| | This article contains an excessive number of copyrighted images. Please review the use of non-free images according to policy and guidelines, especially taking note of WP:NFCC#3a, WP:NFCC#8 and WP:NFC#Images. Correct any violations, then remove this tag once compliant. This article has been tagged since April 2008. | Emma Frost is a fictional comic book character appearing in the Marvel Universe. Created by writer Chris Claremont and artist/co-writer John Byrne, she first appeared in Uncanny X-Men #129 (January 1980). She was named IGN Comic's "Hottest Comic Book Babe" in 2005[1], ranked #21 on IGN Comic's "Top 25 X-Men" in 2006[2] and took 69th place on Wizard’s 200 Greatest Characters of All Time List in 2008[3] ranking way ahead of some of the more prominent members of the X-Men. Image File history File links Copyright-problem. ...
This article is about the comic book company. ...
In comic books, first appearance refers to first comic book to feature a character. ...
This does not adequately cite its references or sources. ...
For other uses of John Byrne, see John Byrne (disambiguation). ...
A mutant within the Marvel comic books, particularly those of the X-Men mythos, is an individual who possesses a genetic trait called an X-gene that allows them to naturally develop superhuman powers and abilities. ...
The X-Men are a group of comic book superheroes featured in Marvel Comics. ...
The Hellfire Club is a Marvel Comics supervillain team that frequently battles the X-Men. ...
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. ...
The Hellions were the names of several groups of fictional characters in the Marvel Comics universe. ...
Generation X was a Marvel Comics superhero team, a 1990s-era X-Men junior team. ...
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. ...
A fictional character is any person, persona, identity, or entity whose existence originates from a work of fiction. ...
A comic book is a magazine or book containing the art form of comics. ...
This article is about the shared universe setting used by many Marvel Comics titles. ...
This does not adequately cite its references or sources. ...
For other uses of John Byrne, see John Byrne (disambiguation). ...
For the second comic book series starring the X-Men, see X-Men (vol. ...
Year 1980 (MCMLXXX) was a leap year starting on Tuesday (link displays the 1980 Gregorian calendar). ...
IGN - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ...
An urbane, mutant telepath with a well-noted dry wit[4] initially known as the White Queen (complete with revealing white attire for which she is known), Frost has changed from one of the X-Men's more infamous foes to one of their most prominent members. A mutant within the Marvel comic books, particularly those of the X-Men mythos, is an individual who possesses a genetic trait called an X-gene that allows them to naturally develop superhuman powers and abilities. ...
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. ...
She was originally one of the wealthy, mutant elites who composed the Inner Circle of the Hellfire Club. There she led the club’s junior team, the Hellions. The death of the entire squad was a turning point in her life. Haunted by her failure with one group of students, she joined Charles Xavier’s cause to mentor another, the X-Men junior team Generation X. Later, after the mutant haven of Genosha was destroyed, she joined the X-Men. Her controversial relationship with constant leading X-Man Cyclops and sometimes ruthless dedication to the next generation of mutants resulted in her assumption of duties as headmistress of the Xavier Institute. The Hellfire Club is a Marvel Comics supervillain team that frequently battles the X-Men. ...
The Hellions were the names of several groups of fictional characters 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. ...
Generation X was a Marvel Comics superhero team, a 1990s-era X-Men junior team. ...
Emma Frost with the current Xavier Institute student body. ...
Publication history
Emma Frost #1 (August 2003). Cover by Greg Horn. From her initial appearance as the White Queen, Frost appeared in a few major storylines over the years. She frequently appeared in Uncanny X-Men and the original volume of the New Mutants alongside her Hellions. With Generation X and Grant Morrison's run of New X-Men, she was brought into the spotlight and has become a mainstay in the X-Men universe. Image File history File links Emma_Frost_-_1. ...
Image File history File links Emma_Frost_-_1. ...
New Mutants may also refer to the genetically engineered superhumans of Mutant X (TV series). ...
The Hellions were the names of several groups of fictional characters in the Marvel Comics universe. ...
Generation X was a Marvel Comics superhero team, a 1990s-era X-Men junior team. ...
Grant Morrison (born January 31, 1960) is a Scottish comic book writer and artist. ...
In March 1986, Tom DeFalco, Mary Wilshire, and Stevie Leialoha were the creative team for the four issue Firestar mini-series, where Emma predominantly appeared alongside her Hellions. This series showcased the deceptiveness of her personality as she attempted to turn Angelica Jones into her own personal weapon. Tom DeFalco (born June 26, 1950) is an American comics writer and editor. ...
For other uses, see Firestar (disambiguation). ...
After recovering from a coma and aiming to redeem herself upon the knowledge that her Hellions had been slaughtered, Frost played a pivotal role in the Phalanx Covenant which saw her team up with Banshee, Jubilee, and Sabretooth in an attempt to save the next generation of mutants. This led to her becoming a main character of the spin-off series Generation X which began in November 1994 under the creative eyes of Scott Lobdell, Chris Bachalo, and Mark Buckingham. The series ended after 75 issues and a minus one issue with Brian Wood, Ron Lim, Sandu Florea, and Randy Elliott ending the series. During the -1 issue, it is revealed that Emma was homeless and had met Banshee, who was working for the NYPD and an amnesiac Dark Beast from the Age of Apocalypse. After the series ended and all the X-Titles were revamped, Emma appeared in the first series of New X-Men where she started an affair with Cyclops. The Phalanx Covenant was a crossover event that ran through Marvel Comics X-Men family of books in September and October 1994. ...
Banshee (Sean Cassidy) was a Marvel Comics superhero, a member of the X-Men. ...
Wondra (Jubilation Lee, formerly known as Jubilee) is a fictional character, a Marvel Comics superheroine associated with the X-Men. ...
Sabretooth is a Marvel Comics character, an arch-enemy of the X-Menâs Wolverine. ...
Scott Lobdell (born 1963) is an American comic book writer. ...
Chris Bachalo (born August 23,1965) is an American comic book illustrator known for his quirky, cartoon-like style. ...
Mark Buckingham is an English comic book artist. ...
Brian Wood (born January 29, 1972) is a writer, illustrator, and graphic designer living in Brooklyn, New York. ...
Cover to Spider-Man Unlimited #4. ...
Dark Beast (Henry Philip McCoy), sometimes known as the Black Beast, is a Marvel Comics supervillain, an alternate reality evil version of the X-Menâs Beast. ...
The Age of Apocalypse is a popular X-Men story arc. ...
For other uses, see Cyclops (disambiguation). ...
In August 2003, writer Karl Bollers penned an ongoing series showcasing her origins titled Emma Frost. The series, which lasted for 18 issues, began during her days as a private school student and ended before her days as a Hellfire Club member. It introduced her father Winston as well as her brother Christian, also exploring the early days of her two sisters Adrienne and Cordelia. Christian Frost is a fictional character from the Marvel Comics universe and first appeared in New X-Men vol. ...
Adrienne Frost is a fictional character of the Marvel Universe, the older sister of Emma Frost and Cordelia Frost. ...
Cordelia Frost is a fictional mutant character in the Marvel Comics Universe. ...
Under Joss Whedon and John Cassaday, Emma became a main character in the third volume of Astonishing X-Men. She has been a major character in the on-going series, specifically during its third arc, Torn, in which the authenticity of her change in heart is explored. She also frequently makes guest appearances in other Marvel titles, New X-Men in particular. The reduced presence of Charles Xavier in recent years has intensified her importance as one of Marvel's foremost telepaths. 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. ...
John Cassaday is a comic book artist, best known for his work on Planetary with Warren Ellis, and Astonishing X-Men with Joss Whedon. ...
Astonishing X-Men is the name of three X-Men comic books from Marvel Comics, the first two of which were limited series and the third an ongoing series. ...
New X-Men refers to two superhero comic books published by Marvel Comics within the hugely popular X-Men franchise. ...
Background explored In a flashback story told by Frost herself in Generation X #24, Frost details a time she spent in a mental institution after being sent there by her parents. However, the now cancelled Emma Frost series depicted Frost's early years. The series was supposed to cover Frost's life from high school until her first appearance as the White Queen, however, it was cancelled at issue #18. Generation X was a Marvel Comics superhero team, a 1990s-era X-Men junior team. ...
Generation X #-1, a part of the "Flashback" event which showed the first meeting of Emma Frost and the Dark Beast, seems to take place after the series. Dark Beast (Henry Philip McCoy), sometimes known as the Black Beast, is a Marvel Comics supervillain, an alternate reality evil version of the X-Menâs Beast. ...
In X-Men: Deadly Genesis, Frost is shown after the events of her series and Generation X #-1. As a stripper at the Hellfire Club, Frost was approached by Professor X and Moira MacTaggert to join a new team of X-Men along with other characters introduced in the series. The task proves harder than first anticipated and Xavier is met with great resistance from Frost. One altercation leads to another and Frost finds herself at a crossroads and in the middle of a tussle where the X-Man Vulcan ends up being her saviour. The event is then mentally erased from everyone's minds by Xavier after he realizes the nature of the Hellfire Club leaving Frost in it's grasp. Dr. Moira Kinross MacTaggert (sometimes spelled MacTaggart, McTaggart, or McTaggert) was a fictional character appearing in X-Men stories in the Marvel Comics universe. ...
Vulcan (Gabriel Summers) is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. ...
Fictional character biography Emma Frost was born in Boston, Massachusetts to the wealthy Winston and Hazel Frost; she was the second of three daughters and also had an older brother, Christian. Winston was cold, ruthless, and domineering, often imposing impossibly high standards on his children, while Hazel abused prescription drugs to cope with the tensions of her household. Thus, Emma obtained no emotional support from her parents or her sisters Adrienne and Cordelia. The one sibling she got along with was her gay brother Christian. To her surprise, her father chose her to carry on his fortune, but after seeing her father betray her trust and commit Christian to a mental institution following a suicide attempt, Emma rejected his offer and decided to make her own way. Boston redirects here. ...
Christian Frost is a fictional character from the Marvel Comics universe and first appeared in New X-Men vol. ...
After a period of homelessness, Emma engaged in a staged ransom situation with some minor thugs who wanted her father's fortune. Events took a turn for the worst and eventually become a real ransom situation, but by using her powers, Emma turned the thugs against one another and freed herself. She took the money and enrolled in a university, only later auditioning as a dancer for the Hellfire Club, an underground elite society that was later usurped into mutant control with her help by Sebastian Shaw. At some unknown point she had plastic surgery. Sebastian Hiram Shaw, also known as the Black King, is a Marvel Comics supervillain, and an adversary of the X-Men. ...
For the album by The Huntingtons, see Plastic Surgery (album). ...
White Queen of the Hellfire Club
Cover to Uncanny X-Men #131. Art by John Byrne. Emma Frost first appeared as the White Queen of the Hellfire Club, a group of superhumans who dressed in 18th century clothing, named themselves after chess pieces, and plotted world domination. Frost and the Club's agents captured several members of the X-Men. Frost engaged the cosmic being Phoenix in a psychic battle and was overpowered and on the verge of being murdered. Frost's incredible skill, guile and quick thinking allowed her to escape undetected leaving the Cosmic Being Phoenix and the great telepath Xavier to believe she committed suicide. In another encounter with the Hellfire Club, Frost switched minds with Storm in order to defeat the X-Men from within their own ranks; the process was soon reversed. It would not be the only time Frost switched minds with an X-Man. Download high resolution version (400x620, 433 KB)Cover to Uncanny X-Men #131, featuring Emma Frost. ...
Download high resolution version (400x620, 433 KB)Cover to Uncanny X-Men #131, featuring Emma Frost. ...
The Hellfire Club is a Marvel Comics supervillain team that frequently battles the X-Men. ...
The X-Men are a group of comic book superheroes featured in Marvel Comics. ...
The alias of Phoenix has been used by several fictional comic book characters published by Marvel Comics. ...
For other uses, see Storm (disambiguation). ...
During her time with the Hellfire Club, Frost also ran the Massachusetts Academy, a school for mutants which served as a counterpoint to that of X-Men founder Charles Xavier's School for Gifted Youngsters. Frost's trainees became the super-villain team known as the Hellions and fought Xavier's young students, the New Mutants though the relationship between the two teams eventually turned into that of friendly rivalry. Frost also assisted the New Mutants after they had been killed and resurrected by the Beyonder, leaving them emotionally traumatized. While she used her psychic powers to erase their traumatic memories, she incorporated them into her Massachusetts Academy, increasing the familiarity and friendship of the New Mutants and Hellions. At one point, Frost began privately training a young mutant named Angelica Jones to be her personal bodyguard and assassin in reaction to political in-fighting among the Hellfire Club. Jones eventually discovered Frost was manipulating her and broke free from her control to later become the super-heroine Firestar. The Massachusetts Academy is a fictional prep school in the Marvel 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. ...
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. ...
The Hellions were the names of several groups of fictional characters in the Marvel Comics universe. ...
New Mutants may also refer to the genetically engineered superhumans of Mutant X (TV series). ...
Bodyguards of Viktor Yushchenko (far left) after leaving Gdansk city hall. ...
Assassin and Assassins redirect here. ...
For other uses, see Firestar (disambiguation). ...
Death of the Hellions When the time traveling mutant Trevor Fitzroy unleashed the mutant-hunting robots called the Sentinels on Frost and the Hellions, Frost placed herself in a psychic coma in order to survive the ordeal and nearly all of her students were killed. One of the Hellions, Tarot, somehow returned to life several months later. The other two Hellions that managed to survive were Warpath and Empath. Time travel is a concept that has long fascinated humanity—whether it is Merlin experiencing time backwards, or religious traditions like Mohammeds trip to Jerusalem and ascent to heaven, returning before a glass knocked over had spilt its contents. ...
Trevor Fitzroy is a Marvel Comics supervillain, an enemy of the X-Men, in particular Bishop. ...
For other uses, see robot (disambiguation). ...
The Sentinels are fictional robots in the Marvel Comics Universe. ...
For other uses, see Coma (disambiguation). ...
Not to be confused with Tarot: Witch of the Black Rose. ...
Warpath (James Proudstar), previously known as the second Thunderbird, is a fictional character, a Marvel Comics superhero associated with the X-Men. ...
Empath (Manuel Alfonso Rodrigo de la Rocha), is a fictional mutant in the Marvel Universe. ...
It was also during this period (behind the scenes) that Emma's egg cells were harvested by John Sublime. This article or section does not cite any references or sources. ...
The X-Men cared for the comatose Frost at the Xavier Academy. Later, she awoke and possessed the body of the X-Man Iceman (Bobby Drake). In Drake's body, Frost made use of his ice powers in ways he had never dreamed and pushed the limits of his powers to escape the X-Mansion. When she discovered the deaths of her students, Xavier was able to coax the devastated Frost back into her own body. Iceman (Robert Bobby Louis Drake) is a fictional Marvel Comics superhero, a member of the X-Men. ...
Later, Frost was attacked in one of her buildings by Iceman, who wanted to know how to utilize his untapped powers to fix damage he had undergone. His ice-form had been severely damaged and he feared if he turned to human, he would die. Despite the danger, Emma managed to talk Iceman into realizing it was simply pure willpower. With her emotional support, he was able to cure himself and return to normal.
Generation X After being disrupted from her comatose state while the Phalanx invaded the mansion and replaced several X-Men, Frost teamed up with the X-Men Banshee (aka Sean Cassidy), Jubilee, as well as Sabretooth, and future student Synch. They battled the techno-organic lifeforms in order to rescue a select group of teenage mutants. Emma agreed to train them after deciding that the Hellions might have survived Fitzroy's Sentinel siege had they been exposed to Xavier's teachings as well as her own. The Phalanx are a cybernetic fictional species in the Marvel Comics universe who have come in conflict with the X-Men and related groups on several occasions. ...
Banshee (Sean Cassidy) was a Marvel Comics superhero, a member of the X-Men. ...
Wondra (Jubilation Lee, formerly known as Jubilee) is a fictional character, a Marvel Comics superheroine associated with the X-Men. ...
Sabretooth is a Marvel Comics character, an arch-enemy of the X-Menâs Wolverine. ...
Synch (Everett Thomas) is a fictional character, a Marvel Comics mutant superhero. ...
The group of students became a superhero team known as Generation X and studied at Frost's Massachusetts Academy. Cassidy's trust of Frost was intermittent — at times he was suspicious of her, and at others he trusted her implicitly. Frost herself seemingly enjoyed flirting with Banshee, though this may have been for pure fun. Around this time, Frost also worked to earn back Firestar's trust. Emma became involved in the lives of many other young mutants besides her initial charges, including Marrow, Artie, Leech, and even Franklin Richards for a time. Generation X was a Marvel Comics superhero team, a 1990s-era X-Men junior team. ...
Marrow (Sarah), is a Marvel Comics character, associated with the X-Men. ...
This article is about the Marvel Comics character. ...
After Frost's business ventures took a bad turn, she turned to her estranged sister Adrienne for help. Adrienne, a psychometrist, offered financial assistance but demanded to be co-headmistress of the school in return. Adrienne secretly plotted against Emma and planted a bomb at the school, which killed Generation X member Synch. Frost tracked down and murdered Adrienne and then returned to the Academy, growing increasingly distant from her students in an effort to hide her crime. Monet even came to the realization that Emma had murdered her sister and informed the other students that they could no longer trust her. This, combined with Banshee's increasing depression and drunkenness following the death of his long-time lover Moira MacTaggert, led the students to leave, disbanding Generation X. Adrienne Frost is a fictional character of the Marvel Universe, the older sister of Emma Frost and Cordelia Frost. ...
For the psychology discipline see psychometrics. ...
Synch (Everett Thomas) is a fictional character, a Marvel Comics mutant superhero. ...
On the Threshold of Eternity. ...
The Drunkenness of Noah by Giovanni Bellini Drunkenness is the state of being intoxicated by consumption of alcohol to a degree that mental and physical facilities are noticeably impaired. ...
Dr. Moira Kinross MacTaggert (sometimes spelled MacTaggart, McTaggart, or McTaggert) was a fictional character appearing in X-Men stories in the Marvel Comics universe. ...
Joining the X-Men Afterwards, Frost traveled to the mutant haven island of Genosha, possibly at the request of Xavier due to her receiving an unrevealed request by him at the end of Generation X. There, Frost ran and taught at a mutant school until a genocidal Sentinel attack killed most of the island's population including all of her students. Frost survived only due to the sudden manifestation of her secondary mutation: the power to transform herself into a flexible, diamond-like substance that provides her near-invulnerability. Download high resolution version (550x833, 125 KB)Cover to New X-Men #156. ...
Download high resolution version (550x833, 125 KB)Cover to New X-Men #156. ...
For other uses, see Cyclops (disambiguation). ...
Salvador Larroca (born 1964) is a Spanish comic book artist, primarily known for his work on various X-Men titles. ...
Flag of Genosha under Magnetos reign. ...
For other uses, see Genocide (disambiguation). ...
New X-Men #114, the first issue of E is For Extinction. Art by Frank Quitely. ...
Frost stays with the X-Men, who had rescued her from Genosha. After seemingly killing Cassandra Nova, Frost joins the X-Men team. When the Xavier Institute reforms into a regular school once again, she takes on a teaching position. Shortly thereafter, she drops her previous "White Queen" codename. She also started to look after and train a group of telepathic quintuplets known as the Stepford Cuckoos, who quickly became her prized pupils. Frost and the Cuckoos proved themselves when they helped fight and defeat Charles Xavier's evil twin sister Cassandra Nova when she returned. As a member of the X-Men, Frost began a psychic, quasi-sexual relationship with the X-Man Cyclops (Scott Summers), who had become distant from his wife Jean Grey as a result of his temporary physical and mental merger with the mutant immortal Apocalypse, and Jean's "remanifestation" of the Phoenix Force added to the disconnection. At first the psychic meetings had been a form of therapy, but soon turned into a full blown telepathic affair. 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. ...
Cassandra Nova is a fictional enemy of the X-Men in the Marvel Comics universe. ...
For other uses, see Cyclops (disambiguation). ...
Apocalypse (En Sabah Nur) is a fictional comic book supervillain in the Marvel Comics Universe. ...
While quelling a riot at the school, one of the Stepford Cuckoos, Sophie, was killed and the others left Frost, blaming her for the death. To get revenge on Frost, the remaining four Cuckoos telepathically contacted Jean Grey in order to tell her about Frost's and Cyclops' psychic affair. In the aftermath of the riot, Jean Grey caught Frost and Summers in bed together in their minds. Jean became enraged at the sight, and confronted Frost, who proceeded to taunt her about her marriage to Scott being stale and ordinary. Unleashing her re-ignited Phoenix abilities, Jean Grey unmercifully tore through Frost's mental defenses and forced her to face the self-denials of her past. Even so, Frost was adamant that Jean would not get the information she wanted. Angry and frustrated, Jean continued to try to torture the information out of Frost, threatening to make Frost experience the pain of reliving the deaths of all her previous students. Cyclops intervenes on Frost's behalf by giving a full account of what occurred between himself and Emma in Hong Kong. Frost was traumatized after the attack as the experience left her humiliated and emotionally shattered. However, in the end, the confrontation with Jean resulted in Emma confessing to Wolverine that she indeed truly loved Scott Summers. Cover to trade paperback. ...
Cover to New X-Men #140 Murder at the Mansion was the fifth story arc from Grant Morrisons run on the Marvel Comics title New X-Men, running from issues #139-141. ...
Jean Grey-Summers (born Jean Grey) is a fictional superheroine who lives in the Marvel Comics Universe. ...
For other uses, see Wolverine (disambiguation). ...
Soon afterwards, fellow X-Man Beast found her physically shattered in her diamond form. While other members of the school investigated the murder, Beast attempted to reassemble Emma piece by piece. Surprisingly, it was Jean Grey, again using her increasingly growing Phoenix powers, who successfully reassembled and fused Frost's body back together as she realized that Emma's consciousness was still clinging to her shattered body. Jean realized that Emma truly did love Scott and could help him in a way that Jean could not. Alive again, Frost was able to name her attempted murderer - Esme of the Stepford Cuckoos. Esme had mind controlled fellow student Angel Salvadore into shooting Frost in her single flaw with a diamond bullet, under the direction of Xorn/Magneto. Esme fled the mansion, and after her subsequent murder by Xorn/Magneto, the three remaining Cuckoos returned to Frost. For other uses, see Beast (disambiguation). ...
Angel Salvadore, often simply called Angel, is a fictional character created by Grant Morrison and Ethan Van Sciver. ...
Xorn is a fictional character published by Marvel Comics. ...
Leading Xavier's At the climactic battle against Xorn, Jean Grey was killed by the villain. Following her funeral, Emma approached Scott with the hopes of furthering their relationship and rebuilding the school. Initially a guilt ridden Cyclops was unable to move on with his life and walked away from Emma, which resulted in a horrible alternate future. Jean Grey, who had been reborn as the White Phoenix of the Crown, realized that in order to prevent that future, Cyclops needed a reason to stay. Using her cosmic powers, Jean Grey urged Cyclops to 'live' and start a new life with Emma. Afterwards Cyclops and Frost became lovers, despite the criticism from their teammates and family members, and the two took over the school after Professor Xavier stepped down. Frost became co-headmistress with Cyclops and adviser to a new team of Hellions. Frost developed a very antagonistic relationship with fellow teacher Kitty Pryde (the White Queen was the first villain she had encountered) and advisor Danielle Moonstar, who both, despite Emma's recent record with the X-Men, did not trust her. Emma would later ask Kitty to re-join the X-men (in the lineup featured in 'Astonishing X-men') for this very distrust - to be ready should Emma revert to her old ways. Download high resolution version (550x828, 139 KB)Cover to New X-Men:Hellions #1. ...
Download high resolution version (550x828, 139 KB)Cover to New X-Men:Hellions #1. ...
The Hellions were the names of several groups of fictional characters in the Marvel Comics universe. ...
Storm and Phoenix (Jean Grey) Clayton Henry is a growing talent in the comic business. ...
Xorn is a fictional character published by Marvel Comics. ...
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. ...
Katherine Kitty Pryde, also commonly known by the codename Shadowcat, is a Marvel Comics mutant superhero and a member of the X-Men. ...
Danielle Moonstar, originally codenamed Psyche and later Mirage, is a fictional Marvel Comics superheroine associated with the X-Men. ...
Emma also had an antagonistic relationship with the daughter of Jean Grey and Cyclops, Rachel Grey, who was furious at her father for betraying Jean and for starting a relationship with Emma immediately after her death. This anger led to a telepathic battle on the astral plane while on a mission in Hong Kong. Although Rachel has access to near infinite reserves of psionic energy, Frost's telepathy was far more refined and trained, allowing her to humiliate Rachel. Frost then rather peacefully offered Rachel the chance to help her hone her telepathic skills. Rachel, though still wary, accepted the proposal. On this same mission Emma also encountered the new White Queen of the Hellfire Club, Courtney Ross, for the first time. Rachel Grey (born Rachel Summers) is a fictional character, a Marvel Comics superheroine created by writer Chris Claremont and artist/co-writer John Byrne. ...
The astral plane, also called the astral world or desire world, is a plane of existence according to esoteric philosophies, some religious teachings and New Age thought. ...
Opul Lun Sat-Yr-9 (also spelled Sat-Yr-nin) is a fictional character in the Marvel Universe. ...
Following Decimation the student population has gone drastically down. Frost, without consulting Cyclops, decides to revamp the entire workings of the school, first by removing all now non-mutant students and teachers (Danielle Moonstar amongst them) and then by having one team of students to train as the New X-Men. To pick the squad members, she puts the students in the danger room to fight each other in an all-out brawl. Frost, feeling that X-23 is too dangerous to have on the team and at the school, promises Hellion that if he eliminates Laura during the brawl, he will appointed as leader of the team, even going so far as to telepathically freeze Laura during the fight. Hellion spares X-23 at the last minute, and Frost chooses six remaining students, four from her Hellions squad, to be New X-Men. Cyclops, who steadily grows more annoyed at Emma making these decisions without consulting him, then places X-23 who Emma had "forgotten" with the New X-Men squad. As punishment for Julian's disobedience, Emma appoints Surge as the team leader instead of Hellion. At this time the racist preacher William Stryker causes the subsequent deaths of most of the depowered students and tries to eliminate mutant kind. Once again Frost feels responsible for the loss of young student lives. 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...
For information on the experimental aircraft, see X-23 PRIME. X-23 (Laura Kinney) is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. ...
Hellion (Julian Keller) is a fictional character, a mutant in the Marvel Comics Universe, a member of the student body at the Xavier Institute, and a member of the Hellions squad therein. ...
For information on the experimental aircraft, see X-23 PRIME. X-23 (Laura Kinney) is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. ...
Surge (Noriko Nori Ashida) is a fictional character, a mutant in the Marvel Universe, one of the student body in the Xavier Institute, and a member of the former New Mutants squad therein. ...
William Stryker is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe, an enemy of the X-Men. ...
Phoenix - Endsong & Warsong During X-Men: Phoenix - Endsong, in a plan to trap the Phoenix Force, Frost allowed her body to be used as a vessel for the Phoenix Force which would allow enough distraction for Cyclops to trap her into an egg-shaped containment cage. Frost is temporarily possessed by the Phoenix, allowing her access to its near-infinite powers, though she is unable to properly host it. The Phoenix refuses to leave Frost's body. However, Jean Grey is able to forcefully remove it. When Jean and the unstable Phoenix Force merge together, Jean starts to lose control and begins reverting to her Dark Phoenix persona. Under Cyclops' direction, Emma uses her telepathy to contact the remaining Stepford Cuckoos, who are connected to Cerebra, and instructs them to connect everyone's mind with every X-Man who ever loved Jean Grey. Emma and the Cuckoos direct all that love and support into Jean's mind in order to keep her grounded. This results in quenching the Phoenix's hunger and allowing Jean to gain control of the Phoenix Force once again, which then allows her to regain her position as the White Phoenix of the Crown and save the X-Men from an impending Event Horizon before returning to the White Hot Room to collect her missing pieces and heal. The alias of Phoenix has been used by several fictional comic book characters published by Marvel Comics. ...
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. ...
Cerebra, whose real name is Shakti Haddad, is a founding member of the X-Men of 2099 and founder of X-Nation. ...
X-Men: Phoenix - Warsong reveals that Emma's ova were the genetic templates used to clone thousands of identical female telepaths, five of which would become the Stepford Cuckoos. At the issue's conclusion, the encapsulated offspring, as well as Celeste Cuckoo, begin to refer to Frost as "mother" -- a title whose usage she later accepts. At the end of the Warsong series, the Phoenix (inhabiting the body of Celeste Cuckoo) manages to destroy the thousands of additional clones, and the three cuckoos seal a fragment of the Phoenix Force within their diamond hearts. Emma, pained by the loss of her cloned children, declares revenge against the Phoenix, whether its form be that of the Force or Jean Grey. A human ovum Sperm cells attempting to fertilize an ovum An ovum (plural ova) is a haploid female reproductive cell or gamete. ...
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. ...
Civil War An unimpressed Frost announced to Iron Man that the Xavier Institute and the X-Men would not support the Superhuman Registration Act and remain neutral (see Civil War) as she fears that the registration of mutants would put them in more danger. Ms. Marvel's visit to the Institute in order to convince the X-Men to support the pro-registration heroes caused Frost to harshly criticize the Avengers for not showing any kind of support following the Genoshan genocide, which she had already done with Iron Man, and the mass deaths of the depowered students at the hands of William Stryker and his Purifiers while showing her psychic images to illustrate her point. This article is about the superhero. ...
In Marvel Comics fictional Marvel Universe, the Registration Acts - the Mutant Registration Act (or MRA) and Super-human Registration Act (SRA or sometimes SHRA) - are legislative bills which, when passed into law, enforce the mandatory registration of super-powered individuals with the government. ...
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. ...
For the other Marvel Comics character called Ms. ...
William Stryker is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe, an enemy of the X-Men. ...
The Purifiers, also known as the Stryker Crusade, are a fictional paramilitary/terrorist organization in the Marvel Comics universe and enemies of the X-Men. ...
Marauders and Mr. Sinister In the Fall 2007 X-Men story arcs, Cyclops, Emma, Beast, and Wolverine arrive to check on Rogue in Mississippi after Rogue's experience with Hecatomb. Emma performs a psychic diagnosis and learns that the eight billion minds trapped inside of Rogue's body are greatly weakening her conscious mind. As Emma prepares to psychically stabilize Rogue's shattered psyche, Omega Sentinel, possessed by a digitized version of Malice, who is part of the newly re-assembled Marauders, enters the room and blasts Emma with a biotoxin. Barely keeping herself conscious, Emma sifts through the Marauder's psionic shielding and transfers some of their goals and targets to Cannonball. The Marauders defeat the remaining X-Men, Rogue in tow, and collapse the house on the remaining X-Men. The Marauders, revealed to be working for Mister Sinister, are seeking different persons and items that can reveal the future (with the Destiny's Diaries being of prime importance). It is revealed that Kitty approached Scott and Emma with her concern of the diaries being discovered and the three formed a plan for Kitty to hide the diaries. Emma was to remove the memory of the hiding place and to make everyone believe that the decoys were the true diaries, thus securing not only the diaries, but also their location. The true location and memory could only be revealed by a trigger word spoken to Kitty, the memory of which, in turn, could only be triggered by a different word from Kitty herself. [5] Rogue (Anna Marie[1]) is a Marvel Comics superheroine, a member of the X-Men. ...
This article is about the U.S. state. ...
In Ancient Greece, a Hecatomb was the sacrifice to the gods of 100 cattle (hecaton = one hundred). ...
Karima Shapandar, codenamed Omega Sentinel, is a fictional character associated with the X-Men and its spinoff Excalibur. ...
Malice is the name of two separate disembodied supervillains in Marvel Comics. ...
The Marauders are a group of supervillains in the Marvel Comics universe and enemies of the X-Men. ...
Cannonball (Samuel Zachary Guthrie) is a fictional Marvel Comics superhero, associated with the X-Men. ...
Mister Sinister (Nathaniel Essex) is a fictional character appearing in the comic books published by Marvel Comics. ...
Torn and Unstoppable An ongoing subplot in Astonishing X-Men depicts Frost's unusually antagonistic relationship with Kitty Pryde and possible domination of Scott Summers as possible evidence of disloyalty. Her secretive relationship with the surviving Stepford Cuckoos has also been presented as "evidence," and accusations are frequently made by other characters having reason to distrust her motives. In issue #12 (August 2005), the question of Frost's "true loyalties" are brought into focus as Frost abandons the team during a fight to confer with a shadowy figure, revealed on the final page to be one of a group of four individuals watching from the shadows. The group contains Sebastian Shaw, Cassandra Nova, Negasonic Teenage Warhead (a young telepath and former student of Frost's, last seen dead in her arms when she was rescued from Genosha), and a cloaked figure called Perfection, who discuss among themselves Frost's impending betrayal of the team. Image File history File links Emmacassandra. ...
Image File history File links Emmacassandra. ...
John Cassaday is a comic book artist, best known for his work on Planetary with Warren Ellis, and Astonishing X-Men with Joss Whedon. ...
Astonishing X-Men is the name of three X-Men comic books from Marvel Comics, the first two of which were limited series and the third an ongoing series. ...
Katherine Kitty Pryde, also commonly known by the codename Shadowcat, is a Marvel Comics mutant superhero and a member of the X-Men. ...
For other uses, see Cyclops (disambiguation). ...
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. ...
Sebastian Hiram Shaw, also known as the Black King, is a Marvel Comics supervillain, and an adversary of the X-Men. ...
Cassandra Nova is a fictional enemy of the X-Men in the Marvel Comics universe. ...
Negasonic Teenage Warhead (real name Ellie Phimister) is a fictional mutant character in the Marvel Comics universe who first appeared in New X-Men vol. ...
Flag of Genosha under Magnetos reign. ...
In Astonishing X-Men #13 (February, 2006), we are shown a vision of Frost's survival of the destruction of Genosha in New X-Men #115 portrayed as being due to Cassandra Nova creating Frost's secondary mutation. In exchange, she was to assist Nova as part of a scheme to infiltrate the X-Men as a sleeper agent (Nova having supposedly erased the memory of their encounter and only restoring it recently). This may have occurred when Emma allowed a part of Nova to escape into her brain while she was trapping Nova into the Alien form Stuff during the X-men's last battle with Nova. She then played upon Emma's survivor guilt at surviving Genosha while her students died and her suppressed fear of her being evil while still seeking redemption, as well as her attempt to reconcile her real love for Cyclops while recognizing that she could possibly betray him by turning back to her roots. New X-Men refers to two superhero comic books published by Marvel Comics within the hugely popular X-Men franchise. ...
Survivor guilt, otherwise known as survivor syndrome, is the mental condition that results from the appraisal that a person has done wrong by surviving traumatic events such as combat, natural disasters, or even surviving a lay-off in a work place. ...
Using this and other elements of Emma's consciousness, she created physical manifestations of Cassandra in her human form, Sebastian Shaw, Emma's younger evil self in the Hellfire club calling itself "Perfection", and Negasonic Teenage Warhead, her former student in Genosha. First, she began using her telepathy on Cyclops to appear as Phoenix, trying to reveal the lack of control he had over his optic blasts. It was revealed that shortly after he fell out of a plane with his younger brother Havok, Scott placed a deep mental block in his mind which prevented the controlled use of his powers. Encouraged by Frost, Scott revisits that moment in his life and reverses the decision, leaving him comatose. With Cyclops out of the way, Frost/Nova and the physical manifestations calling themselves the "Hellfire Club", assault the X-Mansion, incapacitating every X-Man, with the exception of Shadowcat. Kitty manages to elude capture, and, fulfilling the role Emma asked her to in the beginning of the series, manages to capture the former White Queen. However, Kitty was eventually tricked by Nova/Emma/"Perfection" into helping Emma/Nova/"Perfection" retrieve the "Stuff" body containing the rest of Nova. A depowered Cyclops with the help of Blindfold, and Hisako Ichiki, were able to defeat the "Hellfire Club" by figuring out they were fake, while Emma herself tried to get Kitty to shoot her in order to block Cassandra's escape, but was stopped by Cyclops. Undeterred, Nova then attempted to transfer her mind into Hisako. The ending was interrupted as everyone present was teleported away by S.W.O.R.D. onto their ship which was headed towards the Breakworld. Jean Grey-Summers (born Jean Grey) is a fictional superheroine who lives in the Marvel Comics Universe. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Armor (Hisako Ichiki), is a fictional mutant teenager who is enrolled at the Xavier Institute; she retains her powers after the events of Decimation. ...
S.W.O.R.D. (an acronym for Sentient World Observation and Response Department) is a fictional counterterrorism and intelligence agency in the Marvel Universe which deals with extraterrestial threats to world security. ...
Emma, along with Cyclops, 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 (who adopted the code-name "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 destroying the S.W.O.R.D. cruiser. Switching to diamond form in the nick of time, Emma was spared, however Scott was mortally injured. Cradling an injured Scott in her arms, Emma shed a tear. As the Danger room entity approached, Emma made a request of the machine. She asked that Danger kill her, and that 'she' do so quickly. The Danger Room is a fictional training facility built for the X-Men of Marvel Comics. ...
However, this turns out to be another one of Emma's 'lessons' this time aimed at Danger, who in truth seems incapable of killing the X-Men due to her core programing. Emma offers Danger a deal in exchange for her help with the X-Men's mission. As X-Men proceed with their planned attack Breakworld weapon's installation, they are surrounded by Breakworld ships and Scott is forced to take a single battle cruiser to draw attention from the main team, being shot down and apparently dying in the process (with Emma feeling Scott's life flash before his eyes). Scott is resurrected by their enemies, just as Colossus had been. It turns out Cyclops' sacrifice was all part of a master plan by the team undetected by way of Frost's telepathy in order to distract their opponents so the rest of the team can carry out their own duties without as much difficulty.
Emma is part of the team that investigates the detection of a new mutant in Alaska. She also defends the X-Men from the Marauders and the telepathy of Sinister and Exodus. Emma is last seen with Cyclops's team of X-Men looking for Cable and then tracking down the Marauders with the Cuckoos. Later when X-Force arrives to the Marauders hideout, Emma takes out Harpoon, and during the final battle on Muir Island, she faces off Exodus, distracting him in a telepathic duel long enough for Dust to enter his body and scour his lungs with her sand form, incapacitating him. For the singer, see Paris Bennett. ...
Dust (real name Sooraya Qadir) is a fictional character, a mutant in the Marvel Universe. ...
Divided We Stand After the events of the Messiah Complex, Emma goes on a vacation with Cyclops to the Savage Land; there, they are contacted by Archangel asking them for assistance in San Francisco. Upon arriving the couple discovers that a powerful force has made the citizens of the city believe that they are now living in the 1960s.
Emma Frost is among the heroes emerging from the crashed Skrull ship in Secret Invasion #1. She appears in a costume similar to the one she wore when she first appeared as a member of the Hellfire Club. While the group of emerging heroes believe themselves to be the real ones, it is unknown if this is true, or just another Skrull ploy. Secret Invasion is a comic book storyline that began in April 2008, published by Marvel Comics. ...
Powers and abilities Emma Frost is a metamorph capable of accessing both a human form with enormous[6][7][8] telepathic abilities and an organic diamond form with enhanced strength and durability. Since her introduction, Frost has displayed the telepathic standards of broadcasting and receiving thoughts, mind control, altering perceptions and memories, offensive blasts of psionic energy, astral projection, etc. She is highly skilled at creating electronic devices that amplify/block/engage psionic powers, as well as exploiting flaws in most electronic equipment.[9][10][11][12][13][14] Surface mount electronic components Electronics is the study of the flow of charge through various materials and devices such as semiconductors, resistors, inductors, capacitors, nano-structures and vacuum tubes. ...
Frost is also very adept at performing 'psychic surgery': the utilization of pin-pointed psionic energy to exert absolute control over individual brain functions such that the physical form can be manipulated (i.e., injuries healed, disabilities repaired, the nervous system, etc), a subskill of telepathy unusual for even the most powerful of telepaths, but one that Emma is keen to utilize whenever the occasion benefits her. Frost's incredible power and conniving ways are evident in her first appearance whereby she manages to capture and sedate Charles Xavier.[9][10][11] Frost has been cited as a "World-class telepath"[15] and a "Psi of the Highest Order"[16], capable of extraordinary telepathic feats.[17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28][29] Charles Francis Xavier, also known as Professor X, is a fictional Marvel Comics superhero, known as the leader and founder of the X-Men. ...
During the massacre of over 16 million mutants in Genosha, Frost developed a secondary mutation: the ability to transform herself into a perfectly smooth, flexible, translucent diamond-like substance. Her abilities have been inconsistent in this form. Although initially only her skin turns into diamond, she was shattered by a diamond bullet, indicating that her entire body turns into organic diamond. Frost is nearly impervious to all forms of physical damage and can use her indestructible body to support incredible amounts of weight, though different writers have shown varying accounts of her strength. Her diamond form also has a physical flaw, which, if exploited, can and has caused her to shatter. Though the exact location of the flaw in her diamond body has not been stated outright, several clues point to it being located in her face, an ironic reference to her famed vanity.[30] In Marvel comics Secondary Mutation was a worldwide phenomenon that seemed inexplicable. ...
This article is about the mineral. ...
Frost's full range of abilities between her diamond state and regular form have also been inconsistent[31][32]; however recent occurrences[33][34] reflect Morrison's initial depiction of her powers: that Frost cannot access her psychic powers in diamond form and vice versa. Also, Emma does not fatigue and has no need for water or food while she stays in her diamond form.[31]. On top of that her Diamond Hard substance makes her "Impervious to cold"[35] and resistant to heat.[36][37][38] Throughout the years, it has been hinted that Frost is also a latent telekinetic. To save herself from Trevor Fitzroy, Jean Grey's displaced psyche was able to use Frost's brain to generate a strong telekinetic force-field and fly while it inhabited the White Queen's body.[39] During the Onslaught Saga Frost unwittingly levitated several kitchen utensils while having a bad dream. [40] When the mutant known as Synch "synched" with Frosts powers, he was able to use them to levitate several objects and individuals in the room. This phenomenon was referred to as telekinesis and credited to Frost's psi powers. [41] The term psychokinesis (from the Greek ÏÏ
Ïή, psyche, meaning mind, soul, or breath; and κίνηÏιÏ, kinesis, meaning motion; literally movement from the mind)[1][2] or PK, also known as telekinesis[3] (Greek + , literally distant-movement referring to telekinesis) or TK, denotes the paranormal ability of the mind to influence matter, time...
Trevor Fitzroy is a Marvel Comics supervillain, an enemy of the X-Men, in particular Bishop. ...
Synch (Everett Thomas) is a fictional character, a Marvel Comics mutant superhero. ...
Other versions Age of Apocalypse In the Age of Apocalypse, Emma Frost never joined the Hellfire Club, and was neither part of the X-Men nor of Apocalypse's forces. Instead, she was a member of the Human High Council, despite being a mutant. The AoA Frost had no psychic powers due to a lobotomy, which, regardless of it having been forced, saved her from Apocalypse's psychic mutants purge. The Age of Apocalypse is a popular X-Men story arc. ...
Look up Lobotomy in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
Frost was one of the HHC leaders that lead the attack against Apocalypse, alongside Mariko Yashida and Brian Braddock, whom Frost both distrusted and disliked for his extreme anti-mutant stance. It has been suggested that Sunfire (Exiles) be merged into this article or section. ...
Captain Britain (Brian Braddock), briefly known as Britannic, is a fictional character, a superhero appearing in the comic books published by Marvel Comics. ...
House of M The House of M reality was created by Scarlet Witch. In this reality mutants were in the majority and normal humans in the minority. Emma was married to Scott Summers in this reality and worked as a children's psychologist. Two of her clients were Valeria and Franklin Richards, who were receiving therapy after the deaths of their parents (that reality's Reed Richards and Susan Storm). When reality was restored by the Scarlet Witch, only those protected by Dr. Strange's magic and Emma's telepathy retained their memories of what had occurred. House of M was an eight-part comic book crossover storyline published by Marvel Comics in 2005. ...
Cyclops (middle character from top) appears on the cover of X-Men #1. ...
Exiles In a reality where the Legacy Virus became the black plague of mutantkind, Warlock bonded with Cypher in order to save him. However, the legacy virus mutated into a non-lethal techno-organic plague that infected mutants and humans alike, transforming them into Vi-locks, with Forge as its central consciousness. A crippled Emma is a member of the Avengers, the only superhero group remaining and that gathers all the non-infected superhumans of the reality. In the fictional Marvel Universe, the Legacy Virus was a devastating plague that ripped through the mutant population, killing hundreds and mutating so that it affected baseline humans as well, until it was cured almost overnight by the sacrifice of the superhero Colossus, a member of the X-Men. ...
Warlock is a fictional character, a cybernetic alien superhero in the Marvel Comics universe, affiliated with the original New Mutants, a mutant superhero team. ...
Cypher (Douglas Ramsey) is a fictional mutant character, a superhero from Marvel Comics. ...
Forge is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics Universe, a superhero associated with The X-Men. ...
The Avengers is a superhero team that appear in the fictional Marvel Universe. ...
In another reality (Earth-27538), Emma is still a member of the Hellfire Club, alongside Donald Pierce, Sebastian Shaw and Harry Leland. The Exiles fight them to prevent the crashing of that reality. Emma senses the presence of something powerful (Proteus) in the mind of Morph and tries to unleash it, though she's stopped by Longshot, who throws a dagger in her head. Thanks to his luck powers, Emma, whose survival is vital for the fate of her native reality, survives the wound. However, the damage of Morph/Proteus' conditioning causes a fragment of Proteus' mind to manifest, causing Morph to speak with Proteus' Scottish accent. The Exiles are a group of fictional comic book characters from Marvel Comics. ...
Kevin MacTaggert, best known as Proteus and also called Mutant X, is a Marvel Comics character, associated with the X-Men. ...
It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Changeling (Marvel Comics). ...
Longshot is a fictional character a Marvel Comics superhero best known as a member of the X-Men. ...
Ultimate Emma Frost First appearing in Ultimate X-Men #42, the Emma Frost of the Ultimate Universe is a former student of Professor Charles Xavier. The two became romantically involved, but they eventually split over ideological differences: Whereas Xavier believes in aggressive action and in protecting his students from society, Frost believes in an integrated approach to mutant/human relations. Frost believes Xavier to be too violent. Ultimate X-Men is a superhero comic book series published by Marvel Comics. ...
The various characters of the Ultimate Marvel Universe, as seen on the cover of Ultimates (v2) #12. ...
Charles Francis Xavier, also known as Professor X, is a fictional Marvel Comics superhero, known as the leader and founder of the X-Men. ...
Frost returned to Chicago and became a teacher, giving mutant education seminars. The governor supported her cause and introduced her to the White House chief of staff. Through him, she meets the American president and organizes the New Mutants program, designed to educate humans about mutants and to cut the government's ties to Charles Xavier, whose reputation has been tarnished. During the group's first media appearance, they and the president are attacked by Sentinels and must be rescued by the X-Men. Xavier tries to convince Frost to stay with the X-Men, but she returns to her own school in Chicago. Her new program, the Academy of Tomorrow, accepts all talented students, regardless of genetic status. New Mutants may also refer to the genetically engineered superhumans of Mutant X (TV series). ...
In the Ultimate X-Men comics, Frost can transform her skin into an organic diamond form, like her secondary mutation in the Marvel Universe; however, she does not display telepathic abilities, although, in her initial display to the President, she appears as though she is going on to mention other powers before she is cut off, so it remains to be seen whether there will be any similarities between the Ultimate and 616 Versions.
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