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Rogue is a character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, commonly in association with the X-Men.Created by Chris Claremont and Michael Golden, she first appeared in Avengers Annual #10 (1981).
Rogue appears in the Marvel Knights: Wolverine versus Sabretooth motion comic, voiced by Kazumi Evans. [1] The X-Men: The Animated Series incarnation of Rogue appears in the tie-in comics X-Men Adventures and The Adventures of the X-Men. Rogue appears in the Death Battle! episode "Rogue vs. Wonder Woman". [51]
In December 2007, the X-Men's strike team was formed by Cyclops in Uncanny X-Men #493, with Wolverine serving as the field leader. The team took on missions which required responses "too violent or controversial" for the X-Men to deal with directly.
X-Men: The Animated Series has already covered the Savage Lands storyline in Season 2, so there'll likely be a different story ripped from the comics to explain this new attachment between Rogue ...
The X-Treme X-Men contained Storm, Rogue, Gambit, Bishop, Sage (Tessa), Thunderbird (Neal Shaara), Psylocke and Beast as original line up. Psylocke was killed and Beast departed the title in the early goings, and new recruits Lifeguard (Heather Cameron) and Slipstream (Davis Cameron) were eventually added.
Paquin reprised her role as Rogue in the 2014 film X-Men: Days of Future Past, but most of her scenes were cut out for the theatrical release. [35] [36] An alternative version of the film with all of Paquin's scenes reinstated was released as The Rogue Cut on 14 July 2015. [37] Paquin voiced Ramsey in Disney•Pixar's film The Good Dinosaur. [38]
X-Men Legacy, vol. 1 – Rogue leads a team acting as the school's security detail; Astonishing X-Men, vol. 3 – Wolverine's field team forming after the attack of the Marauders. X-Men in Training Wolverine and the X-Men (also served as the flagship title) Other Teams
Rogue and Gambit are one of the most popular couples in the X-Men franchise. [1] Their relationship started in 1990, shortly after Gambit was introduced in comic books, and was a strong aspect of the X-Men TV series. Both characters come from the Southern United States and speak in over-the-top accents and slang. [2]