X-Men 2099

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X-Men 2099
John Francis Moore
Ron Lim

X-Men 2099 is a

John Francis Moore and largely pencilled by Ron Lim
.

The series began in October 1993 and lasted 35 issues along with two specials. It spawned a line of

2099: World of Tomorrow
, though members of the team were rarely seen after that point.

The first issue featured a blue foil cover on cardstock and the double-sized 25th issue's cover was extra-glossy with foil letters, metallic silver ink, and embossed characters on a heavier wraparound cover.

In June 2009, a mini-series called Timestorm 2009–2099 brought back Spider-Man, Ghost Rider, the X-Men, and more from the 2099 universe in a very different version.[1]

In 2016, the original version returned in the Spider-Man 2099 arc "Civil War 2099" (also appearing in X-Men '92 series). Later the team appeared again in X-Men Blue, helping the original time displaced X-Men.

Main characters

The team featured an ever-changing line-up, but the mainstays included:

Antagonists

  • Aesir – Pantheon of false
    Asgardian
    gods created by Alchemax.
  • Brimstone Love and the Theatre of Pain.
  • Controller X – Xi'an Chi Xan while working for the Theatre of Pain.
  • The Foolkiller – An assassin charged with the task of killing members of the Lawless. Raised and trained to believe that foolish behavior should be punishable by death.
  • Free Radicals – A group that clashed with the Neo-Wakandan natives of northern California, particularly Oakland.
  • Glitterspike – Professional assassin and abusive ex-husband of Freakshow member Rosa. Has the ability to absorb light particles and convert them into tangible objects of light.
  • Graverobber and the Undead – A mutant who once worked for Shakti's father, Zail Haddad. Subjected to radioactive and biohazardous conditions, he developed the mutant ability to resurrect the dead, but those he resurrected are linked to his neural energies.
  • The Rat Pack – Casino enforcers for Synge Casino.
  • Lytton and Desdemona Synge – Owners of the Synge casino. Lytton framed Xi'an for his father's murder.
  • Joaquim Eduardo Vasquez (also known as Darkson) – Son of Rosa Vasquez and Glitterspike.
  • Vulcann – Member of the Shaper's Guild known as the Bloodsmiths.
  • Master Zhao and the Chosen (One-Eyed Jack, Psycho-K, Wingspan, Frostbite, and Monster) – Zhao was the last leader of the last true succession of X-Men. He took drugs to enhance his dwindling psychic energies, and as a result grew demented. He eventually killed the last of the X-Men, and used genetic experiments to attempt to raise and develop a new generation of X-Men with abilities similar to Xavier's team.

Supporting characters

  • Book – Possesses mutated rock body and high intelligence.
  • Broken Haiku – Former member of the Lawless. Left for dead by Xi'an, but survived. Lived as an entity tied to the digital world. Hunted down by the Foolkiller.
  • Zail Haddad – Father of Cerebra.
  • Halloween Jack
    (Jordan Boone, also known as Loki)
  • The Driver – A man who worked with Mama Hurricane. Stored digital copies of mutants in his car's computer systems to protect them from persecution. Became ill when Junkpile corrupted his car; seemingly destroyed the copies and now drives for the sake of driving. Powers: Cyberpathy, techo-organic body, link with car grants him other powers.
  • Quiver – A prisoner released from the Theatre of Pain along with Sham, but never officially joined the team. Had the ability to generate seismic pulses.
  • Morphine Somers – Superannuation touch generates specific bioelectric feedback through matter, aging it thousands of years into dust. Minister of Mutant Affairs and Bureaucratic Head of Halo City under the Doom presidency. Becomes temporary leader of the X-Men in Xi'an's place. Member of Doom's Black Cabinet.
  • Victor Ten Eagles – Former member of the Lawless.
  • Rosalinda Navarro Vasquez – Member of Freakshow who fell in love with Metalhead. Powers: electrical disruption.
  • X-Nation
  • The Freakshow – A group of humans who were experimented upon by mega-corps, making them similar to mutants. Under the leadership of Mama Hurricane, an important figure in the MUR (Mutant Underground Railroad), they move from place to place just doing what they can to help.
    • Breakdown – Rosa's younger brother who has destruction powers akin to Xi'an.
    • Contagion – Emits a deadly disease through physical contact. Infected Metalhead during a skirmish.
    • Dominic – Boy engineered with the ability to generate and withstand extreme heat.
    • Psyclone – Psychic or wind blasts.
    • Tantrum – Deadly vocal cords. Power increases with her level of rage.

Creators

Creative teams

The series was written entirely by

John Francis Moore and pencilled almost exclusively by Ron Lim
. Exceptions are as follows:

  • Issue #21 – Cover by Tim Sale.
  • Issue #28 – Cover by Chris Sprouse, part of a set of interlocking covers that form one image.
  • Issue #32 – Cover by Humberto Ramos, pencilled by Jan Duursema.
  • Issue #33–35 – Pencilled by Jan Duursema.
  • X-Men 2099 A.D. Special #1 – Contains three stories: "Tin Man," pencilled and inked by Steve Pugh; "Sally and Sylvester Stay at Home," pencilled and inked by Graham Higgins; and "The Frog Prince," written by Matthew Morra, pencilled by J. Calafiore, and inked by Peter Palmiotti.
  • X-Men 2099 Oasis – One-shot illustrated by
    Greg and Tim Hildebrandt
    .

Inkers

  • Adam Kubert – Issues #1–3
  • An extended run by Harry Candelario.

Alternate versions

Timestorm 2009–2099

In the alternate universe of Timestorm 2009–2099, the X-Men 2099 are introduced in a one-shot by Brian Reed and Frazer Irving. In this timeline, they are based in a former mutant internment camp in Maryland, and are led by a bald, one-armed future incarnation of Wolverine. The other members are Meanstreak (now a young girl), Krystalin, Junkpile (now a self-replicating Stark android), and Bloodhawk (now female, and with a touch that "can give life, or take it", similar to Xi'an). They are trying to rebuild Baltimore, which was destroyed in a war, and must defend it against an army of mindless Hulks.[2]

Uncanny X-Men Annual #1

When the time traveling mutant Tempus ends up in the year 2099, she meets a new version of X-Men 2099 consisting of Desert Ghost, Skullfire, Meanstreak, Metalhead, Serpentina & Sham. In this alternate future Magik is also the Sorcerer Supreme of 2099.[3]

Collected editions

Title Material collected Published date ISBN
X-Men 2099 Vol. 1 X-Men 2099 #1-9 May 2009 978-0785139652
Timestorm 2009/2099 Timestorm 2009/2099: X-Men #1 and Timestorm 2009/2099: Spider-Man #1, Timestorm 2009/2099 #1-4, November 2009 978-0785139225

References

  1. ^ "Exclusive: Timestorm 2009/2099 Designs". Comic Book Resources. January 30, 2009.
  2. ^ Timestorm 2009–2099: X-Men (August 2009)
  3. ^ Uncanny X-Men Annual #1 (December 2014)