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"Planet X" is a 2004 storyline published by Marvel Comics that ran from New X-Men #146–150. The story is the penultimate arc of Grant Morrison 's run as writer on the X-Men , and features the return of Magneto and the death of Jean Grey again.
Daredevil Comic Book Library: Daredevil Vol. 1 #1–10: TOPICS Entertainment/Graphic Imaging Technology: CD-ROM: Deadworld Complete Comic Book Collection: Deadworld Vol. 1 #1–26, Deadworld Vol. 2 #1–15, To Kill a King #1–3, King Zombie #1–2, Christmas in Louisiana, Guns for Sale, The Doom Patrol, The City: Eagle One Media: CD-ROM ...
A New York Times bestseller, [1] it was a sequel to an earlier crossover, detailed in the Marvel Comics one-shot Star Trek: The Next Generation/X-Men #1 (which was itself similar to an earlier Star Trek/X-Men crossover comic, where a slightly different team of X-Men encountered the characters of the original Star Trek series).
A+X is a monthly comic book anthology series that was published by Marvel Comics from October 2012 to March 2014 as part of the company's Marvel NOW! initiative. [1] Each issue includes two stories by different creative teams featuring a different team-up of an Avenger and an X-Man .
Friar (Real name Andrey Radov, heir to an ancient generation and the owner of a powerful artefact – a cross inlaid with Power Gems.) Red Fury (The best thief in the world, recruited by agent Delta from the International Control Agency.) Meteora (Real name Alena Kunzetsova, legendary fictional space smuggler.)
Real estate, with its promise of appreciable assets and consistent revenue streams, remains an industry of choice for savvy investors. Yet, it is not for the faint of heart. With volatile markets ...
Boris Vadim, the twelfth Crimson Dynamo, first appears in the premiere issue of Hulk vol. 2 (March 2008). A S.H.I.E.L.D. -sanctioned team consisting of Iron Man, Doc Samson and She-Hulk encounters the Winter Guard , a Russian superhero team of which Vadim is a member, while investigating the apparent murder of the Abomination in Russia. [ 26 ]
Planet Comics was the foremost purveyor of good girl art in comic books of the period, and is considered highly collectible by modern fans of comics' Golden Age.It specialized in colorful and lurid stories of interstellar action, ingenuous and attractive heroes and heroines, breezy dialogue, and the “barest smattering of sense and substance” (Benton 1992, p. 27).