Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Cable ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity: **__Nathan Christopher Charles Summers is the time-displaced, techno-organically infected son of the X-Men's Cyclops and Madelyne Pryor, bred to be the ultimate mutant weapon against Apocalypse, who becomes a grizzled soldier fighting a desperate war across centuries to protect the future of all mutantkind.__** * **Key Takeaways:** * **The Askani'son:** His identity is defined by his convoluted origin—born in the present, infected by [[Apocalypse]], and raised 2,000 years in a dystopian future by the Askani Sisterhood. This makes him a man out of time, possessing knowledge and a brutal pragmatism that often clashes with his contemporaries. * **Proactive Protector:** Cable's primary impact on the Marvel Universe was shifting mutant teams from reactive defenders to proactive strike forces. He transformed the idealistic [[New Mutants]] into the militaristic [[X-Force]], a group willing to use lethal force and preemptive strikes to neutralize threats before they emerge. * **The Mutant Messiah's Guardian:** His most profound role became the protector and adoptive father of [[Hope Summers]], the first mutant born after the devastating M-Day event. His mission to safeguard her at all costs, chronicled in his solo series, redefined his character from a mere soldier to a devoted father, solidifying his place as a pivotal figure in mutant history. * **Key Incarnations:** The primary **Earth-616** Cable is an immensely powerful Omega-level telepath and telekinetic whose abilities are almost entirely suppressed by the constant need to fight off the techno-organic virus ravaging his body. The version seen in **Deadpool 2** (now part of the MCU multiverse) is a non-psionic, cybernetically enhanced soldier whose motivations are simplified to a personal vendetta, traveling back in time to avenge the death of his family. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== Cable's journey into the Marvel canon is as complex as his in-universe backstory. The character as fans know him first appeared in **//The New Mutants// #87** in March 1990. He was visually conceived and co-created by artist and writer **Rob Liefeld**, with writer **Louise Simonson** scripting his initial appearances. Liefeld was tasked with revitalizing the flagging sales of //The New Mutants// and envisioned a new leader who was the polar opposite of Professor Charles Xavier. Where Xavier was a pacifist and a teacher, Cable was a man of action, a mysterious soldier with immense power, big guns, and a "take no prisoners" attitude that perfectly captured the "grim and gritty" zeitgeist of early 1990s comic books. However, the infant who would //become// Cable, Nathan Summers, was introduced four years earlier in **//Uncanny X-Men// #201** (January 1986) by writer **Chris Claremont**. For years, this infant was simply the son of Scott Summers ([[Cyclops]]) and Madelyne Pryor. The masterstroke of connecting the mysterious new soldier, Cable, to the long-lost infant son of Cyclops was a retcon (retroactive continuity change) orchestrated by writer **Fabian Nicieza** during the //X-Cutioner's Song// crossover event in 1992. This single creative decision transformed Cable from a popular but one-dimensional anti-hero into a character with deep, tragic ties to the very core of the X-Men mythos, securing his A-list status for decades to come. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== The question "Who is Cable?" is one of the most complex in Marvel comics. His origin is a tapestry woven from genetic manipulation, time travel, and prophecies spanning millennia. Critically, his comic book origin and his cinematic depiction are fundamentally different. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === Nathan Christopher Charles Summers was doomed before he was born. His existence was the master plan of the centuries-old geneticist Nathaniel Essex, better known as **[[Mister Sinister]]**. Sinister, obsessed with creating a mutant powerful enough to destroy his master-turned-rival, [[Apocalypse]], determined that a union of the Summers and Grey bloodlines would produce such a being. After the apparent death of [[Jean Grey]] during the Dark Phoenix Saga, Sinister activated his backup plan: a clone of Jean named Madelyne Pryor. He manipulated events so that Scott Summers ([[Cyclops]]) would fall in love with and marry Madelyne, believing her to be a normal human. Their union produced a son, Nathan. Sinister's plan was nearly successful, but Madelyne's discovery of her true nature as a clone led her down a path of darkness, transforming her into the Goblin Queen. In the aftermath of the //Inferno// crossover, Apocalypse saw the infant Nathan as a major future threat. He captured the child and infected him with a techno-organic (T-O) virus, a sentient mechanical plague that converts living tissue into machinery. The virus was incurable and fatal. As Nathan lay dying, a woman from the distant future appeared. She was a member of the Askani clan, a sisterhood dedicated to fighting Apocalypse's tyrannical rule two millennia from now. She revealed herself as Rachel Summers (the daughter of Scott and Jean from an alternate timeline) and told Scott the only way to save his son was to let her take him to her future, where they had the technology to treat, but not cure, the T-O virus. In a heart-wrenching decision, Cyclops handed his infant son over, sending him into a desolate, war-torn future he might never return from. In the 39th century, Mother Askani (the aged Rachel Summers) had the infant Nathan cloned, fearing he would not survive the viral infection. This clone was created as a failsafe. However, Apocalypse's forces attacked, and the infant clone was stolen and raised by Apocalypse himself as his heir, believing him to be the powerful original. This child, free of the T-O virus, grew up to become the terrorist mastermind **[[Stryfe]]**, Cable's arch-nemesis. Meanwhile, the true Nathan Summers survived. He was raised by the Askani and taught to use his vast, Omega-level telekinetic abilities not for combat, but for survival. From the moment he gained consciousness, he had to dedicate the majority of his immense power to a single, constant task: keeping the T-O virus at bay, preventing it from consuming his entire body. This internal battle severely limited his usable power but also forged him into a warrior of unparalleled discipline and will. He grew into the legendary soldier known as "The Askani'son," leading the rebellion against Apocalypse's regime. As an old, grizzled man, he took the codename **Cable** and traveled back to the late 20th century—his past—with a single mission: to prevent Apocalypse's rise and ensure the apocalyptic future he was raised in would never come to pass. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) / Fox's X-Men Universe === The version of Cable introduced in 20th Century Fox's **//Deadpool 2//** (2018) presents a dramatically streamlined and emotionally-driven origin. While the acquisition of 21st Century Fox by Disney has integrated this timeline into the broader MCU multiverse (as seen in //Deadpool & Wolverine//), it is crucial to note that this character is not native to the primary MCU (Earth-199999/616) timeline. This Cable, portrayed by Josh Brolin, is not the son of Cyclops, nor is his primary foe Apocalypse. Instead, he hails from a future ravaged by the powerful and out-of-control mutant, Russell Collins, also known as **Firefist**. In his timeline, an adult Firefist murdered Cable's wife and daughter in a brutal act of violence. Consumed by grief and vengeance, this becomes his sole motivation. Using a wrist-mounted time-travel device with limited uses, Cable journeys to the past with a simple, brutal objective: kill Russell Collins as a child, thereby preventing him from ever becoming the monster who destroys his family. This mission puts him in direct conflict with [[Deadpool]], who takes it upon himself to protect the troubled young mutant and try to steer him away from his dark path. His signature cybernetic arm and glowing eye are present, but their origin is not attributed to the techno-organic virus. They are presented as advanced bionic prosthetics and combat enhancements from his future era. The T-O virus is visually referenced in the design of his arm's metallic structure, which can spread into a shield, but the biological plague element is removed from his backstory. This adaptation grounds the character, stripping away decades of convoluted comic lore to create a sympathetic antagonist whose motivations are clear, personal, and immediately understandable to a film audience. His daughter's charred teddy bear, which he carries with him, serves as a powerful symbol of his loss and the driving force behind his violent quest. ===== Part 3: Abilities, Equipment & Personality ===== === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === Cable's power set is one of the most unique in the Marvel Universe, defined more by its potential and limitations than its active use. * **Mutant Powers (Omega-Level Potential):** * **Telekinesis:** By birthright, Cable is one of the most powerful telekinetics on the planet. If not for the T-O virus, his power would rival or even exceed that of Jean Grey or his alternate-reality counterpart, Nate Grey ([[X-Man]]). In the rare instances he is cured or able to let his power run free, he can levitate entire cities, create impenetrable force fields, and deconstruct matter at a molecular level. * **Telepathy:** Similarly, his telepathic potential is vast. He is capable of mind reading, casting powerful psychic illusions, astral projection, and shielding his mind from other powerful psychics. * **The Techno-Organic Virus: A Curse and a Blessing:** * **The Constant Battle:** Cable's greatest weakness is the core of his character. Over 90% of his mutant power is perpetually focused inward, engaged in a constant, subconscious, cell-by-cell war to halt the spread of the T-O virus. This is why he often appears to have only mid-level telekinetic abilities; he is using the psychic equivalent of a single finger while the rest of his power holds back a flood. When he overexerts his active powers, the virus can flare up and begin to spread. * **Cybernetic Enhancements:** The virus has converted the left side of his body into a techno-organic construct. This provides: * **Cybernetic Arm:** Granting superhuman strength, durability, and the ability to interface directly with technology. It can also be reshaped into blades or other tools. * **Cybernetic Eye:** His left eye, often called the "Prof-Eye," allows him to see in multiple spectrums of light, including infrared and ultraviolet, and provides telescopic vision and energy signature analysis. * **Enhanced Physiology:** The T-O parts of his body grant him superhuman stamina and durability, and can even repair themselves from damage. * **Skills & Intellect:** * **Master Strategist:** Raised in a perpetual war, Cable is one of the most brilliant military tacticians on Earth. He is a master of long-term strategy, asymmetrical warfare, and battlefield command. * **Expert Combatant:** He is a master of countless forms of armed and unarmed combat from both the present and the 39th century. * **Weaponry Expert:** He is proficient with virtually every known form of weaponry, from swords to the highly advanced plasma cannons of his future. * **Equipment:** * **Bodysliding:** Using technology from his future, often housed in his orbital station (Graymalkin, later renamed Providence), Cable can teleport himself, others, and equipment across vast distances almost instantaneously. * **Psimitar:** A large spear-like weapon used by the Askani that allows him to focus his telepathic and telekinetic energies into devastating attacks. * **Future Arsenal:** Cable is famous for carrying impossibly large and powerful plasma rifles and sidearms, far exceeding the technological level of the present day. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) / Fox's X-Men Universe === The cinematic Cable is a far more grounded and physically focused character, with his powers and abilities stemming entirely from technology and training. * **Powers & Abilities:** * **Peak Human Condition:** He is a human in peak physical condition, augmented by future technology. * **No Psionic Abilities:** This version displays no telepathic or telekinetic abilities whatsoever. This is the most significant departure from the source material, done to make him a more physical match for Deadpool and the X-Force team. * **Skills:** * **Elite Soldier:** He is portrayed as an incredibly skilled and ruthless soldier, an expert in stealth, infiltration, marksmanship, and brutal hand-to-hand combat. * **Master Tactician:** He demonstrates an ability to plan and execute complex assaults, quickly analyzing his environment and opponents to gain a tactical advantage. * **Equipment:** * **Cybernetic Arm:** His bionic arm provides immense superhuman strength, capable of stopping a speeding truck. It is composed of a techno-organic mesh that he can deploy as a protective shield. * **Advanced Rifle:** His primary weapon is a large, modular rifle from the future. It can fire powerful kinetic energy pulses, launch grenades, and contains a dial that can increase its power output to devastating levels (up to 11). * **Time Travel Device:** A wrist-mounted device that allows him to travel through time. It has a limited number of uses, which becomes a key plot point in //Deadpool 2//. * **Assorted Gadgets:** He utilizes a variety of other future tech, including a personal force field generator, gravity grenades, and other advanced military hardware. ===== Part 4: Key Relationships & Network ===== ==== Core Allies ==== * **Deadpool (Wade Wilson):** Cable and [[Deadpool]] are Marvel's ultimate odd couple. Their relationship, immortalized in the long-running //Cable & Deadpool// series, is a perfect blend of conflict and camaraderie. Cable is the stoic, hyper-focused "straight man," constantly exasperated by Deadpool's fourth-wall-breaking chaos and irreverent humor. Yet, beneath the friction lies a deep, grudging respect. Cable sees the sliver of a good man buried within Wade's psychosis, while Wade is one of the few people who can break through Cable's hardened exterior. Together, they are one of the most effective and entertaining duos in comics. * **Hope Summers:** Hope is Cable's heart. After he rescued her as an infant during //Messiah CompleX//, she became his sole purpose. He took her into the future, jumping through time to protect her from Bishop and other threats, raising her in one apocalyptic wasteland after another. This journey transformed him from a soldier fighting for an ideology into a father fighting for his child. She is his adopted daughter, his legacy, and the living symbol of the future he has always fought to create. Their bond is one of the most profound in the X-Men universe. * **Domino (Neena Thurman):** A founding member of X-Force, Domino is one of Cable's oldest and most trusted confidants. Her mutant ability to manipulate probability fields—in essence, she has "good luck"—is the perfect chaotic counterpoint to Cable's meticulous, military-style planning. They share a history as mercenaries in the Six Pack and have been partners, leaders, and occasional romantic interests. Domino trusts Cable's judgment implicitly, even when his plans seem insane. * **Cyclops (Scott Summers):** The relationship between Cable and his father is fraught with the paradoxes of time travel. For most of their lives, they were contemporaries, with Cable often being physically older than his own father. Their interactions were frequently tense, marked by ideological clashes between Cable's brutal pragmatism and Cyclops's more measured leadership. Over time, however, they developed a deep understanding and respect, with Scott coming to admire the warrior his son was forced to become, and Nathan finally connecting with the father he never knew. ==== Arch-Enemies ==== * **Stryfe:** No villain is more personal to Cable than Stryfe. As Cable's clone, raised by Apocalypse in a twisted upbringing, Stryfe is a mirror image of Nathan's potential turned to evil. He possesses the full, untethered Omega-level psionic power that Cable must constantly suppress. His entire existence is driven by a burning hatred for the life he was denied and for the "parents" (Cyclops and Jean Grey) he believes abandoned him. The conflict between Cable and Stryfe is a deeply psychological battle of identity, nature versus nurture, and a struggle for the soul that was stolen at birth. * **Apocalypse (En Sabah Nur):** Apocalypse is Cable's progenitor and destiny. He is the reason for Cable's existence, both through Sinister's plot and the T-O virus infection that defined his life. Their war is ancient and fundamental. Apocalypse represents the philosophy of "survival of the fittest" through brutal domination, while Cable, the man Apocalypse inadvertently created to be his ultimate foe, fights for a future where all mutants, strong and weak, can survive and choose their own destiny. ==== Affiliations ==== * **[[X-Force]]:** Cable's most significant contribution to the Marvel Universe is the creation of X-Force. He took the [[New Mutants]], the next generation of X-Men, and reforged them into a proactive strike team. Under his leadership, X-Force operated by the mantra that the best defense is a good offense, hunting down threats to mutantkind and neutralizing them by any means necessary. This often put them at odds with the more defensive and idealistic methods of the [[X-Men]]. * **[[X-Men]]:** Despite his more aggressive methods, Cable has been a frequent and valuable member of various X-Men teams. He respects the dream of Professor X but believes it must be defended with vigilance and force. He has served as a mentor, a powerhouse, and a strategic leader, particularly during times of crisis when his military mindset is most needed. * **Six Pack:** Before forming X-Force, Cable led a mercenary outfit known as the Six Pack (originally called the Wild Pack). This team included notable operatives like Domino, G.W. Bridge, Hammer, and Garrison Kane. It was during his time with this group that he established his reputation as a formidable soldier-for-hire in the present day. ===== Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines ===== === The X-Cutioner's Song (1992) === This 12-part crossover was the storyline that finally unraveled Cable's mysterious past. The plot is set in motion when a figure identical to Cable ambushes Professor X at a public rally, shooting him with a techno-organic virus-laced projectile. The X-Men and X-Factor are thrown into chaos, launching a massive manhunt for their former ally, Cable, and his X-Force team. Cable is forced on the run, desperately trying to prove his innocence while hunting the true culprit: his doppelgänger, Stryfe. The event culminates in a massive battle on Apocalypse's moon base where it's revealed that both Cable and Stryfe are from the future and one is the clone of the other. The storyline solidified Cable's origin as the time-lost son of Cyclops and established Stryfe as his definitive arch-nemesis. === Messiah CompleX & Cable Vol. 2 (2007-2010) === Following the "Decimation" event where the Scarlet Witch erased the powers of over 90% of the mutant population, the birth of the first new mutant becomes a world-changing event. This infant girl, later named Hope, is seen as either a savior or a harbinger of doom. Amid a massive battle between the X-Men, the Marauders, and the Purifiers, Cable recognizes the baby's importance and takes her into his care. He makes the ultimate sacrifice, using his last time-jump to escape into the future with her, knowing he may never be able to return. The subsequent solo series, //Cable (Vol. 2)//, follows their desperate journey through a ruined timeline as Cable raises Hope while being relentlessly hunted by his former X-Men teammate, Bishop, who is convinced Hope's survival will lead to his own apocalyptic future. This saga is arguably Cable's finest hour, recasting the hardened soldier as a devoted, loving father. === Cable & Deadpool (2004-2008) === This 50-issue series is a fan-favorite and a masterclass in character dynamics. After a teleportation mishap merges their DNA, Cable and Deadpool are physically linked, forced to "bodyslide" in and out of each other's presence. The series follows Cable's ambitious plan to become a global savior. Having temporarily gained full control of his powers, he levitates the island of Providence, declaring it a utopia for anyone who wants to build a better world. The series uses Deadpool's cynical, chaotic worldview as a perfect foil for Cable's messianic complex. It's an action-packed, hilarious, and surprisingly philosophical story that explored Cable's humanity in a way no other series had before, cementing his and Deadpool's iconic partnership. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== * **X-Man (Nate Grey / Earth-295):** In the "Age of Apocalypse" timeline, Nathan Summers was never sent to the future and never infected with the T-O virus. Instead, he was artificially grown in a laboratory by that reality's Mister Sinister from the genetic material of Scott Summers and Jean Grey. Named Nate Grey, he escaped Sinister's clutches and became the most powerful psychic on the planet, a living weapon of immense telepathic and telekinetic force. He is essentially Cable with the power limiters turned off—younger, more arrogant, and emotionally volatile, representing the raw potential Cable was forced to sacrifice. * **Ultimate Cable (Earth-1610):** The Ultimate Marvel universe presented a radical reinvention of the character. This version of Cable appears as a mysterious time-traveler who hunts down Professor X. In a shocking twist, it is revealed that this "Cable" is not Nathan Summers at all, but a future, battle-hardened version of [[Wolverine]]. In his timeline, Apocalypse had murdered most of the X-Men, and Wolverine traveled back in time to kill Xavier before he could form the team, believing it was the only way to prevent Apocalypse's rise. * **X-Men: The Animated Series (Earth-92131):** The popular 1990s animated series introduced Cable as a recurring character. His origin as Cyclops's son was only subtly hinted at and never fully confirmed. He was primarily depicted as a cyborg mercenary and freedom fighter from the apocalyptic future of 4000 AD, frequently traveling to the present to combat the schemes of Apocalypse. His personality and design were heavily based on his early comic book appearances, establishing him for a generation of fans as a no-nonsense soldier from the future. ===== See Also ===== * [[cyclops]] * [[hope_summers]] * [[deadpool]] * [[x-force]] * [[apocalypse]] * [[stryfe]] * [[mister_sinister]] * [[x-men]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((Cable's creation is a point of contention among creators. While Rob Liefeld is credited with his visual design, name, and core concept as a man of action, Louise Simonson scripted his first appearances, and Fabian Nicieza is largely credited with developing the character's backstory and linking him to the Summers family.)) ((The miniseries //The Adventures of Cyclops and Phoenix// (1994) detailed Scott Summers and Jean Grey's honeymoon, where their consciousnesses were psychically pulled into the future by Mother Askani. There, under the pseudonyms "Slym" and "Redd," they raised their young son Nathan for 12 years, helping him learn to control his powers and fight the T-O virus before being returned to their own time with their memories of the event suppressed.)) ((In the 2018 comic event //Extermination//, the original, older Cable was killed by a younger version of himself. This "Kid Cable" operated for a time, believing his older self had grown soft, before eventually orchestrating his own resurrection.)) ((Rob Liefeld has stated he chose the name "Cable" because he wanted a simple, strong, one-word name that signified the character was a "cable" connecting the past to the future.)) ((Cable's visual design in the 1990s—with his impossibly large guns, excessive pouches, and metallic arm—is often seen as the epitome of the art style and character trends of that comic book era.)) ((Key reading list for new fans: 1. //X-Cutioner's Song// (Origin), 2. //Cable & Deadpool// (Personality & Partnership), 3. //Messiah CompleX// and //Cable Vol. 2// (Character-defining arc as a father).))