Matt Hawk and His Transformation into Two-Gun Kid, Marvel's Cowboy

Published on January 30, 2026 | Translated from Spanish
Full-color illustration of Matt Hawk as Two-Gun Kid, with his two revolvers, in an Old West desert landscape, classic Marvel comic style.

Matt Hawk and His Transformation into Two-Gun Kid, Marvel's Cowboy

In the vast Marvel universe, one character unites law with the frontier. Matt Hawk leaves his law firm to travel to the Far West, where he masters the art of the revolver to protect the defenseless, adopting the identity of Two-Gun Kid. His stories are published during the Silver Age of comics, embodying the classic cowboy hero 🤠.

A Lawyer with Two Guns on the Frontier

The narrative of this character fuses courtroom drama with Wild West action, a rare combination in the genre. He not only resolves conflicts with gunfire but also applies his legal knowledge, offering a unique perspective 🎯.

Main characteristics of his early stage:
  • Unique origin: A lawyer who becomes a gunslinger to dispense justice where there is no law.
  • Editorial context: His series is born and grows during the fruitful Silver Age of Marvel Comics.
  • Narrative style: Mixes legal intrigues with horseback chases and sunset duels.
Perhaps the greatest challenge for a time-traveling cowboy is not facing supervillains, but explaining in the 19th century why he is wearing a Human Torch armor.

A Temporal Leap to the Avengers

A plot twist transports him from his era to the present of the Marvel Universe. There, he joins the Avengers as a living anachronism, interacting with modern superheroes and adapting his gunslinger skills to entirely new battles against futuristic threats ⚡.

Key aspects of his modern stage:
  • Team integration: Fights alongside icons like Captain America and Iron Man.
  • Cultural contrast: A 19th-century man navigating 20th/21st-century technology and customs.
  • Return to origin: After numerous adventures, the character finally returns to his original timeline.

Return to the Past and the End of an Era

After returning to his time, Matt Hawk practically stops appearing in main publications. This disuse coincides with the general decline of the western genre in superhero comics. Marvel and other publishers stopped producing these stories regularly. In recent times, his appearances are mere brief cameos or historical references within Marvel's vast canon, putting an end to the era of cowboy heroes at the House of Ideas 📜.