Access is a fictional character owned by both DC Comics and Marvel Comics. He made his first appearance in Marvel vs DC #1 (March 1996), a special crossover between the two companies. He was intended both as a way to explain the events of the story as well as a means to enable more such crossovers in the future.
At the height of the Brothers' battle, the universes were combined into a single Amalgam Universe by The Spectre and the Living Tribunal to delay their fight. Access used shards of each universe hidden inside Batman and Captain America to separate and restore both universes. Access helped stop the fight between The Brothers, saving the two universes from destruction.
Access appeared in two follow-up miniseries, "DC/Marvel: All Access" and "Unlimited Access". In the first, Access helped prevent Dr. Strangefate from re-merging the two universes; in the second, he discovered that the "old bum" was actually his own future self, and that a variant version of himself had joined forces with Darkseid. He also discovered his powers were greater than he believed, and he absorbed his evil self within himself and helped the heroes of both universes defeat Darkseid's scheme.
Access is now a native of both universes and his duty is to keep them separate. If they start to overlap, the universes will merge into the Amalgam Universe again. Access must move from one universe to the other keeping people from crossing over. If he stays in one place too long, he can cause spontaneous crossovers to occur. Access usually works out situations like this without anyone noticing that he is involved. (This is done to explain how the subsequent DC/Marvel crossovers occur. Stories where DC and Marvel heroes appear on a 'shared Earth' are believed to be dimensional fluxes where the two universe have begun to merge again.)
Despite shared ownership between DC Comics and Marvel Comics, only DC has used the character in a non-crossover appearance. In Green Lantern issue number 87, Access appears and claims to be looking for Kyle Rayner. Having no success, he decides to travel to the Marvel Comics universe in order to find the Silver Surfer.
Note: In the JLA/Avengers crossover, no mention is made of Access, who should logically have been involved. On the other hand, the events of JLA/Avengers have been referenced to by DC comics (see Crime Syndicate); This implies that the Access stories are no longer considered to have been part of either company's continuity.
Amalgam Comics superheroes | DC Comics superheroes | Fictional interdimensional travelers | Marvel Comics superheroes
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