![buddy pine buddy pine](https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/parody/images/5/5e/Torn_apart_Buddy.jpg)
The left-hand gauntlet also holds the remote control for the Omnidroid. Like the trigger for Spider-Man's web-shooters, the trigger for these weapons is located high on the palm of each hand to prevent most unwanted firings. The field is moved by his fingers and can be fired in the forms of energy blasts and concentrated beams.
Buddy pine skin#
If the victim's skin is exposed, the range of motion of the victim's face is also taken to the minimum (only their eyes can move), and the ability to speak is also inhibited. Using zero-point energy, Syndrome is able to create a field of quantum energy that inhibits the majority of a victim's body movement. He was also a former child prodigy - when Syndrome was still at a young age, he was a gifted boy who specializes in technology engineering, as he was able to create jet boots at a young age.Technology Engineering: Syndrome was a formidable foe when it comes to building numerous advanced technology and weapons, as he was also capable of becoming a successful weapons designer. Genius-level Intellect: While not having superpowers, Syndrome's high intellect made him a fierce opponent, his tactical skills and inventions proving to be more than enough to allow him to compete with the likes of Mr. Though it was years and his vindictiveness had completely absolved him, Syndrome does have a memory of why he respected Mister Incredible and was visibly impressed when he tricked the probe by hiding from the corpse of Gazerbeam while claiming "he truly was Mister Incredible" and was "still geeking out about it."
![buddy pine buddy pine](http://img2.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20120412154829/disneyvillains/images/a/a7/Buddy_Pine_IncrediBoy_The_Incredibes.jpg)
Incredible with his family's supposed death, and a second time when he gloated to the family on how he would steal away Jack-Jack and turn him into a sidekick in a last-ditch attempt to spite Mr.
![buddy pine buddy pine](http://www.writeups.org/wp-content/uploads/Syndrome-The-Incredibles-Buddy-Pine-h.jpg)
To put it simply, Syndrome, having never been told he was special or could do great things, wished to remove the world of its specialties (specifically supers) by either eradicating them or turning them redundant with his technology, which makes him a bit of a complex character as well.Īside from being bitter and sociopathic, Syndrome was intensely sadistic, as shown by how he taunted Mr. Perhaps even if Mister Incredible had not rejected Buddy, he would still descend into villainy as he proved of having no grasp on the terms of what it means to be a hero which is shown when he still considered himself one despite having killed real heroes. Syndrome appeared to be driven at an early age for recognition and ego nourishment, which are normal traits for that of a child prodigy, as seen by him attempting to overcompensate for his lack of super abilities with his brainpower and technology. He is a classical sociopath, caring not at all for the rules of society and seeing it as his mission to make himself the world's ultimate hero through trickery and technology, and when he grows tired of that, to make superheroes entirely obsolete by selling his weapons to the highest bidder. Incredible, and the dissolution of classical superheroes, the young man turned his gifts towards evil, eventually murdering several superheroes with his Omnidroids and various super weapons. He became embittered and eventually descended into megalomania.īuddy is a technical genius, and even at an early age could create wondrous gadgets to circumvent his lack of "super" powers. Sadly, after Bob categorically refused to grant Buddy's favor, Buddy returned home in disgrace and rejected the righteous path. Despite this, Xerek ended up being reintroduced in The Incredibles comic book series of Boom! Studios.Īs a young Buddy Pine, the boy who would become Syndrome aspired to become a superhero and this goal led him to beg Bob Parr to hire him as a sidekick, "Incredi-Boy!". However, when Brad Bird noticed that Syndrome was more popular for the film's producers, he deleted Xerek from the story and used Syndrome instead in what would have been Xerek's role if the film's story would have been left intact. Syndrome's appearance in the film was to be fast as he was to be the main antagonist of the film's original opening sequence. The film's main villain was originally supposed to be Xerek, who was to fulfill what became Syndrome's role in the finished version of the film: he was to call retired superheroes back to action to battle to death the Omnidroids and was the boss of Mirage. Originally, in the early drafts of the film's script, Syndrome was originally going to be featured as a minor villain, like Bomb Voyage in the prologue of the film.