X-men Bios

Started by Vampiree10 pages

THANK YOU BLIND!

*sigh* i think i just fell in love.... 😍

What was the series that had hat alternae timeline?

It wasn't an X men series, The comic she appeared in was called Wild thing apparently and its was called the MC dimension i think.

X-Men Bios

Can anyone share me thier stuff like X-Men Bios and Original backgrounds? I am making an X-Men site by I got hard time looking for their Bios and historical backgrnds... especially those of Colossus, Havok, Kylun, Multiple Man, Polaris, Professor Charles, Quicksilver, Rictor, Shatterstar, Strong Guy, Feral... etc..

You might be of great help for me.

Please? 😮

And thanks in advance... I would appreciate any stuff you share.

With care, Jury.

hmm ok here goes.. this might take a bit.
wow after going over this list, no wonder your having a hard time like 90% are x-factor.

Colossus: peter nicolaevitch Rasputin: turns his skin into a metal stronger than most but is really just a step below adamantium, wolvies scratched it before. he was born in russia, where he looked out for his
sister illiyana. He sacraficed himself to save the world from the legacy virus.
theres more i'm just to lazy to type it i'll put in more later.

Havok🙁was a leader in X-factor) has died only once being blown up in a space shuttle.. etc.. Alex Summers, cyclop's brother. father is the leader
of the star jammers.. mother deceased. almost married polaris. etc. (energy bursts)

Kylun: no idea.. name sounds familiar but i'm spacing and drunk atm.

Multiple Man: jamie madrox, the multiple man, he died from some alien
creature exploding out of his body.. i think dunno if he came back. was
in x-factor. (creates multiple bodies/persons)

Polaris: Was an x-man for a bit,things got to serious with Iceman, so she
left him and X-men, dissappeared for awhile, showed up in the group X-factor. I'm so drunk i cant even remember her name atm. (like magneto)

Professor Charles: Charles Xavier, leader, founder, etc of the x-men.
married to "li'liadra" the shi'ar "queen". i guess. (telepath)

Quicksilver: Pietro lenshur(spelling?), son of magneto sister to wanda(scarlet witch). not alot about his past. He was in like every group of mutants known to mankind. (super speed)

Rictor: (waves of energy formed into earthquake's sometimes pulse bursts.) dunno anymore about him atm.

Shatterstar: is related to cable in some wierd way, think he's a son. .. he has a "luck factor" kinda like longshots.

Strong Guy: name says it all, name is guido something..x-factor

Feral: x-factor person, turns into a wolf girl pretty much like wolvebane.

sorry most of these people are x-factor and i never really cared for that
group at all.. plus i'm drunk. sorry thats all i know atm.. catch me tomrrow when i'm sober pls.

yeah! that would be ok.

Thanks anyways.

Rest!!! 😄

i thought there was already a thread on this somewhere......?

Make A Mystic Bio
I wanna no more bout the blue girl

powers: raven darkholme (mystique) has the mutant ability to transform herself into exact duplicates of any human or humanoid creature, including clothing, fingerprints, and scent, but not weight. the skulls on her belt can be used as fog, knock-out gas, tear gas, flare, acid, or explosive grenades. she is an accomplished martial artist and weapons specialist.

more here.

Originally posted by LoveBlush14
Make A Mystic Bio
I wanna no more bout the blue girl

Real Name: Raven Darkholme

Former Aliases: Mr. Raven, Leni Zauber, Amichai
Benvenisti, Valerie Cooper, Mallory
Brickman, B. Byron Biggs, Ronnie Lake,
Holt Adler, Surge

Height: 5’10”
Weight: 120 lbs
Hair color: Red
Eyes: Yellow, with no visible pupils

First appearance: Ms. Marvel #16
Joined X-Factor in: X-Factor (1st series) #112

Known Relatives: Count Wagner (husband, deceased),
Kurt Wagner (Nightcrawler, son),
Graydon Creed (son, deceased)
Rogue (adoptive daughter)

Profession: mercenary, private investigator

Group Affiliation: formerly Brotherhood of Mutants, Freedom Force, X-Factor, Brotherhood of Evil Mutants

Powers: metamorphic shape-shifter with a perfect cell memory able to rearrange the formation of her cellular structure in order to:
- take on any human appearance she wishes
- adapt specific genetic traits such as night vision, finger talons, or body armor
- heal surface tissue damage
- suppress her natural aging process
- reboot her genetic template to withstand all pathogens and poisons.

MYSTIQUE (Part 1 of 6)

Mystique’s largely unknown early history began with her meeting of Irene Adler, who would later be known as Destiny. Irene hired the “detective” Raven Darkholme to help decipher her precognitive diaries and, as stated later, they “became partners.” This is likely a thinly veiled reference to the fact that the women became lovers at some point, though it is not known exactly when. The time period in which they met isn’t clear either, though it seems to have been at the turn of the 20th century, or even earlier. [X-Treme X-Men #1]

In 1936, a time-traveling Kitty Pryde met up with Mystique and Destiny, who at that time already knew Logan and attempted to dissuade her from assassinating Hitler. [X-Men: True Friends #3]

Mystique was next seen during the Cold War, when she impersonated a German spy known as Leni Zauber in East Berlin. Having assassinated a scientist, Sabretooth pulled her out of the situation and the two struck up a sexual relationship while spending time together at a safe house. With their assignment at an end, Mystique faked her own death by leaving behind the dead body of the real Leni Zauber. It was only a short time afterwards that she learned that she was pregnant with Graydon Creed.

The accounts of Graydon’s early childhood are inconsistent: apparently, Mystique did not care much for the child. The boy was placed in a boarding school and Mystique followed his exploits only long enough to know for sure that he wasn’t a mutant, at which point she abandoned him. Actually, she left him to die, as Graydon had witnessed one of her transformations and knew her secret identity. Still, the boy survived. [Sabretooth (1st series) #3-4, X-Men Unlimited #4]
[Note : X-Men Forever #2 claims that Mystique gave up Graydon for adoption very early, however this doesn’t add up with the earlier released stories. The same can be said for X-Men Unlimited #40, which has a totally different “first meeting and becoming pregnant“ story about Mystique and Sabretooth. Writer Chuck Austen later explained that he was unaware of the story already having been told.]

It is not clear whether it happened before or after abandoning her first born son, but Mystique gave birth to another boy some years later. In the guise of a German noblewoman, the shapeshifter married a Count Wagner, who only shortly afterwards died under mysterious circumstances. A few months later, Mystique gave birth to a child. However, the baby was born visibly mutated, with blue fur all over, iridescent eyes and a prehensile tail. Due to the shock and the strain of the boy’s difficult delivery, Mystique lost concentration and accidentally revealed her true form. Word spread of her and the baby's condition and mother and son were chased by a torch-wielding mob. Trapped, Mystique morphed into one of the villagers and threw her own infant son over a waterfall to expedite her escape. [X-Men Unlimited #4]

Later, Mystique again worked with Sabretooth whilst she was in the guise of an Israeli Mossad agent named Amichai Benvenisti. They were to rendezvous with Destiny, but were caught in a trap set by a HYDRA scientist named Catalyst (she had had run-ins with HYDRA before, though it’s not known if the incidents were related). They were all imprisoned, tortured, and beaten, but Destiny predicted her face would be the last thing Catalyst would see. Indeed, they managed to escape after they seemingly killed their captor. [Sabretooth and Mystique #1-3]

It was sometime during this period that Mystique and Destiny adopted Rogue. Again, the accounts of this are inconsistent, but the more accepted version is that the women took in the girl while she was very young, before her powers had manifested. They acted as loving parents to her, comforting her fears and giving her a materially rich childhood. Rogue’s childhood seems to have been very happy until her powers manifested. They lived in a secluded house near Rogue’s birthplace, Caldecott County, Mississippi. [Uncanny X-Men #178, X-Men (2nd series) #93, X-Men Unlimited #4]

[Note : In X-Men Unlimited #4 Rogue is said to have run away and being adopted by Mystique because of the incident with Cody, yet a majority of stories establish that Rogue already lived with Mystique before her powers manifested. In Uncanny X-Men #178, Rogue says that Mystique used to comfort her when she had bad nightmares and X-Men #93 shows a photograph of Mystique embracing Rogue and their bare skins in contact. Additionally, Scott Lobdell, the writer of the story in X-Men Unlimited, admitted that the issue is full of errors and plot holes.]

After Rogue’s powers had manifested and she had several traumatic incidents of absorbing boys, Mystique tried to encourage her to join her new Brotherhood of Evil Mutants. Rogue alternated between enthusiasm and distaste for these missions, but ultimately agreed to participate, sometimes with disastrous effects. Mystique had difficulty controlling her daughter’s wild behavior and Rogue nearly ruined an early Brotherhood mission. However, she was left out of several others and seems to have matured behind the scenes somewhat during this time, despite her youth. [Classic X-Men #44, Marvel Fanfare (1st series) #60]

By this time, Mystique’s ‘human’ identity of Raven Darkholme, was already working out of the office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Research and Development in the Pentagon. She earned this position and the trust of her superiors by years of hard work. Mystique maintained this useful identity for quite some time, as it gave her access to valuable information and weaponry. One of Mystique’s plans was to kill the heroine known as Ms. Marvel (Carol Danvers), lest the woman interfere in her plans. Mystique and an associate infiltrated the SHIELD Helicarrier and stole some advanced weaponry; however, her subordinate failed to kill Ms. Marvel. In one of the most unusual aspects of Mystique’s history, she then spoke with a mysterious man called “Lord,” who ordered her to leave Ms. Marvel alone. Though she agreed, she clearly intended to disobey. It is not known who this “Lord” was and, apparently, Mystique stopped working under him soon afterwards. [Ms. Marvel #16-18]

Next, Mystique went after Danvers’ psychiatrist and boyfriend, Michael Barnett, and beat him to death. Danvers swore to find the unknown killer and Iron Man helped her with a heat wave projector to recreate the events in Barnett’s office. Carol was shocked to see the projection showing herself entering the room and committing the crime, until the appearance blurred, changing into that of Mystique. Cruelly, she had arranged that the last thing Michael saw was his true love killing him.

Trying to track down the killer, Ms. Marvel followed some clues to Hong Kong, where she found the Brotherhood waiting for her. Mystique ordered Pyro and Avalanche to kill her, citing Destiny’s prediction that Danvers would one day harm Rogue. They failed in their mission and Ms. Marvel learned who was behind the attacks on her and her boyfriend. Furious, Mystique re-iterated her desire to protect Rogue from Ms. Marvel, which Rogue overheard (which probably led to the unseen battle between the two women, mentioned in Uncanny X-Men #182). [Ms. Marvel #22, Marvel Super-Heroes (2nd series) #11]

to be continued...

MYSTIQUE (Part 2 of 6)

Mystique temporarily stopped her feud with Ms. Marvel, as another plan needed her full attention. She recruited the Blob from prison, and, in her human guise, arranged some quarters for the Brotherhood members within the Pentagon. Senator Robert Kelly wanted to make an anti-mutant speech in front of the United States Senate. Mystique decided that this event was the perfect opportunity for the public debut of her Brotherhood of Evil Mutants (without Rogue) – by killing the senator and thus proving the superiority of mutants. The team made a dramatic entrance and speech about mutant rights, only to find opposition in the X-Men, who gained the upper hand and were able to prevent Kelly’s death.

During the battle, Mystique met up with Nightcrawler, who was astonished at the resemblance between them. She told him to ask his “mother” Margali Szardos about it, before disappearing. This proved that Mystique knew her son had not died in the waterfall and she must have been following his development for some time; at least she knew that he was raised by Margali. The authorities arrested the rest of the Brotherhood and Mystique swore to free them. [Uncanny X-Men #140-142]

Mystique and Rogue then hatched an elaborate plan to free their comrades from prison. First, Rogue absorbed the powers of Ms. Marvel; by accident, this became permanent. She then had the strength to battle the rest of the Avengers and temporarily absorbed several others for the mission. They managed to free their teammates from jail and, to cover their escape, Mystique assumed the form of SHIELD director Nick Fury. However, due to the unexpected interference of Spider-Woman, the prisoners were re-captured during an ensuing fight with the Avengers. Mystique and Rogue fled in order to try again. [Avengers Annual #10]

Sometime later, Carol Danvers went with Storm and Wolverine to the Pentagon and inadvertently ran in to Rogue and Mystique. While Rogue battled the X-Men, Mystique followed Danvers and shot her, although Danvers fought back and dearly wanted to kill Mystique. Instead, she had her arrested and Mystique swore revenge for the enmity between them. She apparently escaped soon after, behind the scenes. [Uncanny X-Men #158]

The next plan to free the imprisoned Brotherhood members came as they were being transferred to another jail. Mystique and Rogue infiltrated the prison and set their comrades free. However, thanks to the interference of the Spaceknight Rom, only Destiny escaped with them. The men of the Brotherhood were too over-confident and failed to listen to Mystique’s orders, which led to their re-capture. As “the Sisterhood” got away, they encountered Rom’s enemy, the Dire Wraith creature called Hybrid, and agreed to join forces with him, despite Destiny’s misgivings. They eventually realized that he intended to subjugate humanity and turned against him, but then Rom re-appeared and they were forced to work together to stop the Spaceknight. Mystique and Rogue tricked and ambushed Rom, but as he battled Hybrid, Rogue developed sympathy for him and Destiny’s visions revealed that Hybrid planned to enslave all mutant women as breeders. Rogue and Mystique then assisted Rom in defeating Hybrid, though Mystique asserted that it was only to protect the lives of the endangered Sisterhood. [Rom #31-32]

Soon after, the “Sisterhood” attacked Angel for his role in helping to thwart the Brotherhood’s attack on Senator Kelly, as he was the only X-Man whose real identity was known to the public. Mystique used her Pentagon connections to gain technology for a sneak attack and, when that failed, the three female mutants followed and confronted him and his girlfriend Alison Blaire, the Dazzler. He refused to tell them the whereabouts of the X-Men, so they attacked the pair, defeating the Angel and kidnapping him for later use. However, they did not know about the songstress being a mutant too and were surprised by her fighting back. Dazzler freed the Angel and escaped with him. This enraged the Sisterhood, particularly the troubled Rogue, who both admired Dazzler as a singer and envied her for her control over her mutant power. Mystique decreed that Dazzler be left alone for the time being---and though Rogue acquiesced, she went after Dazzler anyway and battled her. Dazzler came out victorious and handed her over to the authorities. It’s not known when or how Rogue escaped, though probably Mystique had a hand in this. [Dazzler #22-23, #28]

At some point, Mystique found herself targeted by Mastermind, who was on a personal revenge mission against everyone he held accountable for his past failures. In Mystique’s case, the story behind his hatred was never fully revealed, though it seems to have to do with a spoiled weapons deal between the Hellfire Club and the Brotherhood. Whatever the cause, Mystique found herself trapped in an illusion of a formal hunt in the 18th century, with her being the chased animal. In time, she was caught and killed – which caused her to wake up from her nightmare. Mystique’s lover, Destiny, sensed her trouble and together they tried to figure out the meaning of the illusion.

Also, Destiny apparently tried to persuade Mystique that only Charles Xavier could help Rogue with her powers and the torment of Carol Danvers’ persona inside her mind. Mystique disagreed, but the two women were soon dismayed to learn that Rogue had run away and gone to Xavier for help on her own. She ultimately joined the X-Men. [X-Treme X-Men #1, Uncanny X-Men #170-171]

When Mystique trained in Arcade’s Murderworld, she successfully defeated and ‘killed’ most of the X-Men robots - including Rogue - but discovered that she couldn’t kill the Nightcrawler robot, to both her detriment and annoyance. Destiny warned her that her plans against the X-Men were a mistake, especially since she could not bring herself to kill Nightcrawler, but Mystique silenced her and declared that she wanted to get Rogue back. She believed that Charles Xavier was controlling her daughter’s mind and refused to believe that Rogue would abandon her. She then sent Pyro, Avalanche, and Blob - who had escaped jail by unknown means behind the scenes - to draw the X-Men away from the mansion so she could infiltrate it. Mystique was unable to kill Xavier with her first shot, but Rogue stopped her before she could finish the job, insisting that she came there of her own volition. Mystique was doubtful and hurt, but Rogue ultimately convinced her by saying that Xavier was probably the only person who could help with her powers and give her a chance at a normal life as she feared the absorbed personality of Carol Danvers would otherwise drive her insane. Though Mystique wondered which side Rogue would choose if there was a fight between the Brotherhood and the X-Men, she grudgingly agreed and left her adoptive daughter with Xavier. [Uncanny X-Men #177-178]

Not long after, Mystique (in her human guise of DARPA’s Raven Darkholme) traveled with government official Valerie Cooper to meet the United States’ government’s new inventor, Forge. He gave them the prototype of his new weapon against the Dire Wraiths, a power Neutralizer based on that of Rom’s. He warned them that it was untested and did not want it to be used until it was ready. Raven soon learned that Cooper and Henry Peter Gyrich planned to use it on the “mutant terrorist” Rogue and they did not heed her protests. She quickly discussed the matter with Destiny and suggested that it might not be so bad for Rogue to lose her powers, as she could then have the normal life she desired, but Destiny reminded her it should still be their daughter’s choice. As Raven, she informed Forge about Gyrich’s ill plans with his invention. Mystique then went to talk to Storm about the government’s plans and provided some information about the missing Rogue’s whereabouts. Though she claimed she was doing it for Rogue, she knew that Destiny had predicted that whoever went to Rogue’s assistance would suffer the fate meant for her and deliberately set up Storm. The X-Men’s leader went to talk to Rogue and, when the government arrived to shoot the girl with the Neutralizer, it hit Storm instead and removed her powers. Rogue was unharmed. Mystique later again attempted to get Rogue to come home with her, but her daughter once more refused. [Uncanny X-Men #183-185, Marvel Fanfare #40]

to be continued...

thanks for the profiles.

They are really helpful

MYSTIQUE Part 3 of 6

Mystique later went to Val Cooper’s home in her true form (thus, Cooper was unaware that the notorious terrorist Mystique was also her colleague Raven Darkholme) and made a deal with her: she offered the services of her Brotherhood to the government, in exchange for a pardon. She cited the increasing anti-mutant attitudes and dangerous world sentiment for her offer. Cooper agreed, but only if the team could bring in Magneto for trial; the new team, Freedom Force, attacked Magneto and he surrendered after a scuffle with him and his allies, the X-Men. Freedom Force quickly gained a new member in Spiral, who joined behind the scenes sometime before their official debut. [Uncanny X-Men #199]

Freedom Force’s next official mission was to arrest Rusty Collins, a wanted criminal. The team was eager to go after him because of his connection with X-Factor, a group believed to be mutant-hunters (in reality, it was the original X-Men in disguise). Mystique reminded her team that they were obliged to play by the rules, lest they lose their deal with the government, and with that they sought out Rusty. When they found him, they clashed with X-Factor and then an anti-mutant mob.

Rusty and his friend, Skids, were able to escape during the melee and Freedom Force followed him underground into the Morlock tunnels. They then encountered X-Factor in their other disguise and, this time, Blob recognized them as the original X-Men. Destiny warned that Freedom Force had to leave the tunnels or be killed (in what was to be the Morlock Massacre) and so they left. However, Mystique decided to get back at X-Factor by revealing to the media that Warren Worthington, formerly known as Angel and a known mutant, was the financial backer for the mutant-hunting X-Factor. [X-Factor #8-10]

The team’s next mission was to arrest the two teams of Avengers, as one of their former members (Quicksilver) had implicated them in criminal activity. After a lengthy battle, Freedom Force succeeded in capturing both teams and handed them over to the government, but Mystique berated their new member, Spider-Woman II, for her insubordinate behavior. Spider-Woman later went to where the Avengers were imprisoned and freed them, effectively abandoning her own team. [Avengers Annual #15]

Although this was actually a violation of Freedom Force’s pardon rules, Val Cooper realized that the inclusion of Spider-Woman was her own mistake and did not penalize the rest of the group. Against Mystique’s wishes, Cooper brought in three new members for Freedom Force. She did not have long to dwell on that, as Destiny suddenly received a terrifying vision that the X-Men, including Rogue, were going to die. Mystique went to warn Rogue, though her daughter opted to stay with her friends, much to Mystique’s distress. [Uncanny X-Men #223-224]

Mystique then brought her team to Dallas to protect the X-Men by arresting them for their own good, but the X-Men did not appreciate this and the two teams clashed. However, after both sides took prisoners and temporarily retreated, bizarre things began to happen in the city, the result of the Adversary’s magic. The X-Men and Freedom Force then joined forces to protect the civilians and discover the source of the chaos. Eventually, after they successfully worked together for some time, the X-Men decided they had to go up to Forge’s penthouse to battle the evil. Mystique wanted to bring her team too, but Wolverine forced her to stay behind and rescue civilians.

Sadly, she observed as her daughter went into the building and watched helplessly as the X-Men fought and volunteered to be sacrificed by Forge to defeat the Adversary. Forge survived, but Mystique angrily screamed at him for killing the X-Men (fortunately, they were secretly resurrected and went underground, though the rest of the world did not know this). [Uncanny X-Men #225-227]

Everyone believed the X-Men dead, so Illyana Rasputin, aka Magik of the New Mutants, sought revenge on Forge for the death of her brother Colossus. Freedom Force, who had remained in Dallas to clean up, was obliged to protect him by battling Magik and the rest of the New Mutants. Mystique even helped by impersonating him and, when she revealed the deception, Destiny showed them a vision of the future Inferno to come. Puzzled by Freedom Force’s concern for the world, the New Mutants then spotted the real Forge and Magik clashed with him. [New Mutants #65]

After leaving Dallas, Freedom Force continued doing a variety of missions for the government, some of which were not popular with their fellow mutants. They had to enforce the Mutant Registration Act, in which mutants had to register with the government. Rusty Collins refused and X-Factor only agreed to do so using their public identities. Freedom Force was also kept busy with other tasks, including reluctantly rescuing their old nemesis, Senator Kelly, from a drug lord, bringing in a team of mutant terrorists and dealing with the aftermath of fights involving other super-powered beings. [X-Factor #33, Captain America #346, Marvel Comics Presents #41, X-Factor #40]

Freedom Force was again sent to arrest Rusty Collins some time later, as he had been suspected of causing a fire in New York. They ran into the New Mutants, who intended to protect him along with their afflicted teammate, Dani Moonstar. Blob then inadvertently revealed to Rusty and Skids that the government had captured mutant children in its possession and Mystique furiously ordered the teenagers captured, lest they spread this classified secret. While the rest of the New Mutants went to Asgard, Freedom Force brought Rusty and Skids into custody. Somewhat later, the teens escaped prison, only to be re-captured by Freedom Force. Mystique interrogated them about the new terrorist group, the Mutant Liberation Front and, although at this point they knew nothing about the group, the MLF later showed up and freed them, recruiting them for their own organization. [New Mutants #78, 80, 82, 87-88]

One night, Destiny had a precognitive dream, one that foretold her death, though she did not reveal this to Mystique. The next day, Val Cooper ordered Freedom Force to assist Forge against the Reavers on Muir Island. Mystique, who was still furious with the man for the “death” of Rogue, refused, though Cooper forced the issue. Destiny then predicted that Mystique’s and Forge’s futures would be “intimately intertwined,” though Mystique did not believe it and did not feel any more warmly towards him. Freedom Force flew with him to Muir Island and, though initially the battle seemed to go well, things quickly went downhill. Avalanche was severely wounded and Stonewall killed. Though Mystique had sent Forge off with Destiny to protect her, Destiny sent him away after telling him to love Mystique with all his heart. Destiny was then killed by Legion, much to Mystique’s grief. Though the Reavers were defeated, Mystique was furious with Forge and devastated by Destiny’s death. [Uncanny X-Men #254-255]

Mystique took time off to grieve for Destiny. She went on a cruise to re-enact a trip they’d taken earlier and disposed of Destiny’s ashes. When she returned, she found Freedom Force in disarray and angrily brought the team back together after berating them with some choice words. While some of them went off on another mission to retrieve the Hulk, she went on a solo trip, in the guise of a federal agent, to talk to an old woman about a potential Hulk sighting; the incident depressed and saddened her, for it reminded her of her loss. She was surprisingly gentle and helpful to the old woman, but it did not help her unhappy mood. [X-Factor Annual #6, Incredible Hulk #369]

to be continued...

Does anyone have a profile of Nate Grey?

Real Name: Nate Grey
Affiliation: None
Status: Deceased, but merged with all cells on Earth
Powers: The genetically engineered offspring of the Age of Apocalypse versions of Cyclops and Jean Grey, Nate was what Cable would have been without his techno-organic virus. He was a high level-telepath, able to project his astral form across the world and create sophisticated illusions. He was also an extremely high-level telekinetic who can "phase" through solid matter by moving the molecules around his body and reforming them after he's passed. Unfortunately, since he was designed by the AOA Sinister to be powerful enough to destroy Apocalypse, his immense power was always eating away at him, destined to kill him in a few short years. Nate was also responsible for the recreation of Madelyne Pryor, whose psychic echo he apparently homed in on when he first came to our Earth.
In the Age of Apocalypse reality, Nate was raised by Forge, whom he looked to as a father. Along with Toad and Soar-on, they worked to help humans and mutants who were oppressed by Apocalypse. When Nate was in his teens, he and Forge were visited by the mysterious Essex, who was Sinister in disguise. Essex killed Forge, and then revealed to Nate his destiny of destroying Apocalypse. Nate was furious and managed to actually destroy the malleable Sinister. He made a lone assault on Apocalypse's fortress in New York, and wound up slugging it out with Holocaust, until Nate plunged a shard of the M'Kraan Crystal that he had picked up into Holocaust's chest. The resultant release of energy transported both of them back to the core reality (Earth 616).

Nate landed in the Alps, where he met (created) Madelyne Pryor, as mentioned above. He distrusted the X-Men from the start, most likely due to an early encounter with Professor X, inside whom he sensed the burgeoning presence of Onslaught. Nate hooked up with Threnody for a while after rescuing her from the Marauders, but they went their separate ways. Nate then got into a big fight with Madelyne, in which she siphoned off a lot of his power, and left him without his TK. Following that encounter, Nate was recruited by the Brotherhood, and Dark Beast used his technology to help Nate unconsciously use his lost powers. Nate left the Brotherhood after disrupting their plans to use a lethal gas, and ended up in NYC, where he has remained until recently, when he traveled to the Arctic to glimpse his future and saw that he would die in battle with a masked man (who turned out to be Stryfe) and take half the world with him. Nate then fought the Great Beasts, and shortly after, lost his telepathy to the Shadow King's psychic shockwave. Then, Stryfe's return happened and Nate, Maddie and Cable fought him off with the help of Witness, a man who had seen Nate's dream of apocalyptic destruction and had vowed to find Nate and prevent it from becoming reality. With Witness's help Nate was able to defeat Stryfe without resorting to the type of power that would have caused such destruction. Afterwards, Nate was targeted for termination by the Psi-Ops: Gauntlet, a strike force of telepaths with hi-tech weapons. He ended up defeating them, but only barely, and in the process both Ness and Madelyne apparently died. Then Nate had a few run-ins with Scott and Jean, and learned to respect them a lot, enough that he joined the team on a mission to save the Mannites. Then Nate was captured by Pestilence II, and brought to Apocalypse, who planned to transfer himself into Nate's young body. However, Cyclops managed to break free and disrupt the transfer, causing Apocalypse to merge with him instead. Nate was shaken by his "father's" death, and set off to find his proper place in the world. Maddie returned soon afterwards, but she was manipulating him in his sleep and making him destroy things. She finally revealed that she was a Madelyne from another dimension and she needed him to do something for her. This Maddie showed Nate how to shift between parallel earths, and tried to use him to power her engine for traveling between worlds. Nate rejected her, and found that reality's version of himself, who was slightly insane from his experiences. The two Nate's fought Maddie (who was really an evil Jean) and in the process merged parts of themselves to throw her off. This led Nate to consider himself a "mutant shaman," a healer and protector for his "tribe," which is really all of this Earth, just as his alternate reality self had done in that worlf.

Nate became immensely powerful, and had few qualms about using his power to mete out justice to his fellow mutants. He then dealt with and stopped the madman Qabiri from destroying all the worlds on the Spiral, and finally, he confronted the Anti-Man, an alien sent to Earth to insinuate his genetic code into all living cells on the planet so that his people could harvest the resulting energy. To save the world from destruction, Nate merged himself with the Anti-Man, in essence "poisoning" the cells of Earth with his presence, and dissipating both of them across the globe.

thanks a lot!
I was wondering a lot about him. Is is Cable? Or the brother of Cable or what? It's alittle confusing.
Cable's name is Nathan Christopher Summers, and this is Nate Grey. Are they the same person?

No, he is Cable's brother. Cable is Madeline and Scott's son, but Nate's mother is Jean Grey. 🙂

whoa... thats a lot of writing (about bios).... too much... confusing brain 😖😖