DosCadenaz
Superstar
The GOAT
Jae Lee?My favorite wolverine cell is oddly this one
Ready AS fukk
yeah. off topic. but i remember thinking his art was ill as fukk when i was younger. now his old shyt is kinda ass to me. His new shyt is fire. that god damn panel is over 20yrs old..Jae Lee?
My favorite wolverine cell is oddly this one
Ready AS fukk
He's ENCASED IN ADAMANTIUM!!! HOW SWAY?!!?
I've always been a fan, even though back in the day he was like the Bruce Lei to Jim Lee's Bruce Lee to me. Like i picked up a X book thinking I'm getting Jim's work only to see these dark ass frames where half the shyt was covered in shadow. I loved it though. I have the same reaction looking back at some of his old stuff now as you. But the fact that he had a very unique style made me a fan even though some of that shyt looked weird, with light sources all over the place in one panel. I don't know if he's still doing it, but his work on the Dark Tower is dope as fukk.yeah. off topic. but i remember thinking his art was ill as fukk when i was younger. now his old shyt is kinda ass to me. His new shyt is fire. that god damn panel is over 20yrs old..
he's refined the fukk out of his style now. he's on some other shyt. but yeah. even tho i dont "like" that old shyt, the grit is still there and i know why i gravitated to his stuff.I've always been a fan, even though back in the day he was like the Bruce Lei to Jim Lee's Bruce Lee to me. Like i picked up a X book thinking I'm getting Jim's work only to see these dark ass frames where half the shyt was covered in shadow. I loved it though. I have the same reaction looking back at some of his old stuff now as you. But the fact that he had a very unique style made me a fan even though some of that shyt looked weird, with light sources all over the place in one panel. I don't know if he's still doing it, but his work on the Dark Tower is dope as fukk.
X-Cutioner's Song
SOOOO many sonnings.
Classic, underrated X-Men crossover.
Stryfe went beserk on da X-Men:
*Dressed as Cable and shot Prof X in broad daylight. Then the bullet itself was a techno organic virus
*Stryfe then kidnapped Jean n Cyclops.
*Stryfe beats up Apocalypse and slaps him around like a scrub
*Then as a fail safe when he died, Stryfe released the Legacy Virus which killed countless humans and mutants (Pyro, Moira McTaggert)
Stryfe a top 5 x-men villain. He wasn't on da scene long, but he made a hell of a ma
The Summers family reunion
Cable was on Claremont’s Uncanny X-Men team in 2000, and one of the villains Claremont had big plans for was the clone of Cable, Stryfe. “We used Stryfe in the (X-Men) Annual (2000). And the interesting thing is that while there’s a tremendous enthusiasm for the character in-house, fan reaction has been incredibly vehement,” Claremont told Comic Book Resources.com in 2000. “There doesn’t seem to be a lot of affection for Stryfe as a character, which to me is a big red flag in front of a bull. It’s like, “You don’t like him? OK, by the time I’m done…” Nobody liked Rogue when she first showed up, either, so we’ll see.”
Claremont used Stryfe again in X-Men vol.2 #105, where he is the mysterious man in the shadows at the end of the story, whose identity was never revealed in the comics. “Actually, the original idea for that scene spun off of the X-Men 2000 Annual and the team’s confrontation with Stryfe,” Claremont revealed to Cinescape.com in 2001. “He was doing to Psylocke in (X-Men vol.2) #105 what she had done to him in the Annual, only in this case he uses telepathy instead of ninja powers to mask his presence.”
Stryfe’s appearance in X-Men vol.2 #105 was meant to be the beginning of a bigger story. When Comic Book Resources.com in 2000 asked about what stories Claremont had up his sleeve, he replied: “A Summers family reunion.”
Claremont confirmed in an interview with Upstart Comics.com that a Summers family reunion was underway. “After that we’ll deal with the repercussions,” he said, “and in January the X-Men will undergo a fundamental change.”
The latter he expanded on to Comic Book Resources.com: “Assuming all goes well, the X-Men at the end of January 2001 will be a fundamentally different concept than the X-Men right now – in ways, hopefully, that the readers will wonder how the hell we’re going to dig ourselves out of this one. And for the first time in their career as super heroes, they are going to be seriously, seriously on the defensive.”
“They’re going to be up against a set of foes who know them better than they know themselves, and are probably stronger than all of them put together,” he continued. “They are characters you’ve seen before. Certainly within the last five years. Or less. And some of them may surprise you.”
Stryfe’s X-Men
When the Summers family reunion didn’t happen because Claremont was removed from the X-Men books, Claremont revealed on Cinescape.com in 2001 what he had meant with ”a fundamentally different concept” for the X-Men books, and what team of enemies the X-Men should have been up against: “The thrust of that story was for (Stryfe) to build an all-new, all-different team of X-Men based on family, sort of a Summers family reunion, consisting of himself, Cyclops, Jean and Cable, and possibly Nate (Grey, X-Man). They were going to evict Xavier and the others from the mansion and go public, pulling a Thunderbolts riff by branding the fugitive X-Men as criminals and portraying themselves as heroes.”
“The idea was that Stryfe would slip into the Search For Cyclops series and hijack both characters at the end, then gather Cable and in (X-Men vol.2) #110, seize control of X-Men. No more Xavier Institute. In its place: The Summers School.”
“I thought it would be fun, but editorially it didn’t fly.”
Jean Grey and Cable were attacked on the astral plane by an unknown enemy in Uncanny X-Men #384, wherein that same enemy also possessed Cable. The enemy’s identity was never revealed in the comics, but Claremont spilled the beans on his Cordially Chris forum in 2003: “It was meant to be Stryfe, as a precursor to the arc that would close-out 2000, wherein the X-Men and Xavier would be “evicted” by the Summers Clan (Stryfe, Scott, Cable, Alex, Jean and Rachel), who would present the school to the public as the Summers Scool For Mutants. They would control X-Men (vol.2) and the fugitive team (think about it, how would you – COULD you – fight adversaries who comprise four of the most powerful psis in creation, plus two (Cyke & Cable) of the pre-eminent tactical and strategic strategists?) would be on the run in Uncanny (X-Men). And that would be the status quo until (Uncanny X-Men) #400, when things would get really squirrelly.”
“We’re talking conflict here, a civil war/War of the Roses between the Lancasters and the Yorks of the House of Mutants!” Claremont continued. “So much for that idea.”
Claremont had barely left Uncanny X-Men and X-Men vol.2 before subsequent writer Scott Lobdell (presumably on editorial edict) ensured that the Summers family reunion couldn’t happen by killing off Stryfe in the Gambit & Bishop: Sons of the Atom mini series.
In the recent issue of Old Man Logan he says he has to go back to his time or whatever to try and save that Hulk babyBut what about Old Man Logan? What happens to him?
The names Wolverine.
And I'm the best there is at what I do.
I might sound like a dumb mofo but what does he do?
Small thing but was funny AF to me back in 1992 and still funny AF in 2017 is when Archangel accidentally decapitated one of Stryfe's Mutant Liberation Front members.X-Cutioner's Song
SOOOO many sonnings.
Classic, underrated X-Men crossover.
Stryfe went beserk on da X-Men:
*Dressed as Cable and shot Prof X in broad daylight. Then the bullet itself was a techno organic virus
*Stryfe then kidnapped Jean n Cyclops.
*Stryfe beats up Apocalypse and slaps him around like a scrub
*Then as a fail safe when he died, Stryfe released the Legacy Virus which killed countless humans and mutants (Pyro, Moira McTaggert)
Stryfe a top 5 x-men villain. He wasn't on da scene long, but he made a hell of a ma