When we rounded up a list of our favorite comic book cliches, we mentioned that there are a whole lot of female versions of male characters out there in the world of comics. Whether they were started out as a means to secure a copyright (like Supergirl and She-Hulk), attempts at taking a legacy character in a new direction (Dr. Midnight, Dr. Light and Wildcat II), or just attempts at shutting Frederic Wertham up (Silver Age Batwoman, we're looking at you), there are a ton of gender-swapped versions of male characters out there, and some of them are just strange.
That's why we've gotten ComicsAlliance contributor Chris Sims to take a look through the archives and round up the best and outright weirdest female versions of male comic book characters!

She was actually one of many ersatz Punishers running around towards the end of his '90s run (including Outlaw, the motorcycle-riding British Punisher who seriously needs a comeback), but just in case you forgot that she's the girl, she's the one that found Frank's diary (well, "War Journal," but let's be honest) and was very upset to see that she wasn't mentioned.

Created by Adam Warren and Elsevilla for this year's Assistant Editor Spectacular, Galacta appears to be a young woman in a "Sexy Galactus" costume, much to the delight of hat fetishists everywhere. In reality though -- or at least as close to reality as the Marvel Universe gets -- she's Big G's daughter, who has given up on eating planets and instead subsists on "alien microfauna," mostly in the form of space-diseases that are out of place in Earth's ecosystem.
What's more, Galacta -- who even has her own sadly idle Twitter account -- won a reader vote to get a follow-up story, beating out "Nextwave's" Elsa Bloodstone, who is herself a female version of a male character, the Bronze Age monster hunter Ulysses Bloodstone!

We do have to give Mxyzptlk credit though: Not only did he give us a world with a Superwoman, a Batwoman, and even Wonder Warrior (whose arms and legs were colored in in an effort to make it look like he wasn't just straight up wearing Wonder Woman's costume), but he went the extra mile and hit the supporting cast too...

...and gave us Penny White, Louis Lane, and our favorite, Jenny Olsen!
This idea proved to be so popular that Jeph Loeb and Ed McGuinness brought it back in "Superman/Batman"--leading to its newly minted status as Earth-11 in the post-"Infinite Crisis" multiverse--giving us the added bonus of seeing McGuinness draw gender-swapped Kirby characters:

...Miss Miracle and Big Bard!
The issue was even parodied by Mark Millar and Frank Quitely in "The Authority"...

...when the Wildstorm characters crossed over into the world of The Meritocracy, their gender-swapped counterparts who were led by a pregnant Jackie Hawksmoor!

We've mentioned X-23 before, but when it comes to listing off bizarre female versions of male superheroes, the teenage girl clone of everyone's favorite X-Man who appears to exist for the sole purpose of giving confused fanboys a more socially acceptable outlet for their crushes on Wolverine, and who not only first appeared as a "gothic lolita" teenage prostitute but was then stuck almost immediately into Cyclops's murder squad in one of the biggest jerk moves in comics, she's always worth mentioning.

And that's a shame, because as you can see above, her super-power includes kicking people with jet boots.

The future is a strange, dangerous place, full of hazards like evil alien races, sinister masterminds, and of course, Gender-Reversal Disease.
First spotted in the "Legion of Substitute Heroes" special, when CA favorite Infectious Lass accidentally dosed a hapless Color Kid with it, but it was later used on an unsuspecting Matter-Eater Lad so that he could infiltrate an all-girl gang of space-pirates, which was significantly less sexy than it might sound.

The best part though, comes from the fact that there was a member of Youngblood named Cougar...

...whom we can assume developed an interest in much younger men around this time.
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Comments:
(14)Add a comment
Tuesday 17 November
By MaxtotheMax
Jet boot kicking, eh? So that's where Dr. McNinja got it!
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Wednesday 18 November
By nemryn
What about Gal Gardner?
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Wednesday 18 November
By devophill
It can't just be a mirror, can it, Legion? It has to be a "Reflectamatic 9000"?
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Wednesday 18 November
By timscurtin
ROM: Spaceknight - the franchise that just keeps giving.
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Wednesday 18 November
By skeeter
Very nice of you to leave the Matter-Eater lass money shot joke for us, Sims.
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Wednesday 18 November
By Masked Avenger
My favourite swap by far has been Giant-Girl in MA Avengers. Taking a suit that I irrationally love, put superhottie Janet Van Dyne in it and make her not be a spoiled brat? It's like if Jeff Parker wanted to give me the best birthday gift ever.
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Wednesday 18 November
By Dan K
I can't believe you didn't mention Black Condor's pixie boots and disturbingly hairless legs. I can imagine this article will inspire a fair bit of slash fiction.
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Wednesday 18 November
By ShutUpRob
Great article!
Semi-seriously: what I don't get about X-23 is Marvel's ridiculous (even for the pseudoscience of superheroes) insistence that X-23 is a clone of Wolverine. Sure, she is the result of a program that was *trying* to clone Wolverine, but that experiment was a failure, which prompted the lead scientist on the project to splice her genetic material into their samples of Wolverine's cells in order to stabilize the cells for their next attempt.
Which makes Laura Wolverine's *test-tube daughter,* not his clone.
I know, I know, I put waaaaaaaaaaaaay too much thought into this.
-- Rob
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Tuesday 24 November
By Endiem
Rob, I don't think that's right. It's been a while since I read X-23's origin story, but iirc the sample of Wolverine's dna they had was damaged, so instead of using both the X and Y chromosomes (which would result in a male clone) they just paired two of Wolverine's X chromosomes together to get a female clone. From my very limited knowledge of genetics I believe it's possible to get a female clone from male dna but not the other way around, since there's no Y chromosome to copy in female dna. I think the scientist you're talking about was just a surrogate/adoptive mother and had no genetic link to X-23. So X-23 really is Wolverine's full clone (though she looks nothing like him, thank goodness - now *that* would be disturbing).
Wednesday 18 November
By Alex Ess
Lady Punisher doesn't look pissed off enough.
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