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. ====== X-Force ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity: X-Force is the proactive and often lethal mutant special operations team, serving as the militant fist to the [[x-men]]'s guiding hand, tasked with neutralizing threats to mutantkind before they can escalate.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **Role in the Universe:** Originally a splinter group from the [[new_mutants]], X-Force fundamentally operates as the X-Men's black-ops division. While the X-Men defend a world that hates and fears them, X-Force takes the fight directly to their enemies, employing methods—including espionage, targeted strikes, and assassination—that are often deemed too extreme for the main team. They are the necessary, morally ambiguous shield for the mutant race. * **Primary Impact:** The creation of X-Force marked a significant philosophical shift in the mutant world. It challenged [[professor_x|Charles Xavier]]'s passive, defensive dream and embraced the more aggressive, militaristic ideology of its founder, [[cable_nathan_summers|Cable]]. This ideological schism has been a source of constant conflict and debate within the X-Men, questioning how far they should go to ensure their survival. * **Key Incarnations:** In the comics (Earth-616), X-Force has evolved from Cable's guerrilla freedom fighters in the 90s to a clandestine kill squad led by [[wolverine_logan_howlett|Wolverine]], and finally to the official intelligence agency of the mutant nation of [[krakoa]]. In contrast, its most famous cinematic appearance in //Deadpool 2// reimagines the team as a short-lived, comically inept group assembled by [[deadpool_wade_wilson|Deadpool]], serving as a satirical deconstruction of the super-team concept. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== X-Force burst onto the comic book scene in April 1991, with their official debut in **//New Mutants// #100**, before launching their own self-titled series, **//X-Force// #1**, in August 1991. The team was co-created by writer/artist **Rob Liefeld** and writer **Fabian Nicieza**. The creation of X-Force is inextricably linked to the cultural and creative shifts of the early 1990s comic book industry. This era, often dubbed the "grim and gritty" age, saw a move away from the classic, morally straightforward heroes of the Silver and Bronze Ages towards more aggressive, morally complex anti-heroes. Liefeld's dynamic, high-energy, and often exaggerated art style—characterized by massive muscles, impossibly large guns, and an abundance of pouches—perfectly captured this new zeitgeist. As Liefeld's popularity soared on //The New Mutants//, he was given increasing creative control. He introduced the mysterious, cybernetic soldier from the future, Cable, who quickly usurped Professor Xavier as the team's mentor. This transformation culminated in the final issue of //The New Mutants//, where the team was officially rebranded as X-Force, shedding their student personas for the roles of proactive soldiers. //X-Force// #1 was a monumental commercial success. Capitalizing on the collector boom of the 90s, it was shipped with multiple collectible trading cards and sold an astonishing five million copies, making it one of the best-selling single comic book issues in American history, second only to Jim Lee's //X-Men// #1 from the same year. This success cemented X-Force's status as a pillar of the Marvel Universe and a symbol of 90s comic book culture, for both its thrilling energy and its perceived excesses. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== The origin of X-Force differs dramatically between the comics and its cinematic adaptation, reflecting the core tonal and narrative differences between these two universes. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === The genesis of X-Force lies in the dissolution of the New Mutants. After a series of traumatic events and feeling abandoned by their mentor, Charles Xavier, the young team found themselves leaderless and aimless. This vacuum was filled by the arrival of Cable, a battle-hardened soldier from a dystopian future ruled by the tyrannical mutant, [[apocalypse_en_sabah_nur|Apocalypse]]. Cable's philosophy was a stark departure from Xavier's dream of peaceful coexistence. He believed that mutants would never be safe until their enemies were eliminated proactively. He trained the remaining New Mutants—**Cannonball**, **Boom-Boom**, **Warpath**, and **Sunspot**—in military tactics, transforming them from students into a guerrilla army. He supplemented their ranks with new, more aggressive recruits: the fierce warrior **Feral**, the mysterious extra-dimensional swordsman **Shatterstar**, and his trusted confidante, the luck-altering mercenary **Domino**. Operating from a former Sentinel base hidden in the Adirondack Mountains, this new team christened themselves **X-Force**. Their first major mission pitted them against the **Mutant Liberation Front (MLF)**, a terrorist group led by the enigmatic and helmeted Stryfe. X-Force's mandate was clear: they would not wait for threats to come to them. They would hunt down the enemies of mutantkind and end them by any means necessary. This established a deep and lasting ideological rift with the X-Men, who viewed X-Force's methods as dangerously reckless and a betrayal of everything they stood for. The twist that the Domino serving with the team was actually the shapeshifting mutant **Copycat**, a spy for their enemy Tolliver, further cemented the team's chaotic and high-stakes beginnings. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (Fox/MCU Multiverse) === The version of X-Force seen in the 2018 film **//Deadpool 2//** (produced by 20th Century Fox, now integrated into the MCU's multiverse canon) is a satirical parody of the comic book original. Following a personal tragedy, Wade Wilson, aka Deadpool, decides to become a true hero. To protect the young, volatile mutant Russell Collins (Firefist) from the time-traveling soldier Cable, Deadpool decides he needs a team. He places a recruitment ad on LinkedIn, seeking heroes who are "tough, morally flexible, and young enough to carry their own franchise for 10-12 years." The recruitment process is absurdly casual, conducted by Deadpool and his friend [[weasel]]. They assemble a bizarre lineup: * **Bedlam** (Terry Crews), with the ability to disrupt electromagnetic fields. * **Shatterstar** (Lewis Tan), an alien from the planet Mojoworld who claims to be better than a human at everything. * **Zeitgeist** (Bill Skarsgård), who can vomit acidic bile. * **The Vanisher**, an invisible character (revealed to be played by Brad Pitt upon his death). * **Domino** (Zazie Beetz), whose superpower is being "lucky." * **Peter** (Rob Delaney), an ordinary, powerless middle-aged man who just saw the ad and thought it looked fun. Deadpool dubs his new, "super-duper f*cking group" X-Force. Their first mission is to airdrop onto a convoy transporting Russell. Due to high winds that Deadpool completely ignored, the mission is an immediate and catastrophic disaster. Bedlam flies into a bus, Shatterstar is shredded by helicopter blades, the Vanisher is electrocuted on power lines, Zeitgeist is sucked into a woodchipper (his acidic death-vomit also kills Peter), and only the preternaturally lucky Domino and the resilient Deadpool survive. This portrayal serves as a comedic subversion of the "super-team assembly" trope. It pokes fun at the "cool," edgy aesthetic of the original 90s team while creating a memorable, if hilariously brief, cinematic incarnation. It exists not as a serious military unit, but as a punchline to Deadpool's flawed attempt at traditional heroism. ===== Part 3: Mandate, Structure & Key Members ===== The purpose and composition of X-Force have changed drastically over the years in the comics, while its cinematic version had a very singular, short-lived purpose. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === Across its various incarnations, the core mandate of the 616 X-Force has remained consistent: **to be the proactive solution to threats against mutantkind.** However, its structure, leadership, and ethical boundaries have been in constant flux. ==== Key Incarnations and Structures ==== * **Cable's X-Force (1990s):** * **Mandate:** A proactive guerrilla war against mutant and human threats, primarily focused on thwarting the futures envisioned by Stryfe and Apocalypse. * **Structure:** A paramilitary unit with Cable as the clear commander-in-chief and Cannonball as the field leader. Their operations were self-funded and operated entirely outside the jurisdiction of the X-Men or any government. * **X-Statix (Early 2000s):** * **Mandate:** After the original team disbanded, the "X-Force" brand was co-opted by a new group of celebrity mutants. Their goal was not mutant liberation, but fame and fortune. Missions were filmed for a reality TV show. * **Structure:** A corporate-owned team managed by a mogul named Spike Freeman. The roster was notoriously unstable, with members frequently dying on camera, only to be replaced by new, aspiring heroes. They eventually rebranded as **X-Statix** to reflect their unique identity. * **Wolverine's Uncanny X-Force (2010s):** * **Mandate:** Following the near-extinction of mutants after //M-Day//, Cyclops secretly sanctioned a new X-Force under Wolverine's command. Their sole purpose was to act as a clandestine assassination squad, hunting down and killing threats to the mutant race before they could act. This was the darkest and most morally compromised version of the team. * **Structure:** A small, deniable-operations cell. Its existence was a closely guarded secret, known only to a select few in the X-Men's leadership. The team consisted of Wolverine, Psylocke, Archangel, Fantomex, and Deadpool—each chosen for their skills and willingness to use lethal force. * **Krakoan Era X-Force (2019-Present):** * **Mandate:** With the establishment of the mutant nation of Krakoa, X-Force was formalized as the nation's official intelligence agency and special forces—effectively the "mutant CIA." * **Structure:** A dual-pronged organization. The **Intelligence** branch (led by Beast, with Sage and Jean Grey) handles data gathering, threat assessment, and surveillance. The **Field/Operations** branch (including Wolverine, Domino, and Kid Omega) carries out the wetwork and direct action missions identified by Intelligence. This structure has created immense internal friction, particularly as Beast's methods grew increasingly ruthless and fascistic. ==== Roster Across Eras ==== ^ **Character** ^ **Key Incarnation(s)** ^ **Role & Abilities** ^ | [[cable_nathan_summers|Cable]] | Cable's X-Force, Modern | Founder, Leader. Powerful telepath/telekinetic, cybernetic enhancements, expert strategist. | | [[wolverine_logan_howlett|Wolverine]] | Uncanny X-Force, Krakoan | Field Leader, Assassin. Healing factor, adamantium skeleton/claws, master combatant. | | [[deadpool_wade_wilson|Deadpool]] | Uncanny X-Force | Mercenary, Wild Card. Extreme healing factor, expert marksman/swordsman, fourth-wall awareness. | | [[psylocke_kwannon|Psylocke]] | Uncanny X-Force | Psychic Ninja. Telepathy, telekinesis, psionic knife/katana. | | [[domino_neena_thurman|Domino]] | All major incarnations | Scout, Infiltrator. Subconscious probability manipulation ("good luck"). | | [[cannonball_sam_guthrie|Cannonball]] | Cable's X-Force | Field Leader. Generation of a thermo-chemical energy field, enabling flight and invulnerability. | | Shatterstar | Cable's X-Force | Warrior. Superhuman physicality, generation of bio-electric shockwaves through his twin blades. | | Warpath | Cable's X-Force | Heavy Hitter. Superhuman strength, speed, durability, and flight. | | Fantomex | Uncanny X-Force | Thief, Assassin. Three brains, external nervous system (E.V.A.), misdirection abilities, master of espionage. | | Beast | Krakoan X-Force | Head of Intelligence. Genius-level intellect, superhuman strength, agility, and senses. | === Marvel Cinematic Universe (Fox/MCU Multiverse) === * **Mandate:** A single, specific mission: to rescue Russell Collins from a DMC convoy and stop him from committing his first murder, which would set him on a dark path. The team's purpose was entirely reactive and short-term. * **Structure:** Completely amateurish. Deadpool was the self-appointed leader, with Weasel providing haphazard logistical support. There was no training, no cohesion, and no long-term plan. * **Key Members:** As a comedic entity, the team's "key" members are defined by their spectacular failures. **Domino** is the sole exception, her luck powers making her hyper-competent in the midst of chaos. The others—Bedlam, Shatterstar, Zeitgeist, Vanisher, and Peter—serve only as a punchline about the dangers of assembling a superhero team without any forethought. ===== Part 4: Key Relationships & Network ===== ==== Core Allies ==== * **[[x-men]]:** The relationship between X-Force and the X-Men is the core dynamic that defines the team. It is a relationship built on necessity and friction. Leaders like Cyclops and Wolverine have often authorized X-Force's existence, recognizing the need for a team that can do the dirty work, while idealists like Professor X and Storm have vehemently opposed their methods. X-Force represents the dark reflection of Xavier's dream—the price of survival in a world that refuses to coexist. * **[[cable_nathan_summers|Cable]]:** As the founding father, Cable's vision is imprinted on X-Force's DNA. His lifelong war against Apocalypse and his belief in "getting them before they get you" is the team's //raison d'être//. Even when he is not leading the team, his ideology and legacy guide its actions. His complex relationship with the X-Men, as the son of Cyclops and a clone of Jean Grey, further ties X-Force's fate to the central family of mutantkind. * **[[wolverine_logan_howlett|Wolverine]]:** No character better embodies the philosophy of X-Force than Wolverine. His personal code has always included the use of lethal force to protect the innocent. This made him the perfect candidate to lead the //Uncanny X-Force// incarnation, a team that pushed him to his moral and psychological limits. His leadership cemented the team's role as the mutant world's necessary monster. ==== Arch-Enemies ==== * **[[stryfe]]:** The team's first and most personal nemesis. A clone of Cable raised by Apocalypse in the future, Stryfe is a dark mirror of X-Force's founder—possessing all his power but twisted by hatred and cruelty. As the leader of the Mutant Liberation Front, his terrorist acts were the catalyst for many of X-Force's early battles, and the shocking reveal of his true face during //X-Cutioner's Song// rocked the mutant world. * **[[apocalypse_en_sabah_nur|Apocalypse]]:** The ultimate antagonist in the X-Force saga. Cable's entire existence is dedicated to preventing the rise of Apocalypse's dark future. The team was forged as a weapon against him and his "survival of the fittest" ideology. Major storylines, like the //Dark Angel Saga//, revolve around the team fighting to prevent Apocalypse's return or Archangel's ascension as his heir, showing how his shadow looms over them. * **Anti-Mutant Purifiers:** Organizations like William Stryker's Purifiers, the Sapien League, and later, Orchis, represent the fanatical human threat that X-Force was designed to eliminate. While the X-Men try to win hearts and minds, X-Force targets these groups' leaders, funding, and operations with ruthless efficiency. Their war against the Purifiers during the //Messiah CompleX// era was a brutal campaign that saved the mutant race but cost the team members their souls. ==== Affiliations ==== * **[[new_mutants]]:** X-Force is a direct evolution of the New Mutants. The transition from one to the other represents a coming-of-age story for its members, a loss of innocence as they were forced to trade their school uniforms for military gear. This shared history creates a lasting bond and a sense of tragedy among the founding members. * **[[krakoa]]:** In the modern era, X-Force's affiliation with Krakoa has fundamentally changed its nature. They are no longer a rogue paramilitary outfit but a state-sanctioned intelligence agency. This has given them unprecedented resources and legitimacy but has also mired them in the dirty politics of nation-building. As Krakoa's "CIA," they are responsible for protecting the nation from foreign threats, but also for covering up its darkest secrets, often at the behest of amoral leaders like Beast. ===== Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines ===== === X-Cutioner's Song (1992) === A massive 12-part crossover that defined the early 90s X-Men era. The story kicks off with a devastating assassination attempt on Professor Charles Xavier, seemingly by Cable. This act turns X-Force into public enemy number one. Hunted by the combined forces of the X-Men and X-Factor, Cable's young soldiers are captured and forced to defend their leader's actions. The true culprit is revealed to be Stryfe, Cable's identical clone, who has orchestrated the entire event to sow chaos and exact revenge on his enemies. The event was critical for X-Force, as it publicly cemented their outlaw status, exposed the deep rift between them and the X-Men, and revealed the bombshell secret that Stryfe and Cable were doppelgängers. === Messiah CompleX & Second Coming (2007-2010) === This interconnected saga begins with the birth of Hope Summers, the first mutant born after the Decimation event nearly wiped out mutantkind. With the species' future riding on this one child, Cyclops activates a new, secret X-Force led by Wolverine. Their mission is simple and brutal: eliminate anyone and everyone who poses a threat to the child. This incarnation of the team operates in the shadows, committing acts the X-Men cannot. They wage a bloody war against the Purifiers, Lady Deathstrike's Reavers, and other factions. Their actions are instrumental in protecting Hope, but the secrecy and lethality of their mission create a deep, corrosive divide within the X-Men's leadership, ultimately leading to the "Schism" between Cyclops and Wolverine. === The Dark Angel Saga (Uncanny X-Force, 2011) === Widely hailed as one of the greatest X-Men stories ever told, this epic from Rick Remender and Jerome Opeña follows Wolverine's X-Force on a desperate mission. Their teammate, Archangel, is succumbing to the malevolent Apocalypse programming within him, poised to become the new heir of the genocidal tyrant. To save him, the team travels to the alternate reality of the Age of Apocalypse to retrieve a Life Seed. The mission goes horribly wrong, forcing them to confront dark, twisted versions of their friends and make impossible moral choices. The saga culminates in the team's most defining moment: Fantomex assassinates a reincarnated, child version of Apocalypse, arguing it's necessary to prevent future atrocities. This single act shatters the team's already fragile psyche and explores the profound psychological cost of their "proactive" mandate. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== * **Ultimate Universe (Earth-1610):** In this reality, the "X-Force" name was originally used by a team of mutants assembled by the spy Daisy Johnson, under the authority of S.H.I.E.L.D., with the goal of assassinating a target in another country. This version had no connection to Cable and was a government black-ops squad. * **X-Statix (Earth-616 Splinter Group):** The most significant "variant" is the team that briefly held the X-Force name before rebranding. Led initially by Zeitgeist, this team was a group of fame-obsessed mutant celebrities whose heroic missions were broadcast as a reality TV show. A brutal satire of celebrity culture and the excesses of the superhero genre, X-Statix was a deconstruction of the original X-Force's "extreme" attitude, replacing military grit with media savvy. * **Age of Apocalypse (Earth-295):** While a formal X-Force did not exist in this shattered reality, its core philosophy was embodied by many of Magneto's X-Men. In a world where survival was a daily battle against Apocalypse's forces, characters who would later join X-Force in the main timeline, such as Warpath and Domino, were already hardened soldiers fighting a proactive war. * **//Deadpool 2// (Fox/MCU Multiverse):** As detailed previously, this version is a pure parody. It exists to subvert audience expectations of a cool, hyper-competent super-team. Its legacy is not one of heroic deeds, but of a single, hilariously disastrous mission that serves as a running gag in the Deadpool film series. ===== See Also ===== * [[cable_nathan_summers]] * [[deadpool_wade_wilson]] * [[x-men]] * [[new_mutants]] * [[krakoa]] * [[wolverine_logan_howlett]] * [[apocalypse_en_sabah_nur]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((The original concept for Cable, as conceived by Rob Liefeld, was that he and Stryfe were the same person from different points in the timeline. Writer Fabian Nicieza later changed this to the clone origin story to resolve continuity issues.)) ((//X-Force// #1 (1991) sold over five million copies, making it one of the highest-selling single issues in comic book history. It was polybagged with one of five different trading cards, encouraging multiple purchases by collectors.)) ((The long-running mystery of the 90s era was the identity of the "real" Domino. The Domino who helped found X-Force was eventually revealed to be the shapeshifter Copycat, working for the villain Tolliver. The actual Domino had been held prisoner for over a year before being rescued by Cable and officially joining the team.)) ((The //Uncanny X-Force// series by Rick Remender is often cited by fans and critics as the definitive modern take on the team, praised for its deep psychological exploration of the characters and the moral consequences of their violent work.)) ((In the Krakoan era, the X-Force team is officially sanctioned by the Quiet Council of Krakoa, but its operations, particularly under the increasingly ruthless leadership of Beast, have often been conducted without the full council's knowledge or approval, creating an internal intelligence war.))