Give him facial hair ffs
What Rogue does goes beyond a simple loan of power, and that has been known since the time of Claremont, she can keep the powers permanently, and the supposedly temporary powers, are not temporary she duplicate the power template and store it she just have to learn to rechannel it.
rechannel powers absorbed in the past, I would like both to learn of the similarities and differences of the powers of her, but I have no hope of that with the writer
Anyway, I'm glad Synch is exploring him powers as well.💪🏻
Yeah!!! Its crazy out here that some don't seem to think the black/Asian men don't got swag to pull women and have relationships! I wonder why this is? Personally I give dap to Hickman for have the nutz to write Everett and Laura in a relationship as just a young man and young woman.
All that goes under a comic based on the evils of racism, and bigotry.
I'm thankful Hickman created the resurrection protocols, thus reviving and repowering the various POC characters that were unfairly done dirty over the last 25 years.
Shiro was the first poc mutant, iirc, and it was way past time to include him in a main book.
One of the things about Ev is his ability to befriend just about any one. He and Angelo came from decidedly different backgrounds, yet became good friends. I'm hoping Ev forms deep bonds with Jean, Rogue, and Shiro. I can see Shiro letting his guard down around Ev.
I would rather see Ev move on from Laura. It was mentioned before, but let's see Ev & Lorna hook up.
Although, I really want to see Ev with Monet, eventually.
I think it is rare for black men to display social skills, thus enabling them to form notable relationships in mutant books.
At the time of his creation, most black men in comics were loners to various degrees.
At the time, I thought it was great that Everett & Angelo, two kids from different social classes got along. Ev got along great with Jono.
Only Roberto comes to mind. I don't follow David.
Last edited by Anthony Shaw; 07-24-2021 at 10:02 AM.
I dunno. I still kind of think that writers gravitate towards the characters they personally relate to or like the most. There may be a push from editorial or whatever to include this or that character in a lineup, but if the writer isn't all that into it, that character ends up being slighted with only an occasional little bone thrown his or her way. While I have high hopes for Ev in X-Men, I've seen the same kind of story of someone becoming basically underutilized wallpaper play out for POC characters, especially black men.
"Ignore them. They're nothing but a bunch of basement dwellers who spend all day whining on the 'net. Not a single open-minded one in the bunch."
--Andre Briggs, Justice League International #1
Based on issue 1 Sunfire seems more in danger of that than Synch.