The Boys' comics were never afraid to do highly satirical takes on popular Marvel and DC Comics superheroes. However, none of their parody characters were more ridiculous than Ground Hawk, a version of Wolverine that had hammers for hands and couldn't stop repeating the same line over and over again.

Garth Ennis and Darick Robertson's popular comic was all about taking popular heroes and turning them into depraved, greedy heroes. Among the heroes parodied, include a racist Martian Manhunter (Jack From Jupiter), an incompetent Teen Titans clone (Team Titanic), and a sex-addicted Batman and Iron Man amalgamation (Tek Knight). The comic even parodied superhero events, only the heroes in The Boys participated in a giant orgy instead of world-ending crises. The Boys comic series was adapted into an Amazon series where those parodies have come to life.

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In The Boys #27 by Ennis and Robertson, Hughie (wearing his Bagpipe costume and infiltrating the G-Mansion under the team G-Wiz) meets the G-Men, The Boys parody of the X-Men, up close and personal. Hughie is alarmed when one of the members, Ground Hawk, starts growling at him and repeats the phrase "gonna" over and over again. Appearance-wise, he's unquestionably designed to be a hawk-version of Wolverine. Ground Hawk has the angry scowl on his face, is short in stature, has a similar tipped nose, and features many physical characteristics similar to Wolverine. While he doesn't have claws, he has literal hammers for hands - it's unclear if they're adamantium.

G-Men member Ground Hawk fights an opponent

Sadly, Ground Hawk wouldn't stick around very long. Vought would become concerned with John Godolkin, The Boys answer to Professor X, who is selfish and sexually abusive and become too much of a problem for the mega-corporation to deal with. The G-Men (led by Ground Hawk) and the  G-squads such as G-Force, G-Wiz, and the G-Style, decide to take a stand against Vought's attempt at taking down Godolkin. They foolishly tell Vougt "there isn't one of us won't die for John Godolkin." That's when Vought forces fire bullets and bombs into the crowd and kill every single one of the G-Men. It's a bloody end for the entire team. The moment also shows that Ground Hawk doesn't have one of Wolverine's key powers: Immortality.

Ground Hawk's time in The Boys comics might have been short, but his penchant for saying "gonna" and his ridiculous hammer hands made him a worthwhile parody of Wolverine. It would be pretty great to see Ground Hawk show up on The Boys television series - even if it's only a brief cameo before his death. He's an absurd character that sort of personifies the insane nature of The Boys universe.

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