Judging by the early trailers, She-Hulk: Attorney at Law is going to be jam-packed with supervillains. That's in keeping with the show's premise of exploring the absurd legal processes that arise in a world like the Marvel Cinematic Universe. It's also kept fans guessing as to the nature of Jennifer Walters' ultimate nemesis. Titania is an early contender -- making a prominent debut in the series and a perennial foe of the heroine in the comics -- but the trailer has also revealed Tim Roth's Abomination and an MCU version of The Wrecking Crew, among a few others.

Marvel's Disney+ series have a way of hiding their Big Bad Evil Guy (or BBEG) until the final episodes, however, suggesting that She-Hulk's true nemesis has not yet appeared. And despite the bumper crop of villains in the early promos, there's a good chance that none of them will prove to be Walters' final foe. They have, however, suggested an alternative, or at least a potential alternative: Mr. Fixit, another incarnation of her cousin Bruce's ongoing Hulk problem.

RELATED: A Minor Detail Suggests She-Hulk Takes Place During The Blip

Jen is shocked at a meeting in She-Hulk: Attorney at Law.

The trailers depict Bruce helping a freshly empowered Jennifer learn to use her abilities, only to find that she actually has a pretty good handle on them all. He reluctantly acknowledges that she doesn't have to be a superhero if he doesn't want to and that he "respects" her decision to continue practicing law. It leaves an impression of unspoken conflict -- affectionate and familial, but nonetheless very prominent -- which include pushing her off a cliff at the end of the trailer and confessing to jealousy at all the positive attention she receives as She-Hulk. And while Bruce has seemingly tamed his savage side in the MCU, there's no guarantee that it will stay that way.

Mr. Fixit has a surprising origin, stemming from The Incredible Hulk's original incarnation as grey rather than green in The Incredible Hulk #1 in 1962. As explained in ScreenRant, Stan Lee famously wanted the "monster" to be grey so that it wouldn't be associated with a particular race or ethnicity, but a printing problem gave the character a greenish tinge. Lee liked the look and the change in color was eventually explained away as the effects of Banner's experimentation with gamma radiation in search of a cure for his condition.

RELATED: Andor’s New Release Date Allows She-Hulk: Attorney at Law to Shine

Joe Fixit Hulk

The grey Hulk formally reappeared in The Incredible Hulk #324, but it was writer Peter David's run on the line -- starting in The Incredible Hulk #331 in 1987 -- that formally resulted in Joe Fixit. David explored the idea that Banner suffered psychological abuse before the accident that turned him into the Hulk, and that the various incarnations of the monster were different sides of his personality coming out. The green Hulk, or "Savage Hulk" was often the strongest, but his grey Hulk side eventually emerged as Fixit: weaker than the Savage Hulk, but still plenty strong, and with his reasoning still intact. He lacked Bruce's ethics, however -- he's an incarnation of the character's amoral side -- and eventually set himself up as an underworld enforcer.

That makes him a natural antagonist for She-Hulk: Attorney at Law, bringing the added drama of his familial ties, as well as the intelligence to make a proper foe for Jennifer. It stands in contrast to figures like Titania and The Wrecking Crew: traditionally presented as brawlers rather than masterminds. The trailer also makes an oblique suggestion that Jennifer's blood relationship with Bruce won't be a problem with her defending The Abomination, who tried to kill the Hulk in the 2008's The Incredible Hulk. It's played as a joke about a lack of legal ethics -- her boss assures her that it's fine when she raises the obvious conflict-of-interest concerns -- but it could also mean that Joe Fixit is involved with whatever the case is that she's about to take on.

It's all still very speculative, and fans won't find out until the August 18 premiere at the very earliest. The show certainly has no shortage of villains already on display. But Mr. Fixit provides a ready nemesis, and even teamed up with She-Hulk previously in the 1996 animated series The Incredible Hulk Season 2, Episode 4, "They Call Me Mr. Fixit." Doing so again would provide a nice eleventh-hour twist -- akin to the appearance of Kang at the end of the first season of Loki or the Kingpin arriving for the finale of Hawkeye -- while taking full advantage of the intra-family dynamic already on display with her cousin. Joe Fixit is prepped if the MCU chooses to take that path. All She-Hulk has to do is pull the trigger.

She-Hulk: Attorney at Law premieres on August 18 on Disney+.