OK. If any of you know me, you probably know me from my big Ska'Lah'Seh project that I've been working on off and on for about two years now. But if you didn't know from maybe one or two of my more obscure postings, I LOVE SUPERHEROES! Particularly Superman, Batman, Captain America, Static, and I even nerd out a little over Aqua-man.

Well I've decided I'm going to work on a superhero book or comic book about a superhero I've had mulling in the back of my head for the last year or so. Now to the topic at hand.
The superhero I'm working on is called Wyldhunt. He is roughly based on Celtic myth, and when I mean roughly, I MEAN ROUGHLY. Well, Wyldhunt is part Fairy, or a quarter Elf to be exact. He has been chosen by the Seelie Court to act as one of their representatives in the great hunt, a competition held between the Seelie and Unseelie every hundred or so years to decide the fate of mankind.
You see, the Fairy act as guardians of nature, or rather act as part of nature, and are not fond of humans, who aren't usually very considerate of the earth. In this story God commanded the Fairy to live in peace with mankind. So Oberon, the king of the fairy, obeyed and issued the decree that all fairy should live in peace with man and took it upon himself to enforce this order. However Titania, the queen of the fairy, and her followers did not wish to obey this decree, seeing humans as insects that should be squashed. Whether by being enslaved or destroyed by their betters, it didn't matter. So Oberon and his followers became the Seelie and Titania and her followers the Unseelie. In order to keep the two forces from destroying all the life on earth the fairy came up with the great hunt. A series of challenges that halfbreed representatives would participate in to decide the fate of mankind for the next hundred years.
I was thinking of having all manner of fairies in the story; everything from elves, to pixies, to leprechauns, to trolls. I was just wondering if any of you could come up with any interesting fairy I could introduce into the story.