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The Boys Wiki

Says his name is Jamie.

Jamie is an animal character of the Amazon series The Boys. He is the first animal to gain powers from Compound V.

The Boys Series[]

Season Three[]

"Glorious Five Year Plan"[]

The Boys break into a compound to find BCL Red, the weapon that supposedly killed Soldier Boy, so that they can use it to take down Homelander. While looking through the lab to find BCL Red, Frenchie, Mother's Milk, and Kimiko, they find a container with Jamie inside. Jamie activates his flight ability, revealing that he's a Supe and, in the process, cracking his glass container, setting off an alarm and releasing himself. After he is released, Jamie flies into a soldier's eye and begins to eat his head, saving Frenchie and allowing him to get to cover. Afterward, Jamie presumably escapes the lab.

Powers[]

  • Superhuman Strength: Jamie possesses strength enhanced by Compound V, which is sufficient to throw a grown man around. He is also able to effortlessly chew through human flesh and bone and even break a bulletproof container just by ramming into it.
  • Superhuman Durability: Jamie has above-average durability as demonstrated by the fact that his body can withstand his own superhuman strength and multiple impacts with a bulletproof container without showing any outward signs of damage.
  • Flight: Jamie is able to levitate and propel himself at swift speeds. Jamie appears to have some degree of control over his flight, upon being startled by Frenchie, he unintentionally activates his flight ability, leading him to repeatedly smash into his container.

Trivia[]

  • Jamie is the first animal in The Boys universe to gain powers from Compound V.
  • Jamie is a reference to a scene in issue 6 of the original comic series where after Hughie kills Blarney Cock, a small gerbil crawls out of Blarney's pants to the disgust of the Boys. Hughie later keeps the Gerbil as a pet in his home.
  • Jamie is a long-haired Syrian hamster (Mesocricetus auratus), the largest species of domestic hamster. They are commonly used as research models in fields such as pathology and behavioral sciences.
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