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James "dumpster fire gijinka" Barnes ([personal profile] frostythehitman) wrote2017-02-27 01:27 am

REGAINS

REGAIN REGISTRY
BUCKY BARNES
memories
(1940) Bucky's very first kill--him throwing a knife through the throat of a train conductor intending to gas a passing train station--and the speech Cap gave to him later that night about it. (Captain America and Bucky #621)
(1940) Being thrown into the brig at Camp Lehigh, and Major Samson getting him out while offering him a mysterious "special assignment." (Captain America and Bucky #620, Captain America v5 #50)
(1942) Keeping watch in the trees for Nazis, only to find they've already been taken out. When Bucky tries to report in, he realizes Cap on the other end's gotten into trouble. (Also includes general knowledge that staying hidden and keeping watch was a thing he did regularly.) (Captain America and Bucky #622)
Russian naming conventions. The most useless regain of all.
General knowledge of how to operate/handle handguns, with particular expertise for the Walther PP.
(1942) On the plane before dropping into a mission to capture U-Man, Bucky makes a snide comment about Namor. Namor says Bucky ought to carry his own weight on the team. (Remembers all the Invaders on the plane, but no details about who they actually are.) (Captain America and Bucky #622)
(2010) That time when he got turned into a frog (along with Thor and Iron Man, not that he'd remember who those are). Not much to this other than a snippet of him being a tiny frog and jumping into a chaotic fight with lots of people and explosions that are all way huger than him. (Avengers vs. Pet Avengers)
(1940) That time Bucky got drunk underage at a bar, got in a fight, inadvertently started a riot, and got arrested (leading directly into one of his previous regains, about getting released from the brig for a 'special assignment'). (Captain America and Bucky #620)
(1945) The vampire outbreak in Bastogne, Belgium. Bucky and Captain America are trying to put a stop to soldiers coming back from the dead as vampires, oftentimes consoling dying soldiers in their final moments and killing them to put them out of their misery before they attack anyone. (No memory of the culprit or how they stopped it, though.) (Captain America v5 #601)
(1942) The Invaders fight Nazis (and Hiwis, Russian prisoners/deserters fighting on behalf of the Nazis) alongside the Russians in an attempt to take one prisoner to get some information on a Nazi doomsday weapon that might disrupt Operation Uranus. They manage to take out the Nazis with no injuries or casualties, but one of their prisoners, a Hiwi, is shot by his betrayed Russian relative. They end up only bringing one prisoner back to camp near Kalach. (Captain America v5 #5)
(1940) Steve giving him his WW2 uniform as he's officially declared Captain America's partner, and then trying the uniform on for the first time. (This doesn't include the knowledge that Steve is Captain America.) (Captain America and Bucky #620)
(1941-ish?) Bucky's first time fighting alongside the team that would later become known as the Young Allies: a huge brawl with a bunch of Nazi spies at a Brooklyn navy yard. Once the fight starts settling down, Red Skull joins the fray and is revealed to be the man behind the whole scheme. (Young Allies Comics 70th Anniversary Special)
The names and powers of the Human Torch and Toro.
(1941-ish?) This random page about him getting held hostage by the Red Skull, except probably with at least a little less camp. (god i literally don't remember what issue of Captain America Comics i plucked this out of, fml)
(1940) The months of SAS training he was put through, including the inspiration that came from watching the Captain America propaganda reels in the evenings. (Captain America and Bucky #620, Captain America v5 #601)
Captain America's identity and backstory.
(1940-1941-ish?) The mission where Cap and Bucky bust the Nazi spies posing as a circus planning to gas a train station (leading directly into his first regain.) (Captain America and Bucky #621)
(2010-ish?) DEATH BEAR PRISON FIGHT (Captain America v5 616-617)
(2007-ish?) DICKPUNCH (Captain America v5 #33)
(1935) His father's death, the funeral that followed, and him being left behind at Camp Lehigh while his sister gets sent off to a boarding school. (Captain America and Bucky #620)
(1942) The failed mission where the Invaders attempted to stop the Atlanteans from coming ashore to attack. Bucky gets cocky and gets in over his head, nearly gets killed by Atlanteans, and needs to be saved by Namor, who chews him out for being dead weight on the team. (Captain America and Bucky #622)
The basics about the Super-Axis: names, appearances, basic info on who they were/their powers.
(1945) Getting captured by Baron Zemo during a mission and being tortured in a dungeon while Cap is forced to watch. (Captain America v5 #4)
(2005) Being at ground zero for the explosion in Philadelphia where he saves Cap from an attacker. Cap calls him by name and his response is "who the hell is Bucky?" (Captain America v5 #8)
(1944) Bucky and Toro's botched rescue attempt at Auschenberg. (Captain America and Bucky #623)
(1968) Fighting The Man With No Face on a mission as the Winter Soldier (except without any memory of the uniquely winter soldier-y bits of the encounter, like his arm) (Captain America v5 #45)
(~2010?) that time Bucky tried to kill Daredevil before getting his ass kicked--includes memories of the whole fight, but nothing about when it happened, why he was trying to kill him, or who the people who stopped him were. (Winter Soldier #12-13)
(1942) The battle of Kronas (Captain America v5 #5)
the knowledge that he had explosives implanted into his left arm in case of emergency. (Avengers vs. Invaders #2)
(1944) in Arnhem, Netherlands, the Red Skull releasing brainwashed/otherwise brainfucked British POWs to the Allies, only to use them as suicide bombers. (Captain America v5 #12)
Names and faces of Jacqueline Falsworth/Spitfire, Gwenny Lou Sabuki/Golden Girl, and Miss America.
(1941) The end of the botched mission in Tunisia--Cap's plane is shot down and their new teammate Logan turns out to be a double agent helping Baron Zemo. Although injured, Bucky manages to snipe enough of Zemo's men that they're forced into a retreat. (Wolverine: Origins #20)
(1944) Meeting with the rest of the Young Allies in Paris for a team reunion (Young Allies 70th Anniversary Special)
The appearances of the Pet Avengers and the knowledge that they can talk.
(1945) Bucky's final mission at Zemo's castle and his death. (literally every comic Bucky ever shows up in)
(1942) The Invaders' mission to protect a child prodigy scientist named Zhang Chin from Japanese forces. (Captain America v5 #43/46)
(1968) His attempted assassination of Zhang Chin--minus the bit where Chin recognizes him from his WW2 days. (Captain America v5 #44/45/46)
(1955) Killing the United Nations Diplomatic Negotiation Team, in a fire that was covered up as an accident. (Captain America v5 #11)
(2013) that time Bucky punched a hole clean through a guy's chest, caught a Molotov in his hand, and then ignited the Molotov inside the guy's new chest cavity. (Winter Soldier #15)
(1958) His assassination of Sergei Ivanovich, which Black Widow shows up to help him with after it goes pear-shaped. (Captain America & Bucky #624)
(1954) His field test: infiltrating a West Berlin nightclub, impersonating an American soldier, then sabotaging an American jeep that kills 3 soldiers. (Captain America v5 #11)
(1956) His assassination of a British ambassaddor in Madripoor, with several more murdered as collateral damage. (Captain America v5 #11)
(2005) His bombing of Philadelphia and his murder of Jack Monroe to use him as a scapegoat for it. (Captain America v5 #6, #8)
(1983) His murders of Linus Tarasov and his SHIELD agent bodyguard, leaving his daughter Tesla orphaned. (Winter Soldier #16)
(1983-1988) General knowledge that he acted as personal bodyguard to Karpov and some of the main tasks associated with it.
(1956) His assassination of the French defense minister, for which he framed the Algerian Nationalist movement. (Captain America v5 #11)
(mid-late 1970s?) His involvement on Project Zephyr training sleeper agents how to blend into American society. (Captain America v5 #619)
(mid-1950s to mid-2000s) The knowledge that he has repeatedly (at least over a dozen times) woken up, restrained in front of his superiors, with absolutely no memories.
(2017) That time James went to the moon with Nat (and some irrelevant kid) to go talk to Nick "Cryptic Moon Bullshit" Fury. (Black Widow v6 #10)
(2005) His first mission as Buckycap--wielding the shield for the first time in a protest gone violent and proving that yeah actually, he does know how to use it. (Captain America v5 #34)
(1954) The first time he underwent "mental implantation," aka sat in a chair with a brainwashing helmet. (Captain America v5 #11)
Basic knowledge about the Red Room/Department X--their names, what their general purposes were, and their role within the government.
Knowledge that there are aliens called Skrulls who can shapeshift to look like people--and at one point did successfully into human society
(2010) Steve's dogged insistence during Bucky's trial that he's innocent, and going so far as to broker shady deals with fugitives and state officials to try and prove it. (Captain America v5 #611-615)
(2010) That time he went on trial for the Winter Soldier's crimes and decided to plead guilty at the last second. (Captain America v5 #615)
(1973) That time he went rogue after a Winter Soldier mission and briefly escaped to New York, only to be recaptured by the Red Room and get brainwashed extra hard. (Captain America v5 #11)
(2010) The free-for-all deathmatch fights in the Russian prison he was in, feat. superpowered prisoners and the swole bear he already remembers. (Captain America v5 #616-619)
(2005) The time he remote controlled his arm to punch a bunch of scientists and then crawl through a bunch of vents (Captain America v5 #33)
(2010) That time he tried to escape prison only to see that Black Widow decided to break him out herself by....blowing the whole joint up. (Captain America v5 #619)
(2005) Knowledge that he used to work for a Russian CEO named Alexander Lukin in the early 2000s, doing his dirty work such as the Philly bombing (that he already remembers) and guarding a glowing blue cube. (Captain America v5 #13)
THING
THING
abilities
Stupid accurate sharpshooting skills, up to 25 1000 yards
Advanced hand-to-hand combat.
Fluency in French and Russian
His agility/acrobatic skills
His dubiously-super strength (currently limited at: 400lbs. overhead lift)
Expertise with knives--fighting, throwing, plain ol' stabbing, etc.
Stealth/scouting skills
THING
items
10 of the earliest Captain America Comics and 15 of the earliest Young Allies comics detailing the fictionalized exploits of Cap and Bucky.
His WW2-issued M1911A1 pistol with a box of 20 bullets to go along with it
His WW2 uniform.
His left arm. No, I mean the original fleshy one. The one that got blown off in the rocket blast.
his stupid "HEY WORLD DID YOU KNOW I HAVE A STAR ON MY ARM JUST LIKE THE EXTREMELY WANTED CRIMINAL THE WINTER SOLDIER" jacket
F-S fighting knife, serrated Bowie knife, heavy throwing knife
3 Mk 2 grenades
his 1950s arm
the brain damage that gave him convenient amnesia
best arm BEST ARM
the Cosmic Cube effect that conveniently cancelled his amnesia
THING
appearance
amputation of his left arm
the metal arm socket permanently attached at his shoulder
THING

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