Leinil yu biography of abraham

  • Ogun, god
  • Yoruba
  • Ogun marvel
  • X-Men #10 annotations

    Posted on Friday, July 31, 2020 by Paul in Annotations

    As always, this post contains spoilers, and page numbers go by the digital edition.

    X-MEN vol 5 #10
    “Fire”
    by Jonathan Hickman & Leinil Francis Yu

    COVER / PAGE 1. Vulcan, Petra, Sway, Cyclops, Marvel Girl and Wolverine in the new Cotati garden on the moon. This is an Empyre tie-in, so it also gets the Empyre trade dress on top of the regular X-Men design.

    PAGES 2-5.Flashback to how Vulcan survived.

    This is another plot thread where the Covid-19 hiatus has played havoc with pacing. We saw Vulcan having this dream before in X-Men #8, which should have been fairly fresh in the memory. Vulcan is remembering falling into the Fault at the end of the 2009 crossover War of Kings. As I pointed out before, Vulcan wasn’t wearing his superhero costume when that happened. I assumed before that it was a symbolic page, but evidently that’s not it.

    “Th

  • leinil yu biography of abraham
  • Ogun (comics)

    Comics character

    Ogun is a fictional character, a Japanesesupervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character has been depicted as a foe of Wolverine. His first appearance was in Kitty Pryde and Wolverine #2 (December 1984), and was scripted by Chris Claremont and drawn by Allen Milgrom.[1]

    Fictional character biography

    [edit]

    Ogun was a ninja and martial arts master who acted as Wolverine's mentor. Very little is known of his past or the exact nature of his abilities, but he was apparently a mutant who could possess and control minds via telepathy. His reflexes and reaction time also appear to have been enhanced beyond the range attainable by normal humans, such as that he was easily a match for Wolverine. Note that either or both of these abilities may have been wholly or partially mystical in nature.[2]

    Ogun first met Wolverine in Shanghai, China. Shanghai was held by the Empire of Japan, following

    The Ultimate Comics Line returns!

    I don't read comics to learn how to treat other people, I read them just to enjoy an entertaining mixture of action, sci-fi, and other genres. As for people in general, Ultimate Invasion is rated T+, teen and up, parents should have done their job already by that point in someone's life.



    For a simple reason: comic books and films are distributed in different markets, with their own dynamics and specific backgrounds, and something that works or doesn't work in one medium may not necessarily do so in the other as well. For example, you mentioned Mary Jane. We can't have a black Mary Jane in comics because, first, she is a long-runner character published among the Spider-Man main characters for decades, and second, comics are part of an ever-continuing storyline and the change has to make sense in-story somehow. Films are another reality. First, by that point Spider-Man had appeared in just 5 films as far as people were co