
Geomancer
Kay McHenry
First Appearance
Archer and Armstrong #6 (2013)
Powers & Abilities
Teams
Also Known As
Kay McHenry, Deathmate, Angel of Death
About Geomancer
Kay McHenry is one of the most important legacy roles in the modern Valiant Universe — the Geomancer, a mystical champion chosen to serve as the Earth's living voice and protector. First appearing in Archer and Armstrong #6 (2013), Kay stepped into a lineage of spiritual guardians with a surprisingly grounded personality that immediately set her apart from her predecessors. Her debut issue is a key early Valiant Comics renaissance collectible, representing the publisher's commitment to building a rich, interconnected mythology from the ground up.
What makes Kay McHenry genuinely remarkable — and what makes her comics so compelling to collect — is the staggering breadth of her power set. As Geomancer, Kay channels the Earth itself, granting her abilities that range from plant and water control to psychometry and reality manipulation. She has moved well beyond her original supporting role to become a cornerstone figure across multiple Valiant titles, crossing over with Bloodshot, Project Rising Spirit, and the G.A.T.E. organization. Her aliases — including the chilling 'Angel of Death' and 'Deathmate' — hint at darker story arcs that pushed Kay into morally complex territory and made for some of the most gripping Valiant storytelling of the era.
Kay's journey spans some of Valiant's most celebrated crossover events and team dynamics. Her association with Archer and Armstrong gave collectors an early window into her character before she evolved into something far more consequential across the line. Issues featuring her key appearances during major crossover arcs saw strong secondary market interest as Valiant's readership grew, and low-print-run variants from this period remain genuinely difficult to track down.
For collectors, Kay McHenry's Geomancer represents exactly the kind of character worth building a run around — a modern creation with deep mythological roots, a trajectory that only grows in importance, and a debut issue (Archer and Armstrong #6, 2013) that remains affordable but increasingly recognized. As Valiant's profile continues to rise, especially with ongoing entertainment adaptations in development, early Kay McHenry appearances are smart pickups for anyone serious about the publisher's modern era.






