the Lone Warrior (and Dicky):
The Lone Warrior and Dicky are Stan and Dicky Carter, son of the now-deceased "world's greatest scientist" and recipients of his Power Elixir injections, leaving them generically physically enhanced and well-equipped to battle pseudo-Nazi forces seeking to wreck America's military. Plus he made them a land/ air/ sea plane/tank called the Wonder Ship which is very useful.
There is of course a knee-jerk impulse to snidely point out that a guy called the Lone Warrior is never seen without his sidekick, but... I think it's on purpose? They don't explore it well but I reckon that it's meant to be a joke: big tough dude calls himself the Lone Warrior and can't avoid being tailed everywhere by his little brother? It's not a bad joke! Too bad they only had 4 or so appearances and never really explored it. (Banner Comics 003, 1941)
Samson:
Samson from the comics is, unsurprisingly, based off of Samson from the Bible. In fact, he's a descendant of the Biblical Samson, which seems hard to prove. Like his supposed ancestor, Samson possesses superhuman strength as long as his hair remains uncut, which in his case means that he must maintain a sort of shoulder-length mullet. His hair of course frequently gets cut for dramatic effect but luckily for Samson his other super power is that it will grow back preternaturally fast and always into the same style, like Wolverine's.
At some point in a comic I have not yet read Samson finds and adopts a boy named David. David has no super-powers and is in constant peril. He also has a scientist pal named Professor Brun who acts as a sort of Samson dispatcher using advanced surveillance tech to find trouble and a teleporter with the fun nmae of the "demoleculing ray" to send Samson and David to the scene.
Finally, Samson is a stone cold killer. He wipes out crooks by the dozen with a frankly concerning lack of care for the legal process. (Fantastic Comics 001, 1939)
Late in 1941, Samson got a bit of sprucing up. I don't know if this was a deliberate attempt on the part of Fox Features to rectify the formulaic nature of Samson comics or it was a simple case of a new artist/ writer shaking things up but suddenly Samson had a supporting cast beyond David: namely a gal pal with the incredibly on-the-nose name of Lila Dee and a comic relief artist named J. Rembrandt Speedball.
The best addition, however, was... not exactly a secret identity for Samson but an Incognito Mode in which he dressed in street clothes, but since he was an enormous, long-haired guy what this entails is his wearing a huge overcoat buttoned to the neck with the collar flipped up over his mullet. Truly great. Sadly, this revamped Samson only appeared in a handful of issues before Fox Features had the troubles that lead to them halting production for a few years. Like most of their characters, he was never seen again.
the Flame:
Found by Tibetan lamas as a baby and taught their mystic secrets, the Flame has a lot of the standard flame powers - immunity to fire and heat (and explosions), control over flame, a high enough body temperature that bullets melt on contact with him - a few more unusual ones - the ability to walk and climb on sheets of flame as if they were solid, the weirdly common Golden Age super power of appearing suddenly in the element that they embody, in this case any size flame down to a match - and surprisingly no actual ability to produce flame. Instead, he carries a pistol-sized flamethrower (over time, the amount of heat and flame produced by his body does increase, but he's never at Human Torch level). The Flame's enemies of course frequently attempt to set fire to him.
While I appreciate the Flame's classic costume stylings, he is ultimately a pretty generic guy. Plus he's at least as bloodthirsty as his fellow Fox Features alum Samson. (Wonderworld Comics 003, 1939)
(the Flame also has a very cool car, as seen in Big 3 002, 1940)
Like Samson, the Flame eventually gets a more fleshed out world just in time for Fox Features to go to heck for a few years and then fail to bring him back. In the Flame's case he does adopt a secret identity: as Gary Preston, private investigator. He is joined by former boxer and general goofball Pug and future Flame Girl (watch for future round-ups, I guess) Linda Dale.
Stardust the Super Wizard:
Stardust the Super Wizard is an enormous, nigh-omnipotent fellow who lives in a star and deals out bizarre and ironic punishments to a cartoonishly evil rogues gallery with incredible ease - the only real obstacle that he faces in an average adventure is the travel time between him and his villains. The second-greatest creation of outsider comics artist Fletcher Hanks (after Fantomah, of course), Stardust is well-known enough that I don't really need to go into much detail on him here but it seemed weird to leave him out. (Fantastic Comics 001, 1939)
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