Jump to content

Magneto (Marvel Comics)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Ultimate Magneto)
Max Eisenhardt
Magneto
Variant cover of X-Men: Black - Magneto #1 (September 2018).
Art by J. Scott Campbell.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceThe X-Men #1
(September 1963)[1][2][3]
Created byStan Lee (writer)
Jack Kirby (writer/artist)
In-story information
Alter egoMax Eisenhardt[4]
SpeciesHuman mutant
Place of originGermany
Team affiliationsBrotherhood of Mutants
X-Men
New Mutants
Hellfire Club
Acolytes
Astonishing Avengers
Quiet Council of Krakoa
Notable aliasesMagnus[5]
Erik Lehnsherr[6]
White King[7] (later Grey King[8]) of the Hellfire Club
Michael Xavier[9]
Erik the Red
Henryk Gurzsky[10]
White Pilgrim[11]
Abilities

Magneto (/mæɡˈnt/; birth name: Max Eisenhardt; alias: Erik Lehnsherr German pronunciation: [ˈeːʁɪk ˈleːnshɛʁ] and Magnus) is a character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, commonly in association with the X-Men. Created by writer Stan Lee and artist/co-writer Jack Kirby, the character first appeared in The X-Men #1 (cover-dated September 1963) as an adversary of the X-Men.

Magneto is a powerful mutant, one of a fictional subspecies of humanity born with superhuman abilities, who has the ability to generate and control magnetic fields. Magneto regards mutants as evolutionarily superior to humans and rejects the possibility of peaceful human-mutant coexistence; he initially aimed to conquer the world to enable mutants, whom he refers to as Homo superior, to replace humans as the dominant species, and occasionally advocated for human genocide. Writers have since fleshed out his origins and motivations, revealing him to be a Holocaust survivor whose extreme methods and cynical philosophy derive from his determination to protect mutants from suffering a similar fate to the European Jews at the hands of a world that fears and persecutes them. He was once a friend of Professor X, the leader of the X-Men, but their different philosophies sometimes cause a rift in their friendship. Magneto's role in comics has progressed from supervillain to antihero to superhero, having served as an occasional ally and member of the X-Men, even leading the New Mutants for a time as headmaster of the Xavier School for Gifted Youngsters.

Writer Chris Claremont, who originated Magneto's backstory, modeled the character on then-Israeli opposition leader Menachem Begin,[12] with later commentators comparing the character with the American civil rights leader Malcolm X[13][14] and Jewish Defense League founder Meir Kahane.[15][16]

Ian McKellen has portrayed Magneto in various films since X-Men in 2000, while Michael Fassbender has portrayed a younger version of the character in the prequel films since X-Men: First Class in 2011. Both actors portrayed their respective incarnations in X-Men: Days of Future Past.

Publication history

[edit]
X-Men #1 (Sept. 1963) is Magneto's first appearance. Written by Stan Lee and art by Jack Kirby.

Magneto first appeared in the debut issue of The X-Men in 1963.[17] Since the 1960s, Magneto has appeared in The Uncanny X-Men, X-Men, Astonishing X-Men, Alpha Flight, Cable, Excalibur, The New Mutants, various X-Men miniseries, and many other Marvel titles. His first solo title was a one-shot special, Magneto: The Twisting of a Soul #0 (Sept. 1993), published when the character returned from a brief absence; it reprinted Magneto-based stories from Classic X-Men #12 and 19 (Aug. 1987 and March 1988), by writer Chris Claremont and artist John Bolton.

When asked about his approach to Magneto, Jack Kirby stated, "I saw my villains not as villains. I knew villains had to come from somewhere and they came from people. My villains were people that developed problems."[18] In a 2008 interview, Stan Lee said he "did not think of Magneto as a bad guy. He just wanted to strike back at the people who were so bigoted and racist...he was trying to defend the mutants, and because society was not treating them fairly he was going to teach society a lesson. He was a danger of course...but I never thought of him as a villain."[19] In the same interview, he also revealed that he originally planned for Magneto to be the brother of his nemesis Professor X.[19]

Writer Chris Claremont stated that Menachem Begin was an inspiration for Magneto's development, as David Ben-Gurion was for Professor X. "There's a lot of talk online now that Magneto stands in for Malcolm X and Xavier stands in for Martin Luther King, which is totally valid but for me, being an immigrant white, to make that analogy felt incredibly presumptuous. An equivalent analogy could be made to [Israeli prime minister] Menachem Begin as Magneto, evolving through his life from a terrorist in 1947 to a winner of the Nobel Peace Prize 30 years later."[12][20]

Asked about the Malcolm X/Martin Luther King Jr. parallels, Claremont also said "It was too close [in the 1970s]. It had only been a few years since the assassinations. In a way, it seemed like that would be too raw. My resonance to Magneto and Xavier was borne more out of the Holocaust. It was coming face to face with evil, and how do you respond to it? In Magneto's case it was violence begets violence. In Xavier's it was the constant attempt to find a better way... As we got distance from the '60s, the Malcolm X-Martin Luther King-Mandela resonance came into things. It just fit."[21][22][23][24]

Magneto's first original title was the four-issue miniseries Magneto (Nov. 1996-Feb. 1997), by writers Peter Milligan and Jorge Gonzalez, and penciller Kelley Jones. In the miniseries, Magneto had been de-aged and suffered from amnesia, calling himself Joseph; it was later revealed that Joseph was a younger clone of Magneto. Later, Magneto became ruler of the nation Genosha and then appeared in two miniseries; Magneto Rex (written by Joe Pruett and drawn by Brandon Peterson) and Magneto: Dark Seduction (written by Fabian Nicieza and drawn by Roger Cruz).

A trade paperback novel detailing Magneto's childhood, X-Men: Magneto Testament was written by Greg Pak and released in September 2008. Pak based Magneto Testament on accounts from Holocaust survivors. Before the publication of X-Men: Magneto Testament, Magneto's personal background and history were invented[25] in The Uncanny X-Men #150 (Aug. 1981). He was portrayed as a Jewish Holocaust survivor; while searching for his wife Magda, a Sinti, Magneto maintained a cover identity as a Sinti. This created confusion among some readers as to Magneto's heritage,[26] until his Jewish background was confirmed in Magneto: Testament.[4][27]

Fictional character biography

[edit]

Early life

[edit]
(Left) Max and Magda escape from the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp; (Right) Max and Magda with their daughter Anya. Art from X-Factor Annual #4 (1989) by John Byrne.

Magneto was born "Max Eisenhardt" in the late 1920s to a middle-class German Jewish family. Max's father, Jakob Eisenhardt, was a decorated World War I veteran.[4] Surviving discrimination and hardship during the Nazi rise to power, the passing of the Nuremberg Laws in 1935, and Kristallnacht, Max and his family fled to Poland, where they were captured during the German invasion of Poland and sent to the Warsaw Ghetto.[4][28] Max and his family escaped the ghetto, only to be betrayed and captured again. His mother, father, and sister were executed and buried in a mass grave, but Max survived, possibly due to the manifestation of his mutant powers. Escaping from the mass grave, he was ultimately captured yet again[29] and sent to Auschwitz, where he eventually became a Sonderkommando.[29][30][31] While at Auschwitz, Eisenhardt reunited with a Romani girl named Magda, with whom he had fallen in love when he was younger, and with whom he would escape the concentration camp during the October 7, 1944 revolt.

Following the war, he and Magda moved to the Ukrainian city of Vinnytsia, and Max adopted the name "Magnus". Magda and Magnus had a daughter named Anya and lived uneventfully until an angry mob, spurred on by the first manifestation of Magnus's powers, burned down their home with Anya still inside. Magnus was enraged at the mob for preventing him from rescuing Anya, and his powers were unleashed, killing the mob and destroying a part of the city. Magda, terrified at Magnus's power, left him and later gave birth to the mutant twins Pietro and Wanda before she died. Wanted by the authorities for the deaths and destruction in Vinnytsia, and while searching for Magda, Magnus paid a Romanian forger, Georg Odekirk, to create the cover identity of "Erik Lehnsherr, the Sinte gypsy".[6] "Erik" moved to Israel, where he met and befriended Charles Xavier while working at a psychiatric hospital near Haifa, where Gabrielle Haller lived. There, the two debated the consequences humanity faced with the rise of mutants, though neither revealed to the other that they were mutants. However, they were forced to reveal their inherent abilities to one another while facing Baron Strucker and Hydra. After the battle, Erik, realizing that his and Xavier's views were incompatible, left with a cache of hidden Nazi gold, which provided him with the finances to pursue his goals.[5]

Rise of Magneto

[edit]

Magneto's experiences during the Holocaust (Nazi Germany, Auschwitz, and Vinnytsia) shaped his outlook on the situation that mutants face in the Marvel Universe. Determined to keep such atrocities from ever being committed against mutantkind, he is willing to use deadly force to protect mutants. He believes that mutants ("Homo superior") will become the dominant life form on the planet and he sets about either creating a homeland on Earth where mutants can live peacefully, or conquering and enslaving humanity in the name of mutantkind.

Magneto's first villainous act is attacking a United States military base called Cape Citadel after bringing down missiles. He is driven off by Charles Xavier's mutant students, the X-Men, in their first mission.[32] He creates Asteroid M, an orbital base of operations in a hollowed-out asteroid. He then gathers a group of angry and disillusioned mutants including his own, albeit at the time unbeknown to him, son and daughter Quicksilver and the Scarlet Witch, and formed the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants to further his goals. Magneto briefly conquers the South American nation of San Marco in the hopes of establishing a mutant homeland there, but is again foiled by the X-Men.[33] He tries to make the Toad infiltrate the X-Men. When that fails, he captures the Angel and tries to force him to tell the secrets of the X-Men. However, the other X-Men rescue their member and destroy Asteroid M.[34]

Magneto is captured by the Stranger, a powerful alien being, whom he initially thought was another powerful mutant. The Stranger encases Magneto and Toad in a special cocoon and spirits them away to another planet, the Stranger's laboratory world. Back on Earth, Magneto's Brotherhood splinters, and Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch desert him.[35] Magneto escapes to Earth by repairing a spaceship on the Stranger's planet, but leaves the Toad behind. He captures nearly all the X-Men and takes over the Mansion, hoping to use the Angel's parents to create a race of mutants, but is recaptured by the Stranger.[36] Magneto remains on the Stranger's world for a time, but escapes again thanks to the unwitting assistance of scientist Dane Whitman, makes his way back to Earth, and reassembles the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants with the exception of the mutant Mastermind.[37] He then captures the X-Men, but with the help of the Avengers and a rebellious member of the Brotherhood, Toad, Magneto is defeated again.[volume & issue needed]

Magneto then creates the Savage Land Mutates. With the Savage Land Mutates, he clashes with the X-Men and Ka-Zar.[38] Along with Namor, Magneto later attacks New York City.[39] He later fights the Inhumans Royal Family,[40] and battles the Avengers once more.[41]

Magneto later reorganizes the Brotherhood, and fights Professor X and the Defenders. Using ancient and advanced alien technology he found near the core of the earth, Magneto creates the artificial humanoid "Alpha the Ultimate Mutant". Alpha rebels against his creator and reduces him to infancy.[42] Magneto is then placed in the care of Xavier's former love interest, Professor Moira MacTaggert at Muir Island. At Muir Island, MacTaggert discovers that the prolonged and extensive use of Magneto's powers has a disruptive effect on his nervous system and psyche, causing him to become increasingly paranoid and irrational the more he uses them. In an attempt to cure him of this flaw, she manipulates the infant Magneto's genetic code, so that when he grows older, he will be able to safely use his powers while still remaining rational, to prevent him from becoming "evil" in adulthood.[43] However, her genetic tampering soon loses its effect when Magneto reactivates his powers since the very use of his powers causes his genetic sequence to realign and "reset" to its original state. Magneto is eventually restored to adulthood, but to his physical prime rather than his older, chronological age, by the alien Shi'ar agent Erik the Red.[44]

Magneto later gathers a new Brotherhood of Evil Mutants, and with them battles Captain America.[45] He then successfully opposes Doctor Doom's conquest of Earth.[46]

Reformation

[edit]
Magneto goes on trial for his crimes in Uncanny X-Men #200. Art by John Romita Jr.

Magneto's first steps towards a change in character begin during an encounter with the X-Men, when he lashes out in anger and nearly kills Kitty Pryde, stopping short when he sees that the X-Man that he attacked is a Jewish child — precisely the kind of person he claimed he was fighting to make a better world for. Realizing that he has come to regard the lives of those who oppose him to be as worthless as the Nazis considered his people to be, Magneto stands down and leaves the scene; though most of the X-Men are dismayed that he escaped, Xavier expresses hope that the encounter might prove a turning point for his former friend.[47]

Magneto later discovers that former Brotherhood members the Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver are actually his children, simultaneously learning about their recent marriages to the Vision and Crystal. He reveals to Quicksilver and the Scarlet Witch that he is their father.[48] He also discovers his granddaughter, Quicksilver's human child Luna Maximoff.[48] Seeing Luna as a bond to the human race he has rejected, Magneto tries to reach out to his children. Angered by his rejection of them and their mother, they push him away and refuse to forgive him.[48][49]

Magneto finds himself allied with Professor Xavier and the X-Men when a group of heroes and villains are abducted by the Beyonder, a nearly omnipotent alien being. This entity took them to a planet he created called the Battleworld to participate in a personal experiment of his to observe the concept of the battle between good and evil which would later be known as the Secret Wars. The characters were sorted according to their desires; Magneto was placed with the heroes as his desires were based on a wish to help mutants rather than the more selfish drives of the other villains. This surprises many of the other heroes, who still believe him to be a villain, although eventually they come to accept him as an ally. Captain America even speaks in his defense on some occasions, and the Wasp develops a certain affection for him, although it is tempered by her knowledge of his past.[50]

After the Secret Wars, Magneto is transported back to his base, Asteroid M. The alien Warlock, traveling to Earth, collides into the asteroid, breaking it to pieces.[51] Magneto falls towards Earth and into the Atlantic Ocean, sustaining serious injuries. He is rescued by Lee Forrester, the captain of a fishing trawler.[52] Lee takes him to the same island in the Bermuda Triangle where he had once held her captive; there she helps him recuperate from his injuries, and the two become lovers.[53]

After recuperating from his injuries, Magneto is asked to aid the X-Men in battling the returned Beyonder.[54] Magneto stays with the X-Men even after the Beyonder is defeated.[55] His association with the team softens his views on humanity, and Magneto surrenders himself to the law to stand trial for his crimes. A special tribunal dismisses all charges against Magneto from prior to his "rebirth", deeming that this had constituted a figurative death of the old Magneto. However, the tribunal is interrupted by an attack from Fenris, the twin children of Baron Wolfgang von Strucker. Professor X, brought to near death due to the strain of the battle and previously sustained injuries, asks Magneto to take over his school and the X-Men. Magneto agrees and chooses not to return to the courtroom. Instead, he takes over Xavier's school under the assumed identity of Michael Xavier, Charles Xavier's cousin.[56] Seeing him try to reform, the Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver begin accepting him as their father.[57]

Though Magneto makes a substantial effort as the headmaster of the New Mutants and an ally to the X-Men, his tenure is disastrous. His responsibilities to the school force him to separate from Lee, who he felt would have been a strong guiding hand and emotional support.[58] The Beyonder plagues him yet again, slaying Xavier's current students, the New Mutants,[59] and bringing them back to life soon after.[60] This deeply traumatizes the entire group.[61] Magneto is then manipulated by Emma Frost into battling sanctioned heroes the Avengers and the Supreme Soviets.[62] Magneto submits to a trial once again, but uses mind-control circuitry he salvaged from the wreckage of Asteroid M to alter the opinions of the head justice in charge of the trial. As a result, Magneto is finally absolved of his past crimes but finds that this only fuels hostility towards mutants.[63] Feeling that desperate measures need to be taken after the genocidal massacre in the Morlock tunnels, Magneto and Storm join the Hellfire Club jointly as the White King.[7] He is unable to prevent his students Roberto da Costa and Warlock from running away from the school,[64] or to prevent the death of the young mutant student Douglas Ramsey after the students sneak away yet again to save a friend,[65] and witnesses the apparent death of all of the senior X-Men on national television.[66]

His relationship with the New Mutants deteriorates even further when they see him and the Hellfire Club negotiating with the demons of the Inferno incident.[67] Magneto later ousts longtime Hellfire Club co-chair Sebastian Shaw to establish himself as the head of the Hellfire Club. To win the support of the other Club members against Shaw, he claims that his reformation was all a pretense to use the X-Men and New Mutants as pawns in a long-term scheme to take over the world. In response, the New Mutants, who had already decided to leave Magneto's tutelage, declare themselves his enemies.[8]

Seeing conditions for mutants grow progressively more perilous, Magneto begins seeking allies to protect mutants from humanity. He participates in the Acts of Vengeance alongside such established villains as Doctor Doom, the Wizard, the Mandarin, and the Red Skull.[68] His temporary alliance with the Red Skull — an unrepentant Nazi war criminal — is a highly uneasy one. After confirming that the Skull was the original one who had worked with Hitler, Magneto takes revenge upon him by entombing him alive.[69] When Zaladane is able to appropriate the magnetic powers of Polaris,[70] Magneto works alongside Rogue, Ka-Zar, and the American intelligence agent Nick Fury as well as a number of Russian operatives to reestablish peace in the Savage Land.[71] This leads to an altercation with Zaladane, who appropriated Magneto's magnetic powers in addition to those of Polaris. The conflict ends with Magneto reclaiming his powers and executing Zaladane himself. With her death, Magneto renounces his previous efforts to act as a mentor to the New Mutants and to follow Xavier's beliefs in peaceful co-existence between mutants and normal humans.[72]

Avalon and Genosha

[edit]

Tired of the constant strife, Magneto rebuilds his orbital base and retires to a life of quiet seclusion. At this point, he is a figurehead for the cause of mutantkind and is sought out by a group of mutants calling themselves the Acolytes, who pledge their service and allegiance to him.[73] Under the influence of one of them, Fabian Cortez, he declares Asteroid M a homeland for mutantkind, obtaining nuclear missiles from a Soviet submarine he had previously destroyed and placing them around the asteroid pointed towards Earth.[73]

Magneto discovers how Moira MacTaggert altered his genetic structure when he was de-aged. Enraged, he kidnaps Moira and subjects her to torture, later forcing her to use the same procedure that was used on him to alter the minds of some of the X-Men. However, when the remaining X-Men attack Asteroid M to rescue Moira and stop Magneto's plans, the Soviets launch a particle beam satellite that destroys Asteroid M and the procedure wears off; Moira had learned long ago that her procedure did not work because a mutant's natural physiology relies on their bodies operating in a precise manner, with use of their powers restoring them to normal, and so Magneto had genuinely reformed. Betrayed and abandoned by Cortez, who had revealed Moira's actions to him to try and provoke Magneto into bringing mutants together to serve as a martyr for Cortez's own cause. Magneto refuses Xavier's pleas to escape with the X-Men back to Earth.[74] Instead, the Acolyte Chrome encases him in a protective shell, saving him from the subsequent explosion. However, Chrome and the other Acolytes die.[74]

The United Nations Security Council, in response to a resurgent Magneto, votes to activate the "Magneto Protocols" — a satellite network, in a slightly lower orbit than Avalon, that skews the Earth's magnetic field enough to prevent Magneto from using his powers within, preventing him from returning to the planet's surface. In response, Magneto generates an electromagnetic pulse not only destroying the satellites, but deactivating every electric device on Earth within minutes. The X-Men respond by hacking into Avalon's own computer systems to teleport a small team to the station with the aid of Colossus[75] (who joined Magneto's Acolytes moments after his younger sister Illyana's funeral[76]). Magneto, during the battle with the X-Men, rips the adamantium from Wolverine's bones, which enrages Xavier to the point that he wipes his former friend's mind, leaving him in a coma.[75] This action later leads to the creation of Onslaught, an omnipotent being formed from the combination of Xavier and Magneto's own dark sides, the darkness in Magneto's soul latching on to its counterpart in Xavier when he launched such a devastating assault.[77] Magneto remains comatose on Avalon, worshiped by his Acolytes under the leadership of the ancient mutant Exodus, until Avalon itself is destroyed by the arrival of Holocaust from the Age of Apocalypse Earth. During the destruction, Colossus places Magneto in an escape pod sending him back to Earth.[78] This pod is intercepted by Astra, a former ally who now desires his death.[79]

After cloning Magneto, Astra restores Magneto's memories and powers before attempting to kill him. Instead, Magneto, now fully revived, battles both Astra and his clone. Magneto triumphs over the clone, sending him crashing into a South American barn.[79] However, too weak to continue the battle, the real Magneto goes into hiding, while the now-amnesiac clone becomes known as Joseph (christened as such by the nun who discovered him) and eventually joins the X-Men.[80] Since the world believes Joseph to be the real Magneto, Magneto takes his time to plan. He engages in a pair of brief diversions, first posing as "Erik the Red" and revealing Gambit's past crimes to the X-Men, resulting in Gambit's expulsion from the group.[81] Then he kills George Odekirk, the forger that created his "Erik Lehnsherr" alias, to prevent his true identity from being discovered by Sabra and Gabrielle Haller.[6]

Following this, Magneto constructs a machine to amplify his powers and blackmail the world into creating a mutant nation. The X-Men and Joseph, who had fallen under Astra's control again, oppose him. Magneto's powers are severely depleted from battling Joseph, who sacrifices his life to restore the Earth to normal.[82] However, the United Nations, manipulated by its mutant affairs officer Alda Huxley, cedes to Magneto the island nation of Genosha, which had no recognized government.[82] He rules Genosha for some time with the aid of many who had previously opposed him, including Quicksilver, Polaris, and Fabian Cortez, and engages in a brutal civil war with the island's former human rulers.[83]

Despite the UN's hopes that Genosha's civil war between humans and mutants would destroy or at least occupy him, Magneto crushes all opposition to his rule and rebuilds the nation by forming an army of mutants dedicated to his cause, including mutants coming from all over the world seeking sanctuary. Eventually, Magneto uses the Genegineer's equipment to fully restore his power.[84] Intending to declare war on humanity, he captures Professor X to use as a symbol with which to rally his troops.[85] Jean Grey recruits a new group of X-Men to help Cyclops and Wolverine rescue Xavier; they defeat Magneto when Xavier psychically cuts off his access to his powers. Taking the opportunity for revenge, Wolverine attacks the depowered Magneto, crippling him with serious injuries.[86]

The destruction of Genosha

[edit]

While Magneto recovers from his injuries, Genosha is attacked by an army of Sentinels sent by Xavier's long lost twin sister Cassandra Nova Xavier. Over 16 million mutants and humans die.[87] The attack comes just after Polaris (one of the survivors) discovered the truth about her biological relationship as Magneto's daughter. Magneto's supposedly last moments are spent revealing to Genosha Polaris' status as his daughter.[88]

Charles Xavier is met on Genosha by Magneto, who apparently survived Cassandra Nova's attack and lived unnoticed within the ruins.[89] Xavier and Magneto put aside their differences to rebuild the island nation, rekindling their friendship in the process.[90]

House of M

[edit]
The House of Magnus, from left to right: Quicksilver, Scarlet Witch, her two children William and Thomas, Magneto, and Polaris.

During the House of M storyline, Magneto's daughter Wanda suffers a mental breakdown over the loss of her children and starts to warp reality to recreate them, until Doctor Strange put her into a coma to stop her. In Genosha, Magneto hears Wanda's psychic cry for help and creates a wormhole, whisking her away before the Avengers are able to stop her. Magneto tends to Wanda, increasingly becoming more withdrawn and angry. He allows only Xavier to visit, in the belief that Xavier can help Wanda. After months of failed attempts, the X-Men and the Avengers meet to decide what should be done. When some of the members suggest killing Wanda, Quicksilver informs Magneto of this development, before convincing Wanda to warp reality into the House of M. In the new reality, where the New Avengers, the X-Men, and the members of Wanda's family all received their 'heart's desires', Magneto was attacked by Sentinels over Manhattan in 1979, and revealed an alleged international anti-mutant conspiracy involving Richard Nixon. This resulted in Magneto being granted sovereignty over Genosha as leader of the world's much larger and much faster growing mutant population. Magneto then turned Genosha into the most powerful, technologically advanced country on Earth, which he used as a base to dominate the world and place mutantkind above humanity.[volume & issue needed]

A group of heroes is brought together by Wolverine — who alone remembers the way the world is supposed to be because his 'heart's desire' was to regain all the memories stolen from him by the Weapon X Program — and have their own memories of the "real world" restored by Layla Miller. They band together and attack Magneto in Genosha, believing him to be the one responsible. During the battle Layla is able to restore Magneto's memories, and he confronts his son. Enraged that Quicksilver had done all of this in his name, Magneto kills him. Sensing her brother's death, Wanda resurrects him and retaliates with the phrase "No more mutants", changing the world back to its original form and causing ninety-eight percent of the mutant population to lose their powers, including Magneto. Magneto is left a broken man.[91]

Son of M

[edit]

In the 2006 miniseries Son of M, which follows up "House of M", when Quicksilver comes to Genosha to restore the mutants' powers with the Inhumans' Terrigen Mists, Magneto condemns his actions, pointing out the disastrous effects the Mists have on non-Inhumans. Quicksilver attacks Magneto with his new powers from the Mists and savagely beats him until his daughter Luna stops him.[92]

The Collective

[edit]

Marvel's editor in chief at that time, Joe Quesada, elaborated on the issue of Xorn and Magneto, stating that "Kuan-Yin Xorn came under the influence of as-yet-to-be-revealed entity that forced him to assume the identity of Magneto."[93] However, the issue of Xorn and Magneto was ultimately resolved during "The Collective" arc in New Avengers. A powerless Magneto is attacked by Xorn, who has somehow evolved into a being of pure energy and merged with both an energy-absorbing mutant named Michael Pointer and free-floating mutant power energy that manifested after Scarlet Witch depowered the bulk of the mutant population. Xorn reveals that he, of his own free will, impersonated Magneto to rally mutantkind against humanity but failed due to the quality of his impersonation. He possesses Magneto and briefly reactivates his powers before being defeated by the New Avengers and a cadre of heroes, including Magneto's former son-in-law Vision and Inhuman S.H.I.E.L.D. agent Daisy Johnson. Iron Man, Ms. Marvel, and the Sentry combine their powers and send Xorn into the Sun. Michael Pointer and Magneto are freed as a result, though Magneto is arrested and loaded into a S.H.I.E.L.D. helicopter. The helicopter, however, explodes upon take-off through unknown means as Magneto uses what was left of the energy provided to him by Xorn to escape.[94]

Divided We Stand

[edit]

In the 2008 storyline X-Men: Divided We Stand, Magneto appears, apparently at the behest of Exodus and claiming to be powerless, to help restore Professor Xavier's broken psyche.[95] Together they revive Xavier before being attacked by Frenzy. Magneto wounds Frenzy by firing a medical laser into one of her eyes. Seeing the injury of a mutant as a crime, Exodus attacks Magneto. Xavier challenges Exodus on the astral plane. After Xavier defeats Exodus, he leaves Magneto and Omega Sentinel to try and rebuild his lost memories.[96]

Manifest Destiny

[edit]

Magneto, his powers artificially simulated by a suit designed by the High Evolutionary, reactivates Sentinels to attack the X-Men, who had recently relocated to San Francisco. Though he is defeated, Magneto's attack serves its purpose as a distraction so the High Evolutionary can gain an unknown object from the Dreaming Celestial.[97] After extensively examining the Dreaming Celestial, the High Evolutionary subjects Magneto to a dangerous technological procedure, restoring his powers.[98]

"Nation X"

[edit]

In the "Nation X" storyline, impressed with the X-Men's efforts in defending and helping mutantkind, Magneto offers to work with them on Utopia, the new mutant homeland created by the X-Men using the remnants of Asteroid M.[99] He aids the X-Men in defending Utopia Island from an attack of Predator X monsters.[100] Now considered a member of the X-Men, Magneto assists them in stabilizing the asteroid from sinking into the Pacific. To that end, he works with Namor and the Atlanteans by constructing a pillar supporting Utopia on the surface that would provide a home for the Atlanteans, which Magneto would later refer to as New Atlantis. However, Cyclops reprimands Magneto for acting on his own authority.[101] Despite Xavier being apologetic and appreciative for what he'd done, Magneto leaves Utopia for nearby Mount Tamalpais in Marin County.[102] In a final bid to gain their trust, Magneto enters a deep meditative catatonic state to focus his powers at an interstellar distance and reverse the path of Breakworld's "Earth-destroyer" Metal Bullet in which Kitty Pryde is trapped. Magneto had encountered the bullet earlier while working to regain his powers with the High Evolutionary and surmised that Kitty was inside. He had chosen to focus on ways to restore the powers of mutants but memorized the metals of the bullet, allowing him to keep a trace on it. Magneto brings the bullet back to Earth, drawing Kitty out of it and levitating her safely to the ground. However, the strain of using his power at such intensity and duration leaves him comatose.[103]

Second Coming

[edit]

In the "Second Coming" storyline, Magneto comes out of his coma right after Hope is teleported into Utopia by a dying Nightcrawler.[104] With the Nimrods laying siege to Utopia, Magneto stops Hank McCoy from leaving his patients as he prepares to enter battle himself.[105] Magneto holds off a squad of Nimrods, dismembering the robots by pulling shards of iron from the core of Utopia through them.[106]

The Children's Crusade

[edit]

Magneto learns that the Young Avengers are going to search for the still-missing Scarlet Witch, and that the heroes Wiccan and Speed are the reincarnations of Wanda's children. Magneto meets them, stating that he wants Wiccan and Speed to finally know him as their grandfather, and helps them find Wanda.[107][108] The Avengers attempt to stop Magneto, before Wiccan teleports Magneto and the Young Avengers to Wundagore Mountain. There they encounter Quicksilver, who attempts to kill his father. They discover that this Scarlet Witch is actually a Doombot in disguise.[109]

Magneto goes public

[edit]

With his reputation around the world as a well-known mutant revolutionary/terrorist, Magneto is talked into finding a solution to the problem by Cyclops before it goes public that he is established in Utopia. With an earthquake inbound for San Francisco, Magneto uses his powers to stabilize the city's buildings, structures, and metal vehicles and to smooth the earth movements themselves, thus preventing any major damage and saving many lives. As a result, some of the city favors him, while others are reminded of how potentially dangerous he can be and has been.[110]

Avengers vs. X-Men and aftermath

[edit]

In the 2012 storyline Avengers vs. X-Men, Magneto fights Iron Man when the X-Men will not give Hope Summers to the Avengers. During the fight, Magneto senses the destructive force of the coming Phoenix. Iron Man stops the fight in favor of helping in the search for Hope. As he is leaving, Magneto tells him to find his daughter Scarlet Witch.[111] After the battles around the world, Magneto and Psylocke meet Storm and an unconscious Doctor Nemesis at one of their hideouts. Magneto, Storm and Psylocke prepare to go to the Moon to help Cyclops.[112] Magneto later informs Cyclops of Namor's assault on Wakanda.[113] Magneto asks Professor X for his help as the Phoenix Force-powered Emma Frost's rule becomes more tyrannical.[114] Magneto later joins the Avengers, the X-Men, and the Hulk in confronting the Phoenix Force-powered Cyclops. Scarlet Witch uses her abilities to keep Magneto from being harmed.[115] Following the defeat of Cyclops, Magneto and the other former members are reported to have gone on the run.[116]

After finding out that his control of his powers has been lost due to contact with the Phoenix Force, Magneto nonetheless teams up with Cyclops, Emma Frost, and Magik to start a new school for mutants since new mutants have started appearing again, in the old Weapon X facility.[117] Magneto also pretended to serve as a disgruntled informer for SHIELD but it turned out to be an attempt by him to infiltrate the organization.[118]

Ongoing Magneto series

[edit]

In 2014, Magneto starred in his first ongoing series, which was written by Cullen Bunn.[119] Feeling disenfranchised by the state of mutant affairs, Magneto decides to venture off on his own to fight for mutantkind's survival on his own terms. The series has been cancelled, with issue #21 being its last issue, which sees Magneto fail to stop the Ultimate Marvel Earth from colliding with the 616 Earth, thus resulting in his death and his daughter Polaris's loss of powers.

AXIS

[edit]

During the 2014 AXIS storyline, Magneto enters the island of Genosha to find that it has turned into a concentration camp for mutants. He frees two mutant girls who tell him that Red Skull is responsible and possesses Professor X's brain. Magneto attacks Red Skull, but is quickly stopped by his S-Men.[120] Magneto is captured and mind-tortured by Red Skull. He is given visions of those closest to him suffering while being unable to do anything to stop it. After being freed by the Scarlet Witch, Rogue, and Havok, he bites down on a vial of Mutant Growth Hormone beneath his skin, giving himself enough power to fight.[121] When Havok, Rogue, and Scarlet Witch want to leave the island and alert the rest of the Avengers and X-Men of what Red Skull is doing, Magneto says he's going to stay and fight. Before they can do anything, Red Skull appears.[122] Red Skull now has the group mind-controlled. He plans on using the Scarlet Witch's power to shape reality in his image. He tells Magneto to bow if he wants his daughter to remain alive, but Magneto performs a sneak attack enough to break Red Skull's control over the others. In a fit of rage over finding mutants being used for freak medical experiments, Magneto kills the entire S-Men team. Magneto then attacks Red Skull, all while Red Skull tells Magneto that Professor X's greatest fear was him leading the X-Men. Magneto kills Red Skull while the others look on in horror. Magneto believes everything is over only for Red Skull to reappear as a giant called Red Onslaught.[123]

To combat Red Skull's Red Onslaught form, Magneto forms an unnamed group consisting of Absorbing Man, Carnage, Deadpool, Doctor Doom, Enchantress, Hobgoblin, Jack O'Lantern V, Mystique, and Sabretooth.[124] After the villains were inverted by the spell cast by Scarlet Witch and Doctor Doom, the group was soon named the Astonishing Avengers.[125]

When Quicksilver and Magneto try to talk the inverted Wanda down, Wanda attacks them with a curse designed to punish her blood relatives, but when only Quicksilver reacts, Wanda realizes that Magneto is not their biological father.[126] After Daniel Drumm's ghost possesses Scarlet Witch and works with Doctor Doom to reverse the inversion spell, Magneto was affected by it and stopped being a threat to mankind.[127]

When Magneto arrives on Genosha and is confronted by S.H.I.E.L.D. agents, Magneto surrenders to them.[128]

Secret Wars

[edit]

During the "Last Days" part of the Secret Wars storyline, Magneto had to make a choice during the incursion between Earth-616 and Earth-1610. To save the mutant race, he must attempt to destroy the world colliding with his own. To save the mutant race, he must also protect the humans, who are currently celebrating him as a hero and look on with fascination at what he attempts to do when Earth-1610 throws Sentinels against him.[129] As the energies of Earth-616 and Earth-1610 inched closer to impact cascade and send chaos through the streets, Magneto (aided by his daughter Polaris) are taking the fight to this "other" Earth, battling the parallel Sentinels sent after them. Polaris is shocked to see the energy levels her father is exhibiting, all the while trying to protect the people caught in the crossfire of Magneto and the Sentinels. Magneto clearly has one goal in mind, as he rips a building to pieces to use against the killer robots, not caring much for the collateral damage, or the human lives at risk, as people in the building fall to the ground below. Polaris chides him for so reckless an action as she goes to the rescue while Magneto reminisces about the reason he is currently exhibiting this level of power. Magneto and his current right hand, Briar, work with a chemist under Magneto's employ to pump him up with a new cocktail of various drugs to amplify his powers, but Magneto needs further assistance. Months before the final Incursion happened, Briar established at least initial contact with several scientists which included Doctor Doom, Mister Fantastic, the High Evolutionary, Mister Sinister, Doctor Nemesis, and Dark Beast. However, Magneto instead picked out of the lineup the Sugar Man. From him, Magneto acquires the means to initiate his plan, and thanks him in true Magneto style where he leaves Sugar Man barely alive. In the present time, Magneto continues to use the very magnetic forces of the planet to aid him, yet that is more power than he could ever channel and very quickly begins taking a deadly toll on him.[130] As Polaris tries getting him to take a break because his plan is killing him too quickly, Magneto began thinking that he does not believe in resting even for a minute in his eternal war to protect everything he cares about. He recalls picking up the Sugar Man's power amplifiers and his powers go into hyperdrive and he starts having brain aneurysms. In the present day, Magneto sees S.H.I.E.L.D. coming to his aid and grins. Magneto tells Polaris that her help will not be needed for much longer, and she says she does not understand but quickly figures out what her father meant as Magneto absorbs her power and says that it is his responsibility alone and that he could not let her die alongside him and that she still has something to offer the world. Magneto's powers then go nova as all the powers of the Earth's north and south magnetic poles and all the bioelectric energies of the Earth are channeled through him and he reflects on his life role.[131]

All-New, All-Different Marvel

[edit]

As part of the All-New, All-Different Marvel branding, Magneto has been returned to life with no memories of his apparent demise. In the wake of the massive anti-mutant uprising, combined with the discovery that the Terrigen Mists that were spread in the atmosphere are harmful to mutants, Magneto has gathered together a team of mutants (consisting of Archangel, M, Psylocke, and Sabretooth) as his own X-Men to defend mutants at any cost.[132]

"Civil War II"

[edit]

During the 2016 "Civil War II" storyline an Inhuman named Ulysses emerges who can "foresee the future". This divides the superhero community, including the X-Men, with one faction led by Carol Danvers believing that the perpetrators of future crimes indicated by Ulysses' visions should be arrested to prevent said crimes, while an opposing faction led by Iron Man believes this would violate individual civil liberties. Magneto and some of the X-Men side with Iron Man, while Storm and the other X-Men side with Danvers.[133][134] After reaching Ulysses, Magneto asks him why he should not kill or capture him, and Ulysses shows him visions that lead to Magneto leaving Ulysses and New Attilan.[volume & issue needed] It is later shown to be a ploy by Medusa to avoid conflict.[volume & issue needed]

Inhumans vs. X-Men

[edit]

Following the 2016 Inhumans vs. X-Men storyline, Magneto is killed by Psylocke per their agreement that she does this if he was to ever regress to his previous megalomaniacal approach to protecting mutantkind. Upon being left for dead in the Savage Land, his body was found by Exodus and healed by Elixir.[135] Following the conclusion of the war between Inhumans and X-Men, with Medusa unleashing the device to destroy the Terrigen Cloud permanently, he was temporarily beaten by a maddened Emma, who lied to the rest of the mutants about the true death of Cyclops to trigger the war. He is later saved by Medusa and about to best Emma for her traitorous act, but Havok prevents him and Medusa from executing Emma for the sake of his late older brother.[136]

"Secret Empire"

[edit]

In the 2017 "Secret Empire" storyline, it is revealed that Magneto wants to help the time-displaced original X-Men back to their home timeline.[137] Magneto is approached by Captain America-Steve Rogers, whose memories have been altered by Red Skull's clone using the powers of Kobik to cause Rogers to think that he is a Hydra sleeper agent. Captain America-Rogers pitched an idea to Magneto that involved a piece of land in the western United States be granted to the mutants that would be their independent nation with the condition being that no inhabitant there would set foot on US soil. When Hydra takes over the United States, Magneto gives in to a deal from Captain America-Rogers, now a Hydra Supreme. As a result, New Tian is formed somewhere in California and Magneto fakes his death so that he can hide out in Madripoor.[138] At the time when Emma Frost meets with Hydra Supreme Rogers the same time the resistances are fighting back Hydra, Magneto flies outside the Hydra Helicarrier and uses giant shards of metal to attack it, at the same time Emma and other mutants finally begins their moves on joining the resistance against Hydra to return the Captain America-Steve Rogers they once knew, who was revealed to be sealed inside by Kobik, and replaced and impersonated by his alternate Hydra Supreme counterpart (now goes the name "Grant Rogers" in the present) as a result of Red Skull's manipulation on her all along.[139]

Hunt for Wolverine

[edit]

During the Hunt for Wolverine storyline, Kitty Pryde leads Domino, Jubilee, Psylocke, Rogue, and Storm to Madripoor when they suspect that Magneto has excavated Wolverine's body. When they meet with Magneto at the King's Impresario Restaurant in Hightown, they discover that Magneto is actually Mindblast in disguise as it was part of an ambush by Viper and the Femme Fatales.[140] Magneto is shown to be a prisoner of Viper and the Femme Fatales where Mindblast and Sapphire Styx put Magneto in a weakened state.[141] When Kitty Pryde destroyed the psychic-enhancement equipment on Mindblast's back, Magneto recovers and starts to take revenge on Mindblast until Kitty suggests he leaves her and helps to stop the rocket that will be sent to Soteira.[142] Due to Magneto still recovering from what Mindblast put him through, Kitty Pryde was able to evacuate Rogue and Storm from the rocket. Then Kitty and Domino persuaded Magneto not to take revenge on Mindblast. Magneto spares Mindblast's life and leaves her as a gift for helping him to escape. While Magneto denied any knowledge of taking Wolverine's body, he works to destroy the launch site and purge Madripoor of Viper's criminal empire while also pursuing Viper.[143]

House of X

[edit]

Working with Charles Xavier and Moira X, Magneto helps establish the new sovereign mutant nation known as Krakoa. He is first seen at the Jerusalem Habitat, welcoming several ambassadors from several countries as the newly appointed Krakoan ambassador. He guides the group through several Habitats, then reveals that he is aware of their true nature of being potential plants within Krakoa. Although he claims that he is not threatening them, he tells them that they "have new gods now."[144]

Judgment Day

[edit]

During the "Judgment Day" storyline, Magneto was on Arrako when Nightcrawler appeared to inform them about Destiny's vision of a war with the Eternals. Arrako was later attacked by Uranos the Undying where Magneto was one of his victims.[145] It turns out that he was non-lethally impaled by Uranos' fists after briefly using the metal emitted from Lodus Lugos. After Uranos left, Magneto was still alive as he states that the "seat of loss takes command".[146]

Powers and abilities

[edit]

Magneto is a powerful mutant with the ability to manipulate magnetic fields to achieve a wide range of effects.[147] He is classified as an Omega-level mutant.[148]

The primary application of his power is control over magnetism and the manipulation of both ferrous and indirectly nonferrous metal via metal ores they may contain. Magneto is also capable of creating powerful electromagnetic fields capable of moving and manipulating non-metallic objects, as well as levitating them (he can also do this via force fields). He can even perceive tachyons and a variety of antiparticles.[149] While the maximum amount of mass he can manipulate at one time is unknown, he has moved large asteroids several times and effortlessly levitated a 30,000 ton nuclear submarine filled with sea water from the depths of the ocean.[73] His powers extend into the atomic level (insofar as the electromagnetic force is responsible for chemical bonding), allowing him to manipulate chemical structures and rearrange matter, although this is often a strenuous task. He can manipulate a large number of individual objects simultaneously and has assembled complex machinery with his powers. He can also affect non-metallic and non-magnetic objects to a lesser extent. He can also generate electromagnetic pulses of great strength and generate and manipulate electromagnetic energy down to photons. He even uses the electromagnetic energy that surrounds earth to fly. He can turn invisible by warping visible light around his body.[150] Another way in which Magneto frequently uses his power is the projection of force-fields which selectively block out matter and energy. These fields are strong enough to withstand the simultaneous detonation of multiple thermonuclear weapons, hence Magneto is invulnerable to most harm when surrounded by his shield and can survive in deep space thanks to it. He can also channel his powers through his own body to increase his strength and durability far beyond human limits and has a baseline reaction time 15 times faster than those of regular humans. On occasion he has altered the behavior of gravitational fields around him, which has been suggested as evidence of the existence of a unified field which he can manipulate. He has demonstrated the capacity to produce a wormhole and to safely teleport himself and others via the wormhole.[151]

Magneto has been frequently depicted as able to resist all but the strongest or most unexpected of telepathic attacks. A number of explanations have been proposed for his unusually strong resistance to telepathy, among them: (a) technology wired into his helmet (the explanation given in several comic plotlines[152]), (b) some physical aspect of his electromagnetic powers that can interfere with telepathy (he once used the Earth's magnetic field to dampen the powers of all telepaths within his reach), (c) latent telepathic powers of his own or (d) sheer force of will (cf. X-Men #2). The most commonly used iteration of Magneto's resistance to telepathy is his helmet which he had specially built to prevent Charles Xavier or any other high level telepath of reading, influencing or controlling his thoughts. The theme of latent telepathic powers has been explored in a number of stories, among them the Secret Wars limited series. In some of his earliest appearances, Magneto was depicted as capable of engaging in astral projection. He has used Cerebro to locate mutants at great distances while leading the New Mutants. [volume & issue needed] He has also, on rare occasions, been shown reading others' dreams, issuing telepathic commands, and probing the minds of others.[153] He has demonstrated the ability to shield his mind, while in intense meditation, so completely that even Emma Frost was not able to read his thoughts, despite being directly in front of him and actively attempting to do so.[102]

In addition to his powers, Magneto has many other skills. He is a genius with competence in various fields of advanced science, especially in genetic manipulation, particle physics, engineering, and other fields of technology. He has built advanced weaponry, space stations, superpowered humanoid lifeforms, and devices that generate volcanoes and earthquakes, block telepathy, and nullify all mutant powers across a few miles except for his own.[154] He has promptly reconstructed such computerized devices from memory.[154] He has bio-engineered new species including the Savage Land Mutates,[155] and, using Deviant technology, Alpha the Ultimate Mutant.[156] He is fluent in many human languages and once single-handedly deciphered the unknown language of a lost civilization.[156] He possesses extraordinary skill in "reading" the microexpressions on others' faces and sensing what they are thinking and feeling, whether they are lying, fearful, etc. a skill which he refers to as "taking your enemy's measure".[157] He also is a master strategist and tactician with extensive combat experience, and has often been successful in single-handed combat against entire groups of superhuman adversaries. He also has some military training in hand-to-hand combat and has been shown to be effective with his fists, but he prefers to use his powers when in combat situations.

Cultural impact and legacy

[edit]

Critical reception

[edit]

David Harth of CBR.com called Magneto the "X-Men's most iconic villain", writing: "Tragedy molded Magneto into one of the most well-developed Marvel villains of all time. He's also one of the most popular, which is why he's reformed multiple times in the past. Few villains have had the same effect on the Marvel Universe as Magneto, and he's changed the way fans perceive antagonists."[158] IGN asserted: "Magneto has become bigger than his peers and virtually all of his enemies. It's the sign of a great character when his presence dominates a story and his absence creates a vacuum that cannot be filled by any other. Through his legendary role in Marvel Comics over the years as well as fantastic portrayals in film and animation, it's hard to argue that there has ever been a villain more complex, nuanced, sympathetic and yet irrevocably evil."[159]

Accolades

[edit]
  • In 2006, Wizard Magazine ranked Magneto 17th in their "Top 100 Greatest Villains Ever" list.[160]
  • In 2008, Wizard Magazine ranked Magneto 9th in their "Top 200 Comics Characters Of All Time" list.[161]
  • In 2014, IGN ranked Magneto 1st in their "Top 100 Comic Book Villains" list.[159]
  • In 2014, Entertainment Weekly ranked Magneto 20th in their "Let's rank every X-Man ever" list.[162]
  • In 2019, IGN ranked Magneto 2nd in their "Top 25 Marvel Villains" list.[163]
  • In 2019, CBR.com ranked Magneto 3rd in their "X-Men: The 5 Deadliest Members Of The Hellfire Club (& The 5 Weakest)" list.[164]
  • In 2020, Screen Rant included Magneto in their "Marvel: 25 Most Powerful Mutants" list.[165]
  • In 2022, Digital Trends ranked Magneto 8th in their "Marvel's most powerful mutants" list.[166]
  • In 2022, The Mary Sue ranked Magneto 4th in their "8 Most Powerful Marvel Mutants" list.[167]
  • In 2022, CBR.com ranked Magneto 11th in their "13 Most Important Marvel Villains" list.[158]
  • In 2022, Newsarama ranked Magneto 5th in their "Best Marvel supervillains" list.[168]
  • In 2023, CBR.com ranked Magneto 9th in their "10 Most Popular Marvel Characters" list.[169]
  • In 2014, Entertainment Weekly ranked Magneto 20th in their "Let's rank every X-Man ever" list.[170]

Literary reception

[edit]

Volumes

[edit]

Magneto - 2014

[edit]

According to Diamond Comic Distributors, Magneto #1 was the 19th best selling comic book in March 2014.[171][172][173]

Eric Diaz of Nerdist called Magneto #1 "tight, disturbing and even managed to be funny at times," asserting, "Of all the classic super villains in the Marvel and DC universes, Magneto is the easiest sell as an ongoing series, simply because on some level we all sympathize with him. You couldn't really do a Dr. Doom series, or a Joker series (both have been tried, both didn't really work), and have it connect with an audience in the same way, but Magneto is an entirely different animal. So far, Marvel seems to be off a great start with this one, and this is definitely a book worth checking out."[174] Mat Elfring of ComicVine gave Magneto #1 a grade of 5 out of 5 stars, saying, " The majority of the time, when a member of the X-Men gets their own solo book, it lacks purpose and direction. It feels like a cash grab, waiting to fizzle out into cancellation. Magneto is a book with a purpose and it feels right. This first issue really sticks with the reader because of the tone and it blew me away. This book has a very talented writing and art team behind it. This first issue really grabs you, and while there are a few small problems, like what's going on with Magneto's powers and it being tough to swallow that Magneto is a bit of a Punisher archetype, the overall book is still fantastic."[175]

X-Men Black: Magneto - 2018

[edit]

According to Diamond Comic Distributors, X-Men Black: Magneto #1 was the 31st best selling comic book in October 2018.[176][177][178]

Jamie Lovett of ComicBook.com gave X-Men Black: Magneto #1 a grade of 3 out of 5, writing, "Chris Claremont has a talent for filling in every corner of a character's personality, and that talent is on display in X-Men Black: Magneto, where we learn about Magneto's appreciation for speculative fiction, but his actual characterization of Magneto feels all over the place. The current metaplot of the X-Men line has sent Magneto on a fresh villain turn which Claremont seems forced to adhere to. But he seems to be resisting it as well, piling on justifications for every thought and action Magneto takes, painting a picture of Magneto that feels both incomplete and contradictory. The story also has at least one child who talks like a post-graduate thesis too many. Lonnie Nadler and Zac Thompson's backup story centering on Apocalypse is more interesting. As the opening chapter in a story that will continue throughout X-Men Black, it's just enough to whet your appetite, but Nadler and Thompson's take on classic archvillain Apocalypse, Geraldo Borges' artwork, and the hook that reveals itself at the twist at the chapter's end will have readers intrigued."[179] Matt Lune of CBR.com said, "X-Men Black: Magneto #1 gives us two stories, and each have their merits. In the main story, Claremont and Talajic provide an interesting character focus that, while not necessarily breaking any new ground, reinforces Magneto's situation and pushes him forward with a new objective and a potential new character or two. Meanwhile, Thompson, Nadler and Borges' Apocalypse backup puts the villain back on the table in a fresh way that will be interesting to watch moving forward. We may be in a brief limbo with regards to the X-Men line, but X-Men Black has started in a strong way that shouldn't be readily dismissed."[180]

Magneto was ranked by IGN as the Greatest Comic Book Villain of All Time.[181][182]

In 2019, CBR.com ranked Magneto 3rd in their "X-Men: The 5 Deadliest Members Of The Hellfire Club (& The 5 Weakest)" list.[183]

David Harth of CBR.com called Magneto the "X-Men's most iconic villain," writing, "Tragedy molded Magneto into one of the most well-developed Marvel villains of all time. He's also one of the most popular, which is why he's reformed multiple times in the past. Few villains have had the same effect on the Marvel Universe as Magneto, and he's changed the way fans perceive antagonists."[158] IGN asserted, "Magneto has become bigger than his peers and virtually all of his enemies. It's the sign of a great character when his presence dominates a story and his absence creates a vacuum that cannot be filled by any other. Through his legendary role in Marvel Comics over the years as well as fantastic portrayals in film and animation, it's hard to argue that there has ever been a villain more complex, nuanced, sympathetic and yet irrevocably evil."[159]

  • In 2019, CBR.com ranked Magneto 3rd in their "X-Men: The 5 Deadliest Members Of The Hellfire Club (& The 5 Weakest)" list.[184]

5 | October 2009 | 978-0785126409 |- | X-Men: First Class: Class Portraits | Magneto (vol. 2) #1, Cyclops (vol. 2) #1, Iceman and Angel #1 and Marvel Girl #1 | May 2011 | 978-0785155591 |- | Magneto: Not a Hero | Magneto: Not a Hero #1-4 | May 2012 | 978-0785158608 |- | Magneto Vol. 1: Infamous | Magneto (vol. 3) #1-6 | September 2014 | 978-0785189879 |- | Magneto Vol. 2: Reversals | Magneto (vol. 3) #7-12 | February 17, 2015 | 978-0785189886 |- | Magneto Vol. 3: Shadow Games | Magneto (vol. 3) #13-17 | July 13, 2015 | 978-0785193869 |- | Magneto Vol. 4: Last Days | Magneto (vol. 3) #18-21 | October 10, 2015 | 978-0785198055 |- |X-Men: Black |X-Men: Black - Magneto and X-Men: Black - Emma Frost, X-Men: Black - Mystique, X-Men: Black - Juggernaut, X-Men: Black - Mojo |March 15, 2019 |978-1302915537 |- |Giant-Size X-Men By Jonathan Hickman |Giant-Size X-Men: Magneto #1 and Giant-Size X-Men: Jean Grey and Emma Frost #1, Nightcrawler #1, Fantomex #1, Storm #1 |January 23, 2021 |978-1302925833 |- |Heroes Reborn: Earth's Mightiest Heroes Companion Vol. 1: America's Mightiest Heroes Companion |Heroes Reborn: Magneto & the Mutant Force #1 and Heroes Reborn: Hyperion & the Imperial Guard #1, Heroes Reborn: Peter Parker, the Amazing Shutterbug #1, Heroes Reborn: Young Squadron #1, Heroes Reborn: Siege Society #1 |September 13, 2021 |978-1302931131 |- |X-Men: The Trial of Magneto |X-Men: The Trial of Magneto #1-5 |March 15, 2022 |978-1302932176 |} |Giant-Size X-Men: Magneto #1 and Giant-Size X-Men: Jean Grey and Emma Frost #1, Nightcrawler #1, Fantomex #1, Storm #1 |January 23, 2021 |978-1302925833 |- |Heroes Reborn: Earth's Mightiest Heroes Companion Vol. 1: America's Mightiest Heroes Companion |Heroes Reborn: Magneto & the Mutant Force #1 and Heroes Reborn: Hyperion & the Imperial Guard #1, Heroes Reborn: Peter Parker, the Amazing Shutterbug #1, Heroes Reborn: Young Squadron #1, Heroes Reborn: Siege Society #1 |September 13, 2021 |978-1302931131 |- |X-Men: The Trial of Magneto |X-Men: The Trial of Magneto #1-5 |March 15, 2022 |978-1302932176 |} |Giant-Size X-Men: Magneto #1 and Giant-Size X-Men: Jean Grey and Emma Frost #1, Nightcrawler #1, Fantomex #1, Storm #1 |January 23, 2021 |978-1302925833 |- |Heroes Reborn: Earth's Mightiest Heroes Companion Vol. 1: America's Mightiest Heroes Companion |Heroes Reborn: Magneto & the Mutant Force #1 and Heroes Reborn: Hyperion & the Imperial Guard #1, Heroes Reborn: Peter Parker, the Amazing Shutterbug #1, Heroes Reborn: Young Squadron #1, Heroes Reborn: Siege Society #1 |September 13, 2021 |978-1302931131 |- |X-Men: The Trial of Magneto |X-Men: The Trial of Magneto #1-5 |March 15, 2022 |978-1302932176 |}

Other versions

[edit]

In other media

[edit]

Collected editions

[edit]
Title Material collected Publication date ISBN
Magneto: Rogue Nation X-Men: The Magneto War #1; Uncanny X-Men #366-367; X-Men (vol. 2) #85-87; Magneto Rex #1-3 April 2002 978-0785108344
X-Men: The Magneto War X-Men: The Magneto War #1; Uncanny X-Men #366-371; X-Men (vol. 2) #85-91, Annual 2001; Magneto Rex #1-3, X-Men Unlimited #23 and material from X-Men Unlimited #24 October 10, 2018 978-1302913762
X-Men: Eve of Destruction Magneto: Dark Seduction #1-4; Uncanny X-Men #390-393, Annual 2000; X-Men (vol. 2) 110-113; X-Men Forever #1-6; X-Men: Declassified #1; X-Men Unlimited #30-33; X-Men: The Search For Cyclops #1-4 July 2019 978-1302918255
X-Men: Magneto Testament X-Men: Magneto Testament #1-5 October 8, 2009 978-0785126409
X-Men: First Class: Class Portraits Magneto (vol. 2) #1, Cyclops (vol. 2) #1, Iceman and Angel #1 and Marvel Girl #1 May 13, 2011 978-0785155591
Magneto: Not a Hero Magneto: Not a Hero #1-4 May 13, 2012 978-0785158608
Magneto Vol. 1: Infamous Magneto (vol. 3) #1-6 September 13, 2014 978-0785189879
Magneto Vol. 2: Reversals Magneto (vol. 3) #7-12 February 17, 2015 978-0785189886
Magneto Vol. 3: Shadow Games Magneto (vol. 3) #13-17 July 13, 2015 978-0785193869
Magneto Vol. 4: Last Days Magneto (vol. 3) #18-21 October 10, 2015 978-0785198055

Other versions

[edit]

1602

[edit]

In the alternative history of 1602, Magneto is known as Enrique, or the Grand Inquisitor, his true agenda a mystery. Born a Jew in the Venice Ghetto, he was taken in by a Christian priest and baptized. The Christians later refused to let him return to his Jewish family, saying that giving him back to the 'Christ-killers' would damn his soul to Hell.[volume & issue needed]

Being unable to reunite with his family left him psychologically scarred. When he grew up, he became the leader of the Spanish Inquisition and oversaw the Inquisition from Domdaniel. He was ordered to execute the witchbreed, but hid those who could pass off as normal. Enrique's only known followers are his children Petros and Sister Wanda (Quicksilver and the Scarlet Witch, who are unaware of their parentage. Enrique is, and chooses not to tell them), and his spy in the Vatican, Toad. Enrique uses his position to further his needs and curry favor with influential figures, including King James of Scotland; towards this end, he has all 'witchbreed' killed.[volume & issue needed]

While Enrique is attempting to have Angel killed, the witchbreed is rescued by Iceman and Cyclops. This does not deter Enrique, who continues on his path until Toad is discovered to be a witchbreed by the Pope's men, and to save his own life he sells out Enrique, Petros and Wanda. The trio are set to be sacrificed, but Enrique escapes and pursues many of the other heroes to America. However, the New World is under the threat of impending doom, and Richard Reed determines that to restore balance, Enrique has to co-operate.[volume & issue needed]

With the help of Nick Fury and Thor, Enrique participates in the restoring of the world. He then tells his enemy, Carlos Javier, to train Petros and Wanda.[volume & issue needed]

Age of Apocalypse

[edit]

In the reality of the Age of Apocalypse, Magneto founded Earth-295's X-Men after the death of his friend Charles Xavier, at the hands of Xavier's own son David who traveled back in time to kill Magneto hoping to fulfill his "father's greatest wish".[volume & issue needed]

He and the X-Men fight against the forces of this world's Apocalypse who, having been wakened early by the battle between David and Magneto, was able to take over North America in the absence of Xavier's interference. Holocaust, Sinister, Mikhail Rasputin and Abyss are Apocalypse's horsemen, and while Magneto's team is composed not only of X-Men but also of standard "evil" mutants from traditional timelines, including mutants such as Sabretooth, other individuals who are "heroes" in Earth-616 serve Apocalypse in this timeline.[volume & issue needed]

In this timeline, Magneto is married to his former protégé Rogue, and being able to touch due to his magnetic mastery over his own bio-aura, are able to have a son together who they name Charles, in honor of Xavier. Magneto and Charles are later personally captured by Apocalypse himself,[185] though they are rescued by Rogue and the other X-Men, including Nate Grey, who raid Apocalypse's citadel in a desperate final attempt to save all of reality from M'Kraan crystallization.[186]

As the X-Men use the M'Kraan Crystal to send Bishop back in time to return the timeline to its proper course, Magneto and Nate Grey square off in one last fight against Apocalypse and Holocaust. Nate Grey jams the original fragment of the M'Kraan Crystal into Holocaust, crystallizing them both, while the battle between Magneto and Apocalypse ends with Magneto using his control of magnetism to rip the techno-organic Apocalypse in half. Following this, Manhattan Island and most of North America are enveloped in nuclear bombs.[186]

It is later revealed that the day was saved by Jean Grey, who manifested the Phoenix Force at the point of near-death.[volume & issue needed]

However, nobody realizes this, and everyone assumes it is Magneto, who immediately becomes a reluctant hero to a grateful humanity. The X-Men then help rebuild America in record time, and Magneto is made Federal Director of Mutant Affairs of the government of the newly restored United States of America, with the X-Men deputized as a mutant police force sanctioned to bring to justice the remaining survivors of Apocalypse's regime. Just as the burden of maintaining the deception eventually begins to take its toll on an extremely stressed Magneto, he is secretly visited by Mister Sinister (who everyone has assumed to have been killed by X-Man), who reveals to him just what really happened when the bombs fell. Sinister offers his silence in exchange for Magneto's promises not to go looking for him and to let him have the body of Jean Grey, who is actually still alive. Magneto is forced to accept for the sake of preserving the current fragile peace of global mutant-human relations, which had improved primarily due to the general public's mistaken assumption that he had personally saved the world by singlehandedly stopping nuclear armageddon. A subsequent scheme of revenge orchestrated by an embittered former X-Man later forces Magneto to confess the truth to the rest of the shocked team of X-Men. He is nearly killed by an enraged Weapon X, but is saved by the intervention of his wife. The X-Men then proceed to stop Sinister from conquering the world using his own version of the Sinister Six (which consisted of brainwashed mutants, including this world's version of Dark Phoenix) in a violent confrontation filled with many deaths, including those of both Gambit and Quicksilver. Grief-stricken and guilt-ridden, Magneto then voluntarily goes into U.S. government custody as penance for his deception. While in jail awaiting trial, Magneto appoints a restored Jean Grey as the new leader of the X-Men in his absence.[volume & issue needed]

Amalgam

[edit]

In the Amalgam Comics universe, Erik Magnus is a heroic defender of Metamutants, leading his Brotherhood to save and protect them. After Sentinels created by Magneto's villainous brother Will slaughter his Brotherhood, the heartbroken Erik uses Will's own technology (combined with his power over magnetism) to create a team of "Magnetic Men", each one formed from a different metal, and imbued with the personalities of his fallen comrades.[187]

Days of Future Past

[edit]

In this possible future, when Sentinels rule North America, Magneto is in a wheelchair and, like the rest of the surviving X-Men save Wolverine, held in a mutant concentration camp, his powers suppressed by an inhibitor collar. It is implied but never stated that he devised the X-Men's plan to escape from the camp and send Kate Pryde's spirit back through time. When Franklin Richards is able to disable the inhibitors and the other X-Men flee the camp, Magneto stays behind to cover their escape and is presumably killed by the Sentinels.[volume & issue needed]

Earth-110

[edit]

Magneto and his Brotherhood of Mutants allied with Doctor Doom, Hulk, Namor, Red Skull, and Ultron in a plot to take over Manhattan.[188] Magneto was defeated by Mockingbird.[189]

Earth X

[edit]

In Earth X, Magneto resides in Sentinel City, a city he constructed after drawing all the Sentinels to the Savage Land and using the extra forces there, destroying all the sentinels and turning them into a city. He rules there with Toad.[volume & issue needed]

After the Celestial is removed from the Earth, the resulting shifts due to the removal of the vibranium within the Earth shifts the magnetic poles such that Magneto is depowered and Toad is given all of Magneto's powers. Toad forces Magneto to constantly dance and humiliates him at every opportunity by forcing him to become a Jester. When the vibranium is restored, Magneto's powers are restored as well. Magneto then joins the other heroes in the fight against Creel.[volume & issue needed]

Exiles/Magnus

[edit]

In the Exiles comics, an alternative good version of Magneto living on Earth-27 falls in love with Rogue. Magneto uses his powers to alter Rogue's DNA so they can touch and kiss. They have a child together, a son whom they name Magnus, who has both his magnetic powers and a white streak in his auburn hair. Magnus quickly shows the potential to be an even more powerful master of magnetism than his father. Unfortunately, during his teens, Magnus develops his second mutation, which turns anyone touched by his skin into immobile steel, never dying. Like his mother he cannot touch anyone. Magnus lives a lonely life, and is eventually forced to join the Exiles, a group of alternative reality mutants forced to repair broken realities. The Exiles first mission involves a reality where all superpowered individuals have been either exterminated or imprisoned. They are instructed to save the one individual who can save this broken reality. They mistakenly release a totally evil and depraved version of Professor Xavier who uses his mental powers without remorse or mercy. Magnus dies on the team's mission after giving his life to stop a bomb set by the leader of high security prison.[190] Later the Exiles learn that Magnus' corpse is trapped inside the Crystal Palace. They free it and return it to his homeworld, where Magnus is buried by his parents.[191]

Marvel Zombies

[edit]

In the reality of Marvel Zombies, Magneto and his Acolytes were a few of the survivors following a plague that caused an undead-like effect in "super-powered beings". It is revealed in Marvel Zombies: Dead Days that he and Fabian Cortez made a deal with an unknown entity from another universe to damage the Earth to let mutants become the dominant force. Though they believe it is the zombie Sentry, the zombified Reed Richards later hypothesizes that it was with an entirely different universe unrelated to the zombie plague and that Sentry's arrival was a coincidence misleading Magneto into believing he had led to the Earth's ruin.[192] Regretful that he has doomed the entire planet and his Acolytes either dead or having retreated to Asteroid M, Magneto returns to earth to help any non-infected beings left. He eventually hides out with a small group of human survivors, a female cop, a lone father and his daughter. He saves Reed Richards of the Ultimate Universe from the Zombies and brings him to their hideout, a subway station. Magneto acknowledges the irony of working with normal humans, but believing that "Beggars can't be choosers when you're down to the last few people alive". Magneto learns the zombified Fantastic Four of his reality had tricked Reed, in a plan to allow the zombies to cross to Reed's universe for more victims. Reed and Magneto work together, first getting diabetic medicine for the young girl, then taking the civilians back to the dimensional teleporter that Reed had emerged from, although they require the aid of the rest of the Fantastic Four to do so (Magneto is the first person outside of the team to explicitly refer to the Ultimate Universe's Fantastic Four as 'superheroes'). After Richards escapes with all three of the civilian survivors and his teammates, Magneto stays behind, not wanting to die but acknowledging that he is the only one capable of destroying Richards' dimensional transporter so that the zombies won't infect Earth-1610.[volume & issue needed]

Magneto destroys the device and flees from the zombies. He is contacted by the Acolytes in Asteroid M, who offer to send a shuttle down; Magneto, however, refuses to let them risk infection, and says that he will find a way up to them somehow. As the battle with the zombies takes place, Magneto decapitates the zombie Hawkeye with Colonel America's shield. He attempts to decapitate the Colonel as well but only succeeds in slicing off the top half of Colonel America's brain. The latter becomes very annoyed at this, demanding double rations when Magneto is caught. Magneto is soon confronted by more zombie hordes, whom he only destroys but with little success as result of them being undead, and prepares for a final showdown. He drops many of them with a rain of metallic debris, but is swiftly bitten by the zombie Wasp. Magneto is pounced upon and devoured before turning, his last words being "I hope you choke on me!" just as Thor and Hulk tear him in two as the rest of the group descends upon him.[193]

In Marvel Zombies 2, a group known as the "Acolytes" established a cult to Magneto in New Wakanda.[volume & issue needed] In Marvel Zombies vs. Age of Ultron Magneto is revealed to have become a zombie. Magneto is transformed into a robot zombie hybrid.

MC2

[edit]

Several characters inspired by Magneto appear in MC2:

  • Magneta- Also known as the Mistress of Magnetism. She first appeared in the comic J2, where she attempts to start her own superhero team. She later takes up crime as a new member of the Revengers in Last Planet Standing.[volume & issue needed]
  • Charlie Philip- He first appeared in Spider-Girl #44, where he wanted to become a crime fighter with magnetic power (With a device he created to wear). He wanted to become Magneto, but without the bad attitude. He came across Spider-Girl when he tried to steal a superhero costume as he had no money. His second appearance was in Spider-Girl #92 where he tried to secure/steal funds to become a superhero, this time posing as Magneto. He is stopped by Spider-Girl and X-People member Push.[volume & issue needed]

Mutant X

[edit]

In the Mutant X universe, Magneto is leader of the X-Men, just as he was for a time in the mainstream Earth-616 universe.[194] Several of the X-Men, however, feel that he has strayed from Professor X's dream and split off to form a separate mutant team, the Six.[195]

Old Man Logan

[edit]

On Earth-807128 during the "Old Man Logan" storyline, Magneto was among the villains that united to take down each of the superheroes. Hawkeye later mentioned to Old Man Logan that he and Absorbing Man killed Thor.[196] He ruled a section of the Western United States until was weakened by old age enough to be killed by the new Kingpin.[197] A flashback revealed that he took down Hawkeye's group of Avengers with help from the Thunderbolts who were coerced by Baron Helmut Zemo. After reluctantly killing Scarlet Witch, Magneto covered this up to Baron Zemo by stating that he did not kill Scarlet Witch.[198]

On Earth-21923, Magneto's history remains the same.[199]

Powerless

[edit]

In Powerless (which takes place in a world without superpowers), Magneto appears as a middle-aged American senator named Eric Magnus. He is involved with a shadowy government conspiracy involving mentally conditioned assassins, and is ultimately killed by Logan after arranging the death of Charles Xavier.[200]

Ruins

[edit]

Warren Ellis's Ruins is a two-part parody of Marvels where the circumstances that gave the normal Marvel Universe's heroes their powers instead led to more realistic effects causing horrific deformities and deaths. The version of Magneto seen in Ruins is shown as a demonstrator protesting the corrupt regime of President Charles Xavier. His powers are uncontrollable, causing him to wear a magnetic-dampening harness around his chest. When a government agent pushes him aside and breaks the device, Magneto unwillingly brings destruction to an airport and kills the agent with a massive neural hemorrhage brought on by intense electromagnets. He meets his end when a plane gets magnetised towards him, killing many in the process.

Ultimate Marvel

[edit]
Magneto on the cover of Ultimate X-Men

In the Ultimate Marvel comics, Magneto, a.k.a. Erik Lehnsherr's background differs greatly from his mainstream history. He has given contradictory accounts of his past; he once told Cyclops how his entire family had died in a large scale genocide (this could indicate a similar origin as the main continuity Magneto, only that he was a descendant of Shoah survivors, not a Shoah survivor himself), but he also claimed to come from a rich family with whom he no longer spoke; although it is possible the family he mentioned at that point was an adopted family, rather than his true family. In Ultimate Origins #3, it is revealed that his parents were Weapon X agents, and that he was responsible for their deaths. His wife's name was Isabelle (whom he still possibly loves), and is aware from the beginning of his familial relationship with Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch. It is also noted that he verbally mistreats them, hinting that he regards them as a living reminder of having an inter-species relationship. An arrogant fantasist who gradually sank deeper and deeper into his self-proclaimed role as Mutant Messiah, Erik Lehnsherr eventually reinvented himself as Magneto, the leader of the Brotherhood of Mutants and a ruthless terrorist who is willing to kill hundreds in the name of mutant supremacy.[201] Additionally, he was the one to cripple Professor X.[202]

In addition, Magneto helped Xavier to create the Savage Land, using his knowledge of technology and genetics. He created an artificial language called Epsilon-Omega, based on Esperanto and featuring its own script, for mutants to use in the Savage Land, as a rejection of human languages. They even have plays, poetry and songs in this language.[volume & issue needed]

This version of Magneto is significantly darker and more cynical than the mainstream version, regarding all humans with utter and unwavering disdain and likening them to "insects". On several occasions, he has attempted to implement unflinchingly genocidal plans for humanity. More than once, dialogue refers to him actually consuming the flesh of human beings as he literally considers them to be animals. He commands a noticeably larger Brotherhood than his mainstream counterpart and has displayed enough power to defeat the Ultimates (even Thor, a literal god, on two occasions by taking his hammer). However, Magneto does believe that humanity has done some good things as is shown in his appreciation for art, especially that of René Magritte. Magneto was imprisoned in a special plastic cell in the Triskelion following the events of "Return of the King", the sixth arc in the series. Aside from a brief mention in the Ultimate Six arc of Ultimate Spider-Man, he was then unseen until "Magnetic North", the 12th arc and the final run for writer Brian K. Vaughan. Magneto was found to have hatched a scheme to escape, utilizing the willing cooperation of Forge and Mystique as well as the unknowing but amicable aid of Longshot's mutation for luck.[volume & issue needed]

Magneto escapes by the end of the arc, leaving Mystique in his cell to impersonate him. He and Longshot then exit the Triskelion unharassed and Magneto makes it clear to Longshot that he has something different planned than any of his more typical world-domination schemes.[volume & issue needed]

Most recently, Magneto has shown up in the "Aftermath", following the death of Charles Xavier. Magneto has apparently freed Forge from prison and there are signs that he is building something. Exactly where he is hiding is still unknown, but with Charles Xavier's death he now believes it's time to speed up his plan. He takes pleasure knowing his former friend is dead (unaware that he is in fact alive and was simply transported into the future). He has a close relationship with Mystique, and arranged for her to be freed from the Triskelion by having Mastermind take her place. He has also apparently established a mutant commune. He appears in Ultimates 3 along with the Brotherhood members Mystique, Blob, Sabretooth, Lorelei, and Multiple Man). They attack the Ultimates Mansion so he can talk to Quicksilver about re-joining the Brotherhood and retrieve Wanda's body. Magneto appeared in "Ultimate Spider-Man" and revealed that the Blob is Liz Allan's father. He tried to recruit her into the Brotherhood.[volume & issue needed]

In the crossover event "Ultimatum", Magneto uses Thor's hammer with his magnetic powers to cause worldwide devastation, flooding New York, freezing Doctor Doom's country and a portion of Europe, causing eruptions of volcanoes and earthquakes in other locations. He also uses an army of suicide bombers composed of Jamie Madrox duplicates, mind-controlled by Lorelei. His army blows up the Academy of Tomorrow, including everyone inside, and the European Defense League. The suicide bombers also try to blow the Triskelion. Thanks to the S.H.I.E.L.D. agents, Carol Danvers, and Iron Man, as well as timely assistance by Clint Barton and Hank Pym's sacrifice, they fail to blow up the SH.I.E.L.D. base.[volume & issue needed]

Because of Magneto's actions the surviving Ultimates (Captain America, Iron Man, Hawkeye, Valkyrie, and Hulk) and some of the X-Men (Cyclops, Jean Grey, Storm, Wolverine, and Colossus) travel to Magneto's floating home and after a fight. Angel is killed by Sabretooth and Wolverine is killed when Magneto removed the adamantium from his body after controlling Cyclops' visors and Iron Man's lasers to shoot him. Then soon after, Nick Fury arrives. Due to Jean Grey's abilities to connect minds together, Magneto learns the truth about mutants: they were created accidentally by some scientific experiments and not by God's wish. Upon learning of this truth, Magneto pleads mercy from Cyclops, stating that Xavier would have done so, but Cyclops disintegrates Magneto's head with an optic blast. Following the worldwide devastation caused by Magneto, the American government brings in new anti-mutant laws.[volume & issue needed]

Recently, Magneto has resurfaced in Egypt alive where he is being worshipped as a God. Whilst doing this, he is instructing Wanda how best to ensure the protection of mutants.[203] However, they are revealed to be illusions by Mister Sinister and Apocalypse.[204]

What if?

[edit]

There were various What If issues that had Magneto as a key character:

  • What if? ... "What if Magneto took over the U.S.A.?" - Following the death of Professor X, Cyclops, and Jean Grey at the hand of Cable, Magneto becomes dictator of the United States uniting the Freedom Force, the Morlocks, the Externals, Shadow King, the Nasty Boys, Fenris, the Savage Land Mutates, the Hellfire Club, and the Mutant Liberation Front. When he took over the White House, the president unleashed Sentinels which killed every mutant and non-mutant. Psylocke tried to warn Magneto about one Sentinel that carried a nuclear warhead, but it was too late. When Magneto destroyed the Sentinel, the nuclear warhead exploded killing him, Storm, Psylocke and every other mutant that was in the White House at the time. This was the Master of Magnetism's first starring role in the series, spinning out of Uncanny X-Men #269.[205]
  • What if? ... "What if Legion killed Magneto?" - Magneto is the focus of this issue, through his mere absence is a departure from the Legion Quest and Age of Apocalypse storylines.[206]
  • What if? ... "What if the Age of Apocalypse had not ended?" - Prominently features Magneto continuing his role as leader of the X-Men, continuing after the events shown in Age of Apocalypse.[207]
  • What if? ... "What if Magneto ruled all mutants?" - Magneto leads the remains of mutantkind, as they float through space on Asteroid M. He manipulates his followers into believing a baby born among them is the next stage in human evolution beyond mutants, leading to the death of the baby. Realizing that the baby was actually just normal and Magneto did this to keep his followers together, Colossus leaves in disgust.[208]
  • What if? ... "What if Professor X and Magneto formed the X-Men together?" - In an alternative reality, Magneto and Xavier's confrontation with Baron Von Strucker did not end with Magneto leaving with Von Strucker's gold. Instead, he was convinced by Gabrielle Haller to let go of his hatred. Together, Magnus and Xavier formed the X-Men and were responsible for advancing the mutant cause and aiding world peace.[209]

X-Men: Fairy Tales

[edit]

In the second issue of the X-Men: Fairy Tales limited series, based on the African story The Friendship of the Tortoise and the Eagle, Magneto appears as the eagle, alongside Professor X as the tortoise. Magneto/eagle has witnessed his family's slaughter when he was young, and had to teach himself to fly and survive. He has many 'demons' of his past that continue to haunt him, although while he is with his friend, Professor X/tortoise, they fade. When they come back to haunt him, he no longer believes in the friendship, thinking himself a danger to those around him.[volume & issue needed]

He also appears in the Japanese story of The little peach boy in which he and his children are demons who have taken over a town. They are defeated by the peach boy (Cyclops) and animals that resemble other X-Men: Beast, Angel, and Iceman.[volume & issue needed]

X-Men: Noir

[edit]

In Marvel Noir, Eric Magnus is a Chief of Detectives in the New York City Homicide Department, a firm believer in eugenics, and leader of the secret society that rules over most organized crime in the city, the Brotherhood. His son, Peter, a former track star, has just joined Homicide, and his daughter, Wanda, is a local socialite who started a relationship with reporter Tom Calloway. Magnus appears to owe most of his success to Sebastian Shaw, the latter stating that the months of practice it took Magnus to lose his eastern European accent is the only thing that Magnus did not get from him. Magnus's last name is revealed to be Magnisky, which the Ellis Island agent misheard as Magnus. He is currently seeking out Anna-Marie Rankin on behalf of Shaw so that they may use her against "Unus the Untouchable", a crime boss and enemy of Shaw and Magnus.[volume & issue needed]

In other media

[edit]

Collected editions

[edit]
Title Material collected Publication date ISBN
Magneto: Rogue Nation X-Men: The Magneto War #1; Uncanny X-Men #366-367; X-Men (vol. 2) #85-87; Magneto Rex #1-3 April 2002 978-0785108344
X-Men: The Magneto War X-Men: The Magneto War #1; Uncanny X-Men #366-371; X-Men (vol. 2) #85-91, Annual 2001; Magneto Rex #1-3, X-Men Unlimited #23 and material from X-Men Unlimited #24 October 2018 978-1302913762
X-Men: Eve of Destruction Magneto: Dark Seduction #1-4; Uncanny X-Men #390-393, Annual 2000; X-Men (vol. 2) 110–113; X-Men Forever #1-6; X-Men: Declassified #1; X-Men Unlimited #30-33; X-Men: The Search For Cyclops #1-4 July 2019 978-1302918255
X-Men: Magneto Testament X-Men: Magneto Testament #1-5 October 2009 978-0785126409
X-Men: First Class: Class Portraits Magneto (vol. 2) #1, Cyclops (vol. 2) #1, Iceman and Angel #1 and Marvel Girl #1 May 2011 978-0785155591
Magneto: Not a Hero Magneto: Not a Hero #1-4 May 2012 978-0785158608
Magneto Vol. 1: Infamous Magneto (vol. 3) #1-6 September 2014 978-0785189879
Magneto Vol. 2: Reversals Magneto (vol. 3) #7-12 February 2015 978-0785189886
Magneto Vol. 3: Shadow Games Magneto (vol. 3) #13-17 July 2015 978-0785193869
Magneto Vol. 4: Last Days Magneto (vol. 3) #18-21 October 2015 978-0785198055
X-Men: Black X-Men: Black - Magneto and X-Men: Black - Emma Frost, X-Men: Black - Mystique, X-Men: Black - Juggernaut, X-Men: Black - Mojo March 2019 978-1302915537
Giant-Size X-Men By Jonathan Hickman Giant-Size X-Men: Magneto #1 and Giant-Size X-Men: Jean Grey and Emma Frost #1, Nightcrawler #1, Fantomex #1, Storm #1 January 2021 978-1302925833
Heroes Reborn: Earth's Mightiest Heroes Companion Vol. 1: America's Mightiest Heroes Companion Heroes Reborn: Magneto & the Mutant Force #1 and Heroes Reborn: Hyperion & the Imperial Guard #1, Heroes Reborn: Peter Parker, the Amazing Shutterbug #1, Heroes Reborn: Young Squadron #1, Heroes Reborn: Siege Society #1 September 2021 978-1302931131
X-Men: The Trial of Magneto X-Men: The Trial of Magneto #1-5 March 2022 978-1302932176

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Rovin, Jeff (1987). The Encyclopedia of Super-Villains. New York: Facts on File. pp. 201–202. ISBN 0-8160-1356-X.[1]
  2. ^ Misiroglu, Gina Renée; Eury, Michael (2006). The Supervillain Book: The Evil Side of Comics and Hollywood. Visible Ink Press. ISBN 9780780809772.
  3. ^ Conroy, Mike (2004). 500 Comicbook Villains. Collins & Brown. ISBN 1-84340-205-X.
  4. ^ a b c d X-Men: Magneto Testament #1
  5. ^ a b The Uncanny X-Men #161 (Sept. 1982)
  6. ^ a b c X-Men Vol. 2 #72 (February 1998)
  7. ^ a b The New Mutants #51 (May 1987)
  8. ^ a b The New Mutants #75 (May 1989)
  9. ^ The New Mutants #35-75
  10. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #350
  11. ^ Vision and the Scarlet Witch Vol 1 #4
  12. ^ a b Foege, Alex (17 July 2000). "The X-Men Files". New York Magazine. Vox Media, LLC. Retrieved 4 April 2022.
  13. ^ Godoski, Andrew (June 1, 2011). "Professor X And Magneto: Allegories For Martin Luther King, Jr. And Malcolm X". Screened. Archived from the original on June 18, 2011. Retrieved May 8, 2016.
  14. ^ Shutt, Craig (August 1997). "Bad is Good". Wizard. No. 72. p. 38.
  15. ^ "(Orthodo)X-Men, On Screen and Off, Irving Greenberg, Jewish Daily Forward, 13 June 2003". Forward.com. 2003-06-13. Retrieved 2012-08-18.
  16. ^ Ami Eden (2003-05-23). "(Orthodo)X-Men". Jewish Daily Forward.
  17. ^ Press, Ivy (May 2006). Heritage Comics Dallas Signature Auction Catalog #820. Heritage Capital Corporation. p. 71. ISBN 978-1-59967-044-7.
  18. ^ Danzig, Glenn; Thibodeaux, Mike (December 1998). "Jack Kirby Interview". The Jack Kirby Collector #22. Retrieved 2023-06-21.
  19. ^ a b Marvel Spotlight: Uncanny X-Men 500 Issues Celebration, pp. 5-7
  20. ^ Lynskey, Dorian (April 6, 2016). "Exclusive: X-Men's Chris Claremont talks through five key storylines". Empire. Retrieved December 26, 2023.
  21. ^ Young, Paul (30 March 2014). "Real Life Inspirations Behind Some of the Best Comic Book Villains". Screen Rant.
  22. ^ Hanks, Henry. "The secret to 'X-Men's' success". CNN.
  23. ^ Darowski, Joseph J. The Ages of the X-Men:Essays on the Children of the Atom in Changing Times. p. 71.
  24. ^ DeCandido, Keith R.A., Haber, Karen, Wein, Len (April 1, 2006). The Unauthorized X-Men: SF and Comic Writers on Mutants, Prejudice, and Adamantium. Benbella Books. p. 23. ISBN 1-932100-74-1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  25. ^ Mordechai Shinefield (2008-06-07). "X-Men mutant survives the Holocaust in new Marvel Comics miniseries". Haaretz. Archived from the original on 2009-09-28. Retrieved 2008-06-09.
  26. ^ The Religious Affiliation of Comic Book Character Erik Magnus Lehnsherr — Magneto. URL last checked 2010-09-28.
  27. ^ Meth, Clifford. Protocols of the Elders of Marvel Archived 2010-08-10 at the Wayback Machine. URL last checked 2010-09-28.
  28. ^ Classic X-Men #12
  29. ^ a b The New Mutants #49
  30. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #274
  31. ^ Excalibur vol.3 #14
  32. ^ The X-Men #1
  33. ^ The X-Men #4
  34. ^ The X-Men #5
  35. ^ The X-Men #11
  36. ^ The X-Men #17-18
  37. ^ The Avengers #47-49
  38. ^ The X-Men #62-63
  39. ^ Fantastic Four #102-104
  40. ^ Amazing Adventures #9-10
  41. ^ The Avengers #110-111
  42. ^ The Defenders #15-16
  43. ^ X-Men #2
  44. ^ The X-Men #104
  45. ^ Captain America Annual #4
  46. ^ Super-Villain Team-Up #14; The Champions #16
  47. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #150 (Aug. 1981)
  48. ^ a b c Vision and the Scarlet Witch #4 (Feb. 1983).
  49. ^ The Avengers #234 (Aug. 1983)
  50. ^ Secret Wars #3 (July 1984)
  51. ^ The New Mutants #21 (Nov. 1984)
  52. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #188 (Dec. 1984)
  53. ^ The New Mutants #23, 24, 26, 28, 29 (Jan., Feb., April, June, July 1985)
  54. ^ The New Mutants #29 (July 1985)
  55. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #196
  56. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #200 (Dec. 1985).
  57. ^ Vision and the Scarlet Witch #6
  58. ^ The New Mutants #35 (Jan. 1986).
  59. ^ The New Mutants #37 (March 1986).
  60. ^ Secret Wars II #9 (March 1986).
  61. ^ The New Mutants #38 (April 1986)
  62. ^ The X-Men vs. The Avengers #1–4 (April–July 1987)
  63. ^ The X-Men vs. The Avengers #4 (July 1987)
  64. ^ Fallen Angels #1 (April 1987)
  65. ^ The New Mutants #60 (Feb. 1988)
  66. ^ The New Mutants #61 (March 1988)
  67. ^ The New Mutants #73 (March 1989)
  68. ^ Avengers West Coast #53
  69. ^ Captain America #367 (February 1990).
  70. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #250
  71. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #274 (March 1991)
  72. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #275 (April 1991).
  73. ^ a b c X-Men #1 (Oct. 1991)
  74. ^ a b X-Men #1-3 (Oct.-Dec. 1991)
  75. ^ a b X-Men #25
  76. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #304
  77. ^ X-Men #53
  78. ^ X-Men #42-43
  79. ^ a b Nicieza, Fabian (w), Davis, Alan (p), Farmer, Mark (i). "Magneto's War: Thanks For The Memories" X-Men Legacy, no. 86 (Mar. 1999). Marvel Comics.
  80. ^ X-Men Unlimited #11
  81. ^ Seagle, Steve (w), Madureira, Joe (p), Townsend, Tim (i). "Trial & Errors" The Uncanny X-Men, no. 350 (Dec. 1997). Marvel Comics.
  82. ^ a b Nicieza, Fabian (w), Davis, Alan (p), Farmer, Mark (i). "Magneto's War: No Surrender !" X-Men Legacy, no. 87 (April 1999). Marvel Comics.
  83. ^ Magneto Rex #1-3
  84. ^ Magneto: Dark Seduction #4 Sept. 2000
  85. ^ X-Men #111
  86. ^ X-Men #113 (June 1, 2001)
  87. ^ New X-Men #115
  88. ^ New X-Men #132
  89. ^ New X-Men #147
  90. ^ Excalibur (comics)#Excalibur (vol. 3): 2004 #20
  91. ^ House of M #8
  92. ^ Son of M #5, 2006
  93. ^ Quesada, Joe. "New Joe Fridays Week 03" URL last checked 2010-09-28.
  94. ^ The New Avengers #20. Marvel Comics.
  95. ^ X-Men: Legacy #208. Marvel Comics.
  96. ^ X-Men: Legacy #209-#210. 2008. Marvel Comics.
  97. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #500. Marvel Comics.
  98. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #507. Marvel Comics.
  99. ^ "The Uncanny X-Men (1963) #516 | Comic Books | Comics". Marvel.com. Retrieved 2012-08-18.
  100. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #515-516. Marvel Comics.
  101. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #520. Marvel Comics.
  102. ^ a b The Uncanny X-Men #521. Marvel Comics.
  103. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #522. Marvel Comics.
  104. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #524. Marvel Comics.
  105. ^ New Mutants vol. 2 #11. Marvel Comics.
  106. ^ X-Men Legacy #237. Marvel Comics.
  107. ^ Uncanny X-Men #526. Marvel Comics.
  108. ^ Avengers: The Children's Crusade #1. Marvel Comics.
  109. ^ Avengers: The Children's Crusade #2. Marvel Comics.
  110. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #534.1 (2011)
  111. ^ AvX: Versus #1. Marvel Comics.
  112. ^ The Uncanny X-Men vol. 2 #13. Marvel Comics.
  113. ^ Avengers vs. X-Men #8. Marvel Comics.
  114. ^ Avengers vs. X-Men #10. Marvel Comics.
  115. ^ Avengers vs. X-Men #11. Marvel Comics.
  116. ^ Avengers vs. X-Men #12. Marvel Comics.
  117. ^ All-New X-Men #1-5. Marvel Comics.
  118. ^ The Uncanny X-Men vol. 3 #1-3. Marvel Comics.
  119. ^ "Magneto, Cullen Bunn". Archived from the original on 2017-05-28. Retrieved 2017-07-13.
  120. ^ Magneto Vol. 3 #9. Marvel Comics.
  121. ^ Magneto vol. 3 #10. Marvel Comics.
  122. ^ Uncanny Avengers #24. Marvel Comics.
  123. ^ Uncanny Avengers #25. Marvel Comics.
  124. ^ Avengers & X-Men: AXIS #2. Marvel Comics.
  125. ^ Avengers & X-Men: AXIS #6. Marvel Comics.
  126. ^ Avengers & X-Men: AXIS #7
  127. ^ Avengers & X-Men #9. Marvel Comics.
  128. ^ Magneto vol. 3 #14. Marvel Comics.
  129. ^ Magneto vol. 3 #18. Marvel Comics.
  130. ^ Magneto Vol. 3 #19. Marvel Comics.
  131. ^ Magneto vol. 3 #20. Marvel Comics.
  132. ^ The Uncanny X-Men vol. 4 #1. Marvel Comics.
  133. ^ Civil War II: X-Men #1-3. Marvel Comics.
  134. ^ Civil War II #4-5. Marvel Comics.
  135. ^ The Uncanny X-Men vol. 4 #9. Marvel Comics.
  136. ^ IVX #6. Marvel Comics.
  137. ^ X-Men Blue #1. Marvel Comics.
  138. ^ Captain America: Steve Rogers #17. Marvel Comics.
  139. ^ Secret Empire #9. Marvel Comics.
  140. ^ Hunt for Wolverine: Mystery in Madripoor #1. Marvel Comics.
  141. ^ Hunt for Wolverine: Mystery in Madripoor #2. Marvel Comics.
  142. ^ Hunt for Wolverine: Mystery in Madripoor #3. Marvel Comics.
  143. ^ Hunt for Wolverine: Mystery in Madripoor #4. Marvel Comics.
  144. ^ House of X #1. Marvel Comics.
  145. ^ A.X.E.: Judgment Day #1. Marvel Comics.
  146. ^ X-Men: Red Vol. 2 #5. Marvel Comics.
  147. ^ "Magneto". Marvel. Retrieved May 31, 2015.
  148. ^ Hickman, Jonathan (2019). House of X. Marvel Comics.
  149. ^ Avengers Academy #22 (Jan. 2012)
  150. ^ Vision and the Scarlet Witch #4 (Feb. 1983)
  151. ^ Excalibur vol. 3 #8 (Feb. 2005)
  152. ^ Ultimate X-Men #6 (July 2001)
  153. ^ The X-Men #5-7 (May–Sept. 1964), The New Mutants #38 (1986), X-Men vs. Avengers miniseries (1987), Marvel Fanfare #33 (1987)
  154. ^ a b The Uncanny X-Men #150 (Oct. 1981)
  155. ^ The X-Men #62 (Nov. 1969)
  156. ^ a b The Defenders #15 (Sept. 1974)
  157. ^ Avengers Academy #6 (Jan. 2011)
  158. ^ a b c Harth, David (2022-03-13). "The 13 Most Important Marvel Villains, Ranked". CBR. Retrieved 2022-11-23. Cite error: The named reference ":0" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  159. ^ a b c "The Top 100 Comic Book Villains". IGN. Retrieved 2022-11-23. Cite error: The named reference ":1" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  160. ^ Wizard, #177, July 2006
  161. ^ Wizarduniverse.com, "The 200 Greatest Comic Characters of All Time", Numbers 20 Through 1, 2008-05-23 Archived May 27, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  162. ^ Coggan, Devan (October 31, 2022). "Yahya Abdul-Mateen II to lead Marvel's Wonder Man series". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved November 23, 2024.
  163. ^ Schedeen, Jesse; Yehl, Joshua (March 27, 2019). "The Top 25 Marvel Villains". IGN. Retrieved February 7, 2023.
  164. ^ Chrysostomou, George (October 4, 2019). "X-Men: The 5 Deadliest Members Of The Hellfire Club (& The 5 Weakest)". CBR. Retrieved October 11, 2022.
  165. ^ Brehmer, Nat (January 9, 2018). "Marvel: 25 Most Powerful Mutants, Ranked From Weakest To Strongest". Screen Rant. Retrieved November 23, 2024.
  166. ^ Allen, Joe (October 22, 2022). "Marvel's most powerful mutants, ranked weakest to strongest". Digital Trends. Retrieved November 23, 2024.
  167. ^ Ulatowski, Rachel (August 25, 2022). "8 Most Powerful Marvel Mutants, Ranked". The Mary Sue. Retrieved November 23, 2024.
  168. ^ Marston, George (August 4, 2022). "Best Marvel supervillains". gamesradar. Retrieved November 23, 2024.
  169. ^ Harth, David (January 22, 2023). "10 Most Popular Marvel Characters, Ranked". CBR. Retrieved February 4, 2023.
  170. ^ October 31, Devan Coggan; EDT, 2022 at 04:05 PM. "Yahya Abdul-Mateen II to lead Marvel's 'Wonder Man' series". EW.com. Retrieved 2024-11-23.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  171. ^ "Top 100 Comics: March 2014". www.diamondcomics.com. Retrieved November 23, 2024.
  172. ^ "Comichron: March 2014 Comic Book Sales to Comics Shops". www.comichron.com. Retrieved November 23, 2024.
  173. ^ "Top 300 Comics Actual--March 2014". icv2.com. Retrieved November 23, 2024.
  174. ^ "Advance Review: MAGNETO #1 — Nerdist". archive.nerdist.com. Retrieved November 23, 2024.
  175. ^ "Magneto #1 Review". Comic Vine. 4 March 2014. Retrieved November 23, 2024.
  176. ^ "Top 100 Comics: October 2018". www.diamondcomics.com. Retrieved November 23, 2024.
  177. ^ "Comichron: October 2018 Comic Book Sales to Comics Shops". www.comichron.com. Retrieved November 23, 2024.
  178. ^ "Top 500 Comics--October 2018". icv2.com. Retrieved November 23, 2024.
  179. ^ "Comic Book Reviews for This Week: 10/3/2018". Comics. 3 October 2018. Retrieved November 23, 2024.
  180. ^ Lune, Matt (October 8, 2018). "Magneto Fights the Power in X-Men Black: Magneto #1". CBR. Retrieved November 23, 2024.
  181. ^ "Magneto". www.ign.com. IGN. Retrieved 5 June 2014.
  182. ^ IGN.com, Top 100 Comic Book Villains, "Magneto is Number 1" Archived 2009-05-18 at the Wayback Machine
  183. ^ Chrysostomou, George (2019-10-04). "X-Men: The 5 Deadliest Members Of The Hellfire Club (& The 5 Weakest)". CBR. Retrieved 2024-11-23.
  184. ^ Chrysostomou, George (2019-10-04). "X-Men: The 5 Deadliest Members Of The Hellfire Club (& The 5 Weakest)". CBR. Retrieved 2024-11-23.
  185. ^ Amazing X-Men vol.1 #3 (1995)
  186. ^ a b X-Men: Omega (1995)
  187. ^ Magneto & the Magnetic Men #1
  188. ^ Fantastic Four: Big Town #1
  189. ^ Fantastic Four: Big Town #4
  190. ^ Exiles #1-2
  191. ^ Exiles #83
  192. ^ Marvel Zombies: Evil Evolution
  193. ^ Marvel Zombies #1
  194. ^ Mutant X #9-12
  195. ^ Mutant X #1 (Oct. 1998)
  196. ^ Wolverine Vol. 3 #67. Marvel Comics.
  197. ^ Wolverine Vol. 3 #68. Marvel Comics.
  198. ^ Old Man Hawkeye #7. Marvel Comics.
  199. ^ Old Man Logan Vol. 2 #8. Marvel Comics.
  200. ^ Powerless #3-5
  201. ^ Ultimate X-Men #1
  202. ^ Ultimate Origins #5
  203. ^ Ultimate Comics: X-Men #07
  204. ^ Ultimate Comics: X-Men #12
  205. ^ What if? vol. 2 #47
  206. ^ What if? vol. 2 #77
  207. ^ What if? vol. 2 #81
  208. ^ What if? vol. 2 #85
  209. ^ What if? vol. 3 #1
[edit]