| | This comics-related article or section describes an element of the series in a primarily in-universe style. Please rewrite this article to explain the fiction more clearly and provide non-fictional perspective. | The Changeling (Kevin Sydney) is a Marvel Comics character, and a member of the X-Men. Created by writer Roy Thomas and artist Werner Roth, he first appeared in X-Men #35 (August 1967). Image File history File links Emblem-important. ...
This article is about the comic book company. ...
In comic books, first appearance refers to first comic book to feature a character. ...
For the second comic book series starring the X-Men, see X-Men (vol. ...
Roy Thomas (born November 22, 1940, Missouri, United States) is a comic book writer and editor, and Stan Lees first successor as editor-in-chief of Marvel Comics. ...
Werner Roth was a comic book artist perhaps best known for immediately succeeding Jack Kirby on The X-Men. ...
In Marvel comic books, particularly those of the X-Men mythos, a mutant is a member of the species Homo sapiens superior, an offshoot of regular humanity, Homo sapiens sapiens. ...
The X-Men are a group of comic book superheroes featured in Marvel Comics. ...
Factor Three was a short lived villainous organization within the pages of X-Men and part of the Marvel Comics Universe. ...
Charles Francis Xavier, also known as Professor X, is a fictional Marvel Comics superhero, known as the leader and founder of the X-Men. ...
For other uses, see Shapeshifting (disambiguation). ...
Telepathy, from the Greek Ïá¿Î»Îµ, tele, remote; and Ïάθεια, patheia, to be effected by, describes the hypothetical transfer of information on thoughts or feelings between individuals by means other than the five classical senses. ...
This article is about the comic book company. ...
The X-Men are a group of comic book superheroes featured in Marvel Comics. ...
Roy Thomas (born November 22, 1940, Missouri, United States) is a comic book writer and editor, and Stan Lees first successor as editor-in-chief of Marvel Comics. ...
Werner Roth was a comic book artist perhaps best known for immediately succeeding Jack Kirby on The X-Men. ...
For the second comic book series starring the X-Men, see X-Men (vol. ...
Year 1967 (MCMLXVII) was a common year starting on Sunday (link will display full calendar) of the 1967 Gregorian calendar. ...
The Changeling is a mutant shapeshifter. He was a short-lived X-Men adversary who, off-panel, joined Professor X’s efforts and died shortly after. The Changeling was the first member of the X-Men to die in action. In Marvel comic books, particularly those of the X-Men mythos, a mutant is a member of the species Homo sapiens superior, an offshoot of regular humanity, Homo sapiens sapiens. ...
For other uses, see Shapeshifting (disambiguation). ...
Charles Francis Xavier, also known as Professor X, is a fictional Marvel Comics superhero, known as the leader and founder of the X-Men. ...
Publication history
The first run of appearances happened in 1967-1968 when he appeared in X-Men #37-42. Although dying at the end of this run he was thought to have been seen as a ghost in Excalibur: The Possession (1991) and returned properly in Sensational She-Hulk #34-35 (1991-1992). Excalibur is a Marvel Comics superhero group, an offshoot of the X-Men, usually based in the United Kingdom. ...
Fictional character biography The Changeling originally worked for the villainous organization Factor Three. Following that group's defeat he reformed and unbeknownst to the X-Men was recruited by Professor X to replace him while he isolated himself to prepare for his fight against the alien Z'Nox.[1] The Changeling, masquerading as Professor X, was killed in battle shortly after by Grotesk.[2] However, the X-Men thought it was actually Professor X who had died and did not find out until later that it was in fact Changeling[3] Factor Three was a short lived villainous organization within the pages of X-Men and part of the Marvel Comics Universe. ...
Charles Francis Xavier, also known as Professor X, is a fictional Marvel Comics superhero, known as the leader and founder of the X-Men. ...
There are several different extraterrestrial races in the Marvel Comics universe. ...
Grotesk is a fictional character in the Marvel Universe. ...
Although dead, Excalibur encountered what they thought was his ghost, however, it turned out to be Merlyn posing as him.[4] Changeling did return and battled She-Hulk when he was raised from the dead by Black Talon to form part of the team X-Humed. It was Changeling who was able to break Talon's control of him long enough to allow She-Hulk to win.[5] Merlyn is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. ...
She-Hulk (Jennifer Walters) is a Marvel Comics superheroine. ...
The Black Talon (left) appears on the cover of She-Hulk #35. ...
Powers and abilities Changeling is a mutant with the ability to alter his physical appearance at will to resemble that of any person he chooses. He also has limited telepathic abilities which (in the original timeline) were enhanced by Professor X. As a side effect he also gained limited telekinetic abilities[citation needed]. He is also a skilled actor. In Marvel comic books, particularly those of the X-Men mythos, a mutant is a member of the species Homo sapiens superior, an offshoot of regular humanity, Homo sapiens sapiens. ...
Telepathy from the Greek τηλε, tele, distant, and πάθεια, patheia, feeling, is the supposed ability to communicate information from one mind to another, and is one form of extra-sensory perception or anomalous cognition. ...
Other versions Changeling is the character from the main Marvel Universe, Earth-616. However, in the 1990s, he was reinvented as Morph[6] in the X-Men animated series (Earth-921031), which led to versions of the character (also named Morph) appearing in stories set in other alternative universes. This article is about the shared universe setting used by many Marvel Comics titles. ...
In the fictional Marvel Universe, Earth-616 or Earth 616 is the name used to identify the primary continuity in which most Marvel Comics titles take place. ...
For the band, see 1990s (band). ...
It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Changeling (Marvel Comics). ...
The X-Men Animated Series debuted in the 1992-1993 season on the Fox Network. ...
Exiles | Morph | |
 Morph from the Exiles. Art by Mike McKone. Morph from the cover to Exiles #2. ...
| | | | Characteristics | | Alter ego | Kevin Sydney/Currently: Kevin MacTaggert | | Species | Human Mutant | Team affiliations | Exiles X-Men Avengers New Mutants | | Notable aliases | Changeling | | Abilities | Can shapeshift into anything, Able to reattach severed body parts, flight | | Morph/Kevin Sydney is a founding member of the Exiles, and since Blink was pulled out between issue #22 and #42 and Mimic was killed in issue #73, Morph is the only one to be consistent throughout the series[7]. This article is about the comic book company. ...
In comic books, first appearance refers to first comic book to feature a character. ...
The Exiles are a group of fictional comic book characters from Marvel Comics. ...
Judd Winick (born in 1970 on Long Island, New York City) is an American comic book and comic strip writer/artist famous for his 1994 stint on MTVs The Real World: San Francisco, as well for his work on such comic books as Green Lantern, Green Arrow, and Pedro...
An editor has expressed a concern that the subject of the article does not satisfy one of the guidelines for inclusion on Wikipedia on one of the following topics: If you are familiar with the subject matter, please expand the article to establish its notability, citing reliable sources. ...
In Marvel comic books, particularly those of the X-Men mythos, a mutant is a member of the species Homo sapiens superior, an offshoot of regular humanity, Homo sapiens sapiens. ...
The Exiles are a group of fictional comic book characters from Marvel Comics. ...
The X-Men are a group of comic book superheroes featured in Marvel Comics. ...
The Avengers are a fictional superhero team appearing in comic books published by Marvel Comics. ...
The New Mutants is the name of two defunct Marvel Comics superhero teams, as well as the title of two series featuring those teams. ...
The Exiles are a group of fictional comic book characters from Marvel Comics. ...
Blink (Clarice Ferguson) is a Marvel Comics superheroine featured in various X-Men-related series. ...
Mimic is a fictional character in the Marvel Universe. ...
Fictional character biography Before the Exiles Morph is a hero from a (Earth-58163) who was a member of the New Mutants, X-Men, and Avengers. He was a unique son of loving parents. Early on in life he managed to use his powers, and was able to give everyone what they wanted from him. Morph always used his power to joke around and keep everyone at ease with him, only comfortable to be himself around his parents. Parallel universe or alternate reality in science fiction and fantasy is a self-contained separate reality coexisting with our own. ...
The New Mutants is the name of two defunct Marvel Comics superhero teams, as well as the title of two series featuring those teams. ...
The X-Men are a group of comic book superheroes featured in Marvel Comics. ...
The Avengers are a fictional superhero team appearing in comic books published by Marvel Comics. ...
His mother died of lung cancer and Morph tried in every way to cheer up his emotionally distraught father (often acting in a childish way whenever his father wanted him to act serious), who, unable to let his suffering go, chose to enroll his son in a boarding school; luckily, that school happened to be the Xavier Institute for Higher Learning. In the fictional Marvel Comics universe, the X-Mansion, the common name for the Xavier Mansion, is the base of operations and training site of the X-Men and the location of a school for mutant teenagers, the Xavier Institute for Higher Learning, formerly Xaviers School for Gifted Youngsters. ...
Promoted to the X-Men, Morph's sense of humor initially grated upon the much more serious team but eventually his humor and humility won them over. He was instrumental in many of the team's victories and was chosen to be part of a pilot program with the Avengers, along with the Beast, as a public representative of mutantkind. Morph would return to the X-Men because, in his own words, "he missed his freaky mutant brothers and sisters." On a subsequent mission, Morph and the rest of the X-Men were facing off against a threat known only as Stonehenge when Morph became unhinged from time.
With the Exiles Then the mysterious Timebroker appeared to him, explaining to him that he had become unhinged from time as a chain of events had caused his reality as he knew it to change. In that new reality a wounded Morph is unable to maintain his form, and is in a coma, being only a white muddy substance in Beast's lab. Hoping to save his own future, he becomes a member, and comic relief, of the Exiles, a group of universe-hopping heroes trying to save realities from ripples and alteration. This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality. ...
For other uses, see Beast (disambiguation). ...
Comic relief is the inclusion of a humorous character or scene or witty dialogue in an otherwise serious work, often to relieve tension. ...
The Exiles are a group of fictional comic book characters from Marvel Comics. ...
He soon befriended the mutant Sunfire, although in a loving platonic relationship, accepting the lesbian nature of his friend. He always took care of her, and her death left him emotionally wrecked. It has been suggested that this article or section be merged into Mariko Yashida. ...
Platonic idealism is the theory that the substantive reality around us is only a reflection of a higher truth. ...
This article is about same-sex desire and sexuality among women. ...
Mojo's World The Exiles battled on, fixing reality after reality and struggling to keep it together. Following one of these missions the team was kidnapped by Mojo, the insane evil dictator of the Mojoverse. Mojo considered Morph the best entertainer he had ever seen and brought him back to entertain the masses. If he didn't, Mojo would kill his fellow Exile, Nocturne. Eventually, Nocturne was able to escape and set Morph free. Mojo went crazy and threatened to kill Morph's friends. An enraged Morph was on the verge of killing Mojo when the Timebroker stopped them. The Timebroker revealed Mojo had disrupted time but he was a necessary evil and could not be killed. Mojo is a Marvel Comics supervillain, an enemy of the X-Men, primarily Longshot. ...
Against Weapon X Morph continued to be the heart of the team until a mission in which Mimic was taken over by a Brood egg. During the battle, he killed Sunfire. Mimic was eventually cured but Morph was enraged. He was devastated by Sunfire's death and told Mimic he should have killed himself rather than let something like this happen. Morph stormed off and threatened to leave the team. Magik, an unlikely ally, followed and tried to calm him. The two connected and despite her past attitude during missions, Morph realized Illyana was just a scared girl trying to get home. He remained angry with Mimic but helped his team fight against the rogue reality-hopping team, Weapon X. Mimic (real name: Calvin Montgomery Rankin) is a Marvel Comics fictional character who was briefly a member of the X-Men. ...
The Brood are a race of insect-like, parasitic, extraterrestrial beings that appear in the comic books published by Marvel Comics, especially Uncanny X-Men. ...
Magik (Illyana Nikolievna Rasputina - typically anglicized to Rasputin) was a Marvel Comics character, associated with the X-Men. ...
Weapon X is a fictional clandestine government project in the Marvel Universe conducted by the Canadian Governments Department K (and secretly funded by the US government) which turns willing and unwilling beings into living weapons. ...
Before the battle began, Magik attempted to switch sides, believing her team was weaker. Hyperion, the self-appointed leader of Weapon X, snapped her neck and Morph was driven into a rage. He attacked Hyperion, who attempted to blast Morph with his eyebeams, but Mimic saved him. During the brawl with Weapon X, Morph fought against an evil Ms. Marvel. Their battle caused a building to fall in on them, killing Ms. Marvel but Morph was able to survive. Carol Danvers, also known as Ms. ...
The Exiles were triumphant and the Timebroker told Morph he could finally go home. His mission was fulfilled. Morph considered the offer but asked if he could stay with his team. He realized they needed him and he couldn't leave them behind. The Timebroker agreed; Morph asked him not to tell the rest of the Exiles of his decision. Morph and Mimic reconciled since he realized that Sunfire's death was not Mimic's fault and that the Brood was controlling him. The team moved on.
Proteus He recently helped the team take down Proteus by impersonating the Maestro and weakening Proteus with a steel strip in his head. Morph went to take down Proteus but Proteus knocked the steel plate out of his head and took over Morph's body in issue #80. When the Exiles tracked him to the "Heroes Reborn" world, cosmic entities "O" and "Kay" kidnapped him, saying his presence has tipped the balance of power. Using a tiara hooked to a brainwasher device, his teammate Blink managed if not to restore his consciousness, to brainwash Proteus, forcing him to act like Morph, and access to only Morph's memories, functionally "bringing him again to life". With Proteus trapped and believing he is Morph, he remained an Exile to continue fixing damaged realities. Considering Morph's body does not burn out like other hosts, Morph's consciousness is still active beneath Proteus. Also, Proteus is immune to metal while in Morph's body, since wearing a metal tiara during the "Heroes Reborn" world did not kill him. However, concerns about some discreppancies in "Morph's" behavior forced his teammates to plan regular brainwashings with the same device, and, eventually, put him in stasis whenever his behavior would change again. Recently, Morph had to intervene in a fight between Sabretooth and Psylocke and make an introduction. Heather teleports Morph, Sabretooth, and Psylocke down to Earth #1720 to save the other Exiles, who are currently beaten or brainwashed, courtesy of this world's Madame Hydra, Sue Storm. After the defeat of Sue Storm, the Exiles stay on Earth #1720 while Psylocke recovers from injuries sustained during the battle against that universe's Wolverine and Slaymaster. Later, Morph and the Exiles returned to an empty Panoptichron. Morph and Blink then visited Heather, who had left the Panoptichron and is now pregnant. Kevin MacTaggert, best known as Proteus and also called Mutant X, is a Marvel Comics character, associated with the X-Men. ...
The Maestro is an incarnation of The Incredible Hulk as a supervillain from an alternate future timeline set roughly 100 years from the present. ...
Blink (Clarice Ferguson) is a Marvel Comics superheroine featured in various X-Men-related series. ...
Psylocke (Elisabeth Glorianna Betsy Braddock, sometimes Elizabeth) is a Marvel Comics superhero, sister to Captain Britain, and often associated with the X-Men. ...
âInvisible Girlâ redirects here. ...
Powers and abilities Morph's mutation to shapeshift has also made it so that his body is a Play-doh-like substance and he can reattach limbs after they have been severed. It has been stated that his body is composed of unstable molecules. He has also stated that his mutation gives him a high metabolism and makes him very hormonal. In one issue, Sasquatch said she was never able to detect a scent on Morph; Sabretooth stated the same while hunting Proteus in Morph's body, noting how, in a crowd of "normal" people, Morph stands out like a sore thumb to Sabretooth's enhanced senses, whatever the form the shapeshifter takes. It also appears he has the ability to fly as demonstrated in Exiles #27. Due to his shapeshifting ability he does not wear any actual clothing, and he takes joy in pointing this out. Green Play-Doh with can and accessory toy Play-Doh is a commercial plastic modeling compound similar in texture to bread dough that has been sold as a childrens toy around the world for a half century. ...
Unstable molecules is a fictional piece of technology featured in Marvel Comics. ...
Cover to Exiles #20. ...
Sabretooth is a Marvel Comics character, an arch-enemy of the X-Menâs Wolverine. ...
Even though Morph is a prankster and appears to be unintelligent, he actually is very smart. He has a Master's degree in computer engineering, which he earned at Xavier's Institute. This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Computer engineering (also called electronic and computer engineering) is a discipline that combines elements of both electrical engineering and computer science. ...
Age of Apocalypse In the Age of Apocalypse (AoA), Morph was, like his "regular Marvel Universe" counterpart Changeling, an early recruit of the X-Men. Changeling was killed shortly after joining the X-Men while assuming the guise of Professor X. In the AoA reality, Kevin Sydney did not die while impersonating Professor X, because in the Age of Apocalypse Xavier died before the X-Men were ever founded. The AoA Morph's personality and costume are largely the same as that of the Exiles version, based upon the latter's initial appearance. The Age of Apocalypse is a popular X-Men story arc. ...
Charles Francis Xavier, also known as Professor X, is a fictional Marvel Comics superhero, known as the leader and founder of the X-Men. ...
In the AoA timeline, Morph often agitated his teammates with his off-the-wall sense of humour and inappropriate timing; he describes himself as wanting to die with a smile on his face when his time comes. Despite his happy-go-lucky attitude, Morph has displayed signs of a softer, more empathetic side several times. For example, he morphed into Sabretooth in an effort to comfort Blink while she doubted her abilities, and he later gave Rogue the strength to endure against the horseman Holocaust by acting as her son. Shortly after the defeat of Apocalypse, he accompanied fellow X-Men Iceman, Wildchild and Exodus on an unspecified mission, during which they disappeared. Their fate has yet to be revealed.
The Lost Generation -
Main article: Marvel: The Lost Generation A Morph is also seen as a member of First Line, set in Earth-616 but in the period after World War II.[8] The First Line was a fictional team of superheroes and adventurers from the Marvel Comics series Marvel: The Lost Generation. ...
Combatants Allied powers: China France Great Britain Soviet Union United States and others Axis powers: Germany Italy Japan and others Commanders Chiang Kai-shek Charles de Gaulle Winston Churchill Joseph Stalin Franklin Roosevelt Adolf Hitler Benito Mussolini Hideki TÅjÅ Casualties Military dead: 17,000,000 Civilian dead: 33,000...
In other media X-Men: The Animated Series
Morph in the X-Men animated series
The evil, brainwashed Morph In the X-Men animated series, Morph (voiced by Ron Rubin in the English language version, and by Mitsuru Ogata in the Japanese dub) was a member of the X-Men and a close friend of Wolverine who was apparently killed in the second episode by Sentinels. Wolverine was distraught by his death (he claimed that Morph was the only one who made him laugh) and blamed Cyclops for leaving him behind, but later overcame it, as many friends have passed in front of his eyes. Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ...
Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ...
X-Men is an American animated series which debuted on October 31, 1992 on the Fox Network as part of its Fox Kids Saturday morning lineup. ...
Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ...
Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ...
X-Men is an American animated series which debuted on October 31, 1992 on the Fox Network as part of its Fox Kids Saturday morning lineup. ...
Ron Rubin (born August 27, 1959 in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada) is a veteran voice actor whose voice is most easily recognized as that of Artemis from the English translation of Sailor Moon. ...
Mitsuru Ogata ) (March 24, 1961 - ) is a male seiyū from Aomori Prefecture affiliated with Mausu Promotion. ...
The Sentinels are a type of fictional robot in the Marvel Comics universe. ...
He reappeared in the second season as a recurring villain who was driven steadily mad by memories of his death. Eventually, it was revealed that Mr. Sinister took his shattered body, brought him back to life, but significantly brainwashed him and put some implants in him. He was divided into two personalities: One who loved his X-teammates and one who hated them for leaving him behind. His best friend Wolverine was astonished to find out that Morph was alive, albeit he was fluctuating between "the good" and "the bad". Till the end of the season, through constant assurance from his teammates that "he was part of the team" and what Cyclops did "was in the name of the team", Morph helped in the final battle at the season finale - Reunion (Part 2) - where he temporarily destroyed Sinister and was taken into custody. Professor X finally removed his implants, but determined that the psychological damage needed much more rehabilitation than seemed obvious. Cover to X-men: The End #4. ...
Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID), as defined by the American Psychiatric Associations Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV-TR), is a mental condition whereby a single individual evidences two or more distinct identities or personalities, each with its own pattern of perceiving and interacting with the environment. ...
For other uses, see Wolverine (disambiguation). ...
For other uses, see Cyclops (disambiguation). ...
A season finale (British English last in the series) is the final episode of a season of a television program. ...
Reunion is two part episode from second season of X-Men: The Animated Series. ...
Charles Francis Xavier, also known as Professor X, is a fictional Marvel Comics superhero, known as the leader and founder of the X-Men. ...
Morph appeared in two more episodes as a patient on Muir Island (Once on a hospital bed and once in a wheelchair as Cyclops and Wolverine were leaving the island.) before starring in the episode Courage,. There, Moira Mactaggert was curing his mental instability, which was provoked by the cruelty of Sinister and the overcoming of his guilt and fear of the Sentinels that nearly killed him. In the episode, he came back in the team, but when facing Sentinels again, Morph got a flashback memory and was terrified. This fear later caused the abduction of Professor X by Master Mold. Morph overcame his fear with great efforts and when he understood that the Professor was in danger, he rushed to save him, despite his teammates' warnings and concerns. However, he showed great fighting skill and battled singlehandedly many of the Sentinels and destroyed Master Mold himself at the end, changing to Angel, Sasquatch, Longshot, and Omega Red. Although this was a great victory and his friends welcomed him back fully to the team, Morph was feeling unsure of himself and said that he had to work more on his mental health. He decided to go back to Dr. MacTaggert so that next time, he would return to the team in peak mental condition. He then makes a split second appearence in the episode Beyond Good and Evil during Scott and Jean's wedding, sitting next to Jubilee. Spoiler warning: The episode begins with Dr. McTaggert helping out Morph and he is about to return to the X-Men. ...
The Sentinels are fictional robots in the Marvel Comics Universe. ...
A flashback is a psychological phenomenon in which an individual has a sudden, usually vivid, recollection of a past experience. ...
Master Mold is a fictional character, a robot supervillain in the Marvel Universe. ...
Cover to Excalibur #11. ...
Sasquatch is a fictional character, a superhero in Marvel Comics universe. ...
Longshot is a fictional character a Marvel Comics superhero best known as a member of the X-Men. ...
Omega Red (Arkady Rossovich) is a comic book supervillain in the Marvel Comics universe and a foe of the X-Men. ...
Beyond Good and Evil is a series of 4 episodes (Season 4 episodes 8 to 11) in X-Men: The Animated Series. ...
His last appearance was in the series finale Graduation Day, where he briefly appeared as Professor X, while the latter was sick and dying, due to an illness. He appeared to have more of his past snickering humor, probably suggesting that he was now mentally healthy and back on the team, this time permanently. A series finale is the very last installment of a television series, usually a sitcom or drama. ...
Graduation Day is the last episode of X-Men: The Animated Series. ...
Behind the scenes Morph was originally placed in the X-Men animated series simply because the writers wanted to have a character die in the opening story arc in order to show how serious the series was. [citation needed] Changeling was chosen because of his past ties to the X-Men, as well as his deceased status in the comics. He was practically a blank slate, so the writers were free to do with him as they wanted, without really angering fans of the character. The name was changed from Changeling to Morph, since DC comics had the rights to the name Changeling at the time. (DC's Changeling is better known now as Beast Boy from the Teen Titans). Morph's death was, in fact, intended to stick, but due to his unexpected popularity, he was brought back. [citation needed] DC Comics is an American comic book and related media company. ...
Beast Boy (real name Garfield Mark Gar Logan) is a fictional character in the DC Comics universe, a shapeshifting superhero who is a former member of the Doom Patrol and member of the Teen Titans. ...
Teen Titans redirects here. ...
Powers and abilities Morph has been successful since his mutant abilities manifested in his early teens. Immediately able to control his powers, he hid his abilities from others. It was not until Professor Charles Xavier asked him to enter his mutant academy that Morph realized his own potential. Xavier made him a part of his young team of New Mutants. Morph quickly became a best friend to all of his teammates and, although he was not the group's official leader, he was looked upon as a trusted confidant. He even completed a degree in computer engineering during his time on the team. Morph is an omnimorph. As such, he is capable of shapeshifting into basically anything, regardless of size, shape, color, mass, or density. Presumably he does this by tapping into an extradimensional source for the materials and mass needed. He can create objects out of his mass, including clothing and weaponry. Presumably he has a pseudo-healing factor due to the unstable nature of his molecular structure. Also due to his unique physiological makeup, he possesses no discernible scent, unlike other shapeshifters - a fact that made the Wolverine of his reality "uneasy". This was one of the ways Wolverine recognized him, when Morph pretended to be Charles Xavier in front of his team-mates, who have their own scents. Another power is the ability of unaided flight, although how he does this is as yet unknown.
Bibliography As Changeling - Excalibur: Possession
- Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe: The Book of the Dead
- She-Hulk vol. 2 #34-35
- X-Men vol. 1 #26-42, 65
- X-Men: Legends (story 2: "Diary of a False Man")
As Morph References - ^ X-Men #65 (February 1970)
- ^ X-Men #42 (March 1968)
- ^ X-Men #65
- ^ Excalibur: The Possession (July 1991)
- ^ Sensational She-Hulk #34-35 (1991-1992)
- ^ The name change was due to copyright reasons
- ^ Exiles #1-98
- ^ http://www.lostgenerationhandbook.com/thefirstline.htm
External links - Marvel Universe character bio
- Marvel database entry
|