I get a little giddy thinking about this — comics are a playground for alternate takes, and the Winter Soldier is no exception. Over the years Marvel has tossed James Barnes into a bunch of what-if playgrounds and alternate realities, so yes, there are lots of alternate-universe Winter Soldiers to dig into.
You’ve got the obvious broad categories: zombified or corrupted versions in things like 'Marvel Zombies', bleak future takes in stories similar to 'Old Man Logan', and classic spin-offs in 'What If?' style tales where the choices around Cap and Bucky diverge. There are also universes where Bucky’s role shifts entirely — sometimes he stays dead, sometimes he never becomes a super-soldier, sometimes he’s kept as a brainwashed weapon in a different way, and sometimes he’s recast into another identity entirely. I once stumbled on a backup 'What If?' tale in a flea market and loved how a single change (Cap never waking up, Bucky surviving WWII differently) completely rewired Barnes’ life.
If you’re hunting specifically, look for alternate-universe anthologies and the many 'What If?' collections — they’re where writers test out permutations of the Winter Soldier idea. Also check out big crossover events and Battleworld/Secret Wars tie-ins where mashups and reinventions are basically the point. If you enjoy seeing a character remixed into a horror, a tragedy, or a tragic-hero role, those alternate takes are gold. I still flip through them when I want a fresh, sometimes uncomfortable perspective on a character I thought I knew.
I don’t shy away from alternate takes on characters, and Bucky is a prime example of how flexible a single identity can be across Marvel’s multiverse. There are plenty of alternate-universe Winter Soldiers: zombie versions in 'Marvel Zombies', dystopian future variants echoing the vibe of 'Old Man Logan', and countless 'What If?' permutations that twist one choice into a lifetime of consequences. Beyond that, big event books and Battleworld-style mashups in 'Secret Wars' produce temporary but fascinating reboots where Barnes can be a different kind of weapon, a political figure, or even a redeemed leader depending on the world’s rules.
If you want to explore these, anthologies, crossover tie-ins, and 'What If?' collections are your best bets — they show the range from horror to tragedy to reluctant hero. I love the way each alternate Bucky highlights a different theme: memory, agency, loyalty, and the cost of violence. It keeps me turning pages, imagining which small change would flip my own favorite characters into someone unrecognizable.
One of my favorite things about comics is how a single character can be twenty different people across timelines, and Bucky Barnes/Winter Soldier is one of those characters who gets reinvented constantly. For example, universe-hopping anthologies and standalone tie-ins frequently show him as a different kind of asset — sometimes a hero forced into villainy, other times a survivor who never becomes the brainwashed assassin we know. You’ll find him reimagined in grim futures, in zombie plagues like 'Marvel Zombies', and in speculative twists in 'What If?' stories.
I collect anthology issues and love piecing together which version of Bucky I’m holding: a broken soldier trying to reclaim his humanity, a completely unredeemed killer, or an alternate-history patriot raised in a governmental program. Events like 'Secret Wars' can create temporary Battleworld versions that mash him up with other archetypes, which makes for some wild reinterpretations. If you’re coming from the movies and want to explore variations, start with 'What If?' and any 'Legacy' or event tie-ins — they consistently serve up alternate Winter Soldiers that are both familiar and strange. It’s a nice reminder that a single origin can branch into so many emotional and moral stories.
2025-09-02 18:17:17
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The Ice Alpha's Mate
Bee Diaz
10
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“You belong to me, Aria,” he growls, his nose brushing against mine. “The harder you push me away, the deeper I fall into this madness of wanting you.”
“You don’t even want a mate!” I remind him, hating how small my voice sounds, and how my body sings whenever he’s this close.
His breath brushes against my lips. “You’re right. I don’t. But I burn for you, Aria, and I don’t think I’ll make it through the season without tasting what’s mine.”
*****
They call Ryder Drexel the Ice King of Ironclaw University, captain of the undefeated Iron Wolves, cold-blooded on the rink and untouchable off it. He doesn’t do distractions. He doesn’t do relationships.
Until her.
Aria Murdock is the opposite. She’s an invisible scholarship student hiding secrets that she’s spent her entire life hiding—she’s a wolf who can’t shift in a world where wolves like her are called runts and are mercilessly killed to be rid of their weak bloodline.
But when an accident reveals her true scent, Ryder’s world fractures.
She’s a walking death sentence. Someone undesirable to most. Off-limits because of her low rank and bloodline.
And she’s his mate.
Now, the Alpha heir has a choice. He can either reject the bond, or risk everything to claim her. The problem? Claiming her means breaking every rule and starting a war within his own pack. It also means revealing who Aria truly is, and she’s so much more than a runt.
They’re enemies by nature, but bound by instinct and fate.
In a world where packs, rules, and reputations reign, claiming her might just cost him everything, especially his heart.
TWO BOOKS IN ONE
BOOK 1 - WINTER'S MATE:FATED ON ICE (COMPLETED)
BOOK 2- THE GOALIE'S KEEPER (AU VERSION OF WMFOI - ONGOING) {MATURE — mid slow burn with yearning MMC. notting, claiming, mate frenzy and rutting. Check the trigger warnings. The FMC is a plus-size woman who insecure about her body, but as the book progresses, she'll learn to love herself.}
✧ SNIPPET ✧
His eyes flashed, and a growl rumbled through him. "Careful, sweetheart. Once I claim you, you'll be mine—body, heart, and soul."
"Then take me."
~**~
Christmas was meant to be magical—yet for Rosie Martinez, it became the night her world ended.
A cruel bet. A viral video. A betrayal that left her reputation in ruins. Desperate to breathe again, Rosie runs to a quiet mountain town where no one knows her name—where she hopes she can disappear.
She didn't expect him.
Jude Winters—hockey captain, future Alpha of the Winters Pack, and the stranger who saved her in the snow. The moment he touched her, he knew.
Mate. His. Forever.
Rosie has no idea what she is to him. No clue about the supernatural world hidden beneath this frozen town. She only feels the way her body awakens around him… and the way he watches her like she's the only woman he's ever wanted.
But when her past crashes into their peaceful relationship—threatening the one person he cares about—Jude's control snaps.
The only thing more dangerous than the game is the man guarding the crease.
Lyon Navarro has spent his entire career tearing down the San Diego Stormbreakers. As the city’s most ruthless journalist, he’s made an art form out of exposing the Alphas’ volatile tempers and their scandalous lives off the rink. He’s the man they love to hate—until a desperate management team offers him the biggest paycheck of his life to fix their image.
The assignment? Tame the six most notorious werewolves in the league.
But Lyon isn’t just dealing with professional athletes; he’s stepping into a den of apex predators who have been waiting for him to cross their territory. And they have no intention of playing nice.
Rafael Stone, the team’s intense, iron-willed captain, has made one thing clear: if Lyon wants to manage the pack, he’s going to have to survive them. But between the locker room tension, the high-stakes pressure of the season, and the way the pack’s gazes feel like a physical brand on his skin, Lyon realizes he’s no longer just reporting the story—he’s the one being hunted.
In a world of adrenaline, cold ice, and raw, lupine desire, Lyon is about to discover that the line between enemy and lover is thinner than a skate blade.
Six Alphas. One PR strategist. And a season that’s about to get very, very hot.
Beyond the Ice is a high-stakes, slow-burn MM hockey werewolf romance. Expect intense power dynamics, sizzling tension, and a pack that doesn't just want to win the cup—they want to claim their man.
Hockey star Leo "The Comet" Valdez has one rule: never let anyone know he's an Omega. In a world of brutal Alphas, his secret is his survival. After a career-defining play that cost Captain Jax "The Ice King" Thorne the championship, Leo's worst nightmare comes true—he's traded to Jax's team.
Forced to work under the man he humiliated, Leo braces for war. Jax is colder than ice, determined to make Leo's life a living hell. But the Captain's possessive hatred masks a dangerous hunger he can't control. He knows Leo is hiding something, and his Alpha is screaming to find out what.
The locker room becomes their battlefield. The ice, their stage. When a brutal hit leaves Leo vulnerable, his scent blockers fail, and the truth is revealed. Jax doesn't expose him. He corners him.
"You're an Omega," Jax growled, his voice a low, dangerous rumble as he pinned Leo against the lockers. "All this time... you've been lying."
"Get off me," Leo shot back, his body trembling with a mix of fear and a traitorous, desperate heat. "It doesn't change anything."
"Doesn't it?" Jax's grip tightened, his body pressing flush against Leo's. His breath was hot against Leo's ear. "It changes everything. Because now, I don't just want to beat you on the ice. I want to break you in this locker room. Over and over again."
Now, Leo is trapped in a game of dominance and desire, where one wrong move could end his career. But as the line between hatred and lust blurs, he starts to wonder if being broken by his Captain might be the most thrilling thing that's ever happened to him.
Nueva Winter is a regular teenage girl. After getting asked out on a date by the hottest guy in her school, she believes life is about to get as good as it gets. But the date turns disastrous when Nueva gets attacked and bitten by an enormous dog-like animal. If that wasn't bad enough, her date leaves her abruptly without explanation directly after the attack.
This event throws Nueva into an unknown world of werewolves, Banshees, and strange magic when an old legend speaks of the powerful Ice wolf, a white beast dormant inside Nueva's human body. Alpha Gray of the White Creek pack is so confident that she is the key to breaking the Alpha's curse that's robbed him of a mate-bond that he kidnaps her and brings her to his pack. There she has to learn how to defend herself and unlock the potentials hidden within. All while trying to survive the growing number of Rogues attacking and attempting to take over the White Creek pack by eliminating anything standing in their way. But can the human girl with the Ice Wolf break the curse and restore the power and strength to this weakening pack? And, when the time comes, will Alpha Gray be willing to let her go after he develops strong feelings for her despite the missing mate-bond, knowing he will send her to certain death.
At Moonfang College, the ice rink hides more than just bruises and blades—it conceals betrayal, forbidden love, and the fury of fated mates.
Lira Hale never expected her 20th birthday to end in heartbreak. Caught between shattered trust and a twisted pack hierarchy, she finds solace not in her destined mate, but in his exiled older brother—Rylan Grayson, the masked bad boy with a legacy of scars and secrets.
He’s cold, brutal, and a former hockey prodigy returning for revenge. She's broken but burning to reclaim her strength. When Rylan forces her into a fake relationship to protect her brother—Moonfang’s Ice Hockey Captain—it starts a chain reaction that threatens to unravel the pack from the inside.
On the rink, tensions flare. Off the rink, passions ignite. As old enemies resurface and a deadly tournament approaches, Lira must master not just her emotions—but her wolf. Because in this brutal game of love, legacy, and ice, only the strongest hearts survive.
From locker room heat to life-or-death arena battles, Icebound Fates is a shifter romance that slices deep—where the ice is cold, but the love burns hotter.
Whenever I flip between the comic panels and the MCU scenes, what hits me first is how different the tone and scale are. In the comics — especially the Ed Brubaker era of 'Captain America' and the 'The Winter Soldier' storyline — Bucky is a long-game spy-thriller figure: decades of secret missions, repeated memory wipes, and an almost mythic second life as a Soviet assassin. The comics lean into the idea that he was a tool used across cold-war politics, with years of assignments that explain an almost encyclopedic list of kills and operations. The mystery and morbid glamour of a man kept alive for decades by covert programs gives the comic Winter Soldier a very different flavor than the movie one.
Visually and technically, both versions have the iconic metal arm, but the comics play with that arm more as a shifting piece of tech (sometimes high-end prosthetic, sometimes experimental hardware) while the MCU makes it a clear visual and emotional marker — first a Soviet/Hydra cybernetic limb, later upgraded into a Wakandan vibranium arm. The MCU compresses his timeline: he falls at the end of World War II and reappears pretty quickly for modern audiences, making his trauma and redemption arc more immediate and personal.
Perhaps the biggest divergence is motive and consequence. The films focus on redemption — you watch him wrestle with memory, guilt, and attempts at rehabilitation across 'Captain America: The Winter Soldier', 'Captain America: Civil War', and 'The Falcon and the Winter Soldier'. In the comics, he's colder at first, a haunted professional killer who eventually finds his humanity through slow unraveling of his past. Both are heartbreaking, but the comic's path is grittier and more bureaucratic; the MCU's is intimate and cinematic. If you love political spycraft and slow reveals, read the comics. If you want a character study wrapped in blockbuster stakes, the films will stick with you longer.
Growing up flipping through old issues of 'Captain America' gave me whiplash the first time I read the modern Winter Soldier story — it’s one of those comic twists that feels both heartbreaking and brilliant. Bucky Barnes originally debuted in the 1940s as Steve Rogers’ teen sidekick, created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby. In the classic Golden Age tales he’s a cheerful kid fighting alongside Cap in World War II, but decades later Ed Brubaker and Steve Epting reinvented him. After a presumed-death near the end of the war, Bucky was secretly recovered by Soviet operatives, surgically altered, and turned into a ruthless, brainwashed assassin known as the Winter Soldier.
The core of his origin in the comics is grim and surprisingly human: the Soviets erased his memories, gave him a cybernetic arm, kept him in cryogenic stasis between missions so he wouldn’t age, and used him for covert operations during the Cold War and beyond. He wakes up on missions, completes atrocities he can’t remember, and then is frozen again. That setup lets the stories explore identity, trauma, and agency when he eventually confronts the truth and slowly reclaims himself. Over time he’s deprogrammed, confronted his past, and even picked up the mantle of Captain America for a spell.
If you’re curious, read the Brubaker era — the trade collections titled 'The Winter Soldier' are a great start. It’s the perfect mix of spy noir, superhero action, and emotional weight, and it changed how a lot of people (myself included) think about sidekicks and legacy in comics.