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- Summary: FAQ for rec.arts.comics.marvel.xbooks--X-Men comic books
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- -= REC.ARTS.COMICS.MARVEL.XBOOKS =-
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Part 7
-
- Version 2003.02, last updated November 2003
- URL: http://users.rcn.com/kateshort/faqs/racmxFAQ/faq7.html
-
-
- ------------------------------
- Subject: Table of Contents
-
-
- Part 7:
-
- X-MEN COMIC BOOK QUESTIONS
- * Which X-Men haven't been mutants?
- * What is the Siege Perilous?
- * Why did the X-Men lose their invisibility to electronic
- scanners?
- * Psylocke, Revanche, Kwannon, Betsy Braddock ... help?
- * When did Psylocke and Phoenix switch powers? Wasn't Psylocke
- telepathically holding the Shadow King captive?
- * When did the Beast turn blue and furry? Wasn't he unfurry
- again for a while? When did he become a lion?
- * How come other mutants seem to be changing their powers and
- appearances? (+)
- * Is Longshot Shatterstar's father?
- * There's an External at my door. What does that mean? Should
- I be concerned? Is it contagious?
- * Who are the Twelve? Why are they important?
- * Is Apocalypse dead?
- * What is the Legacy Virus? Who's had it? Hasn't there been a
- cure for a while?
- * What is the Soulsword? Who has Magik's Soulsword now?
- * Is the Malice who worked with the Marauders the same one
- that appears in Fantastic Four now and then?
- * Do you lose your mutant powers in the Savage Land? Where is
- the Savage Land, anyway?
- * What happens when the Blob meets the Juggernaut?
-
-
- ------------------------------
- Subject: X-MEN COMIC BOOK QUESTIONS
-
- Please note: Background information on the creators and the X-titles
- editorial offices is based on over a decade's worth of interviews,
- articles, and personal questions, and as such is not directly
- attributed here. Now that some of Marvel's staff members are on Usenet,
- they are welcomed to correct and amend any of the answers listed below.
-
-
- --- Which X-Men haven't been mutants?
-
- Mimic, the original Phoenix, Longshot, and (possibly) the two Psylockes.
-
- Mimic is Calvin Rankin, the son of a scientist, who got caught in an
- explosion in his father's lab, and gained the ability to copy
- superpowers of every superhuman near him, and keep all the powers until
- the people he stole them from were over a mile away or so. He's been
- killed a number of times in a variety of filler stories, and brought
- back just as often to just die again. Scott Lobdell tried to retcon this
- in a backup story somewhere by saying that Rankin was a latent mutant
- who just got his powers started up by his father's explosion. While
- there have been other latent mutants who have gained access to their
- powers in such dramatic ways in Marvel history, Scott Lobdell is also
- responsible for such continuity goofs as Storm declaring she resents and
- hates her thieving heritage, and all of X-Men Unlimited #4, while the
- Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe still has Rankin as a non-
- mutant. This FAQ will go with the OHOTMU.
-
- The original Phoenix (the one in UXM #101-137) was once Jean Grey, who
- was a mutant, of course, but has since been retconned into being the
- cosmic Phoenix Force itself, just pretending to be Jean Grey. As a
- cosmic entity, Phoenix automatically is disqualified from being a
- mutant; they have enough troubles as it is. See the entry on the Jean
- Grey/Phoenix relationship question in this FAQ for more information.
-
- Longshot was a genetically-designed being from the dimension of the
- Spineless Ones. As an artificial life form, he cannot, by definition, be
- a mutant; his "free will" could be described as a design malfunction,
- but actually, it was programmed into him by Arize (Longshot #1-6). Even
- if he showed up on a mutant detector, something for which there is no
- textual support, he's still not a mutant, because nothing in his genetic
- makeup happened by mutation. He was built from the ground up.
-
- The original Psylocke, Betsy Braddock, is the sister of Brian Braddock,
- aka Captain Britain. Both she and her brother gain their powers from
- their not-entirely human heritage (their father was from Otherworld).
- This was stated directly in her pre-X-Men appearances, as recounted now
- in the "Captain Britain" trade paperback. However, there are statements
- made in the X-titles clearly identifying her as a mutant--including a
- caption where Betsy described herself as a mutant in UXM #213, and an
- identification by the Master Mold in UXM #247. One reader points out
- that telepathic powers are unusual even for the Otherworlders--Brian's
- powers are more typical. While this doesn't prove that she is both a
- hybrid and a mutant, it adds a little credibility to the notion.
-
- Kwannon may have been a mutant, or it may have been simply genetic
- engineering--it was revealed that she was a low-level empath, with her
- source of powers undetermined. (However, this generally means "mutant
- powers", especially where the X-titles are concerned.) The practical
- upshot of all this is that since Psylocke finally occupied Kwannon's
- body, the question of her mutancy no longer concerns her Otherworld
- origins.
-
-
- --- What is the Siege Perilous?
-
- The Siege Perilous is a large, brooch-like magical gemstone that Roma, a
- powerful mystical entity, gave the X-Men after the Fall of the Mutants
- storyline (UXM #229). The whole idea of the Siege was that one could
- send people through it, who would be "judged" by some unknown, higher
- power (possibly Roma herself), and then be given a second chance at life
- if found worthy, so they could try and correct their evil deeds, so to
- speak.
-
- This interesting way for heroes to rehabilitate their villains lasted
- for about one storyline, the original encounter with the Reavers (UXM
- #229) in Australia, until the press of crossovers and editorial
- interference kept Claremont from using it much more than he did.
- Claremont was, believe it or not, reportedly planning on spending well
- over a hundred issues of the X-Men based in Australia, and thus his
- leaving during the X-Odus could be viewed as somewhat of a relief,
- depending on what you thought of the Oz-Men. Indeed, pretty soon the
- Siege became an escape route for the X-Men from their enemies, as a
- series of vicious, horrible encounters ended up with the X-Men believing
- themselves better off reincarnated through the Siege than captured by
- their enemies. Having Psylocke control their minds so they thought it
- was a good idea (it was mainly hers) helped also. She had a vision in
- UXM #250 of the remaining X-Men being turned into cyborgs and left for
- dead.
-
- So most of the X-Men popped through, and ended up, mostly with amnesia,
- all over the world, mostly living lives they felt mostly "better" in
- than superheroing--for the most part. The Siege was then captured by
- Donald Pierce, who destroyed it (UXM # 251).
-
- The X-Men who went through the Siege were:
-
- * Rogue: Pushed through it by Dazzler (UXM #247). Reappeared in the
- Outback in #269, then went to the Savage Land with Magneto who
- freed her of Carol Danvers.
-
- * Dazzler: Convinced by Betsy in #251, reappeared in Malibu and found
- by Guido in UXM #260.
-
- * Colossus: Convinced in #251, reappeared in Soho as Peter Nicholas,
- artist, in UXM #259.
-
- * Havok: Had doubts, but Betsy coerced him psychically in #251.
- Reappeared as a Genoshan prelate in UXM #270.
-
- * Psylocke--Went through #251. Reappeared in #256, only to become a
- nimbo.
-
- Storm did not go through, as she was captured by Nanny in #248 (although
- they thought Havok killed her). She was de-aged, paired with Gambit in
- UXM #266, and then re-aged to adulthood in #272.
-
- Wolverine was left to bleed to death in the Australian wilderness in UXM
- #251, where he was found by Jubilee.
-
- Longshot had left voluntarily in #248 to find himself.
-
- The original Siege Perilous, by the way, where Claremont got the name,
- was the seat at the Round Table of King Arthur which had letters on it
- that prophecied that only the "purest and greatest" of all knights would
- sit there, who turned out to be Galahad. See the appropriate Malorian
- (and other) sources for more on King Arthur, Galahad, and the Grail
- Quest. Siege Perilous literally means "the dangerous seat."
-
-
- --- Why did the X-Men lose their invisibility to electronic scanners?
-
- After the X-Men died in Dallas during Fall of the Mutants (UXM #227),
- they were resurrected by Roma via the Siege Perilous. One of the gifts
- Roma gave the X-Men was that they were invisible to electronic scanners,
- television cameras, and so forth, to better help cement their reputation
- as "legends".
-
- This power served the X-Men well enough during their Australian days
- (although, for no explained reason, the computers at the Reavers base
- were capable of detecting them, and the X-Men themselves wondered why),
- but soon after they went tumbling through the Siege Perilous for a
- second time it became apparent that the X-Men had lost their
- "invisibility." There being no other explanation for this power loss in
- the first place, it's generally assumed by the racmx crowd that Roma's
- spell wore off.
-
- Of course, there's a more logical explanation of why and when the X-Men
- lost their invisibility to scanners, as explained by Chris Claremont at
- the 2000 Wizard World Chicago convention: They lost the power somewhere
- between pages 10 and 11 of UXM #279, or around page 1 of X-Men #4. This
- was a reference to Claremont's last work on the titles, so apparently
- *he* had planned to still have it going when he left the books.
-
-
- --- Psylocke, Revanche, Kwannon, Betsy Braddock ... help?
-
- The two Psylockes are an unusual matter. After the fun with the Siege
- Perilous, Betsy Braddock was caught by the Hand, a bunch of techno-
- demonic ninjas, and apparently turned into an Asian woman (UXM #256),
- for reasons too vague to go into here. While odd, and apparently mainly
- an excuse to draw Betsy in a bunch of tight-fitting quasi-Asian outfits,
- it was still accepted that Psylocke was Psylocke. She just looked...
- different.
-
- Then Revanche entered the scene (X-Men #20). She looked just like
- Betsy's old body, but had an Asian name (Kwannon). Confused yet? In
- another retcon, the unconscious Betsy apparently was discovered by the
- original Kwannon after tumbling out of the Siege. Kwannon, who looked
- just like the new Betsy's Asian form, touched her and got psychically
- zapped by Betsy, somehow passing both Betsy's powers and personalities
- to Kwannon, while passing Kwannon's personality to Betsy.
-
- Enter the Hand. The head of the Hand, Matsuo Tsurayaba, was in love with
- Kwannon despite her belonging to a rival ninja clan. Now, apparently the
- original Betsy was not turned into an Asian, but the Asian body of
- Kwannon was brainwashed by the Hand into believing that she was Betsy.
- In this they had help from the demonic dancer of Mojo, Spiral. Meanwhile
- the original Betsy's body was programmed by Spiral, behind the scenes,
- to still think it was Betsy but remember that it was Kwannon once, just
- to bug Matsuo. All of this was sorted out in X-Men #31-32.
-
-
- --- When did Psylocke and Phoenix switch powers? Wasn't Psylocke
- telepathically holding the Shadow King captive?
-
- Psylocke and Phoenix switched powers in the "six month gap" between
- Chris Claremont's return to the two X-Men core titles. When Claremont
- debuted, Jean Grey had a Phoenix shadow eye tattoo on the astral plane,
- while Betsy had all of Jean's telekinesis but none of her telepathy.
- The actual switch was never shown and never explained, which caused a
- lot of confusion to new readers of the titles.
-
- While the power switch was interesting, it came at a bad time for
- Marvel. The X-Men movie had just debuted, and in it, Jean was very
- definitely a telekinetic. Jean was also a telekinetic in the former
- X-Men cartoon and was set to be a telekinetic in the X-Men: Evolution
- cartoon. Thus, editorial wasn't too pleased about it. When the titles
- were handed back to Scott Lobdell in preparation for yet another team
- of writers, Jean seemed to be regaining her telepathy (which also was
- not explained).
-
- On a CoolBoard interview with Sean Thack, Claremont revealed his ideas
- behind the power switch, and whether it'll be explained:
-
- I thought it would be fun. I thought she was in a rut, that
- readers had come to take her personality and powers for granted.
- I wanted to give her a challenge to overcome, to cycle her back
- to a place in her life where she needed to become a student once
- more, to emphasize the "School" aspect of Xavier's institution.
- I wanted to establish a strict differentiation between her and
- Jean. Instead of them being echoes of one another, they could now
- function independently both as individuals and team members. There
- was always an explanation and had I managed to find the time last
- year, the story would have been presented in the X-Men Annual. But
- that window of opportunity passed and given the current status quo
- within the X-Canon, the fact that Jean has been restored to her
- default status quo as a telepath/telekinetic, I doubt the story
- will ever be told. Why explain a continuity twist that no longer
- exists? It's done, we move on, end of that story. This is who she
- is, this is what she does, now our focus is on what happens next.
-
- As you can see, it's likely a dangler that will be remembered only by
- the fans.
-
- As for Psylocke's telepathy holding the Shadow King in place, that's a
- whole other story. It seems most likely that he escaped when Psylocke
- died in X-Treme X-Men. In X-Treme X-Men Annual 2001, the Shadow King
- returned, and tried to take over Rogue's mind. Since Rogue had once
- absorbed Psylocke's powers, and therefore possesses some of Psylocke's
- powers and psyche, Gambit figured that Rogue could contain the Shadow
- King in a corner of her own mind, just like Psylocke had. The solution
- apparently worked, since Rogue survived the battle, but it's likely
- that he'll pop up again if Rogue ever purges Psylocke's powers.
-
-
- --- When did the Beast turn blue and furry? Wasn't he unfurry again for
- a while? When did he become a lion?
-
- The Beast's normal form isn't fuzzy. Up until the cancellation of the
- original X-Men series, he looked like a human with an ape-like body: no
- fur, but big, elongated arms, hands, and feet. He had the same powers as
- he does now: strength and agility.
-
- Then, in Amazing Adventures #11 (1972), the Beast got a job at the Brand
- Corporation, a subsidiary of Marvel's evil megacorporation, Roxxon. He
- was researching the "genetic source" of mutations (the X-factor), and
- isolated a hormone that would activate the X-factor. In typical comic
- book timing, as soon as the Beast discovered this wonderful hormone, the
- sinister Secret Empire tried to steal it from him. So Hank McCoy did
- what any award-winning researcher would do with his potentially Nobel-
- prize-winning experiment: he drank it.
-
- The resultant enchancement of his mutant nature turned him into his now
- famous fuzzy form, but with grey fur, and with a healing factor that
- would shame Wolverine--bullet holes healed as fast as they were made.
- Various misadventures ensued, until the computer Quasimodo drained the
- Beast's excess life energy in Amazing Adventures #14, which left him not
- only without his nifty healing factor, but also turned his fur blue.
-
- He stayed that way all the way through his service in the Avengers and
- Defenders until X-Factor was inaugurated. In their second issue, a story
- was started which brought the Beast back to Brand, where much the same
- sort of process left him back the way he was in the first X-Men series.
- During the Fall of the Mutants he was infected by Pestilence (X-Factor
- #19), resulting in a biochemical imbalance that increased his strength
- each time he used it with a corresponding decrease in his intelligence.
- A kiss from Infectia (#31) turned him back blue and fuzzy again, this
- time with near-Hulk level strength (X-Factor #33).
-
- Beast eventually lost most of that superstrength, and was back in his
- "normal," highly agile, slightly-superstrong blue fuzzball form until
- his lion-like form debuted in New X-Men #114. This was confusing, since
- he was appearing in his normal form in the first issues of X-Treme X-Men
- at the same time. However, in XXM #3, Sage first saw Beast's potential
- mutated form. Just pretend that the events of New X-Men occur after all
- of Beast's growing pains.
-
-
- --- How come other mutants seem to be changing their powers and
- appearances? (+)
-
- It's hard to tell, exactly. Mutation in the Marvel Universe often
- occurs during extreme physical or psychological stress. Combining the
- removal of everyone's powers by High Evolutionary with increased sunspot
- activity (radiation) has apparently created a bumper crop of odd power
- increases and mutant births all over the world.
-
- That said, there are a few obvious cases of this "secondary mutation,"
- as well as a few other characters who have shifted appearances:
-
- * Angel: Not a secondary mutation, apparently. His shift from metal
- wings to feather wings is apparently due to Apocalypse's mucking
- with his DNA and that eventually wearing off. He lost his blue
- skin pigment in Uncanny X-Men #411 after Black Tom Cassidy drained
- his life force.
-
- * Beast: Secondary mutation. Evolved into a lion-like form. Gained
- strength and speed.
-
- * Emma Frost: Secondary mutation. Gained an extremely tough diamond
- exoskeleton which can block physical damage and radiation. However,
- she can't use her telepathy in this form.
-
- * Iceman: Secondary mutation? After the events of the X-Men Forever
- miniseries, gained the ability to become "living ice," and seems
- to have his flesh turning into ice on a permanent basis.
-
-
- --- Is Longshot Shatterstar's father?
-
- Maybe, maybe not. This idea generally comes from X-Men #11, where
- Dazzler says to Longshot: "'Shatterstar'? You've got to be kidding!"
- (They had just found out she was pregnant.) This and the fact that both
- are from Mojoworld are what most people base the relationship on.
-
- Fabian Nicieza, who was writing X-Force at the time, was rather upset
- about this. He intended no such thing, and soon made a point of giving
- Shatterstar a different origin. According to X-Force #39, his real name
- is Gaveedra 7 and he was born in a test tube. Also, in Dazzler's last
- appearance (X-Men #47), it was strongly hinted she had miscarried. So,
- as things stand now, there is probably no relation.
-
- However, one writer's original intentions don't always conicide with the
- conclusions of later writers. The following bits of in-continuity trivia
- complicate this question considerably:
-
- * According to Beast, Shatterstar has the exact same DNA as Longshot.
- This is an interesting dangler, especially in light of the fact
- that Longshot and Shatterstar don't even have the same number of
- fingers.
-
- * According to Spiral, Shatterstar is the son of an "Arize-spawn" and
- a human. Longshot and Dazzler are the obvious suspects here, but
- the story was deliberately vague on this point.
-
- (FAQ-keeper's note: I don't have any issue numbers handy for these
- events. If anyone out there does, please forward 'em to me at
- racmx@yahoo.com.)
-
- I'd love to say that X-Force #60-61 (The Origin of Shatterstar!)
- resolved this. Heck, I'd love to say these issues resolved anything at
- all. They don't. All it did was move Shatterstar into the body of
- Benjamin Russell and make Spiral somehow involved. That doesn't really
- get at any of the answers this FAQ-keeper was looking for, and doesn't
- say anything about Longshot particularly.
-
- However, there is a light at the end of this tunnel. The whole Benjamin
- Russell/Shatterstar question was brought up in X-Force #56, when the
- Gamesmaster told him that "Shatterstar" was nothing more than a sick
- fantasy of Gamesmaster's creation. X-Force #76, however, has Mojo
- telling Arcade that Shatterstar is still his own property, "no matter
- what the omnipathic Gamesmaster wishes to believe." While this doesn't
- yet answer the question of Shatterstar's parentage, it does place
- Shatterstar's origin squarely back in Mojoworld.
-
-
- --- There's an External at my door. What does that mean? Should I be
- concerned? Is it contagious?
-
- First off, don't be alarmed. Many Externals are simply poor excuses for
- a supervillain, too innately lame to make a living any other way, and
- they are probably only looking for a handout. Treat them with kindness,
- patience, and respect, and they'll probably leave you alone, although
- they may mutter a bit about impossible designs and grand world-spanning
- plans before they leave.
-
- The Externals first showed up in the storylines of Rob Liefeld in X-
- Force #10. The idea was that they are a type of mutant whose "full
- potential" is not realized until they're killed. And then they're
- reborn, and they become, well, immortal, except they could only be
- killed by cutting off their heads, or something like that. In any case,
- any similarities between Externals and the immortals from the movie
- Highlander are obvious and often commented on. Currently the term is
- mainly used to refer to any mutant that enjoys immortality by virtue of
- his mutant powers.
-
- X-Force #37 is possibly the closest thing the Externals will ever have
- to an origin issue. It explains how En Sabah Nur (aka Apocalypse) found
- the Celestial ship, how old each of the Externals actually were, and why
- they acted the way they did. Apocalypse's origin is explained in more
- detail in his limited series, "The Dawn of Apocalypse".
-
- Anyway, so much for immortality. Selene killed most of them off in X-
- Force (#52-53). The only ones left are Selene, Candra (who may or may
- not have died in X-Men #61), and Apocalypse. Apparently Cannonball
- wasn't one of them after all, according to Selene in X-Force #53.
-
-
- --- Who are the Twelve? Why are they important?
-
- The Twelve, in no particular order, are Magneto, Xavier, Cyclops, Cable,
- Jean Grey/Phoenix, Mikhail Rasputin, Iceman, Storm, Sunfire, Polaris,
- Bishop, and the Living Monolith/Living Pharaoh. They were gathered by
- Apocalpyse in his quest to become a godlike being with more power than
- the Phoenix force or the Celestials.
-
- According to Uncanny X-Men #377 (specifically Apocalpyse):
-
- The Monolith is at the core of it all, as the primal earth which is
- the foundation for all that is to be mine. Magneto and Polaris are
- opposing magnetic poles, serving to control the flow of energies at
- play here... energies under constant pressure from the forces of
- nature itself. The elemental extremes of Iceman, Storm, and
- Sunfire... stimulated by the unrestrained energies of man and the
- heavens, free of any grounding or gravity. Father, mother, and
- son-- Cyclops, Phoenix, and Cable-- far, far stronger as a whole
- than the sum of their parts... linked to the powers of time and
- space wielded by Bishop and Rasputin, respectively. The power of
- pure thought that is Xavier.
-
- Nate Grey was the 13th member of this merry band, and was slated to
- become Apocalypse's new host body. Unfortunately, things didn't go as
- planned. Instead, Cyclops sacrificed himself and became a merged half-
- Apocalypse being. The team members consider him dead. This FAQ should
- also note that Wolverine served as Death, the fourth horseman of
- Apocalypse, during much of the shindig. The being they thought was
- Wolverine was actually a Super-Skrull so brainwashed into his disguise
- that even *he* didn't know he was anything other than Wolverine.
-
- Of course, the final version of the Twelve contradicted much known about
- the Twelve up to that point. First, the original Twelve were a vision by
- a deranged Sentinel of the dozen most important mutants. The problem is,
- these twelve had shown up in other issues (Power Pack #36, X-Factor #14,
- X-Factor #68) as well, and even they hadn't been consistent.
-
- The members who had shown up in every version of the Twelve were Xavier,
- Cyclops, Jean Grey, Storm, and Franklin Richards. What of the other
- seven? In one version, all the original X-Men were implied. Cable, in
- both baby and adult forms, was shown in another. Cannonball was clearly
- shown in one version. So, we add Iceman, Beast, Archangel, Cable, and
- Cannonball to the list. Other possibilities included Dani Moonstar,
- Mystique, Psylocke, Wolverine, and Dark Beast.
-
- Uncanny X-Men #-1 cleared up the origin of The Twelve, albeit somewhat
- ambiguously. Sometime after Rachel Summers switched places with Captain
- Britain in the timestream (Excalibur #75) she rescued and befrended
- another time-lost refugee from the 20th century named Tanya Trask, the
- daugter of the original creator of the Sentinels, Bolivar Trask. Upon
- learning of her father's genocidal legacy, Tanya determined to alter the
- timeline by reaching back to the past and convince her father of his
- doomed path. Rachel followed her back and erased the memory of her
- contact with her father, seemingly setting the timeline right again.
-
- However, it turned out that Tanya's true plan was to store within the
- memory banks of Trask's first Master Mold--so deeply even Trask himself
- (and later his son and successor Larry) were unaware of it--the identity
- of the infamous "XII", The Twelve, whose failure Tanya determined as the
- true cause of her dark future and without whom, somehow, mutant genocide
- and Sentinel conquest will be averted. Their identity, however, was
- never divulged.
-
-
- --- Is Apocalypse dead?
-
- We hope so.
-
- During the aftermath of The Twelve storyline, Cyclops was thought dead,
- although Apocalypse had merely disappeared as a merged "Cyclopalypse"-
- style being, with his soul in Cyke's body. Eventually, Phoenix and Cable
- decided that Cyclops might be alive, and they went looking for him.
-
- During the Search for Cyclops mini-series, Phoenix and Cable found
- Cyclops. Phoenix professed her love for Scott, and was able to rip
- Poccy's astral self out of Scott's body. Cable then impaled the astral
- form with his psimitar. This apparently killed Apocalypse.
-
-
- --- What is the Legacy Virus? Who's had it? Hasn't there been a cure
- for a while?
-
- The Legacy Virus was a once-interesting plot device that served as a
- parallel to the AIDS/HIV virus. Basically, it was spread from mutant to
- mutant, and it caused mutants to die by accelerating or increasing their
- powers to the point that they burned themselves out. Obviously, such a
- nasty virus caused even more fear of mutants in the Marvel Universe.
-
- As with all plot devices, it started out interesting and became a
- cliche. The virus was supposed to be Stryfe's legacy--his post-death
- gift to the world, if you will. Thus the name. However, one couldn't do
- justice to the plot device by quickly creating a cure, since that would
- not only cut the story short, but also trivialize the actual search for
- an AIDS/HIV cure. So the story plugged away, year after year.
-
- During its time, the Legacy Virus affected many mutants, including
- Abyss, Bolt, Feral, Magik, Mastermind, Maverick, Moira MacTaggert,
- Nicodemus, Omega Red, Pestilence, Psynapse, Pyro, Revanche, and of
- course, Sinister's Assistant who let the darned thing out in the first
- place. A team of mutants led by Exodus and Random and a set of
- "Morlocks" created by the Dark Beast round out the medical list.
-
- Most notable in the list above are Magik and Moira. Magik received the
- virus after she'd been deaged post-Inferno, though a retcon during the
- New Mutants mini-series revealed that teenage Illyana was infected when
- Mikhail et al journeyed into the NM's past. Her death served as a huge
- catalyst, since Colossus' grief led him to join the Acolytes. More on
- that in a moment.
-
- Back to Moira. Moira was a genetic researcher, of course, and so was
- often exposed to nifty little things like viruses. The odd thing was
- that she caught the virus AS A HUMAN. This was meant to parallel the
- spread of the AIDS/HIV virus into the general population, but her
- search for the virus cure waxed and waned as the plotline's prominence
- varied due to shifts in writers and storylines.
-
- Brian Fried reminds us that Zero give Douglock the key or cure to the
- Legacy Virus a few years back. In "The Douglock Chronicles," which
- introduced Douglock to Excalibur, Zero gave Douglock information to
- cure the virus, and then was promptly destroyed for accessing that
- information. (Side note: the issue was written by Scott Lobdell, who
- also wrote the Excalibur issues in which Moira contracted the virus and
- X-Men Prime, where the idea that the cure is connected to Cable's DNA
- appeared.)
-
- Every nasty Marvel Virus needs to have its cure, and one certainly was
- around; the characters just didn't collectively realize it. Again, if
- the virus cure was put off, lots more neat stories could be told that
- used it as a plot device (or, as the case may be, neater stories could
- be told that *didn't* use it as a plot device). The solution got placed
- in a drawer until the writers and marketing staff had nothing better to
- use.
-
- A second factor was Warren Ellis' apparent dislike for the storyline and
- the switch from Moira's story to the Black Air / Pete Wisdom / Alien
- conspiracy stuff that culminated in "The Black Air Trilogy" and
- Excalibur #100. It wasn't until Ben Raab came on that the plot was
- handled again. In a few issues, it seemed that Douglock would clue in to
- the fact that he had the cure, and all would finally be resolved.
-
- Marvel being Marvel, however, it was decided that the only reason people
- were reading EXCALIBUR was for Kitty, Kurt, and Piotr; their moving back
- to the core books would leave no purpose for Excalibur. Raab had to
- close down his loose storylines to accomplish this. Of course, he also
- couldn't reveal the cure for the Legacy Virus in Excalibur because those
- types of events happened in the core books, like all other important
- storylines (see the second WIZARD X-MEN SPECIAL for more info on this).
- Raab left Douglock with a serious case of amnesia, in the hope that some
- other writer could eventually use the material. Even the Dark Beast's
- solution (in X-Men Unlimited #10) was completely forgotten so that Moira
- and Mystique would have the honours of being involved.
-
- In any case, Mystique and her terrorist brotherhood decided that the
- best way to deal with anti-mutant humans was to mutate the Legacy Virus
- so that it would infect the human population instead. She broke into
- Muir Isle to get the information, and ended up blowing up Moira in the
- process of destroying Moira's research lab. Moira, never one to give up,
- fed the information from her research and Mystique's statements into
- Xavier's brain, who finally passed it on to Legacy Virus researcher and
- noted X-Man Beast.
-
- Beast was quickly able to develop a cure; the problem was, he then
- realized that since the original virus was spread once the first
- infected mutant used his powers, the new cure would likewise only spread
- once an infected mutant used his powers--thus sacrificing someone to
- the greater scientific cause.
-
- The FAQ will pause at this time to point out that it was pretty dumb of
- Beast to leave the cure unlocked in a room with Piotr, who not only had
- lost his sister to the disease, but also had lost his parents to murder,
- his brother to we-can't-remember-where, and his former girlfriend and
- teammate Kitty to they-never-told-us-but-she-came-back-afterward.
-
- Piotr injected the cure, transformed into his organic steel form, and
- passed away. This apparently released the cure into the air, so within
- just a few days of Marvel Time the Legacy Virus was cured, Hallelujah!
- This all happened in Uncanny #390. If nothing else good came of the
- issue, at least Colossus can no longer be poorly written (as long as
- Sinister remains far from his DNA, that is), and the plot device has
- been resolved and buried.
-
-
- --- What is the Soulsword? Who has Magik's Soulsword now?
-
- The Soulsword was created from a piece of Illyana's own soul in issue #4
- of the Magik Limited Series, and ever since then has been the symbol and
- source of its owner's mastery of the other-dimensional realm of Limbo.
- After the teenage Illyana reverted to her younger self in the wake of
- the Inferno crossover, the Soulsword appeared in a rock outside
- Excalibur's lighthouse for Kitty Pryde to claim. She, however, was quite
- willing to leave it there, based on her previous experiences with it.
- (She became the owner of the sword previously during the Secret Wars II
- crossover, in New Mutants #35-37, when Illyana was temporarily killed by
- the Beyonder.)
-
- In Excalibur #37, Dr. Doom showed up at Excalibur's door with a proposal
- to go to Limbo with Kitty and the Soulsword in order to mine the place
- for an energy-producing metal called promethium. Doom eventually tricked
- Kitty into letting him have the sword, which he stuck into the heart of
- Limbo to convert the entire planet/dimension/place into promethium. Doom
- got out before the place went critical, leaving the sword behind. It was
- claimed in issue #39 by the pseudo-demon Darkoth, who remained alone in
- Limbo with the sword. And the matter was thought to be done with.
-
- That is, until Scott Lobdell handed Warren Ellis a plot for the
- Soulsword Trilogy (Excalibur #83-85). Lobdell was apparently completely
- unaware of the aforementioned Promethium Exchange storyline, but we can
- reconcile this by simply noting that something bad must have happened to
- Darkoth between issues #39 and #83. In any event, the Soulsword started
- to manifest itself in Kitty's possession again, and two other new
- characters named Gravemoss and Shrill tried to take it from her.
- Eventually the sword was passed off to Nightcrawler's sorceress
- girlfriend Amanda Sefton, who made the mistake of giving it to her
- mother, Margali Szardos.
-
- Sometime after that, Belasco abducted Margali and stole the Soulsword.
- In X-Men Unlimited #19, it was revealed that Margali had placed her
- mind in Amanda's body, and placed Amanda in her body. She then took
- Nightcrawler to Limbo, where she proceeded to defeat Belasco and knock
- the sword away from him. Margali and Amanda were restored to their
- proper bodies, and Amanda decided that she would became the mistress of
- Limbo. At the end of that issue, the Soulsword, wielded by a silver-
- armored hand, pushed through the dire. Readers never saw who that was,
- so much energy was expended discussing whether Illyana was back.
-
- Margali later turned up in a Claremont Fantastic Four annual that
- dealt with the Hellfire Club. It's also in that FF annual that Amanda
- likely made her first, uncredited appearance as Magik. In any case, in
- the Black Sun and Magik mini-series, Amanda appeared in Illyana's
- traditional silver armor, apparently holding the title and role of
- Magik. The case seems closed.
-
-
- --- Is the Malice who worked with the Marauders the same one that
- appears in the Fantastic Four now and then?
-
- No. The Malice who worked in the Marauders was some sort of pure psionic
- entity who could possess people and make them into "dark versions" of
- themselves. She eventually got stuck in the body of Lorna Dane by the
- machinations of Mr. Sinister (UXM #239), which led to the Malice persona
- eventually being zapped out of Lorna by Zaladane, the purported Queen of
- the Savage Land (in UXM #250). Mr. Sinister finally destroyed this
- Malice in X-Factor #105 because she had outlived her usefulness.
-
- The Fantastic Four's Malice, who occasionally possesses Susan Richards
- (the Invisible Woman), has nothing to do with Sinister's Malice. This
- Malice was a mental creation by the fourth Hate-Monger and the Psycho-
- Man, and it is merely the alternate personality of Sue Richards as an
- "evil" person. Same idea, different approach.
-
- However, the Vertigo that worked with the Marauders is the same Vertigo
- that started out with the Savage Land Mutates. Just while we're on the
- subject of Savage Land and Marauders.
-
-
- --- Do you lose your mutant powers in the Savage Land? Where is the
- Savage Land, anyway?
-
- The Savage Land is one of the fixations of Stan Lee, co-creator of much
- of the Marvel Universe, that has survived longer than other favored plot
- ideas of his (how many Marvel comics are taking place around a circus
- currently, for instance?).
-
- The Savage Land is a direct tribute/descendant/ripoff of those classic
- "Lands that Time Forgot" sf/fantasy stories. It's in that "peninsula"
- sticking out of Antarctica, and the horribly complicated history of it
- can be found in various editions of the OHOTMU. Basically, it was set up
- as a type of alien wildlife preserve, and it's been run by a variety of
- administrations since (currently, no one is in charge of the elemental
- machineries that keep the Savage Land warm and tropical in the midst of
- the vast ice field).
-
- The X-Men have had numerous adventures in the Savage Land, and are good
- friends with Ka-Zar, the main hero of the Savage Land, as well as with
- the tribe of the Fall People. In none of those cases have the X-Men ever
- lost their powers just from being in the Savage Land, although various
- villains they've fought there have dampened their powers while in there.
-
- This question largely comes from X-Men: the Animated Series fans, since
- the Savage Land in X:TAS apparently drains the mutant powers from those
- mutants who visit it. (It may be that the X:TAS Sinister had something
- to do with that as well.) This is most certainly not the case for the
- comic-book X-Men and Savage Land, though.
-
-
- --- What happens when the Blob meets the Juggernaut?
-
- What happens when the unmovable object meets the irresistible force? In
- this case, it's easy. Magic, in the case of Juggernaut, wins. The Blob
- is merely very, very difficult to move, not impossible. Juggernaut's
- unstoppability, on the other hand, derives from the Crimson Gem of
- Cyttorak. As magic, it can't be defeated by mutant powers.
-
-
-
- *** Continued in Part 8 ***
-
-
- Compilation Copyright 2000-2003 by Katharine E. Hahn
- SEND ADDITIONS / CHANGES / DEAD LINKS / MOVED LINKS / UPDATES TO:
- Kate the Short, racmx@yahoo.com (mailto:racmx@yahoo.com)
-
-
- --
- Kate the Short * http://users.rcn.com/kateshort/
-
-