WARNING: The following contains spoilers for He-Man and the Masters of the Multiverse #6, by Tim Seeley, Tom Derenick, Matt Yackey and Saida Temofonte, on sale now.

Over the course of six issues, DC's He-Man and the Masters of the Multiverse comic brought together a variety of fantasy heroes worthy enough to wield the Power of Grayskull from their respective worlds and confront the evil Anti-He-Man. By the miniseries' end, a new multiversal team known as the He-Force, comprised of all new Masters of the Multiverse, appeared to turn the tide of battle against the villain and save all of reality.

In an upcoming interview with CBR, writer Tim Seeley opened up about his concept art for the various new characters that make up the He-Force.  Below, he discusses his inspirations in developing the unique team.

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"We've got He-Sol, an homage to the Olmec Toys figure line Sun-Man which prominently featured PoC back in the '80s," Seeley began. "Zak, an homage to a drawing I did at 6 years old of a Battle Cat/He-Man fusion, and certainly an idea every He-Man fan had had; Platino, an homage to the Argentinian Masters of the Universe-based toyline Fuerza T; Hi-Ra, inspired in part by early designs for She-Ra, and Valiant Tina, named after my daughter.

"When I was a kid growing up in rural Wisconsin, my brothers and I once had a conversation about how there were a lot of black and brown people in G.I. Joe, but in Masters of the Universe, we only had Clamp Champ," Seeley continued. "Rob David at Mattel and I agreed, we could do something about that with these new characters!"

In addition to all the supremely jacked characters that Masters of the Universe fans are used to, the team also includes He-Wo, a diminutive hero that Seeley envisioned as a comedic relief character in the tradition of the Filmation animated series from the '80s.

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"He-Wo is a combination of the very earliest He-Man designs and the 'widget' Squinch from the Filmation cartoon. Widgets were kind of the Ewok/Hobbit species, and in the first issue, we're rather cruel to them, so I felt like they needed a win," continued Seeley. "The idea is that his name was probably He-Ro, but due to his manner of speaking, it became He-Wo."

For more of our discussion with Seeley about the grand finale of Masters of the Multiverse, check back with CBR later today!