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  1. If he can come back to life n shit like in madness then we're in for a problem. I believe Hank is canonically around 6ft if that helps, and hank does feel pain, his tolerance is just superhuman. They will send the military after him. Dude's god damn terrifying. But at the end of the day, he is only one man.

    • Overview
    • Personality
    • Powers and Abilities
    • History
    • Deaths
    • Non-Canon Deaths
    • Weapons Used
    • Trivia

    Hank J. Wimbleton

    1/16

    Hank as he appears across the franchise

    Debut: Madness Combat 1

    Appearances: 17 (5 non-canon)

    Role(s): Main Protagonist

    Hank is shown to care for little besides fighting and killing, and appears to take a nearly animalistic pleasure from the thrill and brutality of combat. As early as the first episode he's willing to beat people to death over a boombox, before casually dancing as text flashes stating that he “had a good time” killing the antagonists in the episode. Hank is rarely fazed by anything, be it supernatural foes appearing or being grievously wounded, and focuses his attention on killing his next target. Hank rarely shows pain no matter how battered he becomes; this is shown in Madness Combat 5 when he's impaled, only to quickly kill Tricky and pull the street sign back out of his chest. The closest Hank has ever shown to a moment of weakness was in Madness Combat 7 — Hank was willing to accept death rather than be constantly revived only to be painfully tortured to death by Tricky over and over again. He then spends most of said episode running away from Tricky, the first time we ever see him do so.

    Hank also seems to have a possible tiny tinge of mercy, as in Madness Combat 2: Redeemer he spares a grunt’s life by knocking him out instead of shooting him when he gave him information on the Sheriff’s location, though other reasons could explain this such as conserving ammunition. However, given the series’ fine line between what counts as unconscious and what counts as a kill when it comes to blunt weapons and hand to hand, this could’ve been intended as a kill, and given Hank’s total lack of mercy for anyone throughout the entire rest of the canon series this is very likely. If this was an act of mercy and he did simply knock the grunt out, it was a one off event and after the events of Redeemer any ounce of mercy or humanity that Hank had left was gone.

    While Hank's powers and abilities changed from episode to episode, they were nearly always the same with little differences, which are extreme skills and physical capabilities that is above any non-superpowered grunt in the series. Hank's powers and abilities seems to become notably better after the episode Madness Combat 4: Apotheosis, considering...

    Madness Combat 1

    The very first episode of Madness Combat. In it, Hank is referred to as "Our Hero," and physically looks nothing different from an ordinary grunt. His first ever victim is the boombox man, who is listening to a remix of the Chicken Dance. This disruption causes a riot and many people enter the scene to try to subdue Hank. He goes on to kill 30 people (and 2 zombies) and even fights Jesus, who appears here for the very first time. Hank emerges victorious over the opposition and, alone, dances to the Chicken Dance remix (still playing in the background).

    Madness Combat 2: Redeemer

    For unknown reasons (possibly having a bounty placed on him), Hank is now on a mission to kill the Sheriff with the aid of his "Sheriff Tracker." Throughout the episode Hank is followed by Jesus, who might be under the employment of the Sheriff, or in another way appointed as the Sheriff's high bodyguard. At one point Tricky tries to join Jesus in an attack against Hank, however, without any supernatural intervention he is quickly dispatched. Though the Sheriff keeps trying to distance between himself and Hank, he is eventually cornered in his office. Hank aims his dual PPKs at the Sheriff's head and is about to fire when Jesus comes up behind Hank and shoots him in the back of the head. The episode ends as Hank lies dead with Jesus and the Sheriff standing unharmed. Hank killed 79 people in this episode (plus eight zombies).

    Madness Combat 3: Avenger

    Hank is "given a second chance" after being shot in the head, which is now wrapped in a bandage to cover his gunshot wound. He continues his hunt for the Sheriff, and it is shown that the Sheriff and Jesus are working together. When killing several A.A.H.W. members, Hank gets caught on a security camera being watched by the Sheriff and Jesus. This causes the Sheriff to panic and activate the Improbability Drive, which causes improbable and insane events to occur. Hank falls into an abyss that ends up actually being the Nevada streets, next to The Bakery. In the background, whales are seen falling from the sky, along with a giant marshmallow. In this warped version of Nevada, Hank fights and kills the Sun, which immediately causes the sky to turn from day to perpetual night. Tricky comes shortly to fight Hank, but he was also quickly killed. Hank impaled Tricky with the streetsign onto the marshmallow (a homage to Marsh-Mellow-Madness). After Hank leaves the scene, a close-up of Tricky's body shows that he was shocked with electricity and revived as a zombie. Hank makes his way back into the complex he was originally in and once again kills the zombified Tricky. All seems won when Hank corners the Sheriff, like in Redeemer. Jesus runs up behind Hank and stabs him through the back with his binary sword. Refusing to fail twice, Hank uses the sword (still protruding through his body) to stab and kill the Sheriff, then shoots both Jesus and the Sheriff. After this split-second move, everyone falls dead to the ground and the episode ends. Hank killed 88 people in this episode.

    1.Madness Combat 2: Redeemer - Shot through the skull by Jesus Christ with a deagle.

    2.Madness Combat 3: Avenger - Impaled through the back by Jesus Christ with the Binary sword (this didn't kill him immediately), succumbed to his wound later.

    3.Madness Combat 4: Apotheosis - Committed suicide via blowing himself up with a suicide bomb.

    4.Madness Combat 5: Depredation - Head ripped off by Tricky and smashed against the ground.

    5.Madness Combat 6: Antipathy - Neck impaled by Tricky with the false-end of a stop sign; Resurrected almost immediately.

    6.Madness Combat 7: Consternation - Brain completely destroyed after being supposedly thrown off a cliff by Tricky.

    1.Incident: 010A - Left eye gouged in, ripped in half horizontally by a Mag Agent: V4 and repeatedly stabbed in the head with his own Dragon sword.

    2.Incident: 1000A - Shot in the head by Jesus with a desert eagle.

    Madness Combat 1
    Madness Combat 2: Redeemer
    Madness Combat 3: Avenger
    Madness Combat 4: Apotheosis
    Madness Combat 5: Depredation
    Madness Combat 6: Antipathy

    •Because of his claw he got at the end of Madness Combat 9: Aggregation, Hank is the only character to have a visible arm rather than just a floating hand.

    •The only episodes Hank is never seen dead are Madness Combat 1, Madness Combat 10: Abrogation, and in the non-canon Madness episodes, Incident: 001A and Incident: 100A. The only episodes where Hank has not died after being revived are Madness Combat 6: Antipathy and Madness Combat 9: Aggregation.

    •Madness Combat 2: Redeemer and Inundation are the only episodes in which Hank's appearance remains the same from the previous episode.

    •According to a poster in Madness Combat 6: Antipathy, Hank's phone number is [555-4259|(719) 555-4259].

    •Interestingly, the 719 area code is for the Colorado Springs area in Colorado, as opposed to the Nevada setting.

    •Hank's claw arm in Madness Combat 9: Aggregation and lightning abilities in Madness Combat 10: Abrogation are references to the video games Die by the Sword and Infamous respectively.

    • 20 (6 non-canon)
    • Madness Combat 12: Contravention
    • Madness Combat 1
    • Main Protagonist
  2. 14. there are no hells in madness or at least not yet krinkels said it's Hell but it's not cuz there no demons so i see no reason it to be Hell I mean they are hells but not the real the hell where you see demons so that is basically what I saying right now 19. what do you mean the auditor possesses The agents he upgrades them and agents doesn't see the auditor's memories when they got ...

  3. Madness Combat's music has seriously inspired a lot of the stories I've been writing. You'd be surprised the sorts of things music to can inspire you to make. The sorts of things completely different from the tracks that inspired them. Madness Combat 5.5's track alone was a big inspiration for me.

  4. This article is about Madness Combat as a series. For the episode of the same name, see Madness Combat 1. The Madness Combat series is a series of Flash animations made by Matt Jolly, also known as Krinkels. The series has 15 canon episodes so far. The musical scores are mainly composed by Sean Hodges, otherwise known as Cheshyre. As a series, Madness Combat's calling card is its excessive and ...

    • Krinkels
    • Cheshyre, API, others
    • Sheriff, Tricky, Auditor
    • Hank, Sanford, Deimos, Jesus
  5. madnesscombat.fandom.com › wiki › Madness_CombatMadness Combat Wiki : About

    Long ago, there was a Madness Combat Wiki (commonly referred to as oldwiki here). That wiki was originally hosted on a server but then it migrated to a site called scribblewiki. One day, scribble wiki shut down and all was lost. The owner of that wiki, known as Simon Koldyk, was too lazy to have a back up and whatever, he decided not to rebuild.

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  7. Oct 1, 2024 · Welcome to the Madness Combat Wiki! "The Madness Combat Wiki delivers comprehensive, up-to-date information on the series, covering characters, weapons, and episodes, as well as fan-created animations and the Madness Project Nexus video game. It’s the go-to source for all things Madness Combat!"

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