







Leo Márquez was seventeen when he threw a football so hard it broke the sound barrier and tore the arms off the training dummy. His father, a retired hero named El Centinela, sighed and said, “We need to talk.”
“No,” El Centinela said. “You just get faster at making the wrong choice feel right.” Leo Márquez was seventeen when he threw a
“Being strong isn’t the hard part,” his father said, showing a scarred palm. “Deciding who to save, and who to sacrifice—that’s the weight.” “Deciding who to save, and who to sacrifice—that’s
That night, Leo learned the truth: his powers weren’t from an accident or alien lineage. They were inherited from a father who had once led a team of heroes—and who had secretly let a villain die to save a city. If you want a fan-made continuation of Invincible
In that second, El Rompe grabbed him, whispered, “You’re not your father,” and threw him through three walls.
If you want a fan-made continuation of Invincible in text form (no downloads), I can write a script-style issue or a prose chapter featuring Mark Grayson facing a new Viltrumite threat. Just let me know.
The media called him a hero. The dead villain’s family called him a legacy of lies.