UP NEXT: BRUTAL BY OLIVIA RODRIGO
Name: Katherine Elizabeth Bishop Nickname(s): Kate, Katie, KB, Hawkette (only Clint) Gender Expression & Pronouns: Cis woman & she/her Sexuality/Romantic Alignment: Bisexual, Biromantic Relationship Status: Single Birthday: November 22, 1999 Zodiac: Sagittarius Sun, Capricorn Moon, Gemini Rising Age: 26 Occupation: Hero | Hawkeye; field leader/co-leader of Young Avengers; trainer and mentor at Avengers Academy Species: Human Playlist
" And I'm so tired that I might Quit my job, start a new life And they'd all be so disappointed... "
Kate Bishop was born into the kind of life most people spend their entire lives trying to reach. Manhattan penthouses. Charity galas. Designer dresses she hated and family expectations she hated even more. The Bishops had money, influence, and an image to maintain, and from the outside looking in, Kate fit perfectly into it: polished, educated, effortless. The youngest daughter with sharp cheekbones and sharper manners. The girl people expected to grow into someone ornamental.
The problem was that Kate saw too much.
She saw the way wealth insulated people from consequence. Saw how easy it was for powerful people to look away from suffering as long as it stayed out of sight. And maybe most importantly, she realized very early on that privilege meant absolutely nothing if you refused to do something useful with it.
So while everyone else expected Kate to grow into another Upper East Side socialite, she spent her time learning how to fight.
Archery came first. Then fencing. Then martial arts. Years of discipline hidden beneath the image of a rich girl people underestimated on instinct. Kate liked it that way. People rarely see a threat coming when she’s smiling at them.
Her life changed the moment she crossed paths with Clint Barton.
What started as being in the wrong place at the right time quickly spiraled into something bigger after Kate found herself helping Clint during a mission gone catastrophically sideways. Most people would have run. Kate stayed. Kept up. Adapted fast enough to impress one of the most skilled Avengers alive: no easy feat considering Clint’s default communication style is equal parts sarcasm and emotional repression.
Taking Kate under his wing was never supposed to happen. Neither was giving her the Hawkeye mantle.
But Kate earned it.
Not because she wanted the legacy attached to the name, but because she understood what it was supposed to mean. Hawkeye was never about powers. It was about showing up anyway. About standing shoulder to shoulder with gods, super soldiers, aliens, and enhanced beings while being painfully, stubbornly human.
And Kate is human in every sense of the word.
No serum. No magic. No cosmic destiny waiting for her in the stars. Just instinct, skill, bruised knuckles, impossible aim, and the kind of determination that borders on self-destructive if you stare at it too long.
Joining the Young Avengers felt less like joining a team and more like finally finding people who understood her instinctively. They became family before she even realized it was happening.
She challenged Eli constantly, partially because she respected him enough to know he could handle it. She dragged Tommy into terrible decisions and let him paint her nails before missions because apparently near-death experiences are more fun with chipped black polish. Billy became her favorite source of gossip and emotional intelligence, which honestly says more about the rest of the team than it does about him. And America Chavez? Kate clocked her immediately as someone carrying the weight of entire worlds on her shoulders and refused to let her walk away from people willing to stand beside her.
Somehow, between world-ending threats, injuries, arguments, and late-night takeout in common room kitchens, they became hers.
That’s what eventually brought Kate to the Elias Avengers Academy dorms.
Not because she needed the training. Not because she wanted structure. And definitely not because she missed communal living. But because for the first time in her life, she had something that felt real. Something she chose for herself.
She traded penthouses for cramped dorm rooms without hesitation. Exchanged galas for patrols. Designer heels for combat boots left abandoned beside someone else’s door at three in the morning after a mission ran too long.
And honestly?
Kate’s never been particularly interested in normal anyway.
These days, she’s usually found somewhere between disaster and leadership: patching people up after fights, arguing with authority figures, making bad jokes in life-threatening situations, or pretending she doesn’t care too much about the people around her when she absolutely does.
Because underneath the sarcasm, confidence, and expertly curated chaos, Kate Bishop wants one thing more than anything else:
To matter.
To protect people.
To make sure nobody else has to feel powerless if she can help it.
And if the world keeps getting stranger around Elias; if magic bleeds into the streets, monsters crawl out of the Underland, and every other week feels one bad decision away from catastrophe, then fine.
Kate’s still going to show up.
Bow in hand. Probably late. Definitely armed.
" All I did was try my best This the kind of thanks I get? "
Kate has the kind of personality that feels effortless until you look closer. Confident, quick-witted, and impossible to intimidate, she moves through the world with the energy of someone who’s already decided she can handle whatever gets thrown at her, even when she absolutely cannot. Humor is her first language and emotional avoidance is a close second, meaning most of her affection comes disguised as sarcasm, bad ideas, or showing up for people before they ever have to ask.
Growing up wealthy gave Kate polish, but it never made her shallow. She’s observant to a fault, fiercely loyal, and far more emotionally intelligent than she lets people realize. Beneath the bravado is someone constantly trying to prove that being human is enough in a world full of gods, monsters, and people born extraordinary. She doesn’t have powers, but she makes up for it with relentless determination, sharp instincts, and a refusal to back down once she’s decided something matters.
Kate is reckless in the way only deeply caring people can be. The type to throw herself into danger without hesitation, patch everyone else up first, and joke through situations that should realistically terrify her. She challenges authority instinctively, gets attached too quickly while pretending she doesn’t, and carries the weight of responsibility with enough sarcasm to make it look lighter than it is.
At her core, Kate Bishop is all sharp edges wrapped in charm: equal parts disaster and leader, emotionally guarded but deeply devoted, trying very hard to make the world better while pretending she’s way less affected by it than she actually is.
" And God, I don't even know where to start... "
Kate will absolutely act like she “doesn’t care” while already having memorized everything about you, including your favorite snack, your stress habits, and your worst coping mechanisms.
She pretends she’s bad at feelings, but she is actually terrifyingly good at reading a room. She just refuses to announce it out loud.
If she likes you, she will insult you more. This is not optional. It is a love language and also a warning system.
She is incapable of entering a room quietly. Even when she tries, she somehow radiates “I might cause problems here” energy.
Kate keeps way too many emergency supplies on her at all times (bandages, snacks, random tools, probably three different kinds of pens) and insists it’s “normal behavior.”
She has a 100% success rate of saying the wrong thing at the worst possible moment, followed immediately by somehow fixing it with charm or audacity.
She will pick fights with people who are objectively more powerful than her purely because she believes tone matters and they “started it emotionally.”
Despite her confidence, she rereads texts before sending them like it’s a tactical operation.
She is extremely competitive about everything. Games, arguments, missions, trivia nights; if there’s a scoreboard, she is trying to win it.
She pretends she’s above sentimentality, but keeps little physical reminders of people she cares about (tickets, notes, useless trinkets) and would rather die than admit it.
Kate is a “walk it off” person until someone else is hurt, at which point she becomes aggressively overprotective and suddenly knows first aid she absolutely refuses to explain where she learned.
She gives leadership energy without ever formally asking for leadership, and then acts annoyed when people naturally start listening to her.
She is deeply allergic to asking for help, but will show up uninvited to help everyone else without hesitation.
If she trusts you, she will immediately start making your problems her problems and then pretend that was your idea.
Kate Bishop does not do subtle emotions. Everything is either a joke, a crisis, or both at the same time.












