![]() ![]() At that point, you're coming awfully close to creating life, which is pretty darn powerful for a Clayface. Arkham Asylum is an unpleasant place to be and a lot of that is thanks to McKean’s representation of it. Not only can he imitate anyone (somehow doing the voice as well as the face) and make his limbs into weapons, he can create separate people out of parts of his mass and even give them a degree of individuality and sentience. Arkham Asylum: A Serious House On Serious Earth panels by Dave McKean. ![]() In one story, he does have to wear a containment suit like Preston Payne's, but in general, his powers seem to be pretty much unlimited. He's not a man made of clay like Matt Hagen was in the comics He's a huge, nearly shapeless pile of clay that (sometimes) walks like a man. Nevertheless, the Clayface who first appears in the two-parter "Feat of Clay" is unlike any of those who came before. At the final scene, we see him staring at the coin. Harvey reluctantly gets it and announces: Hes free. When Batman is surrounded by the inmates, he suggest to let Two-Face decide his destiny and gives him a coin. Although this version was disfigured in an accident rather than born with a disorder. Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth. ![]() Like Karlo, he's an actor whose career is in trouble. ![]() He has Hagen's name and powers, albeit amped up. The animated Clayface contains elements of all three. ![]()
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