X-Force | |
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Schedule | Monthly |
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Written by | List
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Penciller(s) | List
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Inker(s) | List
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X-Force is an ongoing comic book series featuring the fictional superhero team of the same name, published by Marvel Comics in various incarnations beginning in 1991.
X-Force was created by illustrator Rob Liefeld after he started penciling The New Mutants comic book in 1989 with #86. The popularity of Liefeld's art led to him taking over the plotting duties on the book.[ citation needed ] With help from writer Fabian Nicieza, who provided the dialogue for Liefeld's plots, Liefeld transformed the New Mutants into X-Force in New Mutants #100, the book's final issue. Liefeld and Nicieza launched X-Force in August 1991. Rob Liefeld obtained the name for the series from an unknown artist at a convention a few months prior to its release. With the aid of a multiple-variant poly-bagged card, the book sold a record 5 million copies.[ citation needed ] The original line-up of the team included Boom-Boom, Cable (son of Cyclops and Madelyne Pryor), Cannonball (believed to be an External), Domino, Feral (sister of Thornn of the Morlocks), Shatterstar and Warpath (brother of Thunderbird of the X-Men); Siryn (daughter of Banshee of the X-Men) was added to the team in the third issue.
The main opponents of X-Force during its first year were the terrorist Mutant Liberation Front, led by Stryfe, a masked mutant with a mysterious link to Cable. Early issues also featured the wise-cracking mercenary Deadpool, the immortal Externals, and a new version of the Brotherhood of Mutants.
Propelled by Liefeld's art, X-Force became one of Marvel's bestselling comic books immediately after its debut. The series rivaled The Amazing Spider-Man and Uncanny X-Men in popularity, particularly with the adolescent demographic.[ citation needed ] Toy Biz responded to X-Force's popularity by introducing an X-Force action figure line alongside its X-Men action figure line. Liefeld illustrated the series up to #9 and stopped plotting it after #11, as he had become increasingly frustrated with not owning characters he created and that his art was being used on a variety of merchandise while he allegedly received little royalties. Along with six other popular Marvel artists, Liefeld left Marvel Comics in 1992 to form Image Comics.
X-Force continued with Nicieza taking over creative control of the series. Nicieza soon had the team break away from Cable and moved them to a new base in the ruins of Warpath's childhood home at the Camp Verde reservation; he also had former New Mutants Sunspot and Rictor join the team. The series crossed over with most other X-Men related books in the fall of 1992 with the X-Cutioner's Song storyline, co-plotted by Nicieza (who was also writing X-Men vol. 2 ). In that story, Stryfe frames Cable for an assassination attempt on the X-Men's founder Professor X, leading to a clash between the X-Men and X-Force. The crossover boosted Cable's popularity, despite the character's apparent death in X-Force #18, leading to his own solo series being launched in 1993.
After X-Cutioner's Song, X-Force continued under Nicieza with new artist Greg Capullo. With Cannonball taking over as leader, X-Force develop an identity of their own as an independent team. Cable would return in the Fatal Attractions crossover, with a less hardline leadership stance. Capullo departed from the series at this point, first succeeded by Matt Broome and then Tony Daniel. The team grew into a dysfunctional family, and the title regularly combined soap opera plot threads, such as romance and Siryn's alcoholism, with violent action. Nicieza fleshed out previously unknown elements of each character's history, including Siryn's family in Ireland, [1] Rictor's in Mexico, [2] Cannonball's in Kentucky, [3] and Shatterstar's in Mojoworld. [4] This period also saw reappearances of characters from the group's New Mutants days, such as Rusty and Skids, [5] Danielle Moonstar, [6] and Cypher and Wolfsbane. [7] In issue #40 the team moved to a new underground base beneath Manhattan, formerly belonging to the supervillain Arcade. A long-simmering sub-plot about Reignfire and the disappearance of Sunspot came to a climax just as the book went on hiatus for the Age of Apocalypse crossover event in 1995, ending on a cliffhanger.
X-Force was radically overhauled in the wake of Age of Apocalypse from issue #44, with a new creative team of writer Jeph Loeb and illustrator Adam Pollina. The in-progress Reignfire story was apparently resolved off-panel between issues, and the team's Manhattan base was abruptly blown up in the X-Men Prime one-shot special. As part of a general editorial push to more closely integrate the various X-Men books, Loeb had the team move in with the X-Men at the X-Mansion and effectively become the X-Men's junior team, complete with introducing new uniforms modelled on the X-Men. Loeb's first issue also saw Cannonball and Rictor written out of the series, with Cannonball “graduating” to the X-Men and Rictor quitting; Caliban, a super-strong albino mutant who possessed the mind of a child, joined the team. Stories in this period generally toned down the series' levels of action and violence. The character Boomer (formerly Boom-Boom) also changed her codename to Meltdown and adopted a new aggressive attitude. Loeb's final story, the three-part Shatterstar Saga, brought Rictor back to the team; it also ambiguously retconned Shatterstar's origins in a manner that was generally regarded as unnecessarily confusing.
In 1997, writer John Francis Moore took over the series and began revisiting plot developments that had been left ignored throughout Loeb's run, including Dani Moonstar infiltrating the MLF and the true perpetrator of the Camp Verde massacre. Following the Operation Zero Tolerance storyline, the team effectively disbanded in issue #70, and Cable, Caliban, Domino, Rictor and Shatterstar were written out of the series. The next year's worth of issues followed the remaining cast members Meltdown, Siryn, Sunspot, Warpath and Danielle Moonstar on a road trip across America. During this time James Proudstar was able to get closure on the massacre of his tribe, and subsequently stopped using the codename Warpath. The Reignfire story was also followed up on, with a new and more complete explanation for what had actually happened during Sunspot's disappearance. Former team members Cable, Cannonball, Domino, Rictor and Shatterstar all made one-off reappearances, as did New Mutants characters Karma and Skids.
In 1998, Moore and new artist Jim Cheung had X-Force move into new headquarters in San Francisco, returned Domino and Cannonball to the team, and added Bedlam, a mutant who could disrupt electronic equipment; they also gained a new ally in sorceress Jennifer Kale. A new major antagonist came to prominence in the Damocles Foundation, an organisation founded by rogue Deviants, Eternals and humans. Magma the former New Mutant also reappeared as an antagonist. Dani Moonstar acquired new superpowers, being able to manipulate quantum energies. Towards the end of the run, Siryn and Sunspot left the team and continued as recurring guests. The 1999 annual starred Rictor and Shatterstar, showing what they had been doing since leaving the team together.
Sales steadily declined throughout this period, falling from selling over 100,000 copies per issue [8] to between forty and fifty thousand by the end of Moore's run with issue #100. [9] A similar sales decline was observed in other ancillary X-Men titles, including Generation X and X-Man.
Writer Warren Ellis, known for his dark, cynical style, was put in charge of revamping X-Force along with Generation X and X-Man under the branding Counter-X, as part of the Revolution revamp of the various X-Men titles in 2000. Ellis' stint on X-Force over issues #102–115, co-written by Ian Edginton and illustrated by Whilce Portacio, saw Bedlam, Cannonball, Meltdown, and Warpath become a covert ops superhero team under the leadership of Pete Wisdom, a British mutant and former intelligence agent who could shoot burning blades of energy from his fingers. Despite the changes in creators, sales continued to decline at the same rate. [10] The run concluded with Bedlam, Cannonball, Meltdown and Warpath all appearing to die in an explosion, although all were revealed to be alive soon after.
In early 2001, the X-Force title was completely reimagined by writer Peter Milligan and artist Mike Allred, who replaced the existing incarnation of the team with an entirely different group of mutants using the X-Force name. Issue #116 saw the introduction of a new, sardonically toned X-Force consisting of colorfully dressed and emotionally immature young mutants put together and marketed to be media superstars. X-Force was canceled with issue #129 in late 2002 and relaunched as X-Statix in late 2002.
In 2004, Marvel released a new six-issue X-Force limited series with the ongoing series' original creative team, with Rob Liefeld as artist and plotter and Fabian Nicieza as scripter. Some controversy arose from Liefeld's insertion of over ten pages from previous unpublished comic books (Weapon X and Cable: First Contact) with word balloons edited to make them fit the X-Force storyline.[ citation needed ] It was subsequently followed with a four-issue prequel X-Force: Shatterstar miniseries.
A new X-Force ongoing series was launched in February 2008, written by Craig Kyle and Christopher Yost and drawn by Clayton Crain.
Cyclops forms a black ops incarnation of X-Force that uses lethal force to permanently deal with threats against mutants. Warpath, Wolfsbane, Wolverine and X-23 form the starting lineup, with Angel, Domino and Elixir joining soon after. Yost had at one point stated that Deadpool would join the cast to bring more diversity to the team, but this did not happen until after his run and the launch of Uncanny X-Force. This team does battle Red Hulk and his team, consisting of Deadpool, Punisher, Elektra and Thundra, as they try to hunt down Domino. [11]
As part of the "All-New Marvel NOW!" campaign, a new volume of X-Force was launched in February 2014, replacing Cable and X-Force and Uncanny X-Force vol. 2. It was written by X-Men: Legacy writer Simon Spurrier and illustrated by Rock-He Kim and Jorge Molina. It features a team of Cable, Psylocke, Fantomex, Dr. Nemesis, and Marrow. [12] The title has ended with 15 issues.
A new volume of X-Force was launched in December 2018. This volume was written by Ed Brisson and illustrated by Dylan Burnett. It features a team of young Cable, Warpath, Boom-Boom, Shatterstar, Deathlok and Cannonball, written by Ed Brisson. [13] It started with the legacy numbering of #231 (adding the issues of X-Force vol 1,2,3,4 and Uncanny X-Force Vol 1,2) This volume ended with issue #10 in order to allow for the Jonathan Hickman led relaunch of all X-Men-related titles.
X-Force was relaunched in November 2019 as a part of Dawn of X, written by Benjamin Percy and illustrated by Joshua Cassara (pencils) and Dean White (colors). [14] The initial team comprised Beast, Black Tom Cassidy, Domino, Jean Grey, Sage and Wolverine, with Kid Omega and Colossus joining in issues #2 and #7 respectively.
The members of the New Mutants changed the team name to X-Force in New Mutants #100 (1991).
Character | Real name | Joined in |
---|---|---|
Cable | Nathan Summers | New Mutants #100 (1991) |
Cannonball | Samuel Guthrie | |
Copycat | Vanessa Carlysle | |
Shatterstar | Gaveedra Seven/Benjamin Russell | |
Feral | Maria Callasantos | |
Boom-Boom | Tabitha Smith | |
Warpath | James Proudstar | |
Recruits | ||
Siryn | Theresa Rourke Cassidy | X-Force #5 (1991) |
Sunspot | Roberto Da Costa | X-Force #15 (1992) |
Rictor | Julio Esteban Richter | |
Domino | Neena Thurman | X-Force #32 (1994) |
Caliban | X-Force #44 (1995) | |
Moonstar | Danielle Moonstar | X-Force #68 (1997) |
Bedlam | Jesse Aaronson | X-Force #85 (1999) |
Pete Wisdom | Peter Paul Wisdom | X-Force #102 (2000) |
Colossus | Piotr Nikolaievitch "Peter" Rasputin | Cable & X-Force #1 (2012) |
Forge | Jonathan Silvercloud | |
Doctor Nemesis | James Nicola Bradley | |
Hope | Hope Summers | Cable & X-Force #16 (2013) |
Psylocke | Elizabeth "Betsy" Braddock | X-Force, vol. 4 #1 (2014) |
Fantomex | Charlie-Cluster 7 (Jean-Phillipe Charles) | |
Marrow | Sarah | |
ForgetMeNot | Xabi | X-Force, vol. 4 #15 (2015) |
Deathlok | X-Force, vol.5 #1 (2018) | |
Beast | Henry Philip "Hank" McCoy | X-Force, vol. 6 #1 (2019) |
Wolverine | James "Logan" Howlett | |
Black Tom | Thomas Samuel Eamon Cassidy | |
Marvel Girl | Jean Elaine Grey | |
Sage | Tessa | |
Kid Omega | Quintavius Quirinius "Quentin" Quire | X-Force, vol. 6 #2 (2019) |
Tommy | Inferno, vol. 2 #1 (2021) | |
Deadpool | Wade Wilson | X-Force, vol. 6 #27 (2022) |
Omega Red | Arkady Rossovich | X-Force, vol. 6 #27 (2022) |
Talon / X-23 | Laura Kinney | X-Force, vol. 6 #39 (2023) |
Phoebe Cuckoo | Wolverine, vol. 7 #48 (2024) | |
Prestige / Askani | Rachel Summers | X-Force, vol. 7 #1 (2024) |
Surge | Noriko Ashida | |
Tank | Unrevealed | |
Allies | ||
Lila Cheney | X-Force #19 (1992) | |
X-Treme | Adam Neramani | X-Force Annual #2 (1993) |
Ship / Prosh | Also known as the Professor | X-Force #39 (1994) |
Risque | Gloria Dolores Muñoz | X-Force #51 (1996) |
Gateway | Uncanny X-Force, vol. 1 #27 (2012) | |
Cluster | Charlie Cluster-7 | Uncanny X-Force, vol. 2 #1 (2013) |
E.V.A. | X-Force, vol. 4 #1 (2014) | |
MeMe | X-Force, vol. 4 #2 (2014) | |
Fiqh | ||
Major X | Alexander Nathaniel Summers | X-Force: Killshot Anniversary Special, vol. 1 #1 (2022) |
Thing | Ben Grimm | |
Venompool | Wade Wilson | |
Maverick | David North | X-Force, vol. 6 #34 (2023) |
Issues | Characters |
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#1–2 | Boom-Boom, Cable, Cannonball, Copycat (as Domino), Feral, Shatterstar, Warpath |
#3–14 | Boom-Boom, Cable, Cannonball, Copycat (as Domino), Feral, Shatterstar, Siryn, Sunspot, Warpath |
#15–24 | Boom-Boom, Cannonball, Feral, Rictor, Shatterstar, Siryn, Sunspot, Warpath |
#25–28 | Boom-Boom, Cable, Cannonball, Feral, Rictor, Shatterstar, Siryn, Sunspot, Warpath |
#29–38 | Boom-Boom, Cable, Cannonball, Domino, Rictor, Shatterstar, Siryn, Warpath |
#39 | Boom-Boom, Cable, Cannonball, Domino, Prosh, Rictor, Shatterstar, Siryn, Warpath |
#40–43 | Boom-Boom, Cable, Cannonball, Domino, Rictor, Shatterstar, Siryn, Warpath |
#44–50 | Boom-Boom, Cable, Caliban, Domino, Shatterstar, Siryn, Sunspot, Warpath |
#51–69 | Cable, Caliban, Domino, Meltdown (formerly Boom-Boom), Rictor, Shatterstar, Siryn, Sunspot, Warpath |
#70–81 | Meltdown, Moonstar, Siryn, Sunspot, Warpath |
#83–86 | Bedlam, Cannonball, Meltdown, Moonstar, Siryn, Sunspot, Warpath |
#87–91 | Bedlam, Cannonball, Domino, Meltdown, Moonstar, Siryn, Sunspot, Warpath |
#92–101 | Bedlam, Cannonball, Domino, Meltdown, Moonstar, Warpath |
#102–106 | Bedlam, Cannonball, Meltdown, Warpath, Wisdom |
#107–115 | Bedlam, Cannonball, Domino, Meltdown, Warpath |
#116 | Anarchist, Battering Ram, Doop, Gin Genie, Plazm, U-Go Girl, Zeitgeist |
#117–118 | Anarchist, Bloke, Doop, Orphan, Phat, Saint Anna, U-Go Girl, Vivisector |
#119 | Anarchist, Doop, Orphan, Phat, Saint Anna, U-Go Girl, Vivisector |
#120 | Anarchist, Doop, Orphan, Phat, U-Go Girl, Vivisector |
#121–124 | Anarchist, Doop, Orphan, Phat, Spike, U-Go Girl, Vivisector |
#125–128 | Anarchist, Dead Girl, Doop, Orphan, Phat, Spike, U-Go Girl, Vivisector |
#129 | Anarchist, Dead Girl, Doop, Orphan, Phat, Vivisector |
Issues | Characters |
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#1–3 | Cable, Cannonball, Domino, Human Torch, Meltdown, Shatterstar, Sunspot, the Thing, Warpath, Wolverine |
#4–5 | Cable, Caliban, Meltdown, Shatterstar |
#6 | Cable, Caliban, Domino, Human Torch, Meltdown, Shatterstar, the Thing, Wolverine |
Issues | Year | Characters |
---|---|---|
Messiah Complex | 2008 | Caliban, Hepzibah, Warpath, Wolfsbane, Wolverine, X-23 |
#1–7 | Warpath, Wolfsbane, Wolverine, X-23 | |
#8–10 | 2008–2009 | Archangel, Elixir, Warpath, Wolfsbane, Wolverine, X-23 |
#11–25 | 2009–2010 | Archangel, Domino, Elixir, Vanisher, Warpath, Wolfsbane, Wolverine, X-23 |
#26 | 2010 | Archangel, Domino, Vanisher, Wolverine |
#27–28 | 2010 | Archangel, Cable, Cypher, Domino, Wolverine, X-23 |
Second Coming #2 | 2010 | Team disassembling – Archangel, Domino, Wolverine, X-23. Team reformation as Uncanny X-Force – Archangel, Deadpool, E.V.A, Fantomex, Psylocke, Wolverine |
Issues | Year | Characters |
---|---|---|
#1–11 | 2014 | Cable, Dr. Nemesis, E.V.A., Fantomex, Hope Summers (as MeMe), Marrow, Psylocke |
#12–13 | 2014 | Cable, Domino, Dr. Nemesis, Hope Summers (as MeMe), Marrow, Psylocke |
#14–15 | 2015 | Cable, Domino, Dr. Nemesis, ForgetMeNot, Hope Summers, Marrow, Psylocke |
Issues | Year | Characters |
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#1–10 | 2018–2019 | Domino, Cannonball, Shatterstar, Boom-Boom, Warpath, Deathlok and Kid Cable |
Issues | Year | Cast |
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#1 | 2019 |
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#2–6 | 2019–2020 |
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#7–8 | 2020 |
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#9–10 |
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#11–12 |
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#13–14 | X of Swords crossover | |
#15 |
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#16 | 2021 |
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#17 |
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#18 |
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#19 |
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#20 |
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#21 |
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#22 |
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#23 |
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#24 |
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#25 |
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#26 |
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Issue | Publication date | Writer | Artist | Colorist | Comic Book Roundup rating [15] | Estimated sales to North American retailers (first month) | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
#1 | November 6, 2019 | Benjamin Percy | Joshua Cassara | Dean White | 8.1 by 23 professional critics | 105,138 [16] | None |
#2 | November 27, 2019 | 8.2 by 15 professional critics | 53,667 [16] | ||||
#3 | December 11, 2019 | 8.2 by 11 professional critics | 47,178 [17] | ||||
#4 | December 18, 2019 | 8.4 by 8 professional critics | 44,872 [17] | ||||
#5 | January 8, 2020 | 8.6 by 11 professional critics | 53,157 [18] | ||||
#6 | January 29, 2020 | Stephen Segovia | Guru e-FX | 8.2 by 13 professional critics | 47,131 [18] | ||
#7 | February 12, 2020 | Oscar Bazaldua | 8.1 by 10 professional critics | 42,808 [19] | |||
#8 | February 26, 2020 | 7.9 by 10 professional critics | 41,153 [19] | ||||
#9 | March 11, 2020 | Joshua Cassara | Dean White | 8.9 by 8 professional critics | 43,075 [20] | ||
#10 | July 8, 2020 | Guru e-FX | 8.2 by 12 professional critics | Data not yet available | |||
#11 | August 12, 2020 | Oscar Bazaldua | 8.0 by 9 professional critics | ||||
#12 | September 9, 2020 | 8.4 by 7 professional critics | 29,500–35,000 [21] | ||||
#13 | October 7, 2020 | Viktor Bogdanovic | Matt Wilson | 7.7 by 11 professional critics | 48,000–53,000 [22] | X of Swords tie-in | |
#14 | November 18, 2020 | Benjamin Percy Gerry Duggan | Joshua Cassara | Guru e-FX | 7.5 by 11 professional critics | Data not yet available | |
#15 | December 16, 2020 | Benjamin Percy | 8.4 by 7 professional critics | None | |||
#16 | January 20, 2021 | 8.3 by 9 professional critics | |||||
#17 | February 10, 2021 | 8.2 by 10 professional critics | |||||
#18 | March 17, 2021 | Garry Brown | 7.2 by 9 professional critics | ||||
Title | Material collected | Publication Date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
X-Force Epic Collection Vol 1: Under The Gun | X-Force #1-15, Annual #1; Spider-Man (1990) #16; Wolverine (1988) #54 | ||
X-Force Epic Collection Vol 2: X-Cutioner's Song | X-Force #16-19, Cable: Blood & Metal #1-2, Uncanny X-Men #294-296, X-Factor #84-86, X-Men (vol. 2) #14-16, Stryfe's Strike File #1, New Warriors #31 | December 2019 | 978-1302920661 |
X-Force Epic Collection Vol 3: Assault on Greymalkin | X-Force #20-26, Cable #1-4, Deadpool: The Circle Chase #1-4, X-Force Annual #2 | December 2023 | |
X-Force Epic Collection Vol 7: Zero Tolerance | X-Force #66-84, #-1 | March 2022 | 978-1302927110 |
X-Force Epic Collection Vol 8: Armageddon Now | X-Force #85-100, X-Force/Champions Annual ’98, X-Force Annual ’99 | June 2023 |
Title | Material collected | Publication Date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
X-Men: Fatal Attractions | X-Force #25; X-Factor #92; Uncanny X-Men #304; X-Men (vol. 2) #25; Wolverine (vol. 2)#75; Excalibur #71 | August 2000 | 0-7851-0748-7 |
Origin of Generation X: Tales of the Phalanx Covenant | X-Force #38; Uncanny X-Men #316–317; X-Men (vol. 2) #36–37; X-Factor #106; Excalibur #82; Wolverine (vol. 2) #85; Cable #16; Generation X #1 | June 2001 | 0-7851-0216-7 |
Cable and X-Force Classic Vol. 1 | X-Force #44–48;Cable (vol. 1) #21–28 | April 2013 | 978-0-7851-6272-8 |
Cable and X-Force: Onslaught Rising | X-Force #49-56; Cable (vol.1) #29-31; X-Man #14, X-Force/Cable Annual '95 | February 2018 | 978-1-302-90949-9 |
Cable and X-Force: Onslaught! | X-Force #57-61; Cable (vol. 1) #32-39; Incredible Hulk (Vol. 1) #444; X-Man #18-19; X-Force/Cable Annual '96 | March 2019 | 978-1302916190 |
X-Men: The Complete Onslaught Epic Vol. 2 | X-Force #57; Excalibur #100; Fantastic Four #415; Amazing Spider-Man #415; Sensational Spider-Man #8; Spider-Man #72; Green Goblin #12; Punisher #11; X-Factor #125–126; Wolverine (vol. 2) #104; X-Man #17; X-Men (vol. 2) #55; Uncanny X-Men #336 | June 2008 | 0-7851-2824-7 |
X-Men: The Complete Onslaught Epic Vol. 3 | X-Force #58; Avengers #402; Incredible Hulk #445; Iron Man #332; Thor #502; Wolverine (vol. 2) #104; Cable #35; X-Men (vol. 2) #55; Uncanny X-Men #336; X-Man #19 | August 2008 | 0-7851-2825-5 |
X-Men: Powerless | X-Force #101; Uncanny X-Men #379–380; Cable #78; Wolverine, vol. 2 #149; and X-Men, vol. 2 #99 | August 2010 | 0-7851-4677-6 |
Counter-X: X-Force | X-Force #102–109 | July 2008 | 0-7851-3304-6 |
Counter X: X-Force: Rage War | X-Force #110–115, 102 Rough Cut | August 2012 | 978-0785159735 |
X-Force: Famous, Mutant & Mortal, Volume 1: New Beginning | X-Force #116–120 | November 2001 | 0-7851-0819-X |
X-Force: Famous, Mutant & Mortal, Volume 2: Final Chapter | X-Force #121–129 | November 2002 | 0-7851-1088-7 |
Title | Material collected | Publication Date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
X-Force: A Force To Be Reckoned With HC | New Mutants #98–100; X-Force #1–4; and Spider-Man #16 | January 2011 | 0-7851-4984-8 |
X-Force: Under The Gun HC | X-Force #5–15, material from Annual #1 | March 2011 | 0-7851-4985-6 |
X-Force: Assault on Graymalkin HC | X-Force #19–25, New Warriors #31 | November 2011 | 0-7851-5899-5 |
X-Force: Toy Soldiers HC | X-Force #26–31, Annual #2; Nomad #20 | April 2012 | 0-7851-6219-4 |
X-Force: Child's Play HC | X-Force #32–37, Annual #3; New Warriors #45–46 | August 2012 | 0-7851-6269-0 |
X-Force: The Phalanx Covenant HC | X-Force #38–43; X-Factor #106; Excalibur #82 | May 2013 | 978-0-7851-6272-8 |
Title | Material collected | Publication Date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
X-Force Omnibus – Vol. 1 | New Mutants #98–100, Annual #7; X-Men Annual #15; X-Factor Annual #6; X-Force #1–15; Spider-Man #16; Cable: Blood & Metal #1–2; material from New Warriors Annual #1, X-Force Annual #1 | February 2013 | 0785165959 |
X-Men: X-Cutioner's Song | X-Force #16–18; Uncanny X-Men #294–296; X-Factor #84–86; and X-Men (vol. 2) #14–16 | May 1994 | 0-7851-0025-3 |
Deadpool and X-Force Omnibus | X-Force #19-31, Annual #2; Cable (vol. 1) #1–8; Deadpool: The Circle Chase #1-4; Deadpool (vol. 1) #1-4; New Warriors (vol. 1) #31; Nomad #20 | November 2017 | 978-1302908300 |
Cable and X-Force Omnibus | X-Force #32-43, Annual #3; Cable #9-20; New Warriors #45-46; X-Factor #106; Excalibur #82, Wolverine #85 | July 2019 | |
X-Men/Avengers: Onslaught | Cable #32-36; X-Force #55, 57-58; Uncanny X-Men #333-337; X-Man #15-19; X-Men #53-57; X-Men Annual '96; X-Men Unlimited #11; Onslaught: X-Men; Onslaught: Marvel Universe; Onslaught: Epilogue; Avengers #401-402; Fantastic Four #415; Incredible Hulk #444-445; Wolverine #104-105; X-Factor #125-126; Amazing Spider-Man #415; Green Goblin #12; Spider-Man #72; Iron Man #332; Punisher #11; Thor #502; X-Men: Road to Onslaught #1; material from Excalibur #100, Fantastic Four #416 | March 2022 | |
X-Men: Operation Zero Tolerance | X-Force #67–70, Generation X #26–31, X-Men #65–70, Uncanny X-Men #346, Wolverine #115–118, Cable #45–47, X-Man #30 | August 2012 | 0-7851-6240-2 |
X-Men vs. Apocalypse: The Twelve Omnibus | Uncanny X-Men #371-380 and Annual '99; X-Men (vol. 2) #91-99 and Annual '99 (#94, A-story only); X-Men Unlimited #24-26 (#24, A-story only); Astonishing X-Men (vol. 2) #1-3; Wolverine (vol. 2) #145–149; Gambit #8-9; Cable #71-78; X-Man #59-60; X-51 #8; X-Force #101; X-Men Yearbook 1999 | February 2020 | |
X-Force: Famous, Mutant & Mortal | X-Force #116–129 | July 2003 | 0-7851-1023-2 |
X-Statix Omnibus | X-Force #116–129; Brotherhood #9; X-Statix #1-26; Wolverine/Doop #1-2; X-Statix Presents: Dead Girl #1-5; and material from X-Men Unlimited #41, I [HEART] Marvel: My Mutant Heart and Nation X #4. | December 2011 |
Title | Material collected | Publication Date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
X-Force and Cable: Legend Returns | X-Force (vol. 2) #1–6 | April 2005 | 0-7851-1429-7 |
X-Force: Shatterstar | X-Force: Shatterstar #1–4, New Mutants #99–100 | August 2005 | 0-7851-1633-8 |
Title | Material collected | Publication Date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
X-Force Volume 1: Angels and Demons | X-Force (vol. 3) #1–6 | November 2008 | 0-7851-3552-9 |
X-ForceVolume 2: Old Ghosts | X-Force (vol. 3) #7–11 | June 2009 | 0-7851-3821-8 |
X-ForceVolume 3: Not Forgotten | X-Force (vol. 3) #12–13, 17–20 | December 2009 | 0-7851-4019-0 |
X-Force/Cable: Messiah War | X-Force (vol. 3) #14–16; X-Men: The Times and Life of Lucas Bishop #1–3; Cable (vol. 2) #11–15; Messiah War; and X-Men: Future History—The Messiah War Sourcebook | August 2009 | 0-7851-3157-4 |
X-Necrosha | X-Force (vol. 3) #11, 21–25, material from Annual #1; New X-Men (vol. 2) #32; New Mutants (vol. 3) #6–8; X-Men: Legacy #231–234; X-Force/New Mutants: Necrosha; and X-Necrosha: The Gathering | July 2010 | 0-7851-4674-1 |
X-Men: Second Coming | X-Force (vol. 3) #26–28; Second Coming: Prepare; X-Men: Second Coming #1–2; Uncanny X-Men #523–525; New Mutants (vol. 3) #12–14; and X-Men: Legacy #235–237 | September 2010 | 0-7851-4678-4 |
X-Force: Sex and Violence | X-Force: Sex & Violence #1–3 | December 2010 | 978-0785149972 |
X-Force by Craig Kyle & Chris Yost: The Complete Collection Volume 1 | X-Force (vol. 3) #1–13; X-Force Special: Ain't No Dog #1, material from X-Force Annual #1 | March 2014 | 0-7851-8966-1 |
X-Force by Craig Kyle & Chris Yost: The Complete Collection Volume 2 | X-Force (vol. 3) #17–25; X-Necrosha: The Gathering; X-Force: Sex & Violence #1–3; material from X-Necrosha and X-Force Annual #1 | September 2014 | 0-7851-9000-7 |
Title | Material collected | Publication Date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
X-Force Volume 1: Dirty/Tricks | X-Force (vol. 4) #1–6 | September 9, 2014 | 978-0785190264 |
X-Force Volume 2: Hide/Fear | X-Force (vol. 4) #7–10; X-Men: Legacy (vol. 1) #300 | February 3, 2015 | 978-0785190271 |
X-Force Volume 3: Ends/Means | X-Force (vol. 4) #11–15 | May 12, 2015 | 978-0785193913 |
Title | Material collected | Publication Date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
X-Force Volume 1: Sins of the Past | X-Force (vol. 5) #1–5 | June 11, 2019 | 978-1302915735 |
X-Force Volume 2: The Counterfeit King | X-Force (vol. 5) #6–10 | September 17, 2019 | 978-1302915742 |
Title | Material collected | Publication date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
X-Force by Benjamin Percy Vol. 1 | X-Force (vol. 6) #1–6 | June 2, 2020 [23] | 978-1302919887 |
X-Force by Benjamin Percy Vol. 2 | X-Force (vol. 6) #7–12 | December 8, 2020 [24] | 978-1302919894 |
X-Force by Benjamin Percy Vol. 3 | X-Force (vol. 6) #15-20, Wolverine (vol. 7) #13 | October 5, 2021 [25] | 978-1302927219 |
X-Force by Benjamin Percy Vol. 4 | X-Force (vol. 6) #21-26 | February 22, 2022 [26] | 978-1302927226 |
X-Force by Benjamin Percy Vol. 5 | X-Force (vol. 6) #27-33 | December 20, 2022 [27] | 978-1302932664 |
X-Force by Benjamin Percy Vol. 6 | X-Force (vol. 6) #34-38 | June 6, 2023 | 978-1302947675 |
X-Force By Benjamin Percy Vol. 1 (HC) | X-Force (vol. 6) #1–12 | June 7, 2022 | 978-1302945077 |
X-Force By Benjamin Percy Vol. 2 (HC) | X-Force (vol. 6) #15-26, Wolverine (vol. 7) #13 | May 30, 2023 | 978-1302950026 |
Tabitha Smith is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, commonly in association with The X-Men and related titles. Created by Jim Shooter and Al Milgrom, the character first appeared in Secret Wars II #5. She then appeared as a member of X-Force and later as a member of Nextwave.
The New Mutants are a group of fictional mutant superheroes appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, generally in association with the X-Men. Originally depicted as the teenaged junior class at the Xavier Institute, subsequent stories have depicted the characters as adult superheroes or as teachers and mentors to younger mutants.
Cable is a character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, commonly in association with X-Force and the X-Men. Nathan first appeared as the newborn infant in The Uncanny X-Men #201 created by writer Chris Claremont and penciler Rick Leonardi, while Cable first appeared in The New Mutants #87 created by writer Louise Simonson and artist/co-writer Rob Liefeld; Cable's origin initially was undecided and he was assumed to be a separate character, but it was later decided that he was actually an older version of Nathan due to being a time traveler.
Robert Liefeld is an American comic book creator. A prominent writer and artist in the 1990s, he is known for co-creating the character Cable with writer Louise Simonson and the character Deadpool with writer Fabian Nicieza. In the early 1990s, Liefeld gained popularity due to his work on Marvel Comics' The New Mutants and later X-Force. In 1992, he and several other popular Marvel illustrators left the company to found Image Comics, which started a wave of comic books owned by their creators rather than by publishers. The first book published by Image Comics was Liefeld's Youngblood #1.
Wolfsbane is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character is commonly associated with the X-Men. A Scottish mutant, Wolfsbane can transform into a wolf or a transitional state somewhere between human and wolf, similar to a werewolf. She honed her powers to shift between human and wolf characteristics but must keep her feral instincts at bay when she does.
The X-Force is a team of superheroes appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, most commonly in association with the X-Men. Conceived by writer/illustrator Rob Liefeld, the team first appeared in New Mutants #100 and soon afterwards was featured in its own series called X-Force. The group was originally a revamped version of the 1980s team, the New Mutants.
Shatterstar (Gaveedra-Seven) is a mutant superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by writer Fabian Nicieza and artist Rob Liefeld, the character first appeared in The New Mutants #99, after which he became a member of the superhero team X-Force. He later became an employee of X-Factor Investigations, a private detective firm starring in the series X-Factor. In 2013, ComicsAlliance ranked Shatterstar as #29 on their list of the "50 Sexiest Male Characters in Comics".
Siryn is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by writer Chris Claremont and artist Steve Leialoha, the character first appeared in Spider-Woman #37. Theresa Cassidy belongs to a subspecies of humans called mutants, who are born with superhuman abilities. She possesses a sonic voice providing various effects while her name refers to the Sirens of Greek mythology and their hypnotic voices. She is depicted most commonly in association with the X-Men. Theresa Cassidy is the daughter of the superhero Sean Cassidy. The character has also been known as Siryn and Banshee at various points in her history.
Domino is a character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character is best known as a member of the mutant team X-Force. Created by writer Fabian Nicieza and artist/co-writer Rob Liefeld, Domino made her first full cover story appearance in X-Force #8 as an original member of the Wild Pack team led by the mutant Cable.
Fabian Nicieza is an Argentine-American comic book writer and editor who is best known for his work on Marvel titles such as X-Men, X-Force, New Warriors, Nomad, Cable, Deadpool and Thunderbolts, for all of which he helped create numerous characters, among them Deadpool, Domino, Shatterstar, and Silhouette.
X-Factor Investigations is a fictional detective agency appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The organization was created by writer Peter David for the comic book series X-Factor. The agency first appears under the name XXX Investigations in the first issue of the Marvel Comics limited series Madrox #1. In the final issue, Madrox #5, the name is changed to X-Factor Investigations, and later abbreviated XF Investigations.
Rictor is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, primarily in the X-Men family of books. The character was created by writer Louise Simonson and artist Walt Simonson and first appeared in X-Factor #17. In subsequent years, the character was featured as a member of the original New Mutants team and the original X-Force team, and continued to appear in various X-Men franchise publications thereafter. In comic books published in the 1980s and 1990s, Rictor's mutant powers were to generate and manipulate seismic energy and creating tremendously powerful vibrations in any nearby object, inducing earthquake-like phenomena and causing objects to shatter or crumble. When the character was reintroduced in 2005, it was as one of many depowered mutants adjusting to civilian life. The character remained depowered until a 2011 comic.
Feral is a character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by Rob Liefeld and Fabian Nicieza, the character first appeared in The New Mutants #99. Throughout her history, Feral has sometimes been a superhero and a supervillain. The character has also been a member of the New Hellions, and the Morlocks, and the X-Force at various points in her history. She is the sister of Thornn.
"X-Cutioner's Song" is a crossover storyline published by Marvel Comics' in twelve parts from November 1992 to early 1993. It ran in Uncanny X-Men, X-Men, X-Factor, and X-Force, and featured Stryfe as the central villain.
Gideon is a fictional character, a mutant supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. He was created by Rob Liefeld and Fabian Nicieza. Gideon was a member of the Externals, a unique type of immortal mutant, and an adversary of the X-Men spin-off group X-Force. He first appeared in The New Mutants #98.
George Washington "G. W." Bridge is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. He is a former mercenary and high-ranking agent of S.H.I.E.L.D.
X-Men: Regenesis is a comic book branding used by Marvel Comics that ran through the X-Men family of books beginning in October 2011, following the end of the X-Men: Schism miniseries. This realignment of the mutant population is ahead of the 2012 Marvel event Avengers vs. X-Men which begins during Regenesis with the mini series Avengers: X-Sanction and brings back Cable, who was previously thought to be dead following the events of X-Men: Second Coming.
Cable is the name of multiple comic book titles featuring the character Cable and published by Marvel Comics, beginning with the original Cable comic book series which debuted in 1993.
The New Mutants is the name of several comic book titles featuring the team the New Mutants and published by Marvel Comics, beginning with the original The New Mutants comic book series which debuted in 1983.
X-Factor is the name of several comic book titles featuring the team X-Factor and published by Marvel Comics, beginning with the original X-Factor comic book series which debuted in 1986.