
Satana
Satana Hellstrom
First Appearance
Vampire Tales #2 (1973)
Powers & Abilities
Teams
Also Known As
Satana Hellstrom, Judith Chambers, The Devil's Daughter, Mistress of the Basilisk, Ana Helstrom
About Satana
Satana Hellstrom is one of Marvel's most dangerously seductive supernatural characters, a half-human, half-demon femme fatale whose very existence sits at the crossroads of horror, magic, and Marvel's Bronze Age occult explosion. Born of a demonic father and a mortal mother, Satana commands an arsenal of infernal powers that makes her one of the most formidable magic-wielders in the Marvel Universe. Her soul-devouring abilities, pyrokinesis, and mastery of dark sorcery place her in a league occupied by very few, and her unpredictable allegiances — sometimes villain, sometimes reluctant anti-hero — keep readers perpetually off balance.
Satana made her debut in Vampire Tales #2 (1973), a Marvel black-and-white magazine from the era when the company was pushing hard into horror anthology territory freed from Comics Code restrictions. That first appearance is a genuine Bronze Age trophy, highly sought by collectors who appreciate the raw, pulpy energy of Marvel's magazine-format books. She appeared alongside her brother Daimon Hellstrom (the Son of Satan) as part of Marvel's coordinated supernatural expansion, and her books from this period carry the moody, adult-leaning aesthetic that makes Bronze Age horror books so compelling to hunt down today. Key issues from Vampire Tales and Marvel Preview featuring Satana are increasingly difficult to find in high grade.
Over the decades Satana has cycled through some of Marvel's most entertaining team configurations. She served alongside Jennifer Kale and Topaz in the Witches limited series, brought her lethal charm to the Legion of Monsters, and memorably joined the Thunderbolts during a period when that book was stacking its roster with morally ambiguous powerhouses. Her appearances in the Heroes for Hire and S.T.A.K.E. era added new readers to her fanbase, and her role in the Supernaturals crossover event remains a favorite among collectors of 1990s Marvel horror material.
For collectors, Satana represents the best of what Marvel's supernatural corner has to offer — a character with genuine Bronze Age roots, consistent enough appearances to build a meaningful run around, and the kind of cult following that drives long-term value. Her magazine-format first appearance alone makes her a priority pickup, and the relative scarcity of high-grade copies of Vampire Tales #2 means the ceiling on that book has plenty of room to grow. Whether you're chasing Bronze Age keys, horror anthology magazines, or team-book appearances across Marvel's supernatural landscape, Satana's collectible footprint rewards dedicated hunters.









