Storm is a fictional superhero that appears in an American comic book published by Marvel Comics. The character was created by writer Len Wein and artist Dave Cockrum, first appearing at Giant-Size X-Men # 1 (May 1975). The original Cockrum concept for characters with weather control powers is male. This changed after she realized that some women with cat-related abilities, her first idea for a black female hero, had been created and under development. Descending from a long line of African wizards, Storm is a member of a subspecies of human fiction born with a superhuman ability known as a mutant. He is able to control the weather and the atmosphere and is considered one of the most powerful mutants on the planet.
Born Ororo Munroe to a Kenyan daughter and an American photo-fathers father, Storm grew up in Harlem and Cairo. He became orphaned after his parents were killed in the midst of the Arab-Israeli conflict. An incident at this time also makes Munroe traumatized, leaving him with claustrophobia that he will strive for a lifetime. Storm is a member of X-Men, a group of mutant heroes who fought for peace and equality of rights between mutants and humans. Under the care of a master thief, a teenager Munroe became a skilled pickpocket, a means he met through Professor X's powerful mutant coincidence. Professor X then convinced Munroe to join X-Men and used his abilities for greater purpose and purpose. Having a natural leadership skill and tremendous strength of his own, Storm has led X-Men on time and has been a member of teams such as Avengers and Fantastic Four as well.
Created during the Bronze Comic Bronze Age, Storm is the first major female character of African descent in comics. He is considered by some to be Marvel Comics' most powerful female heroine after pulling a favorable comparison with the famous woman in DC Comics, Wonder Woman. When Marvel and DC Comics publish miniseries DC vs. Marvel in 1996, Storm pitted against Wonder Woman in a one-on-one battle and emerged victorious for winning popular votes among readers. The storm is also part of one of the high profile romantic relationships in all comics. After marrying a childhood boyfriend and fellow superhero of Black Panther, the fictitious African ruler of Wakanda, Munroe was made a consort through marriage. The title was lost but when both were later divorced.
Storm is one of the more prominent characters in the X-Men series, having appeared in various forms of media related to franchising, including animation, television, video games, and a series of movies. The characters were first described in live action by Halle Berry at X-Men (2000) and by Alexandra Shipp in the 2016 X-Men: Apocalypse film. Shipp recently made a cameo as Storm in Deadpool 2. He will return in the next X-Men movie Dark Phoenix. In 2011, she was ranked 42nd overall in IGN's "100 Comic Book Comics Best" list.
Video Storm (Marvel Comics)
Publishing history
1975 - 1979: Origin and initial story
Storm first appeared in 1975 in the comic book Giant-Size X-Men # 1, written by Len Wein and written by Dave Cockrum. In this comic, Wein uses a battle against the living island of Krakoa to replace the X-Men of the first generation of the 1960s with the new X-Men. Storm is a mixture of two characters created by Cockrum: The Black Cat and Typhoon. The Black Cat has a Storm costume, minus the robe, and is handed over to the new X-Men original lineup. However, during hiatus in the new X-Men project, other female cat characters such as Tigra were introduced, making Black Cat excessive.
Because the creative team does not want X-Men to have a ranks of men, editor Roy Thomas suggested that Cockrum make his character Typhoon, originally designed as a man, becoming a woman of the group. Cockrum loved the idea, and beat the Typhoon with the new Black Cat costume, robes, and haircut with white hair. His collaborators fear that Storm's white hair will make her look like a grandmother, but Cockrum, convinced that she can consistently draw a character so she will look young, insisting on the aspect of her performance.
Chris Claremont followed up Wein as the author of the main title of Uncanny X-Men in 1975, wrote many famous X-Men stories, among them God Loves, Man Kills and " Dark Phoenix Saga ", which serves as the basis for the movies X2: X-Men United and X-Men: The Last Stand , respectively. In both arcs, the Storm is written as the main supporting character. Claremont lived the lead author of X-Men for the next 16 years and consequently wrote most of the Storm-containing publications.
Backstory
In Uncanny X-Men # 102 (December 1976), Claremont set up a Storm backstory. Storm's mother, N'Dare, is a tribal princess in Kenya and descended from a long line of African wizard priests with white hair, blue eyes, and natural aptitude for magic. N'Dare fell in love and married American photojournalist David Munroe. They moved to Harlem in New York City, where Ororo was born. They then moved to Egypt and stayed there until they died during the Suez Crisis in a failed plane attack, leaving Ororo as six-year-old as an orphan. Claustrophobia violence is formed because it is buried under the rubble after the attack. He became a skilled thief in Cairo under the benign Achmed el-Gibar and wandered into the Serengeti as a young woman. He is worshiped as a goddess when his powers appear before being recruited by Professor X for X-Men.
Claremont further refined the Storm backstory at Uncanny X-Men # 117 (January 1979). He retroactively added that Professor X, who recruited him at # 1 in 1975, had met him as a child in Cairo. When Ororo grew up on the streets and became an expert thief under the care of the great thief Achmed el-Gibar, one of his most famous victims was Charles Francis Xavier, then Professor X. He was able to use his mental strength to prevent it temporarily. run away and recognize the potential within him. However, when Xavier was attacked mentally by Amahl Farouk, the Shadow King, the two men were quite busy with their battle to allow the girl to flee. Both Xavier and Shadow King recognize Storm as a young girl later on.
1980s: Punk view and power loss
In the following issues, Claremont describes Storm as a quiet and independent character. Although the Storm was originally written to have difficulty adjusting to Western culture, for example calling the obligation to wear public clothing "unreasonable", at Uncanny X-Men <139> (November 1980), Claremont set it as leader X-Men after Cyclops took leave, a position he held in various incarnations. Claremont also has a motherly relationship between Storm and 13-year-old X-Man Kitty Pryde. A short story by Claremont arranged during the childhood Storm in Kenya that runs on Marvel Team-Up # 100 (December 1980), determined that when he was 12 years old, Storm rescued a young Black Panther from a racist thug. This story will later become the basis for later writers to build a deeper relationship between the two characters.
In the early 1980s, the Storm adventure written by Claremont included a space operatic arc, in which X-Men fought a parasitic creature called Brood. The storm infected Brood's eggs and contemplated suicide, but later experienced a last-minute rescue by a benign alien Acanti fish. Claremont further establishes Storm's strength as a character in the following story line, in which Storm X-Man Angel's colleague was kidnapped by a group of evil mutants called Morlocks. X-Men is outnumbered, and Storm becomes sick by Morlock called Plague. To save Kitty's life, Storm challenged the leader of Morlocks Callisto, in a duel to death for Morlocks leadership. Despite his pain, he defeated Callisto by stabbing him with a knife. Callisto was saved through the efforts of a Morlock shaman, and Storm offered Morlocks protection at Xavier Mansion, although they refused.
In The Uncanny X-Men # 173, October 1983, Claremont and artist Paul Smith created a new look for Storm, leaving old costumes for black tops and pants, and turning his former white hair veil into punk mohawk. The change of appearance was inspired by the decision of his colleague Walt Simonson to shave his beard and mustache while on holiday with his wife, editor of X-Men Louise Simonson. Upon their return, Simonson's daughter, Julie, was annoyed at the appearance of her new father, running from the room. When the editor decided to change the appearance of Storm, Smith submitted a number of designs to them, explaining in an 2008 interview:
"I do a number of portraits, all very beautiful and feminine.As a joke, I include a shot as Mr. T. You know, the kind of shots where they MUST go in the other direction Weezie [ X-Men Response editor Louise Simonson] "They will hang us wherever we go. Let's do the murder. "I thought it was a joke and a very bad idea but, considering my departure after the 175 set before starting my escape, my voice did not count so I did what I could do with what was left. So we went with Mohawk... But once you get into the skin and the males it's all a bad joke out of hand. "
Julie Simonson's reaction to her new father's appearance will be reflected in the refusal of X-Man Kitty Pryde against the new look of Storm. In the story, Storm's view of life became dark after he fought with Brood. This change alienated himself from Kitty for a while. The storm was influenced in this by Yukio, a friend of Wolverine, and both became fast friends. Claremont wrote a bow in which fellow mutant Forge developed a mutant weapon of mutant strength. The target is another X-Man, Rogue, but the Storm is even hit, taking power. Forge took him back to his home in Dallas, Texas to recover. They fall in love, but when he learns that Forge builds a weapon that takes his powers, he breaks his heart and leaves him.
In 1986, the question arose whether X-Men would be led by Storm or by Cyclops, now married to Madelyne Pryor and a future husband. Both solve the problem in a duel in the Dangerous Room which sees the Storm win. It was later revealed during the "Inferno" storyline that Madelyne's newborn psychic abilities had emerged during the duel, without her knowledge or anyone, and that she unconsciously used that ability to influence the duel.
During the "Fall of Mutants" 1988 storyline, the Storm is caught in another dimension by Forge, which restores its elemental strength. After he rejoined the X-Men, they defeated the enemy fiends called the Enemy, in a battle where the public believed that X-Men was dead. They survive, with the help of a celestial beast known as Rome. Using the Roman spell has been thrown at them not to be seen for electronic equipment, X-Men set up a new headquarters in a small frontier village in Outback Australia, after expelling a group of mutant-hunting cyborgs called Reavers who have lived there. The storm was captured by Nanny's cyborg. Though believed to have died at the meeting, he reappears, having become amnesia as a result of the physical decline into childhood by Nanny. He was hunted down by the evil telepath of Shadow King and trapped for murder, and ultimately returned to the thief. As he slowly begins to regain his memory, he meets with Gambit and they return to X-Men together.
In the next bow, "Agenda X-Tinction", he was kidnapped by the mutant mutant Genosha and temporarily converted into a brainwashed slave, but ultimately returned physically and mentally into his adult life.
1990s
In October 1991, the X-Men franchise was relaunched, centering on the new eponymous comics X-Men (vol 2). Claremont wrote Storm as the leader of the X-Men Gold Team. The other team, Blue, is led by his Cyclops counterpart, X-Man who was once the leader. In the sister title of Uncanny X-Men, now under Scott Lobdell, Lobdell goes on to the romance between Storm and Forge, culminating in a Forge proposal to get married in 1992. However, the slightest doubt of the Storm is misconstrued by Forge, who then canceled his offer before it could be accepted. Lobdell waited until November 1993 before he wrote a reconciliation between Storm and Forge who suffered greatly. In 1995, Lobdell continued his bow again against X-Men against Morlocks. As Claremont did with Callisto in 1983, Lobdell had the Storm end the battle by injuring his opponent in the heart. Here, the Storm tears into the heart of the sweet-hearted Marlock Marrow, who has a bomb attached to him. In February 1996, Storm got its first miniseries, Eponymous Storm. In the first arc of the series, Warren Ellis wrote a story in which Storm sucked into an alternative dimension and pitted against villain Mikhail Rasputin. 2000s
In the X-Treme X-Men, contained by Chris Claremont who was recently restored in July 2001, Storm was written as the leader of this team, and the central character of the book, until finally in issue # 46 ( June 2004). During this time, Storm enjoyed a brief temptation with fellow X-Man Slipstream and was kidnapped by intergalactic warlord Khan. In the series, Storm is also the leader of the X-Treme Sanctions Executive, a special police mutant duty unit that oversees mutants granted world authority.
During the "Decimation" storyline of 2005, where 90% of the mutants lose their power, the Storm is one of the 198 mutants that retain their power. Also that year, the miniceri Ororo: Before the Storm by author Mark Sumerak retold his background in more detail, concentrating on his relationship with the father figure of successor Achmed el-Gibar during his childhood.
The following year, Marvel Comics announced that Ororo would marry fellow African superhero Black Panther. Collaborative writer Eric Jerome Dickey explains that it is a move to explicitly target audiences of women and African Americans. The history of the Storm with the Black Panther, including the initial encounters of the characters, is retold by Marvel during the time of their marriage. Originally, at Marvel Team-Up (1980), Storm was seen at the age of twelve rescuing Black Panther from a white racist named Andreas de Ruyter, but in the Dickey miniseries, T'Challa rescues Ororo (who still twelve) of de Ruyter and his brother. A flashback of Black Panther # 24 (2006) is unclear when it comes to the physical aspects of their first meeting, while the miniseries describe Ororo giving his virginity to T'Challa a few days after they meet. Collaborative author Axel Alonso, editor of Black Panther, has stated: "Eric's story, for all intents and purposes (...) is Ororo's original story." The relationship led to the marriage of two of Africa's most famous Marvel Comics heroes in Black Panther # 18 by author Reginald Hudlin, July 2006, as a tie-in to the "Civil War" storyline. Marvel Comics editor-in-chief Joe Quesada is very supportive of this marriage, stating that it is Marvel Comics which is equivalent to the marriage of "Lady Diana and Prince Charles", and she hopes both characters will be strengthened. Shawn Dudley, Emmy-Award Winning Costume Designer for TV's
Storm joins the reformed Awesome X-Men (# 25) because, he explains, Wakanda is a supporter of Mutantes Sans Frontieres and he believes he should be on the front line; however, he is also a bit bored of his life as queen. The reappearance of Shadow King then forced Storm to choose between her role as queen and her role as X-Man. Facing Panther God Bast, Storm insists that he is not limited to being one or the other or anything and that he is not afraid to do whatever it takes to fulfill that responsibility. Regaining Bast support, both defeating Shadow King and Storm deciding that she will remain Queen Wakanda and remain with X-Men, refusing to choose between them. Looking to relearn his limitations, T'Challa then left Africa and took on a new role as a keeper of Hell's Kitchen after the Shadowland episode; Though both remain in pairs, Storm is sad but respectfully accepts T'Challa's request for temporary isolation so that he can find himself.
2010s
After the reshuffling of 2011 comic book related to X-Men, Storm emerged as the leader of the X-Men team based on defense and reconnaissance in the ongoing X-Men title. In November of that year, Storm joined the Avengers at Avengers Vol. 4 # 19. He leaves the team to fight alongside X-Men during the "Avengers vs X-Men" storyline, which he faces against T'Challa when he sides with the Avengers. When Namor Phoenix is ââempowered to destroy Wakanda, Storm realizes Phoenix Five is out of control and returns to help the Avengers. However, she was stunned when T'Challa told her that she had canceled their marriage.
In April 2013, Marvel debuted a series of all new women named X-Men . Written by Brian Wood with artwork by Olivier Coipel, X-Men featuring Storm roster, Jubilee, Rogue, Kitty Pryde, Rachel Gray, and Psylocke.
At the end of 2013, Marvel debuted Amazing X-Men by author Jason Aaron, who featured Storm as a team member.
July 2014 saw Storm's solo series debut Storm written by Greg Pak with artwork by Victor Inanez.
In the aftermath of the storyline "Secret Wars", Storm became the leader of X-Men Extraordinary. The team's goal is to provide a safe place for mutants after the release of Terrigen Mist, which is toxic to mutants. Storm reluctantly led X-Men into war with the Inhumans.
After the war with Inhumans, Storm stepped down as leader of X-Men and was replaced by Kitty Pryde. However, he continues to be a member of the team at X-Men: Gold.
Maps Storm (Marvel Comics)
Historical sense
Storm is one of the first black comic book characters, and the first black woman, except for Misty Knight, who debuted in a comic dated March 1975, to play a lead role or supporter at two large comic book houses, Marvel Comics and DC Comics. In both these companies, his debut in 1975 was only preceded by some black male characters and Misty Knight. In Marvel Comics, his previous characters were Gabe Jones (debuted in 1963), Black Panther (1966), Bill Foster (1966), Spider-Man supporter character Joe Robertson (1967), his son Randy (1968 ). ), Hobie Brown (Prowler) & amp; The Falcon (1969), Luke Cage (1972), Blade (1973), Abe Brown (1974), and Misty Knight (March 1975). In DC Comics, he was preceded by Tony Duncan's "Hall of Titans" who debuted in 1970, Green Lantern wielder John Stewart (1971), and Mister Miracle protà © à © gÃÆ'à © Shilo Norman (1973); he precedes other DC black hero, the legion of Super-Heroes member Tyroc (who debuted in 1976), Black Lightning (1977), Bumblebee (1977), Cyborg (1980), Vixen (1981) and Amazing Man (1983). Though not the first black character to be introduced, since his creation, the Storm remains the most successful and recognizable super black hero.
Gladys L. Knight, author of Women Action Heroes: A Guide for Women in Comics, Video Games, Film and Television (2010) writes that "the two defining aspects of his personality are his racial identity and his social status as mutant. "X-Men symbolically represents the marginalized minority and the X-Men series debut coincides with the Civil Rights Movement, where their suffering as a mutant reflects African-Americans. The creation of Storm in particular "is during the heyday of the blaxploitation film."
Fictional character biography
Since its birth in 1975, Storm's biography has remained largely the same. This framework was first laid out by Chris Claremont, who refined his backstory at Uncanny X-Men # 102 (1976) and Uncanny X-Men # 117 (1979). Several reinterpretations were made in 2005 and 2006, in which authors Mark Sumerak and Eric Jerome Dickey, respectively, rewrote parts of the early history in the Ororo miniseries: Before the Storm and Storm (volume 2).
According to the established Marvel canon, Ororo Munroe was born in New York City as the son of the Kenyan daughter of N'Dare and American photographer David Munroe. When Ororo was six months old, he and his parents moved to the Egyptian capital Cairo. Five years later, during the Suez Crisis, fighter jets crashed into his parents' home, killing them. Buried beneath the ruins, Ororo survives but becomes an orphan and goes with an intense claustrophobia. His fear is so strong that he is known to return to the fetal position and approach the catatonic state. However, at the end of the 2000s storyline, writers such as Ed Brubaker and Christopher Yost have indicated that the Storm has conquered its claustrophobia, and can freely move in a narrow space, even for long periods of time. After the death of his parents, Ororo wandered in the back-street of Cairo for a few weeks, until he was picked up by the street lord Achmed el-Gibar and became a productive thief; among his victims is his future mentor Professor X who was there to meet the King of Shadows. Following his inner urge, he wanders to the Serengeti as a teenager and meets T'Challa, who will be his future husband. Despite strong mutual feelings, the two ways part.
In the Serengeti, Ororo first showcases his mutant ability to control the weather. Sometime after this, he meets the wizard priest, Ainet, who takes him in and becomes his adoptive mother. Once, when their village was in terrible drought, Storm ordered rain for days just to help them. By doing this, he discarded the natural order of nature, and drought formed in a number of villages, and hundreds of animals were killed. Feeling the damage he had done, Ainet told the Storm about his good but unwise attitude, and the damage he caused. Ainet takes this opportunity to explain to Ororo how his strength works with nature, and how he can fix the problem by distributing the rain properly.
For a time, he was worshiped as a rain goddess for African tribes, practicing nudism and tribal spirituality, before being recruited by Professor X to X-Men. Ororo receives the code name "Storm" and is defined as a strong and calm character. In his early career with X-Men, he suffered from a major claustrophobic attack, which prompted revelations of his origins to his colleagues. When Magneto captured the team, Storm freed X-Men from captivity. The storm was later captured by the White Queen, which led to the X-Men clash with the Dark Phoenix. He became vice chairman of X-Men, and succeeded his Cyclops counterpart as X-Men leader, a role he has filled for most of his time as a super hero. He briefly became the "Rogue Storm", and even changed bodies with the White Queen. He was attacked by Dracula, and defeated Callisto, becoming the new leader of Morlocks. After his leadership from Morlocks through a battle with Callisto, Storm began to develop a darker side. Finally, X-Men was invited to Japan for Wolverine's wedding to Mariko Yashida. It was here that he met his old friend Wolverine, Yukio, and the two became fast friends. Storm was inspired by Yukio, who encouraged Storm to embrace his emerging dark side. This caused the Storm to drastically change its outward appearance to fit its inner parts and thus did not include the dull punk punk.
In the storyline that began in 1984, the Storm lost its superpower with the energy weapons fired by Henry Peter Gyrich; Unknown to him, this device was designed by Forge the inventor of mutants. The controlled Ororo later meets and falls in love with Forge, but leaves him when he discovers that he is the inventor of the weapon behind his defeat. He helps Forge battle Dire Wraiths, before leaving him to rejoin X-Men. He helped the New Mutant against the Shadow King Amahl Farouk. He then traveled to Asgard with X-Men, where he was briefly enslaved by Loki. He was almost killed in a confrontation with Andreas von Strucker. He defeated Cyclops in the competition to become the leader of X-Men. During the "Fall of Mutants" storyline, he reunites with Forge, regains his superhuman strength, and dies with X-Men in giving his life power to defeat the Enemy; he was resurrected by the Romans. She was restored to childhood by Nanny's mutant, met Gambit, and eventually returned to adulthood - however, she was enslaved by the Genoshans, but regained her freedom and escaped from custody. Regarding his personal life, he's for a long time romantically involved with fellow X-Man Forge, and even considering marrying him before their relationship breaks up.
After 90% of the world's mutants lose their power, the Storm leaves X-Men to go to Africa; revived his relationship with T'Challa, now a superhero known as the Black Panther; marry him; and becomes Wakanda's royal queen and joins the new Fantastic Four with her husband when Reed and Sue are on holiday. In missions in space, Watcher tells Black Panther and Storm that their children will have a special destiny. After Reed and Sue returned to the Fantastic Four, Storm and Black Panther left, with Storm returning to Uncanny X-Men to help the event at the Messiah Complex . After joining X-Men again, Storm is confronted by Cyclops for his position as X-Man and a Queen. Cyclops reminds her that she made her choose between family and previous assignments, and she needs to make the same decisions. Storm reacted back to Wakanda to face the despairing Black Panther, with both appearing to fight each other, although it was later revealed that the Black Panther had been possessed by the Shadow King. After paralyzing the possessed T'Challa, the Storm fought against the Cyclops, who were mentally fascinated by the Shadow King to kill the other X-Men. After being forced to drive him by attacking the Cyclops through a large lightning chest, Shadow King then takes over the Storm, only to be devoured by retaliation by Bast, Panther God, who has agreed to hide in the mind of Storm. to take revenge on the Shadow King for having T'Challa.
Strength and ability
Weather control
The storm is one of the most powerful mutants on Earth and has demonstrated a large number of abilities, most of which are aspects of its power to manipulate the weather. Storm has a psionic ability to control all forms of weather in large areas. He has been able to control the ecosystem of Earth and outer space. It can modify the ambient temperature, control all forms of precipitation, moisture and humidity (at the molecular level), produce lightning and other electromagnetic atmospheric phenomena, and has shown excellent control of atmospheric pressure. He can instigate all forms of meteorological ruins, such as tornadoes, thunderstorms, blizzards, and hurricanes, and fog. He can remove such weather to form clear skies as well.
Its proper control in the atmosphere allows it to create special weather effects. He can create rainfall at higher or lower altitudes, making the whirlwind trip pointing in all directions, channeling the ambient electromagnetism through his body to produce electric bursts, frozen objects and people, bringing atmospheric pollution into in acid rain or poisonous fog, and, along with its natural flight capabilities, summon strong wind currents to support its weight to lift itself (or others) to fly at high altitudes and speeds. His control is so great that he can even manipulate the air in one's lungs. He can also control the pressure inside the human ear, the ability he uses to cause great pain. He can also bend light using water vapor in the air and fog and fog manipulation to appear partially transparent, and in the next comic, almost invisible.
Storms have also demonstrated the ability to control the forces of nature that include cosmic storms, solar winds, ocean currents, and electromagnetic fields. He has demonstrated the ability to separate water molecules into oxygen and hydrogen through electrolysis, allowing it to breathe under water. While in space, it is able to influence and manipulate interstellar and intergalactic media. Storms can alter their visual perception to see the universe in terms of energy patterns, detect the flow of kinetic, thermal and electromagnetic energy behind weather phenomena and can turn this energy into its will.
The storm has proven to be sensitive to the dynamics of the natural world, and its pdiic power over the weather is affected by its emotions. One consequence of this relationship with nature is that he often suppresses extreme feelings to prevent his emotional state from resulting in violent weather. He once felt a sick and dying tree on an X-Mansion field, detecting objects in various atmospheric mediums - including water, and sensing the wrong movements of storms in the northern hemisphere and the gravitational pressure on waves by the Moon and the Sun and the distortion of a planet's magnetosphere. Storm can see the Earth as a weather pattern, and be able to recognize its geographical position through the interpretation of these patterns. The storm's mutant ability is limited by his determination and body strength. Sentinel has considered the Omega-level mutant Storm on one occasion.
Magical potential
The Storm's ancestors support the use of magic and magic. Many of his ancestors were magicians and priests. Matrilineal Storm's strength has even been linked to the real world Rain Queens of Balobedu, the region from which the Sorceress Supreme ancestor, Ayesha, came. The Mystic Arcana series deals with the ancestors of Storm Ashake, who worship the Egyptian goddess Ma'at, also known as Oshtur - the mother of Agamotto. Oshtur seems to have strong support for the Ororo bloodline. For some unknown reason, since the dawn of Atlantis, this African woman's line has been characterized by white hair, blue eyes, and powerful magic potential. Although the Storm has not developed its magical potential, it has been hinted at. The Mystic Arcana series contains a list of characters with magic potential according to the Marvel Tarot deck. Tarot states that the Storm is "High Priestess", the choice of First Tarot a third time. The other draw is Scarlet Witch and Agatha Harkness. These three characters share the same High Priest card. Timeline-divergent Storm becomes a magician who teaches magic to Magik and some Storm alternative universes have considerable magical talent. On a separate note, it has been stated that the spirit of the Storm is so strong that it is able to host the awareness of the avatar (or "bodily manifestation") of Eternity; in a meeting consisting of himself, Doctor Strange, Black Panther, Silver Surfer and Fantastic Four, he and Doctor Strange are the only worthy candidates.
Combat and theft
Storm is an expert thief, and a fighter of skillful, cunning and talented hands, trained by Achmed el-Gibar, Professor X, Wolverine and T'Challa, Black Panther. Using superior strategies, Storm has overcome physically stronger enemies such as Callisto and Crimson Commando in hand-to-hand combat. Storm is an excellent sniper with a pistol, and proficient in the use of knives. The storm is also fluent in Russian, Arabic, and Swahili. As part of her knick-knacks, Storm carries a set of key-picks (with which she has a remarkable ability in picking keys, in her early appearances she can pick up keys with her teeth while her physical coordination is reduced to baby level) and ruby âââ ⬠<â ⬠< Its ancestors, allowing inter-dimensional transport with the aid of lightning.
Ability and physical properties
Storm's weather strength allows its body to keep up with the extreme climate; on one occasion when he tried to control an unnatural storm he became overwhelmed when his body temperature rose too high. In the Marvel's Marvel Learning Handbook - X-Men (2004), it is stated that its power allows it to breathe while moving at any speed and protect it from friction, while providing its protection from extreme temperatures of hot and cold; All-New Official Handbook of Marvel Universe Update # 1 (2007) states that the body of Storm changes the temperature opposite to its environment so that the warmer the environment the warmer the body, and the warmer the colder the body.
His body compensates for a rapid decline or increase in atmospheric pressure. He can see in almost complete darkness and has tremendous dexterity. The storm has been described as having one of the strongest wills among X-Men, making it very resistant to psychic attacks especially along with the electric field that he created around himself. Telepath found it difficult to track him down and investigate his thoughts. Some of these traits do not depend on their mutant status and are the result of their ancestors. Also, when harnessing its power, the Storm's eyes turn white.
The storm has been declared a Mutant Omega Level. The potential is still unrealized, and on one occasion Super Giant states that the Storm is "Omega-Level Mutate", grouping and targeting it with mutant Omega-Levels like Iceman and Rachel Gray.
The original name of Storm "Ororo" is translated into the language as "Beauty".
Other versions
In other media
Storm has made many appearances in other media, including my X-Men animated X-Men, X-Men: Evolution and Wolverine and X-Men series . She has appeared in five live-action movies X-Men ; she is portrayed by actress Halle Berry in four films and her younger self is portrayed by Alexandra Shipp in X-Men: Apocalypse . He has also been in a large number of video games: guest appearances on Spider-Man: Web of Shadows and playable characters in every game at X-Men Legends /i > Marvel Series: Ultimate Alliance / Marvel: Ultimate Alliance 2 .
Edition collected
Reception
In the 2007 Glyph Comics Awards, Fan Award for Best Comic was won by Storm , by Eric Jerome Dickey, David Yardin & amp; Lan Medina, and Jay Leisten & amp; Sean Parsons.
Storm ranked 89th as the greatest comic book character of all time by the Wizard magazine. IGN also ranked it as the 42nd greatest comic book hero of all time citing that "fans have seen Storm as a thief, X-Man, fighter, and even queen." Through it all, he remains one of the most connected heroes of the " , # 8 in the "Big 25 X-Men" list that argues that "although Cyclops may be the default X-Men leader, specifically because of its loyalty to The Dream, Storm is a better choice to be responsible", and 37 in the list "The Top 50 Avengers ". Storm was ranked 30th in the list of Comic Book Buyer "100 Sexiest Women in Comics" in 2011.
References
External links
- World of Black Heroes: Hurricane Biography
- Storm in DB Comic Book
- Storm on the Marvel Universe wiki
- Storm Profile in Project Marvel Database
- UncannyXmen.net Highlights a Storm
- Storm profile in Comicvine
Source of the article : Wikipedia