Largely agreed. Having a message isn't a problem in and of itself. It's how the message is delivered (allegory beats heavy handed preaching), and which aspect the writers prioritise: good...
Type: Posts; User: Loki
Largely agreed. Having a message isn't a problem in and of itself. It's how the message is delivered (allegory beats heavy handed preaching), and which aspect the writers prioritise: good...
It's not mentioned as far as I can see in her two issues appearance in Excalibur, and it seems likely she wasn't for one simple reason - she was out with a group of fellow heroes in...
Checking, and you are right. The original members were all Inhumans, distant relatives of the Royal Family even, but later recruits added by Genesis included some mutants. The three you mention are...
Yeah, some writers are either confused or actively try to retcon it (which doesn't tend to stick, if only because subsequent writers aren't aware of the retcon and unwittingly reverse it). Mimic...
When was she confirmed to be a mutant?
616 Mimic isn't. However, you could argue that his ability to duplicate powers might also mean he ends up inadvertently also mimicing the x-gene some of the time, at least closely enough to confuse...
Scalphunter yes, as most of the Marauders were (not Vertigo, who was a Savage Land Mutate). Dark Riders are Inhumans.
https://www.cbr.com/the-abandoned-an-forsaked-the-falcon-is-a-mutant/
He's confirmed on Facebook that it isn't. I'd quote him, but I don't want to do so without his permission.
And Paul Grist has confirmed on Facebook that this is exactly the case. Team name, costumes and even individual member names all government imposed, and the members aren't exactly happy about it.
That might well be the point. If this team has been assembled by the government, and some civil servant or politician picked the members and came up with the group name, then both those potentially...
I considered Dragonfly, but last we heard he'd returned to NYC.
Yes, but the original poster asked about black heroes in England, not black heroes who are native British. Blade is the latter, and sometimes the former; Shift and Howitzer are both UK residents.
And Blade, Shift of Genetix, Howitzer of Gene Dogs, Breeze of the Knights of Pendragon, ...
Are you suggesting Marvel might get the colours wrong? They'd never do that, never!
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No, you've got Brian completely wrong. To use your example, he is way, way more Rogers than Stark or Strange, though frankly he's closest to Peter Parker in terms of self doubt with Rogers' sense of...
Since when was Wisdom working for Black Air again? As in, Black Air, former UK intelligence agency turned international terrorists? The UK's agency for dealing with superhuman and supernatural...
Suit built by his uncle, a NASA scientist; allows him to fly, gives him superhuman strength, gives him a forcefield, lets him shoot energy bolts.
http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix/red9spdm.htm
Ditto. Hardly the first time a US writer has used them as cannon fodder only for the next writer to just bring them all back...and use them as cannon fodder.
Presumably.
Oh, I can imagine...
I think the Widow was meant to have killed him, and this is his resurrection from that death.
What bothers me more is how the relationships between Jamie and his siblings keeps swinging back and...
The s spelling was the retcon/repeated error, and it got fixed eventually. The z spelling was the original version.
Marvel Comics 1000 has provided proof positive that the Masked Raider is 616.
It's worth mentioning that despite those appearances, Green Lama isn't in the public domain. Those titles used him...
And a cameo of Death's Head II.
Simon Furman has posted to Facebook today to mention that he has a Death's Head story in tomorrow's Marvel Comics 1001.
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From Thor #163, and specifically referring to people who had started out as normal humans.
So the term has been used in comic.