
Quake
Daisy Louise Johnson
First Appearance
Secret War #2 (2004)
Powers & Abilities
Teams
Also Known As
Daisy Louise Johnson, Cory Sutter, Quake, Skye, Mary Sue Poots
About Quake
Daisy Johnson — codenamed Quake — is one of Marvel's most compelling modern espionage heroes, a ground-level agent with earth-shattering power literally at her fingertips. First appearing in Secret War #2 (2004), the landmark Brian Michael Bendis and Gabriele Dell'Otto limited series, Daisy was introduced as a teenage S.H.I.E.L.D. recruit personally mentored by Nick Fury himself. That debut issue is a grail for modern-age collectors, featuring Dell'Otto's painted artwork and a story that would reshape Marvel's spy landscape for years to come. Her origin as the daughter of the supervillain Mister Hyde gave her a complicated legacy, while her hidden Inhuman biology granted her the ability to generate precise seismic vibrations — capable of collapsing buildings or stopping a heartbeat.
Daisy's most significant arc came in Secret Warriors (2009), where she led Fury's off-the-books team of powered agents against both Hydra and a corrupted S.H.I.E.L.D. This acclaimed Jonathan Hickman-written series elevated Daisy from supporting player to true protagonist and is considered essential reading for any Marvel espionage fan. Her run as the youngest person ever appointed Director of S.H.I.E.L.D. in the main Marvel continuity cemented her status as a major power player in the universe, not just a field operative. Collectors who slept on her early appearances have been chasing back issues ever since.
Her ties to the Inhuman corner of Marvel deepened considerably during the Inhumanity and Uncanny Inhumans eras, where her NuHuman identity was further explored. She also gained mainstream recognition through her central role in the long-running Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. television series, driving new readers toward her comic counterparts and putting sustained demand on her key issues. Her appearances across Avengers titles and team books like the Royal Inhuman Diplomatic Mission further broadened her footprint across Marvel's publishing line.
For collectors, Quake represents exactly the kind of character that rewards early investment. Her first appearance in Secret War #2 remains the headline book, and high-grade copies are increasingly difficult to find given the series' painted prestige format. Secret Warriors #1 is a strong secondary key, and any issue featuring her first use of a specific power or rank upgrade carries real long-term upside. As Marvel continues to develop its Inhuman and spy-adjacent properties, Daisy Johnson's back catalog is one of the smartest places to dig.








