprints on them are the ones that occurred ''before he was born''.
* Destiny Ajaye from Top Cow's ''[[http://www.newsarama.com/php/multimedia/album.php?gid=590 Genius]]''.
* Marvel's Grandmaster can come up with some really complicated schemes. Luckily for the heroes he really doesn't care about losing, he just does it for fun. And when he really wants something he's [[UnwittingPawn nice enough to let them think they won]].



* The goddess Athena in the MarvelUniverse series ''ComicBook/TheIncredibleHercules'' is another heroic version of this trope; one of the series' major ongoing threads is a (and, as yet, largely unknown) BatmanGambit she is in the process of executing. Her brother Hercules, a frequent key piece on her chessboard, finds her refusal to be upfront with her plans annoying.
* ''Comicbook/IncredibleHulk'': Bruce Banner is this, at least under Greg Pak's pen. As we learn in ''ComicBook/FallOfTheHulks'', Banner's just as dangerous as his savage green alter-ego -- if not more so.



* ''ComicBook/{{Moriarty}}'': James Moriarty is a brilliant criminal mind who is able to create complex schemes in order to get ahead
* Metron of ''Comicbook/NewGods'', who is an EnsembleDarkHorse thanks to his unemotional, bipartisan manipulation of events.
* Alex Wilder of ''ComicBook/{{Runaways}}''. [[spoiler: It turns out that, not only did he learn the truth about his parents a full year before the other kids, but he set up virtually every single event in the first volume of the series]].
* While the comic series ''ComicBook/{{Sleepwalker}}'' is relatively obscure and ran for only 33 issues, its BigBad Cobweb is a brilliant Chessmaster, [[EvilPlan using Sleepwalker as a way to invade Earth while framing him as the demonic invasion's leader]].
* ComicBook/NormanOsborn of ''Franchise/SpiderMan'' is another contender in this category. Brought BackFromTheDead when Marvel needed a "[[AuthorsSavingThrow Get Out Of Clone Saga Free]]" card, Osborn has more than made up for lost time. For a while, every other Comicbook/SpiderMan story was turning out to be some sub-sub-plan of Osborn's.
* ComicBook/{{Sunspot}} shows during his stint leading the [[ComicBook/NewAvengers2015 New Avengers]] that he has a deviously cunning mind hidden under his devil-may-care attitude. Any time it seems like he's backed into a corner it's revealed that it's all part of his plan, or he has plenty of backup plans to get him out of trouble. SHIELD tries to take over his island base? He has an entire second base just in case. SHIELD puts a double agent on his team? Wrong, they're a triple agent loyal to Sunspot. The Maker bugs his base and strikes him when his defences are low? Nope, he knew about the bugs, fed the Maker incorrect information to lure him into attacking, and also bugged the Maker's base in return so he knew the Maker's backup plans and how to counter them. It's not just his ridiculous wealth that got him into a leadership position.
* Franchise/{{Superman}} enemy ComicBook/{{Brainiac}} has often been this, in contrast to MagnificentBastard ComicBook/LexLuthor. Brainiac has frequently set up incredibly complex plans, using every character as a chesspiece in his efforts to [[PlanetLooters steal cities]] / [[AGodAmI become a god]]/absorb the sum total of all knowledge in the universe (his motive keeps on changing), but has trouble changing them once something goes wrong.



* ''ComicBook/TheTenSeconders'': The Scientist has orchestrated almost everything that happened throughout the series so that he could both dispose of his fellow "Gods" and destroy the SufficientlyAdvancedAliens who created them to take their power for himself.
* ComicBook/{{Thanos}} is a staple Chessmaster in many cosmic [[CrisisCrossover crossovers]] in the MarvelUniverse. It's frequently [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] how other characters (especially heroes) exist solely to be manipulated by him for whatever agenda he might have at the moment.
* ''ComicBook/UltimateMarvel'':
** ''ComicBook/TheUltimates'': General Nick Fury is a heroic (well, anti-heroic) version of this trope with the full sanction of the United States Government. And also, total badassery.
*** The regular MarvelUniverse's Colonel ComicBook/NickFury is no slouch either, even when he loses the support of the US government.
** ''ComicBook/UltimateXMen'': Xavier had planned the events of the first two arcs. This gave him several victories: the Sentinel program was shut down, he got in good relations with the White House, Magneto was removed from the scene, and Weapon-X was closed.
* V, AntiHero of ''ComicBook/VForVendetta''. In the film, Finch actually figures out part of the plan, but can't do much to stop it by that point.
** In the graphic novel, Finch [[spoiler:goes as far as to almost stumble upon V's lair, but decides his ordeal is over when he fatally shoots V. This was all part of V's plan...]].
** V also uses a Domino motif for his plan.
* Tao from the ''Wildstorm'' comics universe, especially as written by Creator/AlanMoore or Ed Brubaker.




!!Examples Without Chess Motifs
* ''Comicbook/TheAvengers'' villain Immortus was always a Chessmaster in a big way, but in the ''ComicBook/AvengersForever'' series it turned out he was a Chessmaster on a far greater scale than anyone had imagined, he [[spoiler:had manipulated virtually every event in the history of the Avengers simply to prevent the human race from becoming dangerous enough that the malevolent Time Keepers would wipe them out to preserve their own existence]].
* Franchise/{{Batman}} villain ComicBook/TheRiddler is an accomplished chessmaster, notably for smooth sway over the media, especially post-reformation (a quality of VillainWithGoodPublicity), and for his previous yet strategically subtle maneuverings of other well-known manipulators and dangerous personas.
** [[spoiler: In Hush: The Riddler discovers Batman's secret identity and manipulates Bat's oldest friend and his old mechanic, Poison Ivy (who in turn uses Catwoman and SUPERMAN), Killer Croc, Harley Quinn, Clayface, Scarecrow, Ra's Al Ghul. Even the Joker was talked into going along with his scheme. However, Batman ensures his confidentiality when he exploits the Riddler's compulsion: he can't expose Batman because it would be like giving away the answer to a riddle]].
** ComicBook/TwoFace can also be a ChessMaster, usually having two plans in motion at once, one often entirely different (but also in some way linked) to the other.
** You can't say Franchise/{{Batman}}, chessmaster, and villain in the same sentence without talking about ComicBook/{{Bane}}. He managed to beat fellow {{Chessmaster}}, ComicBook/RasAlGhul, at a game of Chess even though he's never seen a chessboard before. [[GeniusBruiser Coupled with his monstrous physical strength]], he's easily one of Batman's deadliest physical opponents. There's a reason he's known as "[[DefeatingTheUndefeatable The Man who Broke the Bat]]".
*** Ironically, this could have backfired on him when he engineered his greatest scheme in ''ComicBook/{{Knightfall}}'', springing the entire RoguesGallery from Arkham Asylum knowing that Batman would physically exhaust himself trying to recapture them all, leaving him vulnerable to the above-mentioned back-breaking. A few of the villains manage to figure out they're being manipulated - and one of them, the Mad Hatter, enlists the help of Film Freak (by brainwashing him) into helping investigate who's behind the breakout. Film Freak discovers Bane and attempts to assassinate him, only to be beaten to death at Bane's own hands - thus, ironically, leaving Batman with one less problem to handle.
** The daughter of Ra's Al Ghul, ComicBook/TaliaAlGhul, [[ComicBook/GrantMorrisonsBatman has recently proven to be far more cunning than anyone could have suspected]]. It helps that she's just as CrazyPrepared as the Bat himself, and fueled by [[WomanScorned a lot more]] [[WellDoneSonGuy malice than]] [[VisionaryVillain Ra's ever was]]. Talia and her agents have proven so dangerous that [[spoiler: it turns out that the mysterious organization Batman thought dangerous enough to create a massive, worldwide organization of Batmen, Leviathan, [[TheReveal is controlled directly by Talia herself]]]].
** In ''ComicBook/RedRobin'' Tim proves himself to be taking after his adoptive father in stride when he sets up his own information network and a "hit list" arranged so that the capture of one criminal will lead to the arrests of about fifteen others, that can easily be tweaked and modified to the point that he can ''free'' a couple of the villains on it without it affecting the overall plan.
** Franchise/{{Batman}} himself. He ''is'' the namesake of the BatmanGambit after all and he is pretty skilled in chess.
* The ComicBook/BlackPanther of the MarvelUniverse is a rare example of this trope who's a traditional superhero, albeit one that is occasionally under fire from his more-idealistic peers, for obvious reasons.
** An example more along the vein of the standard AntiHero would be Adam Warlock, who is often the foil to Thanos.
** Franchise/{{Batman}} is the AlternateCompanyEquivalent for Franchise/TheDCU.
* General Wade Eiling definitely fulfills this trope, given the way he manipulates ComicBook/CaptainAtom.
* In ''ComicBook/CivilWar'', Hammerhead organizes a meeting of all supervillains, to be their new leader, replacing the Kingpin. The Kingpin manages to have his plans thwarted... despite the minor inconvenience of being in prison at the time.
* In ''[[ComicBook/{{Convergence}} Convergence: Titans #1]]'', Dreamslayer of the Extremists sees himself as one. He recognizes that this whole situation is making pawns out of the heroes and villains, and he'd prefer to be the one manipulating said pawns. True to his word, he pits pre-ComicBook/{{Flashpoint}} Arsenal against Troia and Starfire by resurrecting Lian Harper and using her as leverage.
* ComicBook/TheKingpin is another Chessmaster, especially where ''Comicbook/{{Daredevil}}'' is concerned. (Daredevil seems to attract them -- even the two-bit villain Mysterio became one when he took on DD.)
* While mentioned and kind of mocked on the '[[ExamplesUsingChessMetaphors using chess metaphors]]' page, ''{{ComicBook/Darkseid}}'' is definitely a very competent and dangerous Chessmaster when he's written correctly. This is perfectly invoked in ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheAnimatedSeries''.
--> ''"I told you once, {{Superman}}, if you would not be my knight, you would be my pawn."''
* ComicBook/{{Deadpool}} has shown many times that, were it not for his insanity, he would be one of the Marvel Universe's greatest Chessmasters. And even with it, he's shown himself several times to be a cunning and dangerous opponent. In his tie-in to the ''Secret Invasion'' arc, he joins up with the Skrulls and gets them to add his regenerative abilities to their Super Skrulls, resulting in them regenerating so much that they explode due to not having Deadpool's cancer to keep the regeneration in check. He knew would happen. And this is all a cover so he can hack into the Skrulls' information and find out a way to defeat them for Nick Fury. And the plan was all his.
* The Phantom Blot is ([[DependingOnTheWriter often]]) at least as close to a Chessmaster as the writers of ''ComicBook/DisneyMouseAndDuckComics'' can manage. If there's an [[TheManBehindTheMan unseen mastermind]] affecting the events and leaving Mickey Mouse baffled for most of the story, it's probably the Blot.
* Two-Edge of ''ComicBook/ElfQuest'' is probably one of the most ridiculously skilled chessmasters in fiction. He forges enough armor and weapons to fill an vault, them makes an exceptional weapon with a secret key to the vault in the pommel, gives it to someone who couldn't use it so that they would be quick to wager it in a game of dice, then tells a ''third, unrelated person'' about the key in order to lure the sword's owner into looking for it. That's the ''simplest and shortest'' chain of events that Two-Edge is explicitly responsible for. If you count the ones where he's only ''implied'' to have been involved, the only events in the entire plot that don't have his fingerprints on them are the ones that occurred ''before he was born''.
* Destiny Ajaye from Top Cow's ''[[http://www.newsarama.com/php/multimedia/album.php?gid=590 Genius]]''.
* Marvel's Grandmaster can come up with some really complicated schemes. Luckily for the heroes he really doesn't care about losing, he just does it for fun. And when he really wants something he's [[UnwittingPawn nice enough to let them think they won]].
* The goddess Athena in the MarvelUniverse series ''ComicBook/TheIncredibleHercules'' is another heroic version of this trope; one of the series' major ongoing threads is a (and, as yet, largely unknown) BatmanGambit she is in the process of executing. Her brother Hercules, a frequent key piece on her chessboard, finds her refusal to be upfront with her plans annoying.
* ''Comicbook/IncredibleHulk'': Bruce Banner is this, at least under Greg Pak's pen. As we learn in ''ComicBook/FallOfTheHulks'', Banner's just as dangerous as his savage green alter-ego -- if not more so.
* Alex Wilder of ''ComicBook/{{Runaways}}''. [[spoiler: It turns out that, not only did he learn the truth about his parents a full year before the other kids, but he set up virtually every single event in the first volume of the series]].
* While the comic series ''ComicBook/{{Sleepwalker}}'' is relatively obscure and ran for only 33 issues, its BigBad Cobweb is a brilliant Chessmaster, [[EvilPlan using Sleepwalker as a way to invade Earth while framing him as the demonic invasion's leader]].
* ''ComicBook/{{Moriarty}}'': James Moriarty is a brilliant criminal mind who is able to create complex schemes in order to get ahead
* Metron of ''Comicbook/NewGods'', who is an EnsembleDarkHorse thanks to his unemotional, bipartisan manipulation of events.
* ComicBook/NormanOsborn of ''Franchise/SpiderMan'' is another contender in this category. Brought BackFromTheDead when Marvel needed a "[[AuthorsSavingThrow Get Out Of Clone Saga Free]]" card, Osborn has more than made up for lost time. For a while, every other Comicbook/SpiderMan story was turning out to be some sub-sub-plan of Osborn's.
* ComicBook/{{Sunspot}} shows during his stint leading the [[ComicBook/NewAvengers2015 New Avengers]] that he has a deviously cunning mind hidden under his devil-may-care attitude. Any time it seems like he's backed into a corner it's revealed that it's all part of his plan, or he has plenty of backup plans to get him out of trouble. SHIELD tries to take over his island base? He has an entire second base just in case. SHIELD puts a double agent on his team? Wrong, they're a triple agent loyal to Sunspot. The Maker bugs his base and strikes him when his defences are low? Nope, he knew about the bugs, fed the Maker incorrect information to lure him into attacking, and also bugged the Maker's base in return so he knew the Maker's backup plans and how to counter them. It's not just his ridiculous wealth that got him into a leadership position.
* Franchise/{{Superman}} enemy ComicBook/{{Brainiac}} has often been this, in contrast to MagnificentBastard ComicBook/LexLuthor. Brainiac has frequently set up incredibly complex plans, using every character as a chesspiece in his efforts to [[PlanetLooters steal cities]] / [[AGodAmI become a god]]/absorb the sum total of all knowledge in the universe (his motive keeps on changing), but has trouble changing them once something goes wrong.
* ''ComicBook/TheTenSeconders'': The Scientist has orchestrated almost everything that happened throughout the series so that he could both dispose of his fellow "Gods" and destroy the SufficientlyAdvancedAliens who created them to take their power for himself.
* ComicBook/{{Thanos}} is a staple Chessmaster in many cosmic [[CrisisCrossover crossovers]] in the MarvelUniverse. It's frequently [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] how other characters (especially heroes) exist solely to be manipulated by him for whatever agenda he might have at the moment.
* ComicBook/UltimateMarvel
** ''ComicBook/TheUltimates'': General Nick Fury is a heroic (well, anti-heroic) version of this trope with the full sanction of the United States Government. And also, total badassery.
** ''ComicBook/UltimateXMen'': Xavier had planned the events of the first two arcs. This gave him several victories: the Sentinel program was shut down, he got in good relations with the White House, Magneto was removed from the scene, and Weapon-X was closed.
* The regular MarvelUniverse's Colonel ComicBook/NickFury is no slouch either, even when he loses the support of the US government.
* V, AntiHero of ''ComicBook/VForVendetta''. In the film, Finch actually figures out part of the plan, but can't do much to stop it by that point.
** In the graphic novel, Finch [[spoiler:goes as far as to almost stumble upon V's lair, but decides his ordeal is over when he fatally shoots V. This was all part of V's plan...]].
** V also uses a Domino motif for his plan.
* Tao from the ''Wildstorm'' comics universe, especially as written by Creator/AlanMoore or Ed Brubaker.

to:

\n!!Examples Without Chess Motifs\n* ''Comicbook/TheAvengers'' villain Immortus was always a Chessmaster in a big way, but in the ''ComicBook/AvengersForever'' series it turned out he was a Chessmaster on a far greater scale than anyone had imagined, he [[spoiler:had manipulated virtually every event in the history of the Avengers simply to prevent the human race from becoming dangerous enough that the malevolent Time Keepers would wipe them out to preserve their own existence]].\n* Franchise/{{Batman}} villain ComicBook/TheRiddler is an accomplished chessmaster, notably for smooth sway over the media, especially post-reformation (a quality of VillainWithGoodPublicity), and for his previous yet strategically subtle maneuverings of other well-known manipulators and dangerous personas.\n** [[spoiler: In Hush: The Riddler discovers Batman's secret identity and manipulates Bat's oldest friend and his old mechanic, Poison Ivy (who in turn uses Catwoman and SUPERMAN), Killer Croc, Harley Quinn, Clayface, Scarecrow, Ra's Al Ghul. Even the Joker was talked into going along with his scheme. However, Batman ensures his confidentiality when he exploits the Riddler's compulsion: he can't expose Batman because it would be like giving away the answer to a riddle]].\n** ComicBook/TwoFace can also be a ChessMaster, usually having two plans in motion at once, one often entirely different (but also in some way linked) to the other.\n** You can't say Franchise/{{Batman}}, chessmaster, and villain in the same sentence without talking about ComicBook/{{Bane}}. He managed to beat fellow {{Chessmaster}}, ComicBook/RasAlGhul, at a game of Chess even though he's never seen a chessboard before. [[GeniusBruiser Coupled with his monstrous physical strength]], he's easily one of Batman's deadliest physical opponents. There's a reason he's known as "[[DefeatingTheUndefeatable The Man who Broke the Bat]]".\n*** Ironically, this could have backfired on him when he engineered his greatest scheme in ''ComicBook/{{Knightfall}}'', springing the entire RoguesGallery from Arkham Asylum knowing that Batman would physically exhaust himself trying to recapture them all, leaving him vulnerable to the above-mentioned back-breaking. A few of the villains manage to figure out they're being manipulated - and one of them, the Mad Hatter, enlists the help of Film Freak (by brainwashing him) into helping investigate who's behind the breakout. Film Freak discovers Bane and attempts to assassinate him, only to be beaten to death at Bane's own hands - thus, ironically, leaving Batman with one less problem to handle.\n** The daughter of Ra's Al Ghul, ComicBook/TaliaAlGhul, [[ComicBook/GrantMorrisonsBatman has recently proven to be far more cunning than anyone could have suspected]]. It helps that she's just as CrazyPrepared as the Bat himself, and fueled by [[WomanScorned a lot more]] [[WellDoneSonGuy malice than]] [[VisionaryVillain Ra's ever was]]. Talia and her agents have proven so dangerous that [[spoiler: it turns out that the mysterious organization Batman thought dangerous enough to create a massive, worldwide organization of Batmen, Leviathan, [[TheReveal is controlled directly by Talia herself]]]].\n** In ''ComicBook/RedRobin'' Tim proves himself to be taking after his adoptive father in stride when he sets up his own information network and a "hit list" arranged so that the capture of one criminal will lead to the arrests of about fifteen others, that can easily be tweaked and modified to the point that he can ''free'' a couple of the villains on it without it affecting the overall plan. \n** Franchise/{{Batman}} himself. He ''is'' the namesake of the BatmanGambit after all and he is pretty skilled in chess.\n* The ComicBook/BlackPanther of the MarvelUniverse is a rare example of this trope who's a traditional superhero, albeit one that is occasionally under fire from his more-idealistic peers, for obvious reasons.\n** %%** An example more along the vein of the standard AntiHero would be Adam Warlock, who is often the foil to Thanos.
** Franchise/{{Batman}} is the AlternateCompanyEquivalent for Franchise/TheDCU.
* General Wade Eiling definitely fulfills this trope, given the way he manipulates ComicBook/CaptainAtom.
* In ''ComicBook/CivilWar'', Hammerhead organizes a meeting of all supervillains, to be their new leader, replacing the Kingpin. The Kingpin manages to have his plans thwarted... despite the minor inconvenience of being in prison at the time.
* In ''[[ComicBook/{{Convergence}} Convergence: Titans #1]]'', Dreamslayer of the Extremists sees himself as one. He recognizes that this whole situation is making pawns out of the heroes and villains, and he'd prefer to be the one manipulating said pawns. True to his word, he pits pre-ComicBook/{{Flashpoint}} Arsenal against Troia and Starfire by resurrecting Lian Harper and using her as leverage.
* ComicBook/TheKingpin is another Chessmaster, especially where ''Comicbook/{{Daredevil}}'' is concerned. (Daredevil seems to attract them -- even the two-bit villain Mysterio became one when he took on DD.)
* While mentioned and kind of mocked on the '[[ExamplesUsingChessMetaphors using chess metaphors]]' page, ''{{ComicBook/Darkseid}}'' is definitely a very competent and dangerous Chessmaster when he's written correctly. This is perfectly invoked in ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheAnimatedSeries''.
--> ''"I told you once, {{Superman}}, if you would not be my knight, you would be my pawn."''
* ComicBook/{{Deadpool}} has shown many times that, were it not for his insanity, he would be one of the Marvel Universe's greatest Chessmasters. And even with it, he's shown himself several times to be a cunning and dangerous opponent. In his tie-in to the ''Secret Invasion'' arc, he joins up with the Skrulls and gets them to add his regenerative abilities to their Super Skrulls, resulting in them regenerating so much that they explode due to not having Deadpool's cancer to keep the regeneration in check. He knew would happen. And this is all a cover so he can hack into the Skrulls' information and find out a way to defeat them for Nick Fury. And the plan was all his.
* The Phantom Blot is ([[DependingOnTheWriter often]]) at least as close to a Chessmaster as the writers of ''ComicBook/DisneyMouseAndDuckComics'' can manage. If there's an [[TheManBehindTheMan unseen mastermind]] affecting the events and leaving Mickey Mouse baffled for most of the story, it's probably the Blot.
* Two-Edge of ''ComicBook/ElfQuest'' is probably one of the most ridiculously skilled chessmasters in fiction. He forges enough armor and weapons to fill an vault, them makes an exceptional weapon with a secret key to the vault in the pommel, gives it to someone who couldn't use it so that they would be quick to wager it in a game of dice, then tells a ''third, unrelated person'' about the key in order to lure the sword's owner into looking for it. That's the ''simplest and shortest'' chain of events that Two-Edge is explicitly responsible for. If you count the ones where he's only ''implied'' to have been involved, the only events in the entire plot that don't have his fingerprints on them are the ones that occurred ''before he was born''.
* Destiny Ajaye from Top Cow's ''[[http://www.newsarama.com/php/multimedia/album.php?gid=590 Genius]]''.
* Marvel's Grandmaster can come up with some really complicated schemes. Luckily for the heroes he really doesn't care about losing, he just does it for fun. And when he really wants something he's [[UnwittingPawn nice enough to let them think they won]].
* The goddess Athena in the MarvelUniverse series ''ComicBook/TheIncredibleHercules'' is another heroic version of this trope; one of the series' major ongoing threads is a (and, as yet, largely unknown) BatmanGambit she is in the process of executing. Her brother Hercules, a frequent key piece on her chessboard, finds her refusal to be upfront with her plans annoying.
* ''Comicbook/IncredibleHulk'': Bruce Banner is this, at least under Greg Pak's pen. As we learn in ''ComicBook/FallOfTheHulks'', Banner's just as dangerous as his savage green alter-ego -- if not more so.
* Alex Wilder of ''ComicBook/{{Runaways}}''. [[spoiler: It turns out that, not only did he learn the truth about his parents a full year before the other kids, but he set up virtually every single event in the first volume of the series]].
* While the comic series ''ComicBook/{{Sleepwalker}}'' is relatively obscure and ran for only 33 issues, its BigBad Cobweb is a brilliant Chessmaster, [[EvilPlan using Sleepwalker as a way to invade Earth while framing him as the demonic invasion's leader]].
* ''ComicBook/{{Moriarty}}'': James Moriarty is a brilliant criminal mind who is able to create complex schemes in order to get ahead
* Metron of ''Comicbook/NewGods'', who is an EnsembleDarkHorse thanks to his unemotional, bipartisan manipulation of events.
* ComicBook/NormanOsborn of ''Franchise/SpiderMan'' is another contender in this category. Brought BackFromTheDead when Marvel needed a "[[AuthorsSavingThrow Get Out Of Clone Saga Free]]" card, Osborn has more than made up for lost time. For a while, every other Comicbook/SpiderMan story was turning out to be some sub-sub-plan of Osborn's.
* ComicBook/{{Sunspot}} shows during his stint leading the [[ComicBook/NewAvengers2015 New Avengers]] that he has a deviously cunning mind hidden under his devil-may-care attitude. Any time it seems like he's backed into a corner it's revealed that it's all part of his plan, or he has plenty of backup plans to get him out of trouble. SHIELD tries to take over his island base? He has an entire second base just in case. SHIELD puts a double agent on his team? Wrong, they're a triple agent loyal to Sunspot. The Maker bugs his base and strikes him when his defences are low? Nope, he knew about the bugs, fed the Maker incorrect information to lure him into attacking, and also bugged the Maker's base in return so he knew the Maker's backup plans and how to counter them. It's not just his ridiculous wealth that got him into a leadership position.
* Franchise/{{Superman}} enemy ComicBook/{{Brainiac}} has often been this, in contrast to MagnificentBastard ComicBook/LexLuthor. Brainiac has frequently set up incredibly complex plans, using every character as a chesspiece in his efforts to [[PlanetLooters steal cities]] / [[AGodAmI become a god]]/absorb the sum total of all knowledge in the universe (his motive keeps on changing), but has trouble changing them once something goes wrong.
* ''ComicBook/TheTenSeconders'': The Scientist has orchestrated almost everything that happened throughout the series so that he could both dispose of his fellow "Gods" and destroy the SufficientlyAdvancedAliens who created them to take their power for himself.
* ComicBook/{{Thanos}} is a staple Chessmaster in many cosmic [[CrisisCrossover crossovers]] in the MarvelUniverse. It's frequently [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] how other characters (especially heroes) exist solely to be manipulated by him for whatever agenda he might have at the moment.
* ComicBook/UltimateMarvel
** ''ComicBook/TheUltimates'': General Nick Fury is a heroic (well, anti-heroic) version of this trope with the full sanction of the United States Government. And also, total badassery.
** ''ComicBook/UltimateXMen'': Xavier had planned the events of the first two arcs. This gave him several victories: the Sentinel program was shut down, he got in good relations with the White House, Magneto was removed from the scene, and Weapon-X was closed.
* The regular MarvelUniverse's Colonel ComicBook/NickFury is no slouch either, even when he loses the support of the US government.
* V, AntiHero of ''ComicBook/VForVendetta''. In the film, Finch actually figures out part of the plan, but can't do much to stop it by that point.
** In the graphic novel, Finch [[spoiler:goes as far as to almost stumble upon V's lair, but decides his ordeal is over when he fatally shoots V. This was all part of V's plan...]].
** V also uses a Domino motif for his plan.
* Tao from the ''Wildstorm'' comics universe, especially as written by Creator/AlanMoore or Ed Brubaker.
Thanos.

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* In ComicBook/TheMightyThor, Odin has sometimes been seeing poring over a chessboard with the characters as the pieces (ususally to show he's going through a morally ambiguous phase).
** Now Kid!Loki has been doing it too. He's got figurines of several people that he's dealing with, and uses a map as his chessboard. However, it was drawn at too far an angle to see what he was arranging. When he was turned mortal for a while, these [[SubvertedTrope turned into]] [=RPG=] miniatures and (door stopper) rulebooks, but when asked he called it a game of his own devising. So apparently Loki plays an elaborate game of "{{Calvinball}}" with the universe.
* ''ComicBook/JLAAvengers'' has Metron and The Grandmaster as such.
* Obadiah Stane did a masterful job of bringing every part of [[ComicBook/IronMan Tony Stark's]] life crashing down. Chess was the theme of his campaign against Stark; he went so far as to outfit his henchmen as Knights, Bishops, and Rooks, with appropriate gimmicks. It's revealed in his origin story that he began playing chess at a young age, and at age eight won a school chess tournament by slitting the throat of his opponent's dog and stuffing the body into the kid's locker. The victory only cemented his obsession with the game.

to:

* In ComicBook/TheMightyThor, Odin has sometimes been seeing poring over a chessboard with the characters as the pieces (ususally to show he's going through a morally ambiguous phase).
** Now Kid!Loki has been doing it too. He's got figurines of several people that he's dealing with, and uses a map as his chessboard. However, it was drawn at too far an angle to see what he was arranging. When he was turned mortal for a while, these [[SubvertedTrope turned into]] [=RPG=] miniatures and (door stopper) rulebooks, but when asked he called it a game of his own devising. So apparently Loki plays
''ComicBook/AllFallDown'', [[spoiler: AIQ Squared]] becomes this, hatching an elaborate game of "{{Calvinball}}" with plot to try and kill Siphon, using [[spoiler: Phylum and Pronto]] as his less-than-willing pawns.
* In
the universe.
* ''ComicBook/JLAAvengers'' has Metron and The Grandmaster as such.
* Obadiah Stane did a masterful job of bringing every part of [[ComicBook/IronMan Tony Stark's]] life crashing down. Chess was the theme of his campaign against Stark; he went so far as to outfit his henchmen as Knights, Bishops, and Rooks, with appropriate gimmicks. It's revealed in his origin
Franchise/{{Batman}} story that he began playing chess at ''Hush'', Hush is thought to be it, but it actually turns out to be [[spoiler:The Riddler]] who ironically, Batman had dismissed as a young age, and at age eight won a school chess tournament by slitting threat earlier on in the throat of his opponent's dog and stuffing the body into the kid's locker. The victory only cemented his obsession with the game.story.



* ''ComicBook/SupermanRedSon'' has ComicBook/LexLuthor (naturally) and ComicBook/{{Brainiac}}. Superman, on the other hand, is more of a chess novice... He's ''good'', but he's not ''Luthor'' good. [[spoiler: Or so it seems. As it turns out, he might actually be better.]]
** Luthor's introduction as the Chessmaster in ''Red Son'' isn't entirely subtle, but effective: he's just won fourteen simultaneous games of chess on his coffee break, while also reading Machiavelli and teaching himself Urdu by tape (in a tape player he designed himself that morning, no less) "to keep my mind occupied". How good is "Luthor good"? [[spoiler:The end sees Brainiac destroyed, (and apparently Superman too), the world united and ready to accept "Luthorism" to lead it. He regards the chessboard and remarks "It's like it was planned to the tenth decimal point forty years ago." Even though Superman survived, Luthor still won the ideological battle, as Superman opted to spend the result of his multi million year lifespan ClarkKenting.]]
** And what ticked him off more than anything? His Superman Clone beat him at Chess. [[spoiler: This foreshadows Superman's final escape from his last death trap.]]
* ''ComicBook/{{Hellblazer}}'' - If you're ever associated with John Constantine, chances are you're already dead.
** Celebrated more in ''ComicBook/JusticeLeagueDark'', where Constantine's has a full arsenal of pieces, albeit he calls it a "band" rather than chess pieces.
** A perfect example was during the ''Reasons to be Cheerful'' arc. John's demonic children attempted to kill everyone that John has ever met and knew. That includes his family, close friends, and those he hasn't seen for a long time. They almost succeeded.



* ''ComicBook/YTheLastMan'' has the Daughters of Amazon led by Victoria, a master of chess; they argue, among other things, that the queen is the most powerful chess piece, like women are the superior sex.

to:

* ''ComicBook/YTheLastMan'' The goddess Athena in DC is a usually heroic and incredibly effective version:
** ''ComicBook/WonderWoman1987'': Athena's scheme to bring down Zeus required the resurrection of Medousa; the death, by Medousa's stone gaze, of a child of one of Franchise/WonderWoman's embassy workers to incense Diana into agreeing to a duel to the death, and then that duel culminating in Wonder Woman's blindness and the decapitation of Medousa. This entire chain of events was simply her way of obtaining a fresh gorgon's head (Medousa's previous head having rotted away to uselessness) to use on Zeus's champion, the hecatoncheires Briareos. And that doesn't even count the plot that she undergoes to consolidate her power once Zeus, Poseidon, and Hades try to rebel... Ares
has a conversation with her over a chessboard with pieces reflecting all the Daughters players in her plan, and grins when she moves a model of Amazon led by Victoria, a master himself before he'd agreed to play along.
** The very different version
of chess; they argue, among Athena in the New 52 is manipulating things without any of the other things, that members of the queen is Dodekatheon noticing, in order to put the most powerful newly reincarnated version of Zeus back on the throne.
* In ''ComicBook/DeathOfTheFamily'', ComicBook/TheJoker has spent his year-long absence becoming this. The ''Catwoman'' story even shows the
chess piece, like women are the superior sex.motif!




* ''ComicBook/{{Hellblazer}}'' -- If you're ever associated with John Constantine, chances are you're already dead.
** Celebrated more in ''ComicBook/JusticeLeagueDark'', where Constantine's has a full arsenal of pieces, albeit he calls it a "band" rather than chess pieces.
** A perfect example was during the ''Reasons to be Cheerful'' arc. John's demonic children attempted to kill everyone that John has ever met and knew. That includes his family, close friends, and those he hasn't seen for a long time. They almost succeeded.
* In ''ComicBook/TheInvisibles'', there is an extremely mysterious and shadowy character known as the Blind Chessman who, well, plays chess, both literally and metaphorically. It also doubles as a BlindSeer.
* Obadiah Stane did a masterful job of bringing every part of [[ComicBook/IronMan Tony Stark's]] life crashing down. Chess was the theme of his campaign against Stark; he went so far as to outfit his henchmen as Knights, Bishops, and Rooks, with appropriate gimmicks. It's revealed in his origin story that he began playing chess at a young age, and at age eight won a school chess tournament by slitting the throat of his opponent's dog and stuffing the body into the kid's locker. The victory only cemented his obsession with the game.
* ''ComicBook/JLAAvengers'' has Metron and The Grandmaster as such.
* Judge Death is portrayed this way in the ''ComicBook/JudgeDredd'' prequel arc ''Fall of Deadworld''. He's mostly an OrcusOnHisThrone and only makes sporadic appearances, but seems to be anticipating various events somehow. At one point, he's actually shown hunched over a chessboard with ghoulish pieces reflecting different characters, knocking one off the table after someone was just caught as a traitor.
* In ComicBook/TheMightyThor, Odin has sometimes been seeing poring over a chessboard with the characters as the pieces (ususally to show he's going through a morally ambiguous phase).
** Now Kid!Loki has been doing it too. He's got figurines of several people that he's dealing with, and uses a map as his chessboard. However, it was drawn at too far an angle to see what he was arranging. When he was turned mortal for a while, these [[SubvertedTrope turned into]] [=RPG=] miniatures and (door stopper) rulebooks, but when asked he called it a game of his own devising. So apparently Loki plays an elaborate game of "{{Calvinball}}" with the universe.



* In the Franchise/{{Batman}} story ''Hush'', Hush is thought to be it, but it actually turns out to be [[spoiler:The Riddler]] who ironically, Batman had dismissed as a threat earlier on in the story.

to:

* In ''ComicBook/SupermanRedSon'' has ComicBook/LexLuthor (naturally) and ComicBook/{{Brainiac}}. Superman, on the Franchise/{{Batman}} story ''Hush'', Hush other hand, is thought to be it, more of a chess novice... He's ''good'', but he's not ''Luthor'' good. [[spoiler: Or so it seems. As it turns out, he might actually turns out to be better.]]
** Luthor's introduction as the Chessmaster in ''Red Son'' isn't entirely subtle, but effective: he's just won fourteen simultaneous games of chess on his coffee break, while also reading Machiavelli and teaching himself Urdu by tape (in a tape player he designed himself that morning, no less) "to keep my mind occupied". How good is "Luthor good"?
[[spoiler:The Riddler]] who ironically, Batman had dismissed as a threat earlier on in end sees Brainiac destroyed, (and apparently Superman too), the story.world united and ready to accept "Luthorism" to lead it. He regards the chessboard and remarks "It's like it was planned to the tenth decimal point forty years ago." Even though Superman survived, Luthor still won the ideological battle, as Superman opted to spend the result of his multi million year lifespan ClarkKenting.]]
** And what ticked him off more than anything? His Superman Clone beat him at Chess. [[spoiler: This foreshadows Superman's final escape from his last death trap.]]



* In ''ComicBook/AllFallDown'', [[spoiler: AIQ Squared]] becomes this, hatching an elaborate plot to try and kill Siphon, using [[spoiler: Phylum and Pronto]] as his less-than-willing pawns.
* In ''ComicBook/DeathOfTheFamily'', ComicBook/TheJoker has spent his year-long absence becoming this. The ''Catwoman'' story even shows the chess motif!
* In ''ComicBook/TheInvisibles'', there is an extremely mysterious and shadowy character known as the Blind Chessman who, well, plays chess, both literally and metaphorically. It also doubles as a BlindSeer.
* Judge Death is portrayed this way in the ''ComicBook/JudgeDredd'' prequel arc ''Fall of Deadworld''. He's mostly an OrcusOnHisThrone and only makes sporadic appearances, but seems to be anticipating various events somehow. At one point, he's actually shown hunched over a chessboard with ghoulish pieces reflecting different characters, knocking one off the table after someone was just caught as a traitor.
* The goddess Athena in DC is a usually heroic and incredibly effective version:
** ''ComicBook/WonderWoman1987'': Athena's scheme to bring down Zeus required the resurrection of Medousa; the death, by Medousa's stone gaze, of a child of one of Franchise/WonderWoman's embassy workers to incense Diana into agreeing to a duel to the death, and then that duel culminating in Wonder Woman's blindness and the decapitation of Medousa. This entire chain of events was simply her way of obtaining a fresh gorgon's head (Medousa's previous head having rotted away to uselessness) to use on Zeus's champion, the hecatoncheires Briareos. And that doesn't even count the plot that she undergoes to consolidate her power once Zeus, Poseidon, and Hades try to rebel... Ares has a conversation with her over a chessboard with pieces reflecting all the players in her plan, and grins when she moves a model of himself before he'd agreed to play along.
** The very different version of Athena in the New 52 is manipulating things without any of the other members of the Dodekatheon noticing, in order to put the newly reincarnated version of Zeus back on the throne.

to:

* In ''ComicBook/AllFallDown'', [[spoiler: AIQ Squared]] becomes this, hatching an elaborate plot to try and kill Siphon, using [[spoiler: Phylum and Pronto]] as his less-than-willing pawns.
* In ''ComicBook/DeathOfTheFamily'', ComicBook/TheJoker
''ComicBook/YTheLastMan'' has spent his year-long absence becoming this. The ''Catwoman'' story even shows the Daughters of Amazon led by Victoria, a master of chess; they argue, among other things, that the queen is the most powerful chess motif!
* In ''ComicBook/TheInvisibles'', there is an extremely mysterious and shadowy character known as
piece, like women are the Blind Chessman who, well, plays chess, both literally and metaphorically. It also doubles as a BlindSeer.
* Judge Death is portrayed this way in the ''ComicBook/JudgeDredd'' prequel arc ''Fall of Deadworld''. He's mostly an OrcusOnHisThrone and only makes sporadic appearances, but seems to be anticipating various events somehow. At one point, he's actually shown hunched over a chessboard with ghoulish pieces reflecting different characters, knocking one off the table after someone was just caught as a traitor.
* The goddess Athena in DC is a usually heroic and incredibly effective version:
** ''ComicBook/WonderWoman1987'': Athena's scheme to bring down Zeus required the resurrection of Medousa; the death, by Medousa's stone gaze, of a child of one of Franchise/WonderWoman's embassy workers to incense Diana into agreeing to a duel to the death, and then that duel culminating in Wonder Woman's blindness and the decapitation of Medousa. This entire chain of events was simply her way of obtaining a fresh gorgon's head (Medousa's previous head having rotted away to uselessness) to use on Zeus's champion, the hecatoncheires Briareos. And that doesn't even count the plot that she undergoes to consolidate her power once Zeus, Poseidon, and Hades try to rebel... Ares has a conversation with her over a chessboard with pieces reflecting all the players in her plan, and grins when she moves a model of himself before he'd agreed to play along.
** The very different version of Athena in the New 52 is manipulating things without any of the other members of the Dodekatheon noticing, in order to put the newly reincarnated version of Zeus back on the throne.
superior sex.



* ''Comicbook/TheAvengers'' villain Immortus was always a Chessmaster in a big way, but in the ''ComicBook/AvengersForever'' series it turned out he was a Chessmaster on a far greater scale than anyone had imagined, he [[spoiler:had manipulated virtually every event in the history of the Avengers simply to prevent the human race from becoming dangerous enough that the malevolent Time Keepers would wipe them out to preserve their own existence]].
* Franchise/{{Batman}} villain ComicBook/TheRiddler is an accomplished chessmaster, notably for smooth sway over the media, especially post-reformation (a quality of VillainWithGoodPublicity), and for his previous yet strategically subtle maneuverings of other well-known manipulators and dangerous personas.
** [[spoiler: In Hush: The Riddler discovers Batman's secret identity and manipulates Bat's oldest friend and his old mechanic, Poison Ivy (who in turn uses Catwoman and SUPERMAN), Killer Croc, Harley Quinn, Clayface, Scarecrow, Ra's Al Ghul. Even the Joker was talked into going along with his scheme. However, Batman ensures his confidentiality when he exploits the Riddler's compulsion: he can't expose Batman because it would be like giving away the answer to a riddle]].
** ComicBook/TwoFace can also be a ChessMaster, usually having two plans in motion at once, one often entirely different (but also in some way linked) to the other.
** You can't say Franchise/{{Batman}}, chessmaster, and villain in the same sentence without talking about ComicBook/{{Bane}}. He managed to beat fellow {{Chessmaster}}, ComicBook/RasAlGhul, at a game of Chess even though he's never seen a chessboard before. [[GeniusBruiser Coupled with his monstrous physical strength]], he's easily one of Batman's deadliest physical opponents. There's a reason he's known as "[[DefeatingTheUndefeatable The Man who Broke the Bat]]".
*** Ironically, this could have backfired on him when he engineered his greatest scheme in ''ComicBook/{{Knightfall}}'', springing the entire RoguesGallery from Arkham Asylum knowing that Batman would physically exhaust himself trying to recapture them all, leaving him vulnerable to the above-mentioned back-breaking. A few of the villains manage to figure out they're being manipulated - and one of them, the Mad Hatter, enlists the help of Film Freak (by brainwashing him) into helping investigate who's behind the breakout. Film Freak discovers Bane and attempts to assassinate him, only to be beaten to death at Bane's own hands - thus, ironically, leaving Batman with one less problem to handle.
** The daughter of Ra's Al Ghul, ComicBook/TaliaAlGhul, [[ComicBook/GrantMorrisonsBatman has recently proven to be far more cunning than anyone could have suspected]]. It helps that she's just as CrazyPrepared as the Bat himself, and fueled by [[WomanScorned a lot more]] [[WellDoneSonGuy malice than]] [[VisionaryVillain Ra's ever was]]. Talia and her agents have proven so dangerous that [[spoiler: it turns out that the mysterious organization Batman thought dangerous enough to create a massive, worldwide organization of Batmen, Leviathan, [[TheReveal is controlled directly by Talia herself]]]].
** In ''ComicBook/RedRobin'' Tim proves himself to be taking after his adoptive father in stride when he sets up his own information network and a "hit list" arranged so that the capture of one criminal will lead to the arrests of about fifteen others, that can easily be tweaked and modified to the point that he can ''free'' a couple of the villains on it without it affecting the overall plan.
** Franchise/{{Batman}} himself. He ''is'' the namesake of the BatmanGambit after all and he is pretty skilled in chess.
* The ComicBook/BlackPanther of the MarvelUniverse is a rare example of this trope who's a traditional superhero, albeit one that is occasionally under fire from his more-idealistic peers, for obvious reasons.
** An example more along the vein of the standard AntiHero would be Adam Warlock, who is often the foil to Thanos.
** Franchise/{{Batman}} is the AlternateCompanyEquivalent for Franchise/TheDCU.



* In ''[[ComicBook/{{Convergence}} Convergence: Titans #1]]'', Dreamslayer of the Extremists sees himself as one. He recognizes that this whole situation is making pawns out of the heroes and villains, and he'd prefer to be the one manipulating said pawns. True to his word, he pits pre-ComicBook/{{Flashpoint}} Arsenal against Troia and Starfire by resurrecting Lian Harper and using her as leverage.
* ComicBook/TheKingpin is another Chessmaster, especially where ''Comicbook/{{Daredevil}}'' is concerned. (Daredevil seems to attract them -- even the two-bit villain Mysterio became one when he took on DD.)
* While mentioned and kind of mocked on the '[[ExamplesUsingChessMetaphors using chess metaphors]]' page, ''{{ComicBook/Darkseid}}'' is definitely a very competent and dangerous Chessmaster when he's written correctly. This is perfectly invoked in ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheAnimatedSeries''.
--> ''"I told you once, {{Superman}}, if you would not be my knight, you would be my pawn."''



* Metron of ''Comicbook/NewGods'', who is an EnsembleDarkHorse thanks to his unemotional, bipartisan manipulation of events.



* ''Comicbook/TheAvengers'' villain Immortus was always a Chessmaster in a big way, but in the ''ComicBook/AvengersForever'' series it turned out he was a Chessmaster on a far greater scale than anyone had imagined, he [[spoiler:had manipulated virtually every event in the history of the Avengers simply to prevent the human race from becoming dangerous enough that the malevolent Time Keepers would wipe them out to preserve their own existence]].
* Franchise/{{Batman}} villain ComicBook/TheRiddler is an accomplished chessmaster, notably for smooth sway over the media, especially post-reformation (a quality of VillainWithGoodPublicity), and for his previous yet strategically subtle maneuverings of other well-known manipulators and dangerous personas.
** [[spoiler: In Hush: The Riddler discovers Batman's secret identity and manipulates Bat's oldest friend and his old mechanic, Poison Ivy (who in turn uses Catwoman and SUPERMAN), Killer Croc, Harley Quinn, Clayface, Scarecrow, Ra's Al Ghul. Even the Joker was talked into going along with his scheme. However, Batman ensures his confidentiality when he exploits the Riddler's compulsion: he can't expose Batman because it would be like giving away the answer to a riddle]].
** ComicBook/TwoFace can also be a ChessMaster, usually having two plans in motion at once, one often entirely different (but also in some way linked) to the other.
** You can't say Franchise/{{Batman}}, chessmaster, and villain in the same sentence without talking about ComicBook/{{Bane}}. He managed to beat fellow {{Chessmaster}}, ComicBook/RasAlGhul, at a game of Chess even though he's never seen a chessboard before. [[GeniusBruiser Coupled with his monstrous physical strength]], he's easily one of Batman's deadliest physical opponents. There's a reason he's known as "[[DefeatingTheUndefeatable The Man who Broke the Bat]]".
*** Ironically, this could have backfired on him when he engineered his greatest scheme in ''ComicBook/{{Knightfall}}'', springing the entire RoguesGallery from Arkham Asylum knowing that Batman would physically exhaust himself trying to recapture them all, leaving him vulnerable to the above-mentioned back-breaking. A few of the villains manage to figure out they're being manipulated - and one of them, the Mad Hatter, enlists the help of Film Freak (by brainwashing him) into helping investigate who's behind the breakout. Film Freak discovers Bane and attempts to assassinate him, only to be beaten to death at Bane's own hands - thus, ironically, leaving Batman with one less problem to handle.
** The daughter of Ra's Al Ghul, ComicBook/TaliaAlGhul, [[ComicBook/GrantMorrisonsBatman has recently proven to be far more cunning than anyone could have suspected]]. It helps that she's just as CrazyPrepared as the Bat himself, and fueled by [[WomanScorned a lot more]] [[WellDoneSonGuy malice than]] [[VisionaryVillain Ra's ever was]]. Talia and her agents have proven so dangerous that [[spoiler: it turns out that the mysterious organization Batman thought dangerous enough to create a massive, worldwide organization of Batmen, Leviathan, [[TheReveal is controlled directly by Talia herself]]]].
** In ''ComicBook/RedRobin'' Tim proves himself to be taking after his adoptive father in stride when he sets up his own information network and a "hit list" arranged so that the capture of one criminal will lead to the arrests of about fifteen others, that can easily be tweaked and modified to the point that he can ''free'' a couple of the villains on it without it affecting the overall plan.
** Franchise/{{Batman}} himself. He ''is'' the namesake of the BatmanGambit after all and he is pretty skilled in chess.
* The ComicBook/BlackPanther of the MarvelUniverse is a rare example of this trope who's a traditional superhero, albeit one that is occasionally under fire from his more-idealistic peers, for obvious reasons.
** An example more along the vein of the standard AntiHero would be Adam Warlock, who is often the foil to Thanos.
** Franchise/{{Batman}} is the AlternateCompanyEquivalent for Franchise/TheDCU.
* In ''[[ComicBook/{{Convergence}} Convergence: Titans #1]]'', Dreamslayer of the Extremists sees himself as one. He recognizes that this whole situation is making pawns out of the heroes and villains, and he'd prefer to be the one manipulating said pawns. True to his word, he pits pre-ComicBook/{{Flashpoint}} Arsenal against Troia and Starfire by resurrecting Lian Harper and using her as leverage.
* While mentioned and kind of mocked on the '[[ExamplesUsingChessMetaphors using chess metaphors]]' page, ''{{ComicBook/Darkseid}}'' is definitely a very competent and dangerous Chessmaster when he's written correctly. This is perfectly invoked in ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheAnimatedSeries''.
--> ''"I told you once, {{Superman}}, if you would not be my knight, you would be my pawn."''
* ComicBook/TheKingpin is another Chessmaster, especially where ''Comicbook/{{Daredevil}}'' is concerned. (Daredevil seems to attract them -- even the two-bit villain Mysterio became one when he took on DD.)
* Metron of ''Comicbook/NewGods'', who is an EnsembleDarkHorse thanks to his unemotional, bipartisan manipulation of events.

to:

* ''Comicbook/TheAvengers'' villain Immortus was always a Chessmaster in a big way, but in the ''ComicBook/AvengersForever'' series it turned out he was a Chessmaster on a far greater scale than anyone had imagined, he [[spoiler:had manipulated virtually every event in the history of the Avengers simply to prevent the human race from becoming dangerous enough that the malevolent Time Keepers would wipe them out to preserve their own existence]].
* Franchise/{{Batman}} villain ComicBook/TheRiddler is an accomplished chessmaster, notably for smooth sway over the media, especially post-reformation (a quality of VillainWithGoodPublicity), and for his previous yet strategically subtle maneuverings of other well-known manipulators and dangerous personas.
** [[spoiler: In Hush: The Riddler discovers Batman's secret identity and manipulates Bat's oldest friend and his old mechanic, Poison Ivy (who in turn uses Catwoman and SUPERMAN), Killer Croc, Harley Quinn, Clayface, Scarecrow, Ra's Al Ghul. Even the Joker was talked into going along with his scheme. However, Batman ensures his confidentiality when he exploits the Riddler's compulsion: he can't expose Batman because it would be like giving away the answer to a riddle]].
** ComicBook/TwoFace can also be a ChessMaster, usually having two plans in motion at once, one often entirely different (but also in some way linked) to the other.
** You can't say Franchise/{{Batman}}, chessmaster, and villain in the same sentence without talking about ComicBook/{{Bane}}. He managed to beat fellow {{Chessmaster}}, ComicBook/RasAlGhul, at a game of Chess even though he's never seen a chessboard before. [[GeniusBruiser Coupled with his monstrous physical strength]], he's easily one of Batman's deadliest physical opponents. There's a reason he's known as "[[DefeatingTheUndefeatable The Man who Broke the Bat]]".
*** Ironically, this could have backfired on him when he engineered his greatest scheme in ''ComicBook/{{Knightfall}}'', springing the entire RoguesGallery from Arkham Asylum knowing that Batman would physically exhaust himself trying to recapture them all, leaving him vulnerable to the above-mentioned back-breaking. A few of the villains manage to figure out they're being manipulated - and one of them, the Mad Hatter, enlists the help of Film Freak (by brainwashing him) into helping investigate who's behind the breakout. Film Freak discovers Bane and attempts to assassinate him, only to be beaten to death at Bane's own hands - thus, ironically, leaving Batman with one less problem to handle.
** The daughter of Ra's Al Ghul, ComicBook/TaliaAlGhul, [[ComicBook/GrantMorrisonsBatman has recently proven to be far more cunning than anyone could have suspected]]. It helps that she's just as CrazyPrepared as the Bat himself, and fueled by [[WomanScorned a lot more]] [[WellDoneSonGuy malice than]] [[VisionaryVillain Ra's ever was]]. Talia and her agents have proven so dangerous that [[spoiler: it turns out that the mysterious organization Batman thought dangerous enough to create a massive, worldwide organization of Batmen, Leviathan, [[TheReveal is controlled directly by Talia herself]]]].
** In ''ComicBook/RedRobin'' Tim proves himself to be taking after his adoptive father in stride when he sets up his own information network and a "hit list" arranged so that the capture of one criminal will lead to the arrests of about fifteen others, that can easily be tweaked and modified to the point that he can ''free'' a couple of the villains on it without it affecting the overall plan.
** Franchise/{{Batman}} himself. He ''is'' the namesake of the BatmanGambit after all and he is pretty skilled in chess.
* The ComicBook/BlackPanther of the MarvelUniverse is a rare example of this trope who's a traditional superhero, albeit one that is occasionally under fire from his more-idealistic peers, for obvious reasons.
** An example more along the vein of the standard AntiHero would be Adam Warlock, who is often the foil to Thanos.
** Franchise/{{Batman}} is the AlternateCompanyEquivalent for Franchise/TheDCU.
* In ''[[ComicBook/{{Convergence}} Convergence: Titans #1]]'', Dreamslayer of the Extremists sees himself as one. He recognizes that this whole situation is making pawns out of the heroes and villains, and he'd prefer to be the one manipulating said pawns. True to his word, he pits pre-ComicBook/{{Flashpoint}} Arsenal against Troia and Starfire by resurrecting Lian Harper and using her as leverage.
* While mentioned and kind of mocked on the '[[ExamplesUsingChessMetaphors using chess metaphors]]' page, ''{{ComicBook/Darkseid}}'' is definitely a very competent and dangerous Chessmaster when he's written correctly. This is perfectly invoked in ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheAnimatedSeries''.
--> ''"I told you once, {{Superman}}, if you would not be my knight, you would be my pawn."''
* ComicBook/TheKingpin is another Chessmaster, especially where ''Comicbook/{{Daredevil}}'' is concerned. (Daredevil seems to attract them -- even the two-bit villain Mysterio became one when he took on DD.)
* Metron of ''Comicbook/NewGods'', who is an EnsembleDarkHorse thanks to his unemotional, bipartisan manipulation of events.
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** The daughter of Ra's Al Ghul, Talia, [[ComicBook/GrantMorrisonsBatman has recently proven to be far more cunning than anyone could have suspected]]. It helps that she's just as CrazyPrepared as the Bat himself, and fueled by [[WomanScorned a lot more]] [[WellDoneSonGuy malice than]] [[VisionaryVillain Ra's ever was]]. Talia and her agents have proven so dangerous that [[spoiler: it turns out that the mysterious organization Batman thought dangerous enough to create a massive, worldwide organization of Batmen, Leviathan, [[TheReveal is controlled directly by Talia herself]]]].

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** The daughter of Ra's Al Ghul, Talia, ComicBook/TaliaAlGhul, [[ComicBook/GrantMorrisonsBatman has recently proven to be far more cunning than anyone could have suspected]]. It helps that she's just as CrazyPrepared as the Bat himself, and fueled by [[WomanScorned a lot more]] [[WellDoneSonGuy malice than]] [[VisionaryVillain Ra's ever was]]. Talia and her agents have proven so dangerous that [[spoiler: it turns out that the mysterious organization Batman thought dangerous enough to create a massive, worldwide organization of Batmen, Leviathan, [[TheReveal is controlled directly by Talia herself]]]].
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* In ''ComicBook/CivilWar'', Hammerhead organizes a meeting of all supervillains, to be their new leader, replacing the Kingpin. The Kingpin manages to have his plans thwarted... despite the minor inconvenience of being in prison at the time.
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* ''ComicBook/{{Moriarty}}'': James Moriarty is a brilliant criminal mind who is able to create complex schemes in order to get ahead

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* ComicBook/UltimateMarvel: General Nick Fury is a heroic (well, anti-heroic) version of this trope with the full sanction of the United States Government. And also, total badassery.
** The regular MarvelUniverse's Colonel ComicBook/NickFury is no slouch either, even when he loses the support of the US government.

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* ComicBook/UltimateMarvel: ComicBook/UltimateMarvel
** ''ComicBook/TheUltimates'':
General Nick Fury is a heroic (well, anti-heroic) version of this trope with the full sanction of the United States Government. And also, total badassery.
** ''ComicBook/UltimateXMen'': Xavier had planned the events of the first two arcs. This gave him several victories: the Sentinel program was shut down, he got in good relations with the White House, Magneto was removed from the scene, and Weapon-X was closed.
*
The regular MarvelUniverse's Colonel ComicBook/NickFury is no slouch either, even when he loses the support of the US government.



** [[spoiler: In Hush: The Riddler discovers Batman's secret identity and manipulates Bat's oldest friend and his old mechanic, Poison Ivy (who in turn uses Catwoman and SUPERMAN), Killer Croc, Harley Quinn, Clayface, Scarecrow, Ra's Al Ghul. Even the Joker was talked in to going along with his scheme. However, Batman ensures his confidentiality when he exploits the Riddler's compulsion: he can't expose Batman because it would be like giving away the answer to a riddle]].

to:

** [[spoiler: In Hush: The Riddler discovers Batman's secret identity and manipulates Bat's oldest friend and his old mechanic, Poison Ivy (who in turn uses Catwoman and SUPERMAN), Killer Croc, Harley Quinn, Clayface, Scarecrow, Ra's Al Ghul. Even the Joker was talked in to into going along with his scheme. However, Batman ensures his confidentiality when he exploits the Riddler's compulsion: he can't expose Batman because it would be like giving away the answer to a riddle]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Deadpool wick updates


* SelfDemonstrating/{{Deadpool}} has shown many times that, were it not for his insanity, he would be one of the Marvel Universe's greatest Chessmasters. And even with it, he's shown himself several times to be a cunning and dangerous opponent, such as his tie-in to the Secret Invasion arc, where he joined up with the Skrull and got them to add his regenerative abilities to their Super Skrull. Which resulted in them all basically regenerating so much that they exploded due to not having Deadpool's cancer to keep the regeneration in check, which he knew would happen. And this was all a cover so he could hack into the Skrulls' information and find out a way to defeat them for Nick Fury. And the plan was all his.

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* SelfDemonstrating/{{Deadpool}} ComicBook/{{Deadpool}} has shown many times that, were it not for his insanity, he would be one of the Marvel Universe's greatest Chessmasters. And even with it, he's shown himself several times to be a cunning and dangerous opponent, such as opponent. In his tie-in to the Secret Invasion ''Secret Invasion'' arc, where he joined joins up with the Skrull Skrulls and got gets them to add his regenerative abilities to their Super Skrull. Which resulted Skrulls, resulting in them all basically regenerating so much that they exploded explode due to not having Deadpool's cancer to keep the regeneration in check, which he check. He knew would happen. And this was is all a cover so he could can hack into the Skrulls' information and find out a way to defeat them for Nick Fury. And the plan was all his.
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* Franchise/{{Batman}} villain The Riddler is an accomplished chessmaster, notably for smooth sway over the media, especially post-reformation (a quality of VillainWithGoodPublicity), and for his previous yet strategically subtle maneuverings of other well-known manipulators and dangerous personas.

to:

* Franchise/{{Batman}} villain The Riddler ComicBook/TheRiddler is an accomplished chessmaster, notably for smooth sway over the media, especially post-reformation (a quality of VillainWithGoodPublicity), and for his previous yet strategically subtle maneuverings of other well-known manipulators and dangerous personas.
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* ''ComicBook/SupermanRedSon'' has ComicBook/LexLuthor (naturally) and Brainiac. Superman, on the other hand, is more of a chess novice... He's ''good'', but he's not ''Luthor'' good. [[spoiler: Or so it seems. As it turns out, he might actually be better.]]

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* ''ComicBook/SupermanRedSon'' has ComicBook/LexLuthor (naturally) and Brainiac.ComicBook/{{Brainiac}}. Superman, on the other hand, is more of a chess novice... He's ''good'', but he's not ''Luthor'' good. [[spoiler: Or so it seems. As it turns out, he might actually be better.]]
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* ''ComicBook/SupermanRedSon'' has ComicBook/LexLuthor (naturally) and Brainiac. Superman, on the other hand, is more of a chess novice... He's ''good'', but he's not ''Luthor'' good.
** Luthor's introduction as the Chessmaster in ''Red Son'' isn't entirely subtle, but effective: he's just won fourteen simultaneous games of chess on his coffee break, while also reading Machiavelli and teaching himself Urdu by tape (in a tape player he designed himself, no less) "to keep my mind occupied". How good is "Luthor good"? [[spoiler:The end sees Brainiac destroyed, (and apparently Superman too), the world united and ready to accept "Luthorism" to lead it. He regards the chessboard and remarks "It's like it was planned to the tenth decimal point forty years ago."]]
** And what ticked him off more than anything? His Superman Clone beat him at Chess.

to:

* ''ComicBook/SupermanRedSon'' has ComicBook/LexLuthor (naturally) and Brainiac. Superman, on the other hand, is more of a chess novice... He's ''good'', but he's not ''Luthor'' good.
good. [[spoiler: Or so it seems. As it turns out, he might actually be better.]]
** Luthor's introduction as the Chessmaster in ''Red Son'' isn't entirely subtle, but effective: he's just won fourteen simultaneous games of chess on his coffee break, while also reading Machiavelli and teaching himself Urdu by tape (in a tape player he designed himself, himself that morning, no less) "to keep my mind occupied". How good is "Luthor good"? [[spoiler:The end sees Brainiac destroyed, (and apparently Superman too), the world united and ready to accept "Luthorism" to lead it. He regards the chessboard and remarks "It's like it was planned to the tenth decimal point forty years ago."]]
" Even though Superman survived, Luthor still won the ideological battle, as Superman opted to spend the result of his multi million year lifespan ClarkKenting.]]
** And what ticked him off more than anything? His Superman Clone beat him at Chess. [[spoiler: This foreshadows Superman's final escape from his last death trap.]]
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* ComicBook/{{Cyclops}} from ''ComicBook/XMen'', the "General of the Mutants", is the [[DeconstructedTrope Deconstruction]] of the trope. While his grand plans allows him to get the job done, it also served as the catalyst for the more recent split of the X-Men, with Wolverine leaving with half of the team out of disgust due to Cyclops using members as pawns.

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* ComicBook/{{Cyclops}} from ''ComicBook/XMen'', the "General of the Mutants", is the current main page image. He's also a [[DeconstructedTrope Deconstruction]] deconstruction]] of the trope. While his grand plans allows him to get the job done, it also served as the catalyst for the more recent split of the X-Men, with Wolverine leaving with half of the team out of disgust due to Cyclops using members as pawns. Since this left him with the members who were perfectly willing to go along with his plans, if anything this actually cemented his position.
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* Franchise/UltimateMarvel: General Nick Fury is a heroic (well, anti-heroic) version of this trope with the full sanction of the United States Government. And also, total badassery.

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* Franchise/UltimateMarvel: ComicBook/UltimateMarvel: General Nick Fury is a heroic (well, anti-heroic) version of this trope with the full sanction of the United States Government. And also, total badassery.

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* The goddess Athena in DC is a usually heroic and incredibly effective version:
** ''ComicBook/WonderWoman1987'': Athena's scheme to bring down Zeus required the resurrection of Medousa; the death, by Medousa's stone gaze, of a child of one of Franchise/WonderWoman's embassy workers to incense Diana into agreeing to a duel to the death, and then that duel culminating in Wonder Woman's blindness and the decapitation of Medousa. This entire chain of events was simply her way of obtaining a fresh gorgon's head (Medousa's previous head having rotted away to uselessness) to use on Zeus's champion, the hecatoncheires Briareos. And that doesn't even count the plot that she undergoes to consolidate her power once Zeus, Poseidon, and Hades try to rebel... Ares has a conversation with her over a chessboard with pieces reflecting all the players in her plan, and grins when she moves a model of himself before he'd agreed to play along.
** The very different version of Athena in the New 52 is manipulating things without any of the other members of the Dodekatheon noticing, in order to put the newly reincarnated version of Zeus back on the throne.



** The goddess Athena in DC is possibly an even bigger version. Her scheme to bring down Zeus required the resurrection of Medousa; the death, by Medousa's stone gaze, of a child of one of Franchise/WonderWoman's embassy workers (to incense Diana into killing), and then a duel to the death between Medousa and Wonder Woman that culminated in Wonder Woman's blindness and the decapitation of Medousa. This entire chain of events was simply her way of obtaining a fresh gorgon's head (Medousa's previous head having rotted away to uselessness) to use on Zeus's champion, the hecatoncheires Briareos. And that doesn't even count the plot that she undergoes to consolidate her power once Zeus, Poseidon, and Hades try to rebel...
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[[TheChessmaster Chessmasters]] in comic books.
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!!Examples With Chess Motifs
* In ComicBook/TheMightyThor, Odin has sometimes been seeing poring over a chessboard with the characters as the pieces (ususally to show he's going through a morally ambiguous phase).
** Now Kid!Loki has been doing it too. He's got figurines of several people that he's dealing with, and uses a map as his chessboard. However, it was drawn at too far an angle to see what he was arranging. When he was turned mortal for a while, these [[SubvertedTrope turned into]] [=RPG=] miniatures and (door stopper) rulebooks, but when asked he called it a game of his own devising. So apparently Loki plays an elaborate game of "{{Calvinball}}" with the universe.
* ''ComicBook/JLAAvengers'' has Metron and The Grandmaster as such.
* Obadiah Stane did a masterful job of bringing every part of [[ComicBook/IronMan Tony Stark's]] life crashing down. Chess was the theme of his campaign against Stark; he went so far as to outfit his henchmen as Knights, Bishops, and Rooks, with appropriate gimmicks. It's revealed in his origin story that he began playing chess at a young age, and at age eight won a school chess tournament by slitting the throat of his opponent's dog and stuffing the body into the kid's locker. The victory only cemented his obsession with the game.
* ''ComicStrip/CalvinAndHobbes'' parodies this trope, with checkers. Hobbes obliterates Calvin's pieces in one series of jumps, and Calvin spends a few panels staring blankly at the board.
--->'''Calvin:''' "[[BlatantLies Ah, you've fallen right into my trap!]] Perhaps you'd like to take that move over?"
--->'''Hobbes:''' "Your remaining piece must have one heck of a plan..."
* ''ComicBook/SupermanRedSon'' has ComicBook/LexLuthor (naturally) and Brainiac. Superman, on the other hand, is more of a chess novice... He's ''good'', but he's not ''Luthor'' good.
** Luthor's introduction as the Chessmaster in ''Red Son'' isn't entirely subtle, but effective: he's just won fourteen simultaneous games of chess on his coffee break, while also reading Machiavelli and teaching himself Urdu by tape (in a tape player he designed himself, no less) "to keep my mind occupied". How good is "Luthor good"? [[spoiler:The end sees Brainiac destroyed, (and apparently Superman too), the world united and ready to accept "Luthorism" to lead it. He regards the chessboard and remarks "It's like it was planned to the tenth decimal point forty years ago."]]
** And what ticked him off more than anything? His Superman Clone beat him at Chess.
* ''ComicBook/{{Hellblazer}}'' - If you're ever associated with John Constantine, chances are you're already dead.
** Celebrated more in ''ComicBook/JusticeLeagueDark'', where Constantine's has a full arsenal of pieces, albeit he calls it a "band" rather than chess pieces.
** A perfect example was during the ''Reasons to be Cheerful'' arc. John's demonic children attempted to kill everyone that John has ever met and knew. That includes his family, close friends, and those he hasn't seen for a long time. They almost succeeded.
* Creator/DCComics' ComicBook/{{Darkseid}} is also fond of moving figures of his minions and enemies around on a chessboard when hatching his latest evil scheme.
** Since everything ''ComicBook/CountdownToFinalCrisis'' touches turns to fail, when he does it in that series he just winds up looking like [[Film/{{Spaceballs}} Dark Helmet.]]
* ''ComicBook/YTheLastMan'' has the Daughters of Amazon led by Victoria, a master of chess; they argue, among other things, that the queen is the most powerful chess piece, like women are the superior sex.
* The very first time we see ComicBook/DoctorDoom, he's toying with chess-piece replicas of the Comicbook/FantasticFour, so that tells you all you need to know. He's usually ranked as Reed Richards' evil ''doppelganger'' regarding intellect, and his plans range from the complicated to the ''really'' complicated to the one that played both [[{{Satan}} Mephisto]] and Comicbook/DoctorStrange like Stradivarius violins. Simultaneously. With one move.
** ...which is parodied in [[http://www.nuklearpower.com/2003/10/16/episode-342-hypothetically-speaking/ these]] [[http://www.nuklearpower.com/2003/10/18/episode-343-check-mate/ two]] ''Webcomic/EightBitTheater'' strips.
** An issue of ''Comicbook/{{Excalibur}}'' parodied the characters-as-chess-pieces visual metaphor, with the characters standing on a chessboard, and Captain Britain saying "Call me paranoid, but I think we're being manipulated."
*** Probably also a reference to a classic earlier ''Captain Britain'' storyline, where the same manipulator, Merlin, played a quite literal game of chess with the characters' fates. He continues to do so during a pivotal story arc of ''Excalibur'', including a time in which he fakes his own death and has his daughter Roma (who's not in on the deception) play the game in his place for a while. When he returns (in the very issue with the above-mentioned cover), he's carrying a chess piece representing Roma, and places it on the board.
* Mother Freya, the goddess of love in Mark Crilley's ''ComicBook/MikiFalls'', is eventually revealed to be one of these.
* In the Franchise/{{Batman}} story ''Hush'', Hush is thought to be it, but it actually turns out to be [[spoiler:The Riddler]] who ironically, Batman had dismissed as a threat earlier on in the story.
* ComicBook/{{Cyclops}} from ''ComicBook/XMen'', the "General of the Mutants", is the [[DeconstructedTrope Deconstruction]] of the trope. While his grand plans allows him to get the job done, it also served as the catalyst for the more recent split of the X-Men, with Wolverine leaving with half of the team out of disgust due to Cyclops using members as pawns.
** DependingOnTheWriter, how self-aware Scott is of this trope varies. He can go from being TheChainsOfCommanding, to a WellIntentionedExtremist, to even a [[TyrantTakesTheHelm borderline tyrant.]]
* In ''ComicBook/AllFallDown'', [[spoiler: AIQ Squared]] becomes this, hatching an elaborate plot to try and kill Siphon, using [[spoiler: Phylum and Pronto]] as his less-than-willing pawns.
* In ''ComicBook/DeathOfTheFamily'', ComicBook/TheJoker has spent his year-long absence becoming this. The ''Catwoman'' story even shows the chess motif!
* In ''ComicBook/TheInvisibles'', there is an extremely mysterious and shadowy character known as the Blind Chessman who, well, plays chess, both literally and metaphorically. It also doubles as a BlindSeer.
* Judge Death is portrayed this way in the ''ComicBook/JudgeDredd'' prequel arc ''Fall of Deadworld''. He's mostly an OrcusOnHisThrone and only makes sporadic appearances, but seems to be anticipating various events somehow. At one point, he's actually shown hunched over a chessboard with ghoulish pieces reflecting different characters, knocking one off the table after someone was just caught as a traitor.

!!Examples Without Chess Motifs
* General Wade Eiling definitely fulfills this trope, given the way he manipulates ComicBook/CaptainAtom.
* SelfDemonstrating/{{Deadpool}} has shown many times that, were it not for his insanity, he would be one of the Marvel Universe's greatest Chessmasters. And even with it, he's shown himself several times to be a cunning and dangerous opponent, such as his tie-in to the Secret Invasion arc, where he joined up with the Skrull and got them to add his regenerative abilities to their Super Skrull. Which resulted in them all basically regenerating so much that they exploded due to not having Deadpool's cancer to keep the regeneration in check, which he knew would happen. And this was all a cover so he could hack into the Skrulls' information and find out a way to defeat them for Nick Fury. And the plan was all his.
* The Phantom Blot is ([[DependingOnTheWriter often]]) at least as close to a Chessmaster as the writers of ''ComicBook/DisneyMouseAndDuckComics'' can manage. If there's an [[TheManBehindTheMan unseen mastermind]] affecting the events and leaving Mickey Mouse baffled for most of the story, it's probably the Blot.
* Two-Edge of ''ComicBook/ElfQuest'' is probably one of the most ridiculously skilled chessmasters in fiction. He forges enough armor and weapons to fill an vault, them makes an exceptional weapon with a secret key to the vault in the pommel, gives it to someone who couldn't use it so that they would be quick to wager it in a game of dice, then tells a ''third, unrelated person'' about the key in order to lure the sword's owner into looking for it. That's the ''simplest and shortest'' chain of events that Two-Edge is explicitly responsible for. If you count the ones where he's only ''implied'' to have been involved, the only events in the entire plot that don't have his fingerprints on them are the ones that occurred ''before he was born''.
* Destiny Ajaye from Top Cow's ''[[http://www.newsarama.com/php/multimedia/album.php?gid=590 Genius]]''.
* Marvel's Grandmaster can come up with some really complicated schemes. Luckily for the heroes he really doesn't care about losing, he just does it for fun. And when he really wants something he's [[UnwittingPawn nice enough to let them think they won]].
* The goddess Athena in the MarvelUniverse series ''ComicBook/TheIncredibleHercules'' is another heroic version of this trope; one of the series' major ongoing threads is a (and, as yet, largely unknown) BatmanGambit she is in the process of executing. Her brother Hercules, a frequent key piece on her chessboard, finds her refusal to be upfront with her plans annoying.
** The goddess Athena in DC is possibly an even bigger version. Her scheme to bring down Zeus required the resurrection of Medousa; the death, by Medousa's stone gaze, of a child of one of Franchise/WonderWoman's embassy workers (to incense Diana into killing), and then a duel to the death between Medousa and Wonder Woman that culminated in Wonder Woman's blindness and the decapitation of Medousa. This entire chain of events was simply her way of obtaining a fresh gorgon's head (Medousa's previous head having rotted away to uselessness) to use on Zeus's champion, the hecatoncheires Briareos. And that doesn't even count the plot that she undergoes to consolidate her power once Zeus, Poseidon, and Hades try to rebel...
* ''Comicbook/IncredibleHulk'': Bruce Banner is this, at least under Greg Pak's pen. As we learn in ''ComicBook/FallOfTheHulks'', Banner's just as dangerous as his savage green alter-ego -- if not more so.
* Alex Wilder of ''ComicBook/{{Runaways}}''. [[spoiler: It turns out that, not only did he learn the truth about his parents a full year before the other kids, but he set up virtually every single event in the first volume of the series]].
* While the comic series ''ComicBook/{{Sleepwalker}}'' is relatively obscure and ran for only 33 issues, its BigBad Cobweb is a brilliant Chessmaster, [[EvilPlan using Sleepwalker as a way to invade Earth while framing him as the demonic invasion's leader]].
* ComicBook/NormanOsborn of ''Franchise/SpiderMan'' is another contender in this category. Brought BackFromTheDead when Marvel needed a "[[AuthorsSavingThrow Get Out Of Clone Saga Free]]" card, Osborn has more than made up for lost time. For a while, every other Comicbook/SpiderMan story was turning out to be some sub-sub-plan of Osborn's.
* ComicBook/{{Sunspot}} shows during his stint leading the [[ComicBook/NewAvengers2015 New Avengers]] that he has a deviously cunning mind hidden under his devil-may-care attitude. Any time it seems like he's backed into a corner it's revealed that it's all part of his plan, or he has plenty of backup plans to get him out of trouble. SHIELD tries to take over his island base? He has an entire second base just in case. SHIELD puts a double agent on his team? Wrong, they're a triple agent loyal to Sunspot. The Maker bugs his base and strikes him when his defences are low? Nope, he knew about the bugs, fed the Maker incorrect information to lure him into attacking, and also bugged the Maker's base in return so he knew the Maker's backup plans and how to counter them. It's not just his ridiculous wealth that got him into a leadership position.
* Franchise/{{Superman}} enemy ComicBook/{{Brainiac}} has often been this, in contrast to MagnificentBastard ComicBook/LexLuthor. Brainiac has frequently set up incredibly complex plans, using every character as a chesspiece in his efforts to [[PlanetLooters steal cities]] / [[AGodAmI become a god]]/absorb the sum total of all knowledge in the universe (his motive keeps on changing), but has trouble changing them once something goes wrong.
* ''ComicBook/TheTenSeconders'': The Scientist has orchestrated almost everything that happened throughout the series so that he could both dispose of his fellow "Gods" and destroy the SufficientlyAdvancedAliens who created them to take their power for himself.
* ComicBook/{{Thanos}} is a staple Chessmaster in many cosmic [[CrisisCrossover crossovers]] in the MarvelUniverse. It's frequently [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] how other characters (especially heroes) exist solely to be manipulated by him for whatever agenda he might have at the moment.
* Franchise/UltimateMarvel: General Nick Fury is a heroic (well, anti-heroic) version of this trope with the full sanction of the United States Government. And also, total badassery.
** The regular MarvelUniverse's Colonel ComicBook/NickFury is no slouch either, even when he loses the support of the US government.
* V, AntiHero of ''ComicBook/VForVendetta''. In the film, Finch actually figures out part of the plan, but can't do much to stop it by that point.
** In the graphic novel, Finch [[spoiler:goes as far as to almost stumble upon V's lair, but decides his ordeal is over when he fatally shoots V. This was all part of V's plan...]].
** V also uses a Domino motif for his plan.
* Tao from the ''Wildstorm'' comics universe, especially as written by Creator/AlanMoore or Ed Brubaker.
* ''Comicbook/TheAvengers'' villain Immortus was always a Chessmaster in a big way, but in the ''ComicBook/AvengersForever'' series it turned out he was a Chessmaster on a far greater scale than anyone had imagined, he [[spoiler:had manipulated virtually every event in the history of the Avengers simply to prevent the human race from becoming dangerous enough that the malevolent Time Keepers would wipe them out to preserve their own existence]].
* Franchise/{{Batman}} villain The Riddler is an accomplished chessmaster, notably for smooth sway over the media, especially post-reformation (a quality of VillainWithGoodPublicity), and for his previous yet strategically subtle maneuverings of other well-known manipulators and dangerous personas.
** [[spoiler: In Hush: The Riddler discovers Batman's secret identity and manipulates Bat's oldest friend and his old mechanic, Poison Ivy (who in turn uses Catwoman and SUPERMAN), Killer Croc, Harley Quinn, Clayface, Scarecrow, Ra's Al Ghul. Even the Joker was talked in to going along with his scheme. However, Batman ensures his confidentiality when he exploits the Riddler's compulsion: he can't expose Batman because it would be like giving away the answer to a riddle]].
** ComicBook/TwoFace can also be a ChessMaster, usually having two plans in motion at once, one often entirely different (but also in some way linked) to the other.
** You can't say Franchise/{{Batman}}, chessmaster, and villain in the same sentence without talking about ComicBook/{{Bane}}. He managed to beat fellow {{Chessmaster}}, ComicBook/RasAlGhul, at a game of Chess even though he's never seen a chessboard before. [[GeniusBruiser Coupled with his monstrous physical strength]], he's easily one of Batman's deadliest physical opponents. There's a reason he's known as "[[DefeatingTheUndefeatable The Man who Broke the Bat]]".
*** Ironically, this could have backfired on him when he engineered his greatest scheme in ''ComicBook/{{Knightfall}}'', springing the entire RoguesGallery from Arkham Asylum knowing that Batman would physically exhaust himself trying to recapture them all, leaving him vulnerable to the above-mentioned back-breaking. A few of the villains manage to figure out they're being manipulated - and one of them, the Mad Hatter, enlists the help of Film Freak (by brainwashing him) into helping investigate who's behind the breakout. Film Freak discovers Bane and attempts to assassinate him, only to be beaten to death at Bane's own hands - thus, ironically, leaving Batman with one less problem to handle.
** The daughter of Ra's Al Ghul, Talia, [[ComicBook/GrantMorrisonsBatman has recently proven to be far more cunning than anyone could have suspected]]. It helps that she's just as CrazyPrepared as the Bat himself, and fueled by [[WomanScorned a lot more]] [[WellDoneSonGuy malice than]] [[VisionaryVillain Ra's ever was]]. Talia and her agents have proven so dangerous that [[spoiler: it turns out that the mysterious organization Batman thought dangerous enough to create a massive, worldwide organization of Batmen, Leviathan, [[TheReveal is controlled directly by Talia herself]]]].
** In ''ComicBook/RedRobin'' Tim proves himself to be taking after his adoptive father in stride when he sets up his own information network and a "hit list" arranged so that the capture of one criminal will lead to the arrests of about fifteen others, that can easily be tweaked and modified to the point that he can ''free'' a couple of the villains on it without it affecting the overall plan.
** Franchise/{{Batman}} himself. He ''is'' the namesake of the BatmanGambit after all and he is pretty skilled in chess.
* The ComicBook/BlackPanther of the MarvelUniverse is a rare example of this trope who's a traditional superhero, albeit one that is occasionally under fire from his more-idealistic peers, for obvious reasons.
** An example more along the vein of the standard AntiHero would be Adam Warlock, who is often the foil to Thanos.
** Franchise/{{Batman}} is the AlternateCompanyEquivalent for Franchise/TheDCU.
* In ''[[ComicBook/{{Convergence}} Convergence: Titans #1]]'', Dreamslayer of the Extremists sees himself as one. He recognizes that this whole situation is making pawns out of the heroes and villains, and he'd prefer to be the one manipulating said pawns. True to his word, he pits pre-ComicBook/{{Flashpoint}} Arsenal against Troia and Starfire by resurrecting Lian Harper and using her as leverage.
* While mentioned and kind of mocked on the '[[ExamplesUsingChessMetaphors using chess metaphors]]' page, ''{{ComicBook/Darkseid}}'' is definitely a very competent and dangerous Chessmaster when he's written correctly. This is perfectly invoked in ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheAnimatedSeries''.
--> ''"I told you once, {{Superman}}, if you would not be my knight, you would be my pawn."''
* ComicBook/TheKingpin is another Chessmaster, especially where ''Comicbook/{{Daredevil}}'' is concerned. (Daredevil seems to attract them -- even the two-bit villain Mysterio became one when he took on DD.)
* Metron of ''Comicbook/NewGods'', who is an EnsembleDarkHorse thanks to his unemotional, bipartisan manipulation of events.

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