However, it's eventually revealed to audiences that it was all an act, allowing Josh to get close to her and steal her blood while she was asleep.
After Jen stumbled onto the Intelligencia meeting, Todd revealed that he stole her blood so he could turn himself into a Hulk, feeling that he deserved the powers more than she did. Todd injected himself with Jen's blood, and turned into a gamma-radiated monster.
Both the Wrecking Crew and Josh are clearly working for Intelligencia as they endeavor to steal She-Hulk's blood. After the villain group failed to acquire the sample in their attack on Jen earlier in the season, Josh was clearly sent to try this other strategy, which appears to have been successful.
The idea that anyone can gain the abilities of a Hulk as long as they have the blood of one creates a big issue for future MCU stories. Jennifer Walters -- cousin to Bruce Banner -- was given Hulk powers after she was exposed to Bruce's blood through an open wound.
It turns out tech bro Todd Phelps is the mysterious big bad HulkKing who created the Intelligencia website. He's also the guy who sent Josh to steal Jen's blood. In his mind, stealing superheroes is actually earning them. He injects himself with Jen's blood and becomes a Hulk.
However, it's eventually revealed to audiences that it was all an act, allowing Josh to get close to her and steal her blood while she was asleep.
In the season finale of She-Hulk: Attorney at Law, misogynistic billionaire Todd Phelps (Jon Bass) is revealed to be the story's true villain. He's HulkKing — the creator behind Intelligencia, an online community of disenfranchised men and web trolls hellbent on hating Jen Walters (Tatiana Maslany), or She-Hulk.
Fortunately for Jen, she and Bruce share a rare combination of genetic factors that allow them to synthesize gamma radiation into something else. After Jen's exposure to his blood, Bruce began running tests to analyze her blood which proved to be the key to healing his arm.
Due to the gamma radiation that birthed him, his skin is nearly indestructible and takes massive force to break. Throughout Hulk's many on-screen fights, he has only bled twice, and both circumstances prove it takes a unique set of variables to accomplish that.
HE CAN CREATE MORE HULKS
As it turns out, the Hulk has another power that even he wasn't aware of, and it's that a blood transfusion given by Bruce Banner has the ability to turn others that match his DNA into the Hulk.
He fell in love and married Caiera, a member of Sakaar's Shadow People. Caiera told her husband she was pregnant, but tragedy soon struck. The warp core on Hulk's rocket exploded, resulting in an apocalypse that killed millions of people on Sakaar, including Caiera.
It takes a special kind of woman to tame a Hulk. Unfortunately for these newlyweds, tragedy strikes when Hulk's crashed spacecraft explodes, killing Caiera and destroying Sakaar's capital city. Hulk assumes the Illuminati to blame, so he assembles his Warbound and launches a massive attack on Earth.
As Titania, MacPherran had an intense hatred for She-Hulk, as she defeated her during her first battle. Ever since that battle, Titania has harbored a resentment for She-Hulk, and has attacked her more than any of her other foes. Because of this, Titania is commonly known to be She-Hulk's arch-nemesis.
Due to the gamma radiation that birthed him, his skin is nearly indestructible and takes massive force to break. Throughout Hulk's many on-screen fights, he has only bled twice, and both circumstances prove it takes a unique set of variables to accomplish that.
The "She-Hulk" Season Finale Was Disappointing Because It Betrayed The Original Premise Of The Show. She-Hulk was one of Marvel's best and brightest origin stories until the studio's character development problem reared its ugly CGI head.
But this is put to the test when he faces off against Hela's giant resurrected wolf, Fenris, on Asgard. During the Battle of the Rainbow Bridge, the two take their fight to the water, and Fenris rag dolls Hulk before biting into his leg, making him bleed.
Bruce explains that Hulks metabolize alcohol at an incredible rate and thus cannot get drunk, thus their drinking sessions are, "All buzz, no barf." The "buzz" experienced while consuming alcohol is a stage of drunkenness. If they cannot get drunk, they cannot get a buzz.
Weakness: RAGE
While Hulk's rage makes him almost completely invulnerable and the strongest being in the entire universe, it also is a huge weakness. The increase of his power when in rage mode is massive. However, at the same time, he also loses almost all his intelligence when he grows angrier.
However, just because Ghost Rider doesn't have any reason to kill the Green Goliath doesn't mean he can't, as hellfire is revealed to be the one thing that can actually kill the Hulk–and the Hulk himself confirmed it.
Hulk would not bleed; you can't pierce Hulk's skin, certainly not through a dinky car accident. So we needed to have him be in human form in order to have his Gamma-radiated blood get onto Jen and into her system, and we had to come up with a reason for why he was human."
Due to training from the alien Ovoids, She-Hulk is able to swap powers and physiques with other human women but retains her green skin pigmentation, and only used it once. Due to the Hulk's wish, Jennifer can now switch between her human and hulk forms at will.
But they didn't seem to be much use after he wielded the Infinity Stones, as his arm was left forever scarred. Well, Endgame directors the Russo brothers have explained just why the powers didn't work, admitting that the power of the Stones was just too great.
The Wrecking Crew, believe it or not, have a long-standing history in the Marvel Comics. They almost always appear as part of a team, and generally consist of four construction-themed villains: the Wrecker, Bulldozer, Piledriver and Thunderball. They first appeared in The Defenders #17 back in 1974.
The series follows Jen as she learns to live as She-Hulk, a path that crosses her with Jameela Jamil's villainous Titania who crashes onto the scene during a court case at the end of the debut episode.
As a highly skilled lawyer who became a superhero by accident, she frequently leverages her legal and personal experience to serve as legal counsel to various superheroes and other metahumans. She-Hulk has been described as one of Marvel's most notable and powerful female heroes.