Danger (comics)

Last updated
Danger
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance Astonishing X-Men vol. 3 #8 (February, 2005)
Created by Joss Whedon
John Cassaday
In-story information
Alter egoInapplicable
Team affiliations X-Men [1]
X-Club [2]
X-Factor
Partnerships Ord
Rogue
Gambit
AbilitiesEnhanced strength and durability
Flight
Energy blasts
Detailed knowledge of the X-Men
Technoformic control over herself & other machines
Ability to create realistic holographic projections
Energy projection and manipulation

Danger is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character was introduced by writer Joss Whedon and artist John Cassaday in Astonishing X-Men vol. 3 #8 (February 2005).

Contents

Fictional character biography

Gaining self-awareness

In Joss Whedon's Astonishing X-Men , the Danger Room developed self-awareness. It is mentioned by Wolverine as 'acting twitchy all semester'. The first thing it does is convince Wing, who has recently been depowered by Ord's cure, to kill himself. [3] The next thing it does is take control of an old, broken Sentinel robot and knock out all the psychics within the X-Mansion. During the Sentinel's attack, Cyclops orders Shadowcat and the students to go hide in the Danger Room for safety, finding the corpse of Wing. It reanimates Wing's corpse and attacks the students. [4] Apart from Wing, there are no additional fatalities among the students. After being freed from its prison, it takes the form of a woman dubbed "Danger" and attacks the X-Men. After defeating the X-Men, she travels to Genosha to kill Professor Charles Xavier. [5]

Xavier was revealed to have known of the Danger Room's sentience and chosen not to reveal it, much to the dismay of the X-Men who seem to view this deception as taking on one of Magneto's former ideals.[ clarification needed ] During the battle on Genosha, she takes control of one of Cassandra Nova's Wild Sentinels and engages Beast in a vicious and brutal fight while the other X-Men take on the Wild Sentinel. After Beast destroys her body, Danger's consciousness was presumed to still exist within the Wild Sentinel's conflicted consciousness. [6]

Ord and Breakworld

Danger later reappears in a new humanoid form, similar to her previous one, in which she infiltrated the headquarters of S.W.O.R.D. to speak with Ord and offer her assistance. [7] Danger and Ord both ended up on Breakworld, along with the X-Men and S.W.O.R.D., and after the robot encountered Emma Frost and the unconscious Cyclops, Emma told the robot that despite its supposed enmity it has let the mutants live too often, meaning it has not overcome its parent programming, so it cannot kill any mutant. Cyclops recovers, and Emma tells Danger to help the X-Men in Breakworld, and in exchange, it will be given Professor Xavier. Danger later attacks some of Breakworld's inhabitants and sides with the X-Men and S.W.O.R.D. [8]

Revenge

Afterwards, S.W.O.R.D. takes Danger into custody. When the S.W.O.R.D. headquarters is destroyed during the Skrulls' Secret Invasion, Danger escapes and goes to Australia, taking on the form of an anthropologist from Melbourne University. She approaches Rogue in her disguise but is targeted by a low flying Shi'ar salvage spacecraft, where she reveals who she really is and that she is going to use Rogue as a conduit so she can get her revenge on Professor Xavier. [9]

After being damaged by the crew, she warps the entire area with her holographic projections of past moments within Rogue's life as well as other famous moments from the X-Men's history. [10] Xavier confronts Danger and she reveals she intended to make Rogue absorb all Xavier's powers and memories permanently. Xavier reveals that when she first said Where am I?, Xavier consulted her Shi'ar makers who assured him it was not possible she could have gained self-awareness and that Xavier had no way of knowing what she was or would become. Xavier tried to free her but because she was really billions of lines of machine code, Xavier did not know which lines to erase without lobotomizing her. Because of not knowing what she was capable of, if she had been freed, she might have killed his X-Men because she had the knowledge and power, so instead Xavier did nothing and watched her suffer. Xavier ends her suffering by repairing her. She then sides with Xavier, Rogue, and Gambit and takes out the Shi'ar salvage crew. Afterwards, with Xavier, she helps Rogue gain full control over her powers. [11]

Utopia

Danger joins Rogue and Gambit to help the X-Men settle the unrest in San Francisco. She saves a child who mistakes her for a Transformer. She comes to aid Rogue and Gambit during a fight with Ares and later departs with the two to find Trance and any other students still out during the riots. [12] After locating Trance, they are attacked by Ms. Marvel who manages to seriously damage her shoulder. [13]

After the events of Utopia, Danger is seen being repaired by Madison Jeffries when they are attacked by Emplate. Danger tries to defend Madison only to be further damaged by Emplate. After being repaired, at the request of Cyclops, she informs the inhabitants of Utopia who Emplate is. [14] She works alongside Madison, Rogue and the X-Club on erasing Legion's many personalities, [15] and is offered the position of warden of Utopia by Emma, which she accepts because it also allows her to study the best and the worst of what humanity has to offer. [16] Danger's first job was to interrogate Scalphunter who was forced into bringing five Predator Xs to Utopia. [17] Armor confronts Danger, due to her being responsible for Wing's death. They get into a tussle. Danger was able to discover Armor's weakness and insists that they talk. Armor angrily expresses to Danger that her presence with the X-Men negatively affects Wing's memory. Danger tells Armor, that she constantly reboots herself, but cannot wipe out Wing's image in her memory. Armor is surprised that Danger can experience feelings of guilt, and she proceeds to tell her about Wing.

Necrosha

As warden of Utopia, some of the prisoners she guards include Empath, Sebastian Shaw and Donald Pierce. She uses her Virtual Reality technology in an attempt to rehabilitate them. [18] During the invasion from Selene's forces, she detects an energy source, but then malfunctions and crashes. Then, Shinobi Shaw and Harry Leland (who have been resurrected by the techno-organic virus) appear and are ready to kill Shaw for preventing Selene's ascent to godhood. [19] However, Danger is able to adapt to the mass increase and severed Shinobi's hand before Sebastian could be killed. [20]

Second Coming

Danger appears to have been compromised as she is not aware that Pierce has free rein to sabotage Utopia's defenses.[ volume & issue needed ]

Wolverine and the X-Men

Beast rebuilds the Westchester School at the behest of Wolverine at the aftermath of the Schism event. Built on the ruins of the previous Xavier Institute, the school is rechristened the Jean Grey School for Higher Learning and is built with state of the art Shi'ar Technology, gifted by the current Emperor of the Shi'ar Empire Gladiator (Kallark) whose son Kid Gladiator is enrolled. The school incorporates a decentralized Danger Room that is integrated into the entire building itself instead of just one room.[ volume & issue needed ]

All-New X-Factor

Danger reappears in the All-New X-Factor series. She appears as a prisoner of a member of the Thieves Guild, which Gambit is running, and when Gambit discovers this, Gambit orders her freed. After restoring her memory which was lost due to the imprisonment, Gambit invites her to join the new X-Factor team. [21]

X-Men: Blue

Danger appears in the form of the Blackbird jet plane and is used as the main transport for the original time-displaced X-Men. [22]

During the Secret Empire storyline, Danger takes Jean Grey and Jimmy Hudson to a prison stronghold to rescue their captured teammates. During the ensuing battle, she reveals her true form and projects holograms of the adult X-Men to keep the guards occupied. [23]

Krakoa

When Krakoa became a sovereign nation for mutants, Madison Jeffries tried to bring Danger with him but the island rejected the home he tried to build for her. Madison was subsequently put into the Pit of Exile for breaking Krakoa's third law and Danger was forced to leave the island. [24] Abandoned and alone, Danger joined and began working with the CIA's Dolores Ramirez and potentially the anti-mutant organization Orchis and is revealed to be behind the "X-Robots". [25] It was later revealed by Third Eye's report that Danger is not a villain, but just a non-mutant being who has been abused and rejected by Krakoan society and abandoned by those meant to protect her. [26]

Danger is set to appear in a new Exiles series in 2026. [27]

Powers and abilities

As Danger gained self-awareness and adopted a more humanoid appearance, she has shown enhanced strength and durability, the abilities to create hard-light holographic projections that can affect entire areas, emit modulated energy waves for blasts, binding and protection, flight capability, mechanical regeneration & shapeshifting; with which to alternate her physical form as well as rebuild herself after her body is destroyed (at one point even rebuilding herself with butterfly-like wings which are soon destroyed by Beast), control and assimilate machinery and cybernetic components into herself via thought. She is able to bring other machines into self-awareness and upload her consciousness into foreign digitized or mechanical systems to build, operate or otherwise commandeer new bodies. Danger also possesses more detailed knowledge of the X-Men and their combat skills than any other source, having trained against them as the Danger Room for generations.[ citation needed ]

Reception

Molly Louise Sharp in her dissertation on heroines and feminism wrote that "from a third wave feminist perspective, Danger seems to be constructed as a radical feminist character as viewed through a third wave feminist lens... Danger is born from a literal revolution of consciousness; she becomes newly sentient and realizes that she is forced into a role that is not fulfilling and in which she cannot reach her potential... Danger herself and her conflict with the X-Men are also similar to radical feminism through patriarchy, essentialism, and separatism. That Danger is a female character is crucial because there is no narrative reason that Danger needs to be female other than to align her with the feminism present in the rest of the text". [28]

In other media

Television

Video games

Miscellaneous

References

  1. Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe A to Z, vol. 13 (2010) Marvel Comics
  2. Uncanny X-Men vol. 2 #1
  3. Astonishing X-Men (vol. 3) #7
  4. Astonishing X-Men vol. 3 #8-9
  5. Astonishing X-Men vol. 3 #10
  6. Astonishing X-Men vol. 3 #11-12
  7. Astonishing X-Men vol. 3 #15
  8. Astonishing X-Men vol. 3 #21-24, Giant-Size Astonishing X-Men #1
  9. X-Men: Legacy #220
  10. X-Men: Legacy #221-222
  11. X-Men: Legacy #223-224
  12. X-Men: Legacy #226
  13. X-Men: Legacy #227
  14. X-Men: Legacy Annual #1 (2009)
  15. New Mutants vol. 3 #5
  16. Uncanny X-Men #515
  17. Uncanny X-Men #517
  18. Uncanny X-Men #515
  19. Necrosha One-shot
  20. X-Force vol. 3 #21
  21. All-New X-Factor #4
  22. X-Men: Blue #1-4
  23. X-Men: Blue #8
  24. Sabretooth (vol. 4) #4
  25. Wolverine (vol. 7) #23
  26. Schlesinger, Alex. "The X-Men's Abuse Has Turned a Vital Hero into a Huge New Threat". Screen Rant. Retrieved January 30, 2026.
  27. Johnston, Rich (September 1, 2025). "The Cosmic Cast of Marvel's New Exiles Series in 2026 (Spoilers)". bleedingcool.com. Bleeding Cool. Retrieved January 30, 2026.
  28. Sharp, Molly Louise (May 2011). "Gender, feminism, and heroism in Joss Whedon and John Cassaday's Astonishing X-Men comics". UT Electronic Theses and Dissertations. University of Texas at Austin.
  29. Pecau, Jack. "Marvel's 7 Best Robot Superheroes". comicbook.com. Comicbook.com . Retrieved January 30, 2026.
  30. Ashford, Sage (May 15, 2025). "The 10 Greatest X-Men Who Aren't Mutants". CBR . Retrieved January 30, 2026.
  31. "Endangered Species: The 25 Most Dangerous Threats To The X-Men, Ranked". CBR. November 6, 2018. Retrieved January 30, 2026.
  32. Allan, Scoot. "10 Smartest Robots In Marvel Comics". CBR. Retrieved January 30, 2026.
  33. Kantor, Jonathan. "25 Marvel Robots That Can Destroy the Hulk". CBR. Retrieved January 30, 2026.
  34. Cronin, Brian. "X-Men: The 15 Strongest Members Ever". CBR. Retrieved January 30, 2026.
  35. Allan, Scoot. "The 10 Best Marvel Robots". CBR. Retrieved January 30, 2026.
  36. Walker, Gary. "10 X-Men Magneto Would Start A Fight With (10 He Actually Respects)". CBR. Retrieved January 30, 2026.
  37. Harth, David. "10 Decisions The X-Men Regret To This Day". CBR. Retrieved January 30, 2026.
  38. Mitovich Webb, Matt (August 10, 2024). "Marvel Zombies (TV-MA!), Spider-Man, Eyes of Wakanda (Iron Fist?!) and Other Animated Series Get Updates at D23". TVLine . Archived from the original on August 11, 2024. Retrieved August 11, 2024.
  39. Shammah, William (February 12, 2026). "The Unbreakable X-Men Assemble in 'MARVEL Tōkon: Fighting Souls'". Marvel.com . Archived from the original on February 13, 2026. Retrieved February 13, 2026.
  40. Sharpe, Zach. "Rally Heroes in the Past to Save the Future in Stern Pinball and Marvel's All-New "The Uncanny X-Men"". businesswire.com. Business Wire . Retrieved January 30, 2026.