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They are a nanotechnology version of the X-Men created by Cerebro [1] when the supercomputer briefly goes rogue. This team was created and designed by the Spanish artist Carlos Pacheco, who also drew them for the cover of Uncanny X-Men No. 360 (1998). [2] The characters appeared in two issues of the Uncanny X-Men series and one issue of the X ...
Temper (Idie Okonkwo), originally known as Oya, is a fictional superheroine appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.The character first appeared in The Uncanny X-Men #528 (September 2010), in the third chapter of the "Five Lights" storyline, and was created by Matt Fraction and Kieron Gillen. [1]
Wattpad is a website for reading and publishing original written fiction [6] and connecting with fellow writers and readers. [7] Its most popular genres are romance, ...
The X-Men first appeared in the self-titled X-Men comic, cover dated September 1963. Due to the X-Men's immense popularity, Marvel has launched dozens of spin-off series, called "X-Legs" throughout the years. Like Uncanny X-Men, most X-books feature mutants, humans born with extraordinary powers due to a genetic mutation.
The Marvel Swimsuit Special primarily featured pin-up style illustrations of characters from Marvel's main franchises, including the Avengers, the X-Men, the Fantastic Four, Spider-Man, and others such as Alpha Flight. The tone of the series was broadly tongue-in-cheek and humorous, rather than explicitly erotic.
"Inferno" was a 1989 Marvel Comics company-wide crossover storyline centered upon the X-Men family of titles, including Uncanny X-Men, X-Factor, X-Terminators, Excalibur, and The New Mutants. The story's inciting incident is demonic invasion of New York City, and its main character arcs were the corruption of Madelyne Pryor into the Goblin ...
She was created by writer Scott Lobdell and artist Chris Bachalo and first appeared in The Uncanny X-Men #316 (Sept. 1994). [1] [2] She was a member of the teenage mutant group Generation X (1994), and later X-Factor and the X-Men. Monet is a Muslim superhero and has illustrated the struggle of accepting "different" people central to X-Men ...
Quicksilver first appears as a comic book character in X-Men #4 (March 1964) and was created by writer Stan Lee and artist/co-writer Jack Kirby. [5] The character initially appears as an antagonist to the X-Men, although before long he becomes a member of the Avengers and appears as a regular character in that title beginning with Avengers #16 in May 1965.