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Encyclopedia > Cyclops (comics)
Cyclops


Cyclops
Art by John Cassaday. In historical scholarship, a primary source is a document, or other source of information that was created at or near the time being studied, by an authoritative source, usually one with direct personal knowledge of the events being described. ... In library and information science, historiography and some other areas of scholarship, a secondary source is a document or recording that relates or discusses information originally presented elsewhere. ... Image File history File links Broom_icon. ... Cyclops has several meanings. ... Image File history File links Download high resolution version (330x700, 21 KB) Summary Artwork from Marvel Comics Astonishing X-Men Licensing File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ... John Cassaday is a comic book artist, best known for his work on Planetary with Warren Ellis, and Astonishing X-Men with Joss Whedon. ...

Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance X-Men #1 (Sep 1963)
Created by Stan Lee
Jack Kirby
Characteristics
Alter ego Scott Summers
Species Human Mutant
Team
affiliations
X-Men
Corsairs Squad
X-Factor
X-Terminators
The Twelve
Askani Clan Rebellion
Hounds
Notable aliases Cyke, Eric the Red, Mutate #007, Slim, Slym Dayspring
Abilities Fires concussive force from eyes
Natural leadership skills

Cyclops (Scott Summers) is a fictional character, a superhero that is the field leader of the X-Men in the Marvel Comics Universe. Created by writer Stan Lee and artist/co-writer Jack Kirby, he first appeared in The X-Men #1 (September 1963) and was originally dubbed Slim Summers. By #3, his name was changed to Scott and Slim was referred as a nickname. A mutant, Cyclops produces powerful "optic blasts" from his eyes, forcing him to wear specialized glasses at all times and a specialized visor in combat. His powers may have led to his inhibited, meticulous character. These same qualities, however, make him an ideal leader for the X-Men and even teammates such as Wolverine, who has deemed him an 'overgrown Boy Scout', admire his leadership skills. He is the son of Corsair, the brother of Havok and Vulcan, the father of Cable, Marvel Girl, X-Man, and the widower of Jean Grey. 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. ... For the fictional character of this name, see Stan Lee (Judge Dredd character). ... Jack Kirby (born Jacob Kurtzberg, August 28, 1917 – February 6, 1994) was one of the most influential, recognizable, and prolific artists in American comic books, and the co-creator of such enduring characters and popular culture icons as the Fantastic Four, the X-Men, the Hulk, Captain America, and hundreds... 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. ... X-Factor is a comic book series published by Marvel Comics. ... For other uses of this term see X Factor X-Factor is a Marvel comic book series, published from 1985 until 1998. ... Apocalypse (En Sabah Nur) is a fictional Marvel Comics supervillain and is one of the prominent foes of the superhero group the X-Men. ... Hounds are the name given to several groups of mutant characters from Marvel Comics. ... Alice, a fictional character based on a real character from the work of Lewis Carroll. ... For other uses, see Superhero (disambiguation). ... The X-Men are a group of comic book superheroes featured in Marvel Comics. ... This article is about the comic book company. ... This article is about the shared universe setting used by many Marvel Comics titles. ... For the fictional character of this name, see Stan Lee (Judge Dredd character). ... Jack Kirby (born Jacob Kurtzberg, August 28, 1917 – February 6, 1994) was one of the most influential, recognizable, and prolific artists in American comic books, and the co-creator of such enduring characters and popular culture icons as the Fantastic Four, the X-Men, the Hulk, Captain America, and hundreds... For the second comic book series starring the X-Men, see X-Men (vol. ... For other uses, see 1963 (disambiguation). ... 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 Wolverine (disambiguation). ... This article is about the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts/Girl Guides organizations. ... Corsair (Major Christopher Summers, USAF) was a fictional comic book character in the Marvel Comics universe. ... Havok (Alexander Alex Summers) is a fictional Marvel Comics superhero, a member of the X-Men. ... Vulcan (Gabriel Summers) is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. ... This article is about the Marvel Comics character Nathan Summers, a. ... Rachel Grey (born Rachel Summers) is a fictional character, a Marvel Comics superheroine created by writer Chris Claremont and artist/co-writer John Byrne. ... For members of the Marvel Comics superhero team, see X-Men. ... Jean Grey-Summers (born Jean Grey) is a fictional superheroine who lives in the Marvel Comics Universe. ...


The first student recruited by Charles Xavier and one of the original five X-Men, Cyclops has had a large presence in X-Men-related comics since their inception. He has also been featured in almost every adaptation of the team in other media. 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 2006, IGN.com rated Cyclops #1 on their list of Top 25 X-Men from the past forty years.[1] IGN is the oldest and most visited general gaming website, and runs one of the most popular forums on the Internet. ...

Contents

Publication history

Cyclops has been a mainstay character of the X-Men since the character was created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby and seen in X-Men vol. 1 #1. Summers has also been a regular in the first series of X-Factor and can currently be seen in the third series of Astonishing X-Men. Over the years, Cyclops has appeared in a few limited series including Adventures of Cyclops & Phoenix, Further Adventures of Cyclops & Phoenix, the second series of Astonishing X-Men, X-Men: The Search for Cyclops and his own self-titled series Cyclops.


Fictional character biography

Youth

When Scott was a boy growing up in Anchorage, Alaska, United States, his father, USAF Major Christopher Summers, takes the family for a flight in their de Havilland Mosquito. It comes under attack by an alien Shi'ar spaceship. As the plane goes down in flames, Scott's parents fasten him and his younger brother Alex into a parachute and push them off the plane, in hopes that they would survive. Unfortunately, the parachute catches fire and Scott strikes his head upon landing. This causes brain damage to Scott, which is supposedly responsible for his inability to control his optic blasts, as well as prolonged amnesia about his childhood. Parts of his memory return when he is unexpectedly attacked by D'Spayre while on a leave of absence after Jean Grey's death. [2] This article is about the city in the U.S. state of Alaska. ... For other uses, see Alaska (disambiguation). ... Seal of the Air Force. ... Corsair (Major Christopher Summers, USAF) was a fictional comic book character in the Marvel Comics universe. ... The de Havilland Mosquito[1] was a British combat aircraft that excelled in a number of roles during the Second World War. ... The Shiar, pronounced // (Shee-ARR), are a fictional species of aliens in the Marvel Comics universe. ... DSpayre (sometimes Dspayre) is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. ...


Scott spends most of his childhood in an orphanage in Omaha, Nebraska and is subjected to batteries of tests and experiments by the orphanage's owner, Mr. Milbury, an alias for the geneticist Mister Sinister. “Omaha” redirects here. ... Mister Sinister (Nathaniel Essex) is a fictional character appearing in the comic books published by Marvel Comics. ...


The X-Men

Cyclops projecting an optic blast. Art by Jack Kirby.

When Scott is sixteen, he is found by Charles Xavier and becomes one of the Professor's students and the first official X-Man. He soon becomes the team's field leader, a position he will traditionally hold over the years. When the other original X-Men (Angel, Beast, Iceman, Jean Grey, and later additions Havok (his own brother) and Polaris) decide to leave in light of the arrival of the new X-Men, which include Storm, Colossus, Nightcrawler and Wolverine, Cyclops stays, feeling that he will never be able to lead a normal life because of the uncontrollable nature of his powers. Cyclops in a scene from Uncanny X-Men #3. ... Cyclops in a scene from Uncanny X-Men #3. ... Jack Kirby (born Jacob Kurtzberg, August 28, 1917 – February 6, 1994) was one of the most influential, recognizable, and prolific artists in American comic books, and the co-creator of such enduring characters and popular culture icons as the Fantastic Four, the X-Men, the Hulk, Captain America, and hundreds... Charles Francis Xavier, also known as Professor X, is a fictional Marvel Comics superhero, known as the leader and founder of the X-Men. ... Havok (Alexander Alex Summers) is a fictional Marvel Comics superhero, a member of the X-Men. ... Polaris (Lorna Dane) is a Marvel Comics superhero, a member of the X-Men. ...


At first, Scott believes that his parents died in the plane accident and is unaware that they, in fact, had been captured and sold into slavery by the Shi'ar. As an adult member of the X-Men, Cyclops meets his father, now known as Corsair, leader of the Starjammers, a group of aliens opposing what they see as the tyranny of the Shi'ar empire. Several more years pass before the two learn of each other's true identities. He later comes into contact with his grandparents, who he learns are still alive and own a shipping company in Canada. Corsair (Major Christopher Summers, USAF) was a fictional comic book character in the Marvel Comics universe. ... This article does not cite any references or sources. ... Green people redirects here. ... The Shiar, pronounced // (Shee-ARR), are a fictional species of aliens in the Marvel Comics universe. ...


Cyclops has a relationship with Jean Grey during their time in the "original" X-Men. For a long time, he refuses to admit, even to himself, that he has feelings for her, afraid he would be hurt again or that his optic blasts would hurt her - or anyone else he cared about for that matter - and also because he feels he is no match for his wealthy teammate Warren Worthington III, a.k.a. Angel, who is at first also romantically interested in Jean. What Scott doen't know is that Jean actually has a crush on him, but is too shy to make a move. Finally, on Bobby Drake's 16th birthday[3], they reveal their passion for each other and begin to date. Jean Grey-Summers (born Jean Grey) is a fictional superheroine who lives in the Marvel Comics Universe. ... Warren Kenneth Worthington III is a fictional character, a superhero that appears in Marvel Comics. ...


Cyclops privately questions their relationship after Jean dies trying to pilot a space shuttle through a solar flare, and then is reborn as Phoenix, feeling that this reborn Jean was not the same Jean he had loved. But when he thinks her dead for an extended period of time after a battle in the Savage Land, Scott is not able to mourn her, and believes this meant he didn't really love her anymore. He briefly dates Colleen Wing. However, when Scott and Jean are reunited on Muir Island to fight Proteus, he rediscovers his love for her, and they share a passionate kiss on the way home[4]. A few days before Jean dies, Scott psychically proposes, and she accepts. After her death, he quits the X-Men, unsure of what to do anymore. He signs on as crew of a fishing boat, captained by Lee Forrester. After an adventure in which Lee's father is possessed by D'Spayre, the two find themselves shipwrecked in the Bermuda Triangle, where they stumble upon Magneto's new base of operations. Eventually Scott marries Madelyne Pryor, a woman who bears a strong resemblance to Jean, and she bears him a son, Nathan. The alias of Phoenix has been used by several fictional comic book characters published by Marvel Comics. ... Magneto (Eric Magnus Lensherr) is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. ... Madelyne Pryor is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. ...


X-Factor and Inferno

Shortly after the birth of Nathan, it is revealed that Jean is not dead. The Phoenix is revealed to be a cosmic entity who had supplanted Jean, placing her in a healing pod at the bottom of Jamaica Bay, to be eventually revived by the Avengers and the Fantastic Four. Cyclops leaves his wife and son and returns to Jean, although Warren moves in on the now single woman. Jean joins with Cyclops and the other original X-Men as X-Factor, who pose as mutant hunters but in reality are trying to help their genetic brethren.[5] Meanwhile, Pryor goes on to be an assisting member of the X-Men, apparently sacrificing her life during the Fall of the Mutants with her teammates, although she was left with feelings of despair over the loss of Scott. The Avengers are a fictional superhero team appearing in comic books published by Marvel Comics. ... For other uses, see Fantastic Four (disambiguation). ... X-Factor is a comic book series published by Marvel Comics. ... Cover to the Fall of the Mutants TPB. The Fall of the Mutants was a crossover event by Marvel Comics, during the summer of 1987. ...


No longer married, Cyclops moves on. During an adventure, his teammate Warren, the angel, loses his wings. Bitter, Angel is transformed by a villain the team recently encountered, immortal mutant Apocalypse, into Death, general of his Horsemen. Iceman manages to bring Warren back, who becomes Archangel. Apocalypse (En Sabah Nur) is a fictional Marvel Comics supervillain and is one of the prominent foes of the superhero group the X-Men. ...


The demons S'ym and N'astirh corrupt Madelyne's feelings of self-despair, transforming her into the Goblin Queen. Madelyne seeks revenge on Cyclops for leaving her. When it is revealed that she is a clone created by geneticist Mr. Sinister, essentially for the purpose of becoming a brood mare, Madelyne can't take it any more and kills herself. Scott kills Sinister with an optic blast, and pursues a romance with Jean, reclaiming his son. Sym is a fictional demon in the Marvel Comics Universe. ... Nastirh is a fictional character created by Marvel Comics as a demonic inhabitant of Limbo. ... Cover to X-men: The End #4. ... Horse breeding is the process of using selective breeding to produce additional individuals of a given phenotype, that is, continuing a breed. ...


Along the way, he re-encounters Apocalypse, who decides to infect Nathan with a techno-organic virus. Distraught, the couple sends their son into the future where he can be cured, although it costs the two their relationship for a second time. now. ...


Next, Xavier's psionic enemy, Shadow King, returns to combat the X-Men and X-Factor. After his defeat, Cyclops and X-Factor rejoin the X-Men team, and Scott is named leader of a newly created "Blue Team". For the band of the same name, see Shadow King (band). ...


Return to the X-Men

After Cyclops' return as field leader, much of the Blue team is kidnapped by Omega Red and the ninjas of The Hand. After the captured teammates' rescue, Mr. Sinister sends Caliban, a former X-Factor member, to kidnap Cyclops and Jean for Stryfe, a madman and rival to Cable, both time-lost mutants. Stryfe tells the two that he is Nathan, sent to the future and abandoned. In a fight, Cable and Stryfe apparently die. Afterwards, the team battles Omega Red again, and fellow teammate and telepath Psylocke tries to lure Cyclops into an affair behind Jean's back. Ultimately, Jean Grey defeats Psylocke in a telepathic battle and claims Cyclops as her boyfriend alone. Cable returns as well and reveals to Cyclops that he is the real Nathan Christopher Summers. Omega Red (Arkady Rossovich) is a comic book supervillain in the Marvel Comics universe and a foe of the X-Men. ... The Hand is a group of fictional supervillains in the Marvel Comics universe. ... Stryfe is a Marvel Comics supervillain, an adversary of the X-Men and related characters, especially Cable and X-Force. ... This article is about the Marvel Comics character Nathan Summers, a. ... Psylocke (Elisabeth Glorianna Betsy Braddock, sometimes Elizabeth) is a Marvel Comics superhero, sister to Captain Britain, and often associated with the X-Men. ...


Marriage

Scott Summers and Jean Grey finally marry. During their honeymoon, they are brought into the future where they raise Cable for the first 12 years of his life during the Adventures of Cyclops and Phoenix miniseries. After helping Cable defeat the future version of Apocalypse, they are sent back to the past. At the request of Rachel Summers, Jean assumes the Phoenix identity. Mister Sinister, involved with the machinations of Apocalypse and Stryfe and still alive, tells Cyclops that there is another Summers brother, and leaves him wondering. Jean Grey-Summers (born Jean Grey) is a fictional superheroine who lives in the Marvel Comics Universe. ... This article is about the Marvel Comics character Nathan Summers, a. ... The Adventures of Cyclops and Phoenix was a four issue comic book miniseries written by Scott Lobdell, drawn by Gene Ha, and published by Marvel Comics in 1994. ...


As Cyclops deals with the fact that his son is now old enough to be his father, the X-Men are forced to battle their mentor when Professor Xavier is transformed into the evil Onslaught as a result of mindwiping Magneto. Although the X-Men defeat the evil entity and free Xavier, most of Earth's heroes are lost for a time. Xavier, who is left powerless after Onslaught's defeat, is arrested for his part, leaving Scott and Jean as leaders and co-headmasters of the school. However, the pair go into retirement following a battle against Operation: Zero Tolerance, in which Cyclops is gravely injured when a bomb is placed in his chest. Onslaught is a Marvel Comics supervillain who was the focus of an enormous intra-company crossover in 1996. ...


Merging with Evil

Scott and Jean return to the X-Men some time after at the request of Storm, when she grows concerned about the mental well-being of Professor X (who had returned sometime prior). Their return then leads to the events of The Twelve; in which Apocalypse locates twelve mutants which can power a machine to allow him to take the body of Nate Grey, the X-Man. In order to save Nate, Cyclops willingly merges with the villain Apocalypse. He is believed lost until Jean and Cable track him down to Egypt and separate him from Apocalypse, killing Apocalypse's spirit in the process. Apocalypse (En Sabah Nur) is a fictional Marvel Comics supervillain and is one of the prominent foes of the superhero group the X-Men. ... X-Man (Nate Grey) is a fictional character, a superhero in the Marvel Comics Universe and related to the X-Men franchise. ...


New X-Men

Upon Cyclops' return to the X-Men following his possession, there is a rather drastic change in his personality, as a result of being bonded with Apocalypse. This change causes a rift to develop between Jean and himself, and he claims Apocalypse made him question not only their relationship, but his life as a whole. He is instrumental in preventing the mutant Xorn's suicide and in recruiting the powerful mutant to the X-Men. Surprisingly, the two establish a close friendship, which is almost unprecedented in Cyclops' personal history; similarly, repeated missions with Wolverine result in the growth of a tentative friendship between the two veteran X-Men. Xorn is a fictional character published by Marvel Comics. ...


When Jean begins to show signs of the Phoenix Force again, the distance between the two grows larger and Scott begains what others would dub his "celibacy kick." Jean attempts several times to confront Cyclops but he continues to push her away claiming that Apocalypse had changed him too much on the inside. When Xavier leaves Earth while under the control of Cassandra Nova, Jean is left as Headmistress of the school. Her new responsibilities along with her growing powers, force Jean to put her attention elsewhere leaving Scott feeling ignored. Instead of attempting to reconcile with his estranged-wife, Scott turns to Emma Frost, a former villain who had reformed, been the headmistress of Generation X, and eventually joined the X-Men. Their relationship ostensibly begins as a series of psychic therapy sessions, but Emma takes advantage of this situation to get closer to Scott. Under the guise of counseling him, she instigates a telepathic affair. When Phoenix discovers the affair, Cyclops claims he and Emma shared only thoughts and thus had done nothing wrong. Meanwhile, Emma's snide and mocking jeers provoke a hurt and angry Jean to psychically confront her. She forces Emma to admit her true feelings for Scott, and also come to terms with her many failures, sins and personal demons. Furious at both himself and Jean, Scott confronts her and demands she read his mind; Jean finally complies, only to discover that Scott and Emma never actually engaged in any physical contact though Emma had offered it. Yet, despite the fact that the affair was not a physical one, to a telepath such as Jean (who for years shared an intimate psychic rapport with Scott) the incident is just as bad if not worse. Emma Grace[1] Frost, formerly known as the White Queen, is a fictional character appearing in the Marvel Comics Universe. ... Generation X was a Marvel Comics superhero team, a 1990s-era X-Men junior team. ...


Unable to fully confront everyone about his actions, Scott runs away from the Xavier Institute just after Emma is been shattered in her diamond form and supposedly killed. He soon finds himself at Hellfire Club which had been turned into a sleazy strip club and tries to get drunk off white wine while generally trying to escape the responsibilities, expectations and demands he feels are unjustly placed on him by the X-Men. He then accompanies Wolverine and Fantomex to the government-created time-pocket called The World and then Asteroid M. During his time with Wolverine, Scott reveales that he feels his relationship with Jean is stagnant and that the two of them had not progressed romantically since their initial teenage romance. He also confesses that he feels that Jean is so concerned with the School and her new powers that he and she no longer communicate like before and that he feels left behind due to Jean once again being connected to the Phoenix Force. When he finally returns to the X-Men, their new teammate Xorn, who pretends to have been their mortal enemy Magneto in disguise, attacks the X-Men. Having at last reached full Phoenix power, Jean confronts Xorn-Magneto and is killed in the process. As she is dying, Scott admits how wrong he was to hurt her and begs her to forgive him. Jean however pushes aside his apology telling him that she understands and then urges Cyclops to live on. The Hellfire Club is a Marvel Comics supervillain team that frequently battle the X-Men. ... Fantomex is the name of a fictional character associated with the X-Men. ... Weapon X a clandestine government project in the Marvel Universe, which turns mutants into living weapons. ... Asteroid M, from X-Men (Second Series) #-1 (July 1997). ... Xorn is a fictional character published by Marvel Comics. ...


Headmaster

Scott, however, felt devastated by the death of his wife, and considered leaving the X-Men once more. It was revealed in the "Here Comes Tomorrow" storyline that, had he done so, it would have led to an apocalyptic alternate future. To prevent this, a resurrected, future-version of Jean used her powers as the White Phoenix of the Crown and telepathically nudged Cyclops into a real relationship with Emma, reaching out to him from this alternate future. Together, the pair rebuilt the Xavier Institute as co-headmasters. Cover to trade paperback Here Comes Tomorrow is the climactic eighth story arc in Grant Morrisons run on the Marvel Comics series New X-Men, which ran from issues #151-154. ...


The new relationship between Emma and Scott has led to problems between them and the rest of the X-Men, all of whom believe that the pair are doing Jean's memory a disservice. Rachel Summers in particular has felt hurt and angry by her father's lack of remorse for the psychic affair that hurt Jean before her death, and took on the last name of Grey in place of Summers. Even long-time friends such as Beast stated "I don't like you very much right now" when he discovered Scott and Emma kissing on Jean's grave. Scott and Rachel eventually reconciled somewhat after the tragic End of Greys extermination that killed Scott's former in-laws. He was especially hurt by the death of Elaine Grey after finding her body. Rachel Grey (born Rachel Summers) is a fictional character, a Marvel Comics superheroine created by writer Chris Claremont and artist/co-writer John Byrne. ... Elaine Grey is a fictional character in the Marvel Universe and the mother of Jean Grey. ...


Deciding that the X-Men need to play more of a role in emergency rescue and aid, and thus garner attention on mutants in a more positive light where mutant abilities are used for the good of people, Cyclops has hand-picked a team in order to get out into the world more. This team recently faced an alien named Ord of the Breakworld. The team subdued Ord, but not before learning that one of their own will be responsible for the destruction of Ord's homeworld in the coming year. Not long after, the X-Men's Danger Room took on a sentience of its own, and after the apparent defeat of the lifeform, Danger, the X-Men abandoned Xavier, when it was revealed that he knew about its sentience for some time already. Ord is a fictional character, a comic book supervillain in the Marvel Comics universe. ...


Cyclops also tutors a squad at the institute called The Corsairs, named after Cyclops’ father. The team consists of Dryad, Quill, Specter and the three remaining Stepford Cuckoos. The Stepford Cuckoos are a group of fictional mutant psychically-linked quintuplets of the Marvel Comics universe, students at the Xavier Institute for Higher Learning. ...


After the events of House of M, nearly all mutants were left powerless, and Xavier was missing. In the series X-Men: Deadly Genesis, a mysterious villain attacked and easily defeated several members of the team, including Cyclops and his alternate-reality daughter, Rachel. The two were captured and taken to an undisclosed location, which Cyclops vaguely remembered visiting in the past. Eventually managing to free themselves, Cyclops and Rachel attempted to escape, only to run into their captor (revealed to be named Vulcan), who informed Cyclops that he was the X-Man's younger brother. A powerless Professor Xavier confirmed this information in the final book of the mini-series. This new information has left Cyclops resentful towards his mentor and has gone so far as to demand that Xavier leave the school as it is no longer 'his.' House of M was an eight-part comic book crossover storyline published by Marvel Comics in 2005. ... Rachel Grey (born Rachel Summers) is a fictional character, a Marvel Comics superheroine created by writer Chris Claremont and artist/co-writer John Byrne. ... Vulcan (Gabriel Summers) is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. ...


In Astonishing X-Men #14, during an impromptu telepathic "therapy session", Emma Frost presented Cyclops with the possibility that his lack of control over his optic blasts actually stems not from physical brain damage, but from a sort of mental block that the young Scott imposed upon himself after the combined traumas of the loss of his parents, separation from his brother, and shocking manifestation of his powers; this is seen as a coping mechanism, giving Scott something to focus on and try to maintain some sort of control over at a time when events completely out of his control had effectively shattered the life he had led up to that point. Astonishing X-Men is the name of three X-Men books, the first two were limited series and the third an ongoing series. ...


Surprisingly, Scott seems to admit that this theory is the truth of the matter, further admitting that he had even blocked making this decision out of his memory, to preserve the fallacy in his own mind and prevent others from discovering his "secret." The issue ends with Scott apparently in a catatonic state, with his eyes uncovered and displaying their natural shade of brown, with no evidence of his powers manifesting.


Astonishing

Apparently Emma was right: a fully recovered Cyclops rose in the issue 17 from his catatonic state to shoot Perfection in the back with a pistol. However it has not been established in the comic yet whether Cyclops has full control of his power or has been rendered completely powerless. In an interview with Joss Whedon in Wizard magazine #182, when asked if Cyclops didn't have his powers any more after Emma psychically manipulated him, Whedon replied that "No, he doesn't have his powers. Well, he had a choice to either be completely out of control or bury them. He can't use them. That's pretty much it. But the thing that would be fun is that, with no powers, he's going to be the best that he's ever been. That's what the arc is about. [Cyclops has] been the team leader and the team washout in terms of popularity. He was defined by Jean so much, and I just think that this guy is so interesting in his struggle against mediocrity. Then, when it's all laid on the line, when you find out the thing that's been holding him back from being just a complete bad ass has been himself all his life, that he's been lying to everyone, including himself, about who he is-that should be freeing. The Scott we're going to see is going to be a little bit different. This guy is either completely out of control or in control of something we're not used to. I wanted him to be an unabashed tough guy. He is shooting people and turning very much into a leader. Not everyone is going to like it." Astonishing X-Men is the name of three X-Men books, the first two were limited series and the third an ongoing series. ... Emma Grace[1] Frost, formerly known as the White Queen, is a fictional character appearing in the Marvel Comics Universe. ... A Browning 9 millimeter Hi-Power Ordnance pistol of the French Navy, 19th century, using a Percussion cap mechanism Derringers were small and easily hidden. ... Joss Hill Whedon (born Joseph Hill Whedon[3] on June 23, 1964 in New York) is an Academy Award-nominated American writer, director, executive producer, and creator of the well-known television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, and Firefly. ... Wizard or Wizard: The Magazine of Comics, Entertainment and Pop Culture (originally titled Wizard: The Guide to Comics and Wizard: The Comics Magazine) is a magazine about comic books, published monthly in the United States by Wizard Entertainment. ...


At the end of the arc Cyclops states when he was in a catatonic state he was still fully conscious and saw the fight between Colossus and Shaw - revealing that Colossus wasn't really fighting anyone but Emma's own disordered mind. He also attempted to help Emma get over her survivor's guilt, speculated by Scott as being the basis for the recent manifestations of the Hellfire Club. Survivor guilt is a type of remorse felt by people who manage to survive a tragic event involving much loss of life, especially the lives of friends and loved ones or other people commonly associated with the survivor. ... The Hellfire Club is a Marvel Comics supervillain team that frequently battle the X-Men. ...


Civil War

Cyclops, along with the other surviving original X-Men, declare neutrality on the subject of Civil War, reasoning that the X-Men sympathized too much with Captain America's side- who, like the X-Men, were persecuted for wanting to do the right thing- but believed that the mutant race had suffered too great a loss recently to take a side either way due to the recent de-powerment of so many mutants. When Bishop leaves the team to join the Registration supporters and locate the escaped 198, Cyclops eventually helps the futuristic X-Man in recovering them. Civil War is a 2006-2007 Marvel Comics crossover event built around a seven-issue limited series of the same name written by Mark Millar, and penciled by Steve McNiven. ...


Post-Civil War

Scott, along with Emma, Colossus, Wolverine, Beast, Shadowcat, Hisako, Ord, and Danger, were taken to deep space by S.W.O.R.D. and Agent Brand. The psychics on the S.W.O.R.D. ship did not detect Cassandra Nova in Emma's shattered psyche, effectively proving Emma's loyalty to the X-Men by her refusal to allow Nova into Hisako. Though emotionally wounded, Emma recovered fast enough to be present for the team's departure to the Breakworld. Separated, Emma, Scott, Beast, and Agent Brand discovered the temple of Attur-Hei ("The Palace of the Corpse.") Joined by teammates Wolverine and Hisako (now titled "Armor"), Emma conceded to Agent Brand's plan of separation. She and Scott left Attur-Hei on a single S.W.O.R.D. armed jet to rendezvous with the rest of the S.W.O.R.D. operatives on the Breakworld.


While flying, several Breakworld fighter jets approached, attempting to knock Emma and Scott out of the air. The couple successfully repelled the Breakworld onslaught, exchanging heated words in the process. Amidst Emma's protestations that Scott was "acting as though [he knew] what [she's] been through," he finally professed his true love for Emma. Stunned, Emma could barely speak, except to utter an apology. Before her reasons behind apologizing were discussed, Scott noticed a blip on their radar. Danger appeared, utterly decimating the S.W.O.R.D. cruiser. Switching to diamond form in the nick of time, Emma was spared, however Scott was injured. Cradling Scott in her arms, Emma shed a tear for the man who truly loves her. Scott was injured, but alive, as it was revealed that Danger's parent programming prevented it from killing any of the X-Men. The X-Men join on a space vessel after Emma exchanges an as yet unknown favor with Danger to help them, and Cyclops jetisons on an unarmed shuttle, to draw fire away from the others. He is seemingly left to die in space after his vessel explodes. As he falls out to space Emma feels his mind leaving. His eyes slowly turn red, either due to oxygen deprevation or from the re-manifastation of his optic blasts. The final thoughts before he blacks out are meeting Jean Grey for the first time, and Charles Xavier telling him "What a Future You Have Ahead of You..."


World War Hulk

Cyclops is listed at IGN.com as a target on Hulk's "Hit List" of characters. [6] He is seen fighting The Hulk in World War Hulk: X-Men #1 and in issue #2, he uses a full beam blast to stop the Hulk, refusing to let the Hulk take Professor Xavier regardless of his own feelings towards his mentor regarding the truth about Krakoa. While it peels off some of the Hulk's skin, he was able to walk towards Cyclops and clench his entire face, effectively containing the blast. After Hulk left from being told by Mercury about the mutant race being near-extinct, Cyclops began to forgive Professor X while the wounded are being tended to. World War Hulk is a comic book crossover storyline published by Marvel Comics beginning in May 2007. ... Krakoa is a fictional character in Marvel Comics, commonly associated with the X-Men. ... Mercury is the name of several characters in comics: Mercury (Marvel Comics) Mercury, a member of the Metal Men. ...


X-Men: Messiah Complex

Cyclops leads a team to Alaska to find the new mutant detected by Cerebra. When the team arrives, they find every child in the town killed, dead Marauder and Purifier bodies, and the baby gone. He sends a team consisting of Wolverine, Nightcrawler, Angel and Colossus to find former Acolytes for information on the Marauders. He argues with Xavier, who complains about not telling him about his team. Scott tells Xavier it's not his X-Men anymore and that he can do what he wants. Scott also calls in X-Factor to help with the situation, asks Rictor to infiltrate the Purifiers, and asks Madrox and Layla Miller to go see Forge. Jamie Madrox, often called the Multiple Man, is a Marvel Comics superhero, associated with the X-Men. ... Layla Rose Miller, also known as Butterfly, is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. ...


Relationships

Although being type-cast as the sensible, stiff loner, Cyclops has had several serious relationships. Unfortunately, most if not all of them have ended poorly. One striking feature is the fact that he seems attracted to women with telepathic abilities. He was married to both Jean Grey and her clone Madelyne Pryor, who both proved to have very strong telepathy; his latest girlfriend, Emma Frost, is a telepath as well. Psylocke, another psi talent, once blatantly tried to seduce him, although this could have been due to the subtle influences of the ninja assassin Revanche's personality that were still in her mind at the time. 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. ... Jean Grey-Summers (born Jean Grey) is a fictional superheroine who lives in the Marvel Comics Universe. ... Molecular cloning refers to the procedure of isolating a defined DNA sequence and obtaining multiple copies of it in vivo. ... Madelyne Pryor is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. ... Emma Grace[1] Frost, formerly known as the White Queen, is a fictional character appearing in the Marvel Comics Universe. ... Psylocke (Elisabeth Glorianna Betsy Braddock, sometimes Elizabeth) is a Marvel Comics superhero, sister to Captain Britain, and often associated with the X-Men. ... Revanche (Real Name: Kwannon) was originally an assassin for the Japanese crime syndicate, The Hand, and the lover of crime boss, Matsuo Tsurayaba, who was transformed into a telepathic mutant. ...


He has also dated non-mutant women. Cyclops (during a time in which he thought Jean was dead) went on a date with Colleen Wing and then he briefly dated Lee Forrester prior to meeting Madelyne Pryor. Colleen Wing is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics. ... Aleytys Lee Forrester is a comic book character created by Marvel comics. ... Madelyne Pryor is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. ...


When he married Madelyne Pryor, Scott had thought he had found a replacement for Jean. Over time however, he realized that while Maddie looked like Jean, it was not her emotionally. Scott then began to emotionally distance himself, while fixating unhealthily on Jean. Scott would later leave Maddie and their child, upon hearing of Jean's return.


When Cyclops married Jean Grey, fans assumed that Cyclops had reached a happy ending. However, following his brief period possessed by Apocalypse, Cyclops returned to the X-Men, feeling that his long-time love/obsession with Jean was a lie. In the same manner as he did with Madelyne, Scott began to distance himself from Jean both emotionally and physically. Then, using Jean's expanding mental powers as an excuse, Cyclops began having sexual therapy sessions with Emma Frost, and that led to a telepathic affair between the two. When Jean confronted Scott, he made the claim that it had only been thoughts which they shared and thus he had done nothing wrong, knowing full well however that to a telepath, thoughts could be just as real as the physical actions. Scott then left the X-Men for a time to understand his own conflicting feelings. He returned to tell Emma that he had made a decision between her and Jean, but Jean was killed by Magneto before it was revealed which woman he had picked.


Following Jean's death, Scott left the X-Men, having been disillusioned with Xavier's dream. This outcome would have led to an apocalyptic future. To avoid it, Jean, using her Phoenix Powers, pushed Scott past the guilt he felt over her death. Scott then accepted Emma's offer of reopening the school with her. The two have since been together, however there have been many problems with their relationship, particularly in light of the recent House of M storyline in which Emma has alienated herself from many people by completely reformating the school's workings and the events involving the Hellfire Club's return. House of M was an eight-part comic book crossover storyline published by Marvel Comics in 2005. ... The Hellfire Club is a Marvel Comics supervillain team that frequently battle the X-Men. ...


Powers and abilities

Cyclops is a mutant, capable of projecting powerful beams of ruby red colored concussive force from his eyes. The beams derive their power from the absorption of ambient energy, most notably sunlight; Cyclops' cells are constantly absorbing solar and other energy and transferring it to his eyes, which in turn serve as apertures which project extra-dimensional non-Einsteinian particles in beam form (in some stories, this means that his powers do not work when he is separated from the sunlight). Contrary to popular misconception, Scott's optic blasts do not project heat; rather, the beam generates pressure which can pummel and subsequently, if desired, destroy objects (though this power has occasionally been misrepresented in the comics and other media). These beams have also been demonstrated to reflect or bounce off certain surfaces, such as highly reflective metal (which has also been portrayed inconsistently at times). It was through this use of his power that Scott ensured the survival of himself and his brother when their parachute failed, by softening the ground beneath them. 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. ...


Possibly because of a head injury suffered in this unorthodox landing, Scott was left unable to consciously control his powers - his optic beams are now constantly "on," and will project indefinitely when his eyes are open. This is explained differently in many stories; according to the original Uncanny X-Men portrayals, if Cyclops uses his powers for too long, he will become weak and run out of energy, using the Sun's energy to revitalize the beams once his visor is closed or his glasses are on. Scott is immune to the harmful effects of his own powers - the natural psionic field which surrounds his body safely absorbs the energy of his beams if they should come into contact with his body. Hence, he is able to block the beams simply by closing his eyes, with even the thin material of his eyelids being sufficient. To allow him to function in day-to-day life, Scott wears a set of eyeglasses made of ruby quartz, a material which is resonant to his psionic field, and hence blocks his beams in a similar fashion. In combat, Cyclops uses a specialized ruby quartz visor (built with a single, long lens, hence Summers' alias "Cyclops") housing adjustable apertures that allow him to control the size and intensity of the beams. Originally, Cyclops had to physically reach for controls on the visor itself for desired firings, but later models had controls wired to his gloves for more convenient use. In addition, the visor has a back-up spring-loaded function to shut its apertures in the event of a power loss while opened so he can at least see safely. Later versions of the visor have been outfitted with various forms of acquired advanced technology, such as thought controlled and neural-activated versions. This article is about the mineral. ... For other uses, see Quartz (disambiguation). ... a big (1) and a small (2) aperture For other uses, see Aperture (disambiguation). ...


The maximum force of Cyclops' optic blasts are unknown, but a commonly given description is that he can "punch holes through mountains", and he has been shown to rupture a half-inch thick carbon steel plate. During a particular battle, Scott says that he hit Cain Marko (a.k.a. the Juggernaut) with enough power to split a small planet, though he may have been indulging in hyperbole. In the mainstream continuity of the Marvel Universe, it has also been implied that Cyclops only utilizes a fraction of the energies at his disposal. During the Civil War: X-Men story arc, Cyclops is controlled by another mutant to use his powers at their full magnitude. When directed at the energy-absorbing mutant Bishop, Cyclops was able to overload Bishop's powers in a matter of seconds. It is also stated that Cyclops does not use his powers at such a level due to the preoccupation he has regarding his control (or lack thereof) of his abilities. Not to be confused with Hyperbola. ... Bishop (Lucas Bishop), is a fictional character, a Marvel Comics superhero who is a member of the X-Men. ...


Scott is immune to the power of his brother Alex, and vice versa. However, he is not immune to Vulcan's powers. Havok (Alexander Alex Summers) is a fictional Marvel Comics superhero, a member of the X-Men. ... Vulcan (Gabriel Summers) is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. ...


Skills

Cyclops seems to possess an uncanny sense of geometry, in this sense used to describe his observation of objects around himself and the angles found between surfaces of these objects. Cyclops has repeatedly demonstrated the ability to cause his optic blasts to ricochet and/or reflect off those objects in a trajectory to his liking. This is commonly called a "banked shot" when applied to this talent. Cyclops has been observed causing beams to reflect from over a dozen surfaces in the course of one blast, and still hit his intended target accurately. It is possible he may possess a sense of superhumanly enhanced spatial awareness that allows him to perform these feats as well. For other uses, see Geometry (disambiguation). ...


Cyclops is an expert pilot of fixed-wing aircraft, a skill he appears to have inherited from his father. It has also been implied that his trigonometric sense improves his abilities in the air.


A master strategist and tactician, Cyclops has spent most of his superhero career as the leader of either the X-Men or X-Factor and has developed exceptional leadership skills. It is notable that regardless of their general attitude towards him, all of the X-Men tend to obey his orders in battle -- because they know that he's usually right. Even Sebastian Shaw acknowledges Cyclops' talents, noting during the Dark Phoenix saga that Cyclops is a born leader, identifying a weakness in the Hellfire Club's defences and rapidly exploiting it. Further evidence of this is seen during the House of M storyline, where the gathered heroes accept Cyclops as the field leader, again without argument. His talents at leadership are also underscored when Emma Frost alludes to the fact that Charles Xavier only made Cyclops a team leader as an anchor for which Scott could gain some sort of stability in his life. Citing that Scott was not the type of natural leader that others like Captain America are, and his defeat to a non-powered Storm for leadership of the X-Men (though this was later revealed to be the subconscious doing of the Goblin Queen), Emma does affirm that Cyclops has proven to be an excellent leader. During his twelve years raising Cable in the distant future, Cyclops and Phoenix, under the aliases of Slym and Redd Dayspring, helped organize a resistance to Apocalypse's rule, with Cyclops/Slym becoming one of the leaders of the Clan Rebellion. Sebastian Hiram Shaw, also known as the Black King, is a Marvel Comics supervillain, and an adversary of the X-Men. ... The Phoenix Force. ... House of M was an eight-part comic book crossover storyline published by Marvel Comics in 2005. ... Emma Grace[1] Frost, formerly known as the White Queen, is a fictional character appearing in 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. ... This article is about the superhero. ... The X-Men are a group of comic book superheroes featured in Marvel Comics. ...


Cyclops also has extensive training in martial arts and unarmed combat, holding black belts in judo and aikido. His level of skill is sufficient to defeat six normal men with his eyes closed. This article is about the martial art and sport. ... Aikido ), is a Japanese martial art developed by Morihei Ueshiba as a synthesis of his martial studies, philosophy, and religious beliefs. ...


Feats and accomplishments

While rarely displayed, Cyclops' versatility in the use of his abilities is quite astounding. Below is a list of impressive feats accomplished by Cyclops (with issue numbers for verification).

  • Uncanny X-Men #124: While trapped in Murderworld (controlled by the villain Arcade), Cyclops saves Nightcrawler by clearing out a room of attacking robots with just one blast that reflects from enemy to enemy, eventually destroying a total of eight attackers.
  • Uncanny X-Men #144: While playing pool, he uses one pinpoint optic blast to strike the cue ball, sinking every ball on the table.
  • Uncanny X-Men #152: He deflects his blast off three surfaces to hit Sebastian Shaw, and pushes him towards the waiting Colossus. This shows an impressive level of intelligence (given Shaw's power to absorb kinetic energy), to adapt his strategy accordingly.
  • Uncanny X-Men #170: While trying to explain his mutancy to Madelyne Pryor, he flips a coin, and blasts the center out of it, leaving the outer edge intact.
  • Uncanny X-Men #175: When the X-Men are hypnotized into thinking Cyclops is the Dark Phoenix, they try to hunt him down. After defeating Colossus, Nightcrawler and Storm in quick succession, he flees to the Danger Room. Inside, he creates a jungle environment in which to hide from his fellow X-Men. They attempt to hunt him down, but he outwits them, defeating Shadowcat, Wolverine, Colossus, Storm and Rogue, all the while suffering from broken ribs.
  • X-Men (vol. 2) #112: While infiltrating Genosha with Wolverine, he fires a blast, deflecting it around two corners to take out two waiting enemies. Wolverine later remarked that it was the first time he'd ever seen Cyclops 'showing off'. In the same comic, he and Wolverine come up against a force of armed guards. Cyclops uses several small blasts to disable the weapon of each one of his enemies before they even fire a shot. In a later issue of this arc, while battling Magneto, he fires past Magneto (who he had just blasted through a wall), hitting Magneto's fallen helmet, which rebounds and strikes Magneto in the head. Lastly, although it isn't shown on panel, Wolverine recounts a memory in which Cyclops opened a car door-lock using only his blasts.
  • New X-Men #137: During the 'Riot at Xavier's' storyline, he is one of the X-Men who faces off against Quentin Quire's Omega Gang. When Redneck challenges him, he fires one blast accurate enough to break Redneck's nose without causing any other damage. During the ensuing fight, he fires (while doing a cartwheel) a second blast that breaks Radian's leg.
  • Two examples of the extent of his power were displayed in issues of Uncanny X-Men and Astonishing X-Men. In Uncanny X-Men #336, while battling the evil being known as Onslaught, Cyclops took off his visor, releasing a huge blast that blew a hole in Onslaught's armor. Then, in Astonishing X-Men #8, while the Xavier Institute was being attacked by a damaged Sentinel, Cyclops again removed his visor, unleashing a blast that blew the Sentinel back across the lawn, and completely leveled a large part of the forest in front of him. After this, Wolverine states that the blast he just unleashed was one of the reasons he's been leader of the X-Men for so long.
  • In Civil War: X-Men In #3, he shoots Bishop, overloading him with power, and in #4, while trying to blast through a reinforced door, Cyclops powers up Bishop, and Iron Man measures the power at nearly two gigawatts. Two gigawatts is the equivalent to the output of a large nuclear reactor.
  • In X-Factor #68, in the battle against Apocalypse, Cyclops, somehow empowered through his wife and son, released an unusually large optic blast that defeated Apocalypse. This display is similar to the occasional one demonstrated when Cyclops removes his visor.
  • In X-Factor # 25, knowing that his optic blast would ricochet off War's mechanical horse's armor, Cyclops flipped himself off a statue in a graveyard to reach War's steed, and fired an optic blast directly into the mouth to destroy War's horse, demonstrating impressive agility and tactical ability.
  • In X-Factor #14, Cyclops encountered Master Mold, who was searching for the Twelve. Taking advantage of the battlefield which was near an oil refinery, by provoking Master Mold he caused the robot to blast the oil tanks, setting off an explosion, while he used his optic blast to create a trench and shielded himself with one of Master Mold's hands, which he had blasted off.

For the second comic book series starring the X-Men, see X-Men (vol. ... Arcade is a fictional character and supervillain in the Marvel Comics universe. ... This article is about the comic character. ... For the second comic book series starring the X-Men, see X-Men (vol. ... This article is about the American-style game. ... For the second comic book series starring the X-Men, see X-Men (vol. ... Sebastian Hiram Shaw, also known as the Black King, is a Marvel Comics supervillain, and an adversary of the X-Men. ... Colossus (Piotr Nikolaievitch Rasputin) is a fictional character, a Marvel Comics superhero in the X-Men. ... For the second comic book series starring the X-Men, see X-Men (vol. ... Madelyne Pryor is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. ... For the second comic book series starring the X-Men, see X-Men (vol. ... The Phoenix Force. ... Colossus (Piotr Nikolaievitch Rasputin) is a fictional character, a Marvel Comics superhero in the X-Men. ... This article is about the comic character. ... This article is about the X-Men character. ... The Danger Room is a fictional training facility built for the X-Men of Marvel Comics. ... Box Log Falls, Lamington National Park, Queensland, Australia Jungle usually refers to a dense forest in a hot climate, such as a tropical rainforest. ... The X-Men are a group of comic book superheroes featured in Marvel Comics. ... Shadowcat (Katherine Kitty Pryde) is a comic book superhero in the Marvel Comics universe. ... For other uses, see Wolverine (disambiguation). ... Colossus (Piotr Nikolaievitch Rasputin) is a fictional character, a Marvel Comics superhero in the X-Men. ... This article is about the X-Men character. ... Rogue (Anna Marie Raven[1]) is a Marvel Comics superheroine, a member of the X-Men. ... This article is about the bones called ribs. ... X-Men (vol 2) is a Marvel Comics series featuring the eponymous group of mutant superheroes. ... Flag of Genosha under Magnetos reign. ... For other uses, see Wolverine (disambiguation). ... Magneto (Eric Magnus Lensherr) is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. ... New X-Men refers to two superhero comic books published by Marvel Comics within the hugely popular X-Men franchise. ... The X-Men are a group of comic book superheroes featured in Marvel Comics. ... Quentin Quire is a fictional comic book character, a Omega-level mutant telepath in the Marvel Universe codenamed Kid Omega. ... Redneck is a fictional mutant character in the Marvel Comics Universe. ... In gymnastics, a cartwheel is the movement where one moves sideways (in the motion the wheel of a cart would follow) in a straight line keeping the back straight placing the hand of the same side on the ground followed by the other hand as the legs are passed over... See Radian for the mathematical concept, or Radian (band) for the musical group Radian is a fictional mutant character in the Marvel Comics Universe. ... For the second comic book series starring the X-Men, see X-Men (vol. ... Astonishing X-Men is the name of three X-Men books, the first two were limited series and the third an ongoing series. ... For the second comic book series starring the X-Men, see X-Men (vol. ... Onslaught is a Marvel Comics supervillain who was the focus of an enormous intra-company crossover in 1996. ... Astonishing X-Men is the name of three X-Men books, the first two were limited series and the third an ongoing series. ... The X-Men (Back row: Nightcrawler, Rachel Summers, Iceman, Rogue. ... The Sentinels are fictional robots in the Marvel Comics Universe. ... Bishop (Lucas Bishop), is a fictional character, a Marvel Comics superhero who is a member of the X-Men. ... For the upcoming film and video game based on the superhero, see Iron Man (film) and Iron Man (video game). ... The gigawatt (symbol: GW) is a unit for measuring power corresponding to one billion (109) watts. ... Apocalypse (En Sabah Nur) is a fictional character, a comic book supervillain in Marvel Comics universe. ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ... Master Mold is a fictional character, a robot supervillain in the Marvel Universe. ... Apocalypse (En Sabah Nur) is a fictional Marvel Comics supervillain and is one of the prominent foes of the superhero group the X-Men. ...

Alternate Reality

  • In Age of Apocalypse: Weapon X #1: It is revealed that Wolverine has lost his left hand from Cyclops' optic blast. While this took place in an alternate timeline, it shows that Cyclops is potentially powerful enough to break one of the most indestructible objects in the Marvel Universe: Adamantium (Note that this happened at a joint, where the bones could be merely held together by ligament and muscle).
  • In Ultimate X-Men: While being held at gun-point, Cyclops uses Colossus's organic steel body to ricochet an optic blast, and hit his attacker.

The Age of Apocalypse is a popular X-Men story arc. ... Weapon X is a fictional clandestine government project in the Marvel Universe conducted by the Canadian Governments Department K (and secretly funded by the U.S. government) which turns willing and unwilling beings into living weapons. ... Alternate timeline, or AT, is a phrase used when discussing alternate history, a literary offshoot of the science-fiction genre. ... Adamantium is a fictional chemical substance and metal alloy in the Marvel comics universe. ... Ultimate X-Men is a superhero comic book series published by Marvel Comics. ...

Other versions

1602

In the continuity of the miniseries Marvel 1602, Scott is known as "Scotius Sumerisle." He is the leader of the original five X-Men, who are united under Carlos Javier (Professor X) and are known as "witchbreed" instead of mutants. His powers in Marvel 1602 are identical to his powers in normal Marvel continuity, though he wears a ruby visor instead of a ruby-quartz visor to block his optic blasts. Possessively in love with Jean Grey (who is disguised as a man under the name "John Grey"), he becomes jealous of her friendship with Werner (Angel). Marvel 1602 is an eight-issue Marvel comic limited series, published in 2003, written by Neil Gaiman, illustrated by Andy Kubert, and digitally painted by Richard Isanove. ...


Age of Apocalypse

In the Age of Apocalypse, Scott is a villain who fights against the X-Men. Just like in the normal timeline, Scott and his brother Alex were separated from their parents when their plane was attacked by a Shi'ar spaceship. The two would end up in an orphanage ran by Sinister, though in this timeline, both brothers were kept by him and raised as his foster children. Unbeknownst to them, their father Christopher Summers eventually makes his way back to earth, only to be found by Sinister and given over to the Beast (also a villain) for medical experimentation. The Age of Apocalypse is a popular X-Men story arc. ...


Both Alpha mutants, and both holding the rank of Prelate, Scott and Alex Summers dominate the new mutant aristocracy in Apocalypse's America. Sinister employs the brothers to operate his breeding pens, act as security, and sometimes perform as special ops unit. Scott's ability to show emotional restraint in battle earns him Sinister's favor over Alex, fuelling a dangerous rivalry between the brothers. This rivalry worsens when the brothers reunite with their real father - Christopher Summers - but are forced to kill him him.


Sinister's preference for Scott over Alex also spills over into his genetic experimentation, as with Scott's DNA Sinister plans to create a super-mutant strong enough to destroy Apocalypse. After capturing the X-Man Jean Grey, Sinister believes that he has found Scott's genetic match, and uses their combined DNA to produce a child, Nate Grey. For members of the Marvel Comics superhero team, see X-Men. ...


Despite an initial belief in the doctrine of mutant superiority and even being considered by Apocalypse as a candidate for Horseman, Scott has reservations about the ethics surrounding his work, primarily in terms of excess. These concerns grow substantially once he meets and becomes enthralled with Jean Grey, a prisoner and "race traitor". Though Scott plans to release her on his own time, Grey's husband, Weapon X, breaks in and liberates her himself. Scott fights back against Weapon X, severing Weapon X's hand but losing an eye in the process. Jean escapes with Weapon X, who remains an enemy of Scott. For other uses, see Wolverine (disambiguation). ...


In the meantime, Scott increasingly finds himself questioning the treatment of prisoners, and secretly starts releasing them. This does not go unnoticed by his brother Alex, who still harbors hostility against him. Alex re-captures Jean in order to use her against Scott, successfully exposing his brother as a traitor. Although Jean has no love for either brother, she decides to trust Scott and they attempt to escape together. Along the way the two meet Nate Grey, their genetically engineered son, though they remain oblivious to the truth of their connection to him. Eventually, Alex tracks down Jean and Scott then kills them both. In retribution for Jean's death, Weapon X kills Alex by revealing that while Scott blew off Logan's hand, his claws were retracted at the time.


Note: In the 2005 AoA One-Shot, a video screen in Magneto's office months after the events of X-Men: Omega shows the status of ten seemingly random mutants. While Jean Grey (who is later resurrected) and Havok are listed as dead, Scott is listed as incarcerated. The reason for this was an editorial error in X-Men: Omega as Scott was supposed to have been shot to death by Alex. This is confirmed further as there is a "blam" gunshot sound effect in the panel where Scott "dies". Instead, he is supposedly killed by Havok's plasma blast, which is impossible as the two brothers are genetically immune to each other's powers.


House of M

During the House of M, where the main involved heroes' fondest wishes were granted, Scott was married to Emma Frost, and Scott was a Pilot for Mutair airlines.


Shadow-X

New Excalibur battles an evil counterpart of Cyclops, who is a member of the Shadow-X, the X-Men of an alternate reality in which Professor X was possessed by the Shadow King. They are brought to Earth-616 as a result of M-Day. He was later beheaded by Sage. Excalibur is a Marvel Comics superhero group, an offshoot of the X-Men, usually based in the United Kingdom. ... Shadow-X (also known as Dark X-Men) is a Marvel Comics supervillain group that first appeared in New Excalibur #1. ... For the band of the same name, see Shadow King (band). ... 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. ... Decimation event logo, as shown on the covers of tie-in comics Decimation is the name of the late 2005 Marvel Comics storyline spinning out of the House of M limited series, that focuses on the ramifications of the Scarlet Witchs stripping nearly all of the mutant population of... Sage, also known as Tessa is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. ...


Ultimate Cyclops

In the Ultimate Marvel continuity, Scott is introduced as the straight-laced field leader of the X-Men. His parents died in a plane crash, and he is estranged from his older brother Alex, to whom he hasn't spoken since joining the X-Men. Before becoming part of Xavier's dream, Scott dated a young woman named Lorna Dane. Scott is unable to ask his crush Jean Grey on a date, and when she sleeps with Wolverine, Scott leaves the X-Men and joins Magneto. Magneto considers Scott a potential heir and urges him to pursue a relationship with his daughter. It is later revealed that Cyclops joined the Brotherhood to infiltrate Magneto's group. The various characters of the Ultimate Marvel Universe, as seen on the cover of Ultimates (v2) #12. ... Havok (Alexander Alex Summers) is a fictional Marvel Comics superhero, a member of the X-Men. ... Polaris Polaris Polaris Polaris (Lorna Dane) is a comic book superhero in the Marvel Comics universe, and a member of the X-Men. ... Jean Grey-Summers (born Jean Grey) is a fictional superheroine who lives in the Marvel Comics Universe. ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards and to make a clear distinction between fact and fiction, this article may require cleanup. ...


During the Weapon X storyline, when agents of Weapon X are trying to take in members of the X-Men Cyclops is the one of the last X-Man standing, causing serious problems for the ground forces attempting to lay siege to Xavier's Institute. Taken out only after Nightcrawler teleported behind him and ambushed him with a frying pan.


When Jean dumps Wolverine and begins a relationship with Cyclops, the two men argue over whom Jean loves and fight. Xavier sends the two on a mission to the Savage Land to resolve the rivalry. Scott falls into a chasm and catches himself on a ledge. Wolverine catches him, but allows Scott to fall. Cyclops survives, but is severely injured and unable to stand. He survives by eating insects until he is found by a Brotherhood rescue group in search of mutant survivors of a previous Sentinel attack. Cyclops recovers just as the doctors recognize him and when one doctor asks "Don't you know who this is?!" Cyclops blasts the two of them and utters the classic line "Cyclops baby, don't wear it out." After recovering Cyclops contacts the X-Men and proceeds to attack Magneto alone in his underwear until the X-Men arrive. After Magneto is defeated Cyclops and Wolverine seem poised for another fight, Cyclops, angered over Wolverine's betrayal. Blasts Wolverine with his optics blasts after taking his visors off and kicks Wolverine off the team. Later Cyclops finds Wolverine and offers him to return to the X-Men, believing that the school was set up to help mutants and someone like Wolverine needed the help that the school had to offer. The Savage Land is a hidden prehistoric land within the fictional Marvel Comics Universe. ...


While trying to stop Alex from proceeding to the Triskelion to save Lorna Dane, he is hit with a tire iron. Alex claims Cyclops allowed him to do it, because he wants Lorna saved as much as he does.


A few months later, the X-Men are challenged by a new and powerful foe: Cable, who came from the future to kill Charles Xavier. After defeating the X-men in the X-mansion and seriously injuring Kitty Pryde, Cable escapes to Finland with a kidnapped Jean. Scott and the Professor stayed in the mansion while the rest of the team travel to Europe with help of Bishop, another time-traveler who wishes to stop Cable. The X-Men engage Cable's bodyguards, the Six-Pack. Frustrated by being left behind, Cyclops confronts Xavier, who confess to his pupil that he is in love with Jean. After this confession, both Cyclops and the Professor rush to Finland. A battle between Cyclops and Cable then occurs with neither able to gain an upper hand, until the Professor distracts Cable so that Cyclops can hit Cable in the neck with an optic blast. Cable then detonates some form of hand grenade, while Charles uses his telekinesis to get Cyclops out of the range of the explosion. After the explosion, all that remains is a skeleton that is believed to be the Professor, while Cable is nowhere to be found. Cable (Nathan Christopher Summers, a. ...


Cyclops, Storm, and Jean are left everything that Professor Xavier owned. Cyclops makes sure that the school will still exist, but since (according to him) Xavier's dream died with him, Cyclops has chosen to disband the X-Men and turn the school into just a school. When Bishop challenges Scott's decision, Cyclops tells him to form his own team of X-Men. Cyclops's age in the ultimate marvel continuity is 19. Professor X Professor X (full name Charles Francis Xavier) is a comic book character in the Marvel Comics universe. ... Bishop (Lucas Bishop), is a fictional character, a Marvel Comics superhero who is a member of the X-Men. ...


X-Men: Fairy Tales

Cyclops appears as the main character in the first and third short-story installations of a four-part X-Men: Fairy Tales limited series. X-Men Fairy Tales, featuring Cyclops as Momotarō. Marvel Fairy Tales is a term for a number of comic book series published by Marvel Comics and written by C. B. Cebulski. ...

  • Issue #1

This issue is based around the Japanese fairy tale of Momotarō, only with Cyclops being the boy born out of the peach. He is named Hitome, which can mean "one eye" in Japanese. However, his optic blasts come from only one eye, and are stopped by the pit of the peach he was born from. Bisque doll of Momotarō Momotarō (桃太郎) is a hero from Japanese folklore. ...


Until he is around the age when he joined the X-Men in the regular comics, he lives with the old couple who found the large peach, working as a woodcutter, using his blasts to cut down trees instead of an axe. The X-Men are a group of comic book superheroes featured in Marvel Comics. ...


When an old monk (Professor X) comes running through the woods, chased by thieves, Hitome comes to his aid. The old monk tells a tale of how he is gathering a group of special people like Hitome in order to rescue the Emperor's daughter (Jean Grey), from a group of demons (The Brotherhood of Mutants: Magneto, Scarlet Witch, Quicksilver, Toad). Charles Francis Xavier, also known as Professor X, is a fictional Marvel Comics superhero, known as the leader and founder of the X-Men. ... Jean Grey-Summers (born Jean Grey) is a fictional superheroine who lives in the Marvel Comics Universe. ... The Brotherhood of Mutants, originally known as the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants and briefly as the Brotherhood, is a Marvel Comics supervillain team devoted to mutant superiority over normal humans. ... Magneto (Eric Magnus Lensherr) is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. ... The Scarlet Witch (Wanda Maximoff) is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe, a mutant who was introduced as a super-villainess before reforming and becoming a superheroine early in her history. ... Quicksilver is a common name for the chemical element mercury, literally meaning living silver based on its appearance and its unusual liquidity at room temperature. ... This article does not cite any references or sources. ...


Along the way, Hitome and the monk gather a team of comrades, some by Hitome's cunning, others by his offers of friendship.

  • Issue #3

This issue's story draws elements from Snow White and stories involving witches. This article is about the Snow White character. ...


Scott is a poor blind tailor who discovers a beautiful red-haired woman (Jean Grey) sleeping in a glass coffin in the woods. He awakens her with a kiss and takes her back to the village. Logan, a local butcher, confronts Scott and warns him that the woman is more than she appears to be, and that she presents a threat now that she's awake.


Marvel Zombies

Cyclops appears in his original form as one of the characters in the Marvel Zombies universe, fighting against the zombified Alpha Flight alongside his fellow X-Men at the X-Mansion in Marvel Zombies: Dead Days. However, like many of his comrades, Cyclops succumbs to the zombie infection and becomes one himself. He is destroyed at the beginning of Marvel Zombies #1 when Magneto fights the zombified superheroes by launching shards of steel at them, which has Cyclops caught in the crossfire and presumably killing him. However, he is also seen later on, as wolerine and others are eating silver surfer, cyclops can be seen behind him, albeit with wrong colouring Marvel Zombies is a set of American comic book miniseries published by Marvel Comics beginning in 2005. ... Alpha Flight is a Marvel Comics superhero team, noteworthy for being one of the few Canadian superhero teams. ... The X-Men are a group of comic book superheroes featured in Marvel Comics. ... 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. ... Marvel Zombies is a set of American comic book miniseries published by Marvel Comics beginning in 2005. ... This article is about magneto, the engine component. ...


In other media

Television

  • Cyclops's appeared in several episodes of the animated television series Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends. He appears in the episodes, "The Origin of Iceman", "A Firestar is Born", "The Education of a Superhero" and "The X-Men Adventure". George DiCenzo provided Cyclops' voice in "The X-Men Adventure" while Neil Ross provided Cyclops's voice in " A Firestar is Born".
  • Cyclops appeared in the Pryde of the X-Men animated pilot. Michael Bell provided Cyclops' voice.
  • In the X-Men animated series, Cyclops was voiced by Norm Spencer. In this version, Scott was the established team leader and was in a relationship with Jean Grey from the beginning of the series, acting more or less as his mainstream counterpart would. The writers on this show seemed to have a decent grasp on the character, including the defining characterization during the "Night of the Sentinels" storyarc. Throughout the series, Scott also discovered that his father was the space-pirate Corsair. During a battle with the government team known as X-Factor, Scott had to fight his brother Alex, a.k.a. Havok. Neither of the two seemed aware that they were brothers, and their powers seemed to have no effect on each other. When the series ended, Scott and Alex never had the chance to discover they are related.
  • He also guest starred in Spider-Man: The Animated Series in the 1990s in first the fourth and fifth episodes of Season 2, along with the rest of the X-Men.
  • In a later animated series, X-Men Evolution, Cyclops was voiced by Kirby Morrow. Here, Scott Summers is the X-Men's field leader. In contrast to his mainstream version, this version of Scott is a confident and self-assured leader with a much more extroverted personality; his teammates all look up to him, especially since he was Xavier's original recruit; Rogue even appears to have a crush on him. He has a slightly rockier, almost love/hate relationship with Jean Grey in this version for a time, although they later admitted their feelings after Scott was separated from the X-Men, lacking his glasses, and was discovered by Jean during a battle with Mystique. After graduating from Bayville High, he has become an instructor at Xavier's Institute for Gifted Children and is currently romantically involved with Jean. He also shares a close big-brother/little brother relationship with Nightcrawler. In this series, Scott later learned that Alex, his brother, was still alive, and they often shared conversation by either telephone or actually meeting up with each other, although Alex declined full-time X-Men membership. The fate of their parents is unclear in this series, though.
  • Cyclops appears in the Robot Chicken episode "Sausage Fest" voiced by Gary Holm. He was among the featured X-Men that were killed in battle against a Sentinel.
  • Cyclops is confirmed to appear in Wolverine and the X-Men voiced by Nolan North.

The Marvel Superheroes[1] is a Canadian-made animated television series starring five popular comic-book superheroes from Marvel Comics. ... Namor the Sub-Mariner is a fictional character, featured in Marvel Comics. ... Warren Kenneth Worthington III is a fictional character, a superhero that appears in Marvel Comics. ... For other uses, see Beast (disambiguation). ... Iceman (Robert Bobby Louis Drake) is a fictional Marvel Comics superhero, a member of the X-Men. ... Jean Grey-Summers (born Jean Grey) is a fictional superheroine who lives in the Marvel Comics Universe. ... Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends is an animated series produced by Marvel Productions Ltd. ... George DiCenzo is a character actor and once associate producer for Dark Shadows. ... Neil Ross (born December 31, 1944) (sometimes credited as Neilson Ross) is a British voice actor and announcer, now resident and working in Los Angeles, in the United States. ... Pryde of the X-Men is a one-shot animated television pilot from 1989 featuring the X-Men. ... Michael Bell (left, with Richard Beymer) in the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode The Homecoming. Michael Patrick Bell is an actor and voice over artist, born April 10, 1938 in Brooklyn, New York. ... 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. ... Jean Grey-Summers (born Jean Grey) is a fictional superheroine who lives in the Marvel Comics Universe. ... This article is about Spider-Man: The Animated Series. ... X-Men: Evolution is an animated series containing the original cast of X-Men, mostly depicted as teenagers and some as adults. ... Kirby Morrow (born August 28, 1973 in Jasper, Alberta) is a voice actor, stand-up comedian, and television and stage actor. ... Rogue (Anna Marie Raven[1]) is a Marvel Comics superheroine, a member of the X-Men. ... Jean Grey-Summers (born Jean Grey) is a fictional superheroine who lives in the Marvel Comics Universe. ... Mystique (Raven Darkholme) is a Marvel Comics character associated with the X-Men franchise. ... This article is about the comic character. ... Robot Chicken is an Emmy award-winning American stop motion animated television series produced by Stoopid Monkey, ShadowMachine Films, Williams Street, and Sony Pictures Digital, currently airing in the US as a part of Cartoon Networks Adult Swim line-up, in the United Kingdom and Ireland as part of... Wolverine and the X-Men is an animated TV series that has been confirmed by Avi Arad. ... Nolan Ramsey North (October 31, 1970 - ) is an American voice actor born in New Haven, Connecticut. ...

Films

In the feature film X-Men (2000) and its sequels X2: X-Men United (2003) and X-Men: The Last Stand (2006), Cyclops is portrayed by James Marsden. Although an important figure and leader in the films, his role seems to be greatly overshadowed in favor of Wolverine, especially in the sequels. A reel of film, which predates digital cinematography. ... X-Men is a 2000 superhero film based upon the fictional characters the X-Men. ... For other uses, see Sequel (disambiguation). ... This page is about the 2003 movie X2; see X2 (disambiguation) for other meanings. ... James Paul Marsden (born September 18, 1973) is an American actor, perhaps best known for playing Scott Cyclops Summers in all three X-Men films. ...


Reception

Some fans of Cyclops were generally disappointed by the handling of the character, and according to an IGN.com article about the X-Men in film: "Cyclops was misunderstood, miswritten, misdirected and generally mismanaged in this series. Sure, he's the leader of the team, they got that much right, but there's so much more to Cyclops than that. Unfortunately many comic book writers portray him poorly as well, so we're not surprised that Scott Summers was neglected in two movies and then quickly killed off in the third. We understand why the writers in X3 felt it necessary to kill Scott -- his death developed the threat of the Phoenix -- but even that emotional note wasn't exploited after the fact. It's really a shame. The Cyclops we wanted to see is basically a force unto himself. He's quiet and reserved but effectively is the hammer that Charles Xavier uses to exert his will."


X-Men

In the first movie Cyclops is the X-Men leader and a teacher at the school. He has a long-term relationship with Jean Grey. He has many minor arguments with Logan, mostly due to the fact the two men compete for Jean's affections, but nevertheless effectively takes charge after Professor X is knocked out due to sabotage of Cerebro, coordinating a plan to stop Magneto's attempt to turn world leaders into mutants via a device on the Statue of Liberty. Jean Grey-Summers (born Jean Grey) is a fictional superheroine who lives in the Marvel Comics Universe. ... For other monuments to freedom, see Monument of Liberty. ...


X2: X-Men United

In beginning of X2, Jean tells Scott (Cyclops) that she has a bad feeling that something terrible will occur, but Scott says he will not let anything happen to her. Cyclops accompanies Professor X to Magneto (who is locked up in a plastic prison). While waiting for Professor X, Lady Deathstrike and the guards attack Cyclops. Cyclops is captured along with Professor X. After William Stryker brainwashes Cyclops, Stryker has him waiting for the X-Men, ready to ambush them. The battle between Cyclops and Jean before Jean can break the brainwashing cracks the dam they are fighting under, setting up the film's ending, where Jean seemingly gives her life to stop the water hitting the Blackbird. Magneto (Eric Magnus Lensherr) is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. ... William Stryker is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe, an enemy of the X-Men. ...


X-Men: The Last Stand

Cyclops had very little screentime in The Last Stand due to Marsden's filming of Superman Returns. About 30 minutes into the film, he encounters the resurrected Jean Grey who (lacking complete control over the Phoenix) kills him. For the video game of the same name, see Superman Returns (video game). ...


Video games

Video game appearances

Cyclops is a playable character in many X-Men games Marvel's X-Men, X-Men for Sega Genesis, X-Men Arcade Game, X-Men 2: Clone Wars, Spider-Man and the X-Men: Arcade's Revenge, X-Men 3: Mojo World, Marvel vs. Capcom series. Most recently, he has appeared in X-Men: Mutant Apocalypse, X-Men Mutant Academy, X-Men: Mutant Academy 2 and X-Men Next Dimension. X-Men. ... X-Men is a home console video game produced by Sega in 1993, based on the adventures of the Marvel Comics superhero team, the X-Men. ... X-Men is an arcade game produced by Konami in 1992. ... This article is about the series. ... X-Men: Mutant Academy is a 3-D fighting game developed by Paradox, the company behind Activisions Wu-Tang: Shaolin Style and the never-published Thrill Kill, and based on Marvel Comics characters. ... X-Men: Next Dimension is a fighting game, released in 2002 for the Xbox, PlayStation 2, and GameCube video game consoles. ...


X-Men Legends series

He appeared in X-Men Legends and its sequel X-Men Legends II: Rise of Apocalypse, where he was a very powerful character. He was voiced by Robin Atkin Downes (who also voiced Pyro) in X-Men Legends and by Josh Keaton in its sequel. X-Men Legends is an action role-playing game released on several consoles in 2004. ... Born in London, England, Robin Atkin Downes is an English actor who is best known for his work in voice acting. ... Pyro (St. ... Joshua Josh Keaton (born February 8, 1979) is an American actor and voice actor. ...


Marvel: Ultimate Alliance

Cyclops also has an appearance in Marvel: Ultimate Alliance where Robin Atkin Downes reprises his role. He first appears in a cinematic detailing the failed attempt by the X-Men, Magneto and The Hulk to stop Dr. Doom from conquering Earth. He later appears in Doom's castle, having been corrupted into Dark Cyclops an evil version of himself that fights the heroes. Cyclops is one of the playable heroes available exclusively to the Xbox 360 version of the game, with the Marvel: Ultimate Heroes and Villains expansion pack. He is more powerful than he was in the X-Men Legends games and has many different optic blast powers. If you have Cyclops on your team in Doom's Castle in the final level, he has a conversation with himself that explains that Dark Cyclops is a clone made by Dr. Doom.[8] Incredible Hulk, The Hulk and The Incredible Hulk redirect here. ... Doctor Doom (Victor von Doom) is a fictional Marvel Comics supervillain created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby. ... It has been suggested that Xbox 360 Elite be merged into this article or section. ...


Footnotes

  1. ^ IGN.com Top 25 X-Men
  2. ^ X-Men #144,
  3. ^ X-Men #138
  4. ^ X-Men #129
  5. ^ X-Factor #1
  6. ^ http://comics.ign.com/articles/778/778709p1.html
  7. ^ [1]
  8. ^ [2]

External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
Cyclops (comics) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (5538 words)
Cyclops (Scott Summers) is a Marvel Comics superhero, as the field leader of the X-Men.
Cyclops had an on-again/off-again relationship with Jean Grey during their time in the X-Men, and when he refused to leave with the other senior members, feeling that the X-Men was the only place he truly belonged, she was deeply upset.
Cyclops (during a time in which he thought Jean was dead) went on a date with Colleen Wing and then he briefly dated Lee Forrester prior to meeting Madelyne Pryor.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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