The Marauders refers to one of two teams of fictional characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The original Marauders team included mutant warriors and assassins employed by the X-Men's enemy Mister Sinister, a mad scientist villain often intent on creating a perfect race of superhumans. At different times, the Marauders have been tasked by Sinister to perform kidnappings, assassinations, mass murder, or simply fight Sinister's enemies. At different times, Marauders have been killed in combat, but often Mr. Sinister later uses his cloning technology to re-create them. This team of Marauders has appeared in many different stories of the X-Men franchise, as well as stories featuring other Marvel Comics heroes.

Marauders
The Marauders featured on the cover of The Uncanny X-Men #240 (Jan. 1989).
Art by Marc Silvestri.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceThe Uncanny X-Men #210 (Oct. 1986)
Created byChris Claremont
John Romita Jr.
Dan Green
In-story information
Base(s)Various
Member(s)Current Members:
Arclight
Blockbuster
Harpoon
Malice
Prism
Riptide
Scalphunter
Scrambler
Vertigo
Former Members:
Aries
Azimuth
Chimera
Coda
Gambit
Lady Mastermind
Mister Sinister
Mystique
Omega Red
Omega Sentinel
Polaris
Sabretooth
Sunfire
Vanisher

In 2019, the Dawn of X event involved the X-Men and many allies and enemies creating a new all-mutant country on the living island Krakoa. Teleport gates that only work for mutants were then created at various points on Earth, allowing any mutant who wished to join the new community to instantly do so. Kitty Pryde then formed a new team of "Marauders" to transport mutants to Krakoa who lived in countries that did not recognize the sovereignty of the mutant nation and/or obstructed the local teleport gates leading to the island. This team also works to protect mutant travelers and refugees from threats. The team's series Marauders debuted in 2019.

Publication history

edit

1986–2000

edit

The first Marauders team debuted in The Uncanny X-Men #210 (Oct. 1986), during a crossover called the "Mutant Massacre" where the team was sent to slaughter a community of sewer-dwelling mutants called Morlocks. This issue introduced the characters Arclight, Harpoon, Malice, Scalphunter, Scrambler, and Riptide. With the exception of Malice, these characters only appeared in issue #210 as figures in silhouette, but then made their full debut in the following issue The Uncanny X-Men #211. Two other Marauders known as Blockbuster and Prism made their first appearance in a later chapter of the "Mutant Massacre" featured in X-Factor #10. The original Marauders team also included the villains Sabretooth and Vertigo, but each had actually been introduced into comics years earlier, while the rest of the Marauders were created for the "Mutant Massacre" story by writer Chris Claremont and artist John Romita Jr.[1] Vertigo had originally been introduced in Marvel Fanfare #1 (1982), while Sabretooth had debuted as an Iron Fist villain in Iron Fist #14 (1977) and then made appearances in Spider-Man stories before it was decided to make him a Marauder and bring him into the X-Men franchise.[citation needed] Uncanny X-Men #212, during the "Mutant Massacre", was the first story to hint at a connection between Sabretooth and the X-Man called Wolverine.[2]

In The Uncanny X-Men #212, Mr. Sinister is mentioned as the leader of the Marauders.[2] He is seen in silhouette in The Uncanny X-Men #213 (1986) when Sabretooth's mind is scanned.[citation needed] He does not appear with the team (or debut in comics) until The Uncanny X-Men #221 (1987).[3] Although it is Sinister's team, it is later revealed in The Uncanny X-Men #350 (1997) it was the mutant thief (and later X-Men member) Gambit who recruited and organized the team[4][2] with the exception of Sabretooth and Scalphunter (whom had already worked for Sinister many times). Gambit was unaware of the team's true purpose, using his skills to locate the members in exchange for Sinister helping him. Gambit is also said to be the one who led the Marauders to the Morlocks location, but this seems to contradict scenes in "Mutant Massacre" where the team tracks a young Morlock returning home.[citation needed]

During "Mutant Massacre," three Marauders are killed: Blockbuster in The Mighty Thor #374, Riptide in The Uncanny X-Men #211, and Prism in X-Factor #10. However, all three appeared alive and well two years later during the 1989 "Inferno" crossover issues The Uncanny X-Men #240.[citation needed]

Five years later, X-Men #34 (1994) revealed that Sinister regularly clones dead Marauders so they can serve him again.[4] Gambit vol. 3 #8 (1999) adds that each Marauder clone is made so their minds will shut down if they attempt to betray Sinister.[citation needed] The 1996 miniseries The Further Adventures of Cyclops and Phoenix revealed that Sinister hired a group of criminals known as the Marauders during the 19th century, making it retroactively the first incarnation of the group.[citation needed]

2000–2019

edit

X-Men #200 (2007) featured the original Marauders team with several new members, including Omega Sentinel (possessed by Malice), Lady Mastermind, Sunfire, Gambit, and Mystique. The team worked alongside members of the Acolytes team.[5] Following Sinister's apparent death during the crossover "Messiah Complex", many dormant Marauder clones awakened and fought the new X-Force team in X-Force (vol. 3) #9.[citation needed] The one-shot X-Men Origins: Gambit (2009) includes flashbacks to Gambit's recruitment of the Marauders – the comic's writer Mike Carey highlighted that artist David Yardin "depicts the first meeting of the Marauders, the first time they're all together in one room, and you get a sense of how powerful and overbearing these personalities are and the tensions between them".[6]

In Astonishing X-Men (vol. 3) #48, a new version of the Marauders appeared whose members included: Arclight, Blockbuster, Harpoon, Prism, Vanisher, and Chimera (serving as the new leader).[citation needed] Mister Sinister later formed another incarnation of the Marauders team consisting of Aries, Azimuth, Chimera, and Coda.[7] Several of the original Marauders (or at least their clones) were later confronted and killed by the mutant Chamber in The Uncanny X-Men (vol. 2) #18 (2019).[citation needed]

2019–2024 (Krakoan Age)

edit

The X-Men franchise titles were rebooted for the 2019 event Dawn of X.[8][9] Professor X, Magneto, and the X-Men, along with many mutant allies and former enemies, created a new mutant community on the living island of Krakoa, a self-sufficient country where they offered sanctuary to any mutant who wished to join them. Various teleport gates were created across Earth to allow mutants entry to Krakoa; if a mutant brings a human with them voluntarily, that human must ask for permission from Krakoa to use the gateway.[10][11][12][13] Kate Pryde then created a team to help transport those mutants whose native countries did not recognize Krakoa and/or blocked the local gates that would allow mutants to travel there. Kate named this team the Marauders, and recruited the former X-Men Iceman, Storm, and Bishop, along with Pyro. The team appears in their own series Marauders, which started publication in 2019.[14][15][16] Screen Rant highlighted that "the Marauders are functionally the Krakoan navy in the Dawn of X era and are an extension of both the X-Men and the high stakes machinations of the Hellfire Club".[16]

In the 2020 series Hellions, the team heads to Nebraska to destroy Mr. Sinister's defunct clone farm, however, they discover "that Sinister's original team of Marauders have been strung up like pigs in a butcher shop".[17] These Marauders had been turned into zombie-like slaves of Madelyne Pryor; Pryor planned on attacking Krakoa with clones of the Marauders.[18][19] Afterwards, the Quiet Council approves the resurrection of the original Marauders.[19]

The Marauders series was then relaunched in 2022 as part of Destiny of X. In the second volume, Captain Pryde with Bishop recruit a new team of Marauders in Marauders Annual #1 – the initial roster included Aurora, Daken, Psylocke (Kwannon), Somnus, and Tempo.[20][21][22] Screen Rant commented that in the first volume the Marauders were "tasked with protecting the interests of the Hellfire Trading Company's black-market and rescuing mutant refugees feeling from unfriendly nations, returning them to safety on Krakoa. Now that most of the world's mutants have been relocated to Krakoa from dangerous territories, and X-Force taking on more responsibility with retrieving stolen Hellfire goods, Pryde is repositioning her Marauders team as a mutant Search and Rescue squad".[21]

Fictional team biography

edit

In Victorian London, during the 1860s, Nathaniel Essex is a biologist and surgeon interested in evolution and the work of Charles Darwin. His interest becomes an obsession after the death of his son Adam due to multiple birth defects. Believing morality has no place in scientific research, Essex decides to experiment on humans to further his research into human genetics, hoping to one day create a perfect race. He meets the criminal Cootie Tremble and his gang, the Marauders, and hired them. For years, the Marauders kidnap homeless and neglected people off the streets of London, bringing them to Essex's lab for his experiments. One test subject who survives is a man named Daniel Summers (an ancestor of the X-Man Scott Summers AKA Cyclops). During this time, Essex meets the Egyptian terrorist and cult leader En Sabah Nur, who might be the earliest example of a mutant on Earth, a person born with an X-gene that grants them superhuman powers and/or traits. Like Essex, En Sabah Nur (who will later be known as Apocalypse) believes in "survival of the fittest", though their methods and ultimate goals differ.[23]

After his wife Rebecca discovers his work and condemns him, dying during labor soon afterward, Essex decides to leave behind his humanity. Using alien technology, Apocalypse turns Essex into an ageless superhuman with chalk-white skin. Essex takes on the name "Mister Sinister" (a reference to how his wife saw him before her death). Though he later cuts ties with the criminal Marauders before moving his operations to America, Sinister repeatedly decides to recruit other agents to act in his stead and serve as his protectors (which becomes more important to Essex after he decides he needs soldiers to use against Apocalypse).[24]

In 1907, Sinister works at the Ravencroft Institute and temporarily employs the mutant killer Sabretooth as an agent. During World War II, Sinister works with the Nazi Dr. Josef Mengele.[25] In 1944, John Greycrow of the US Army is executed by firing squad for murdering fellow officers. A mutant with the ability to regenerate from even potentially lethal wounds, Greycrow emerges from his grave and finds Mr. Sinister waiting. Sinister explains he learned of Greycrow's abilities and deadly nature and wishes to recruit him. Greycrow accepts, calling himself Scalphunter. Around this time, Sinister creates a clone of the Atlantean warrior Namor, the Sub-Mariner, calling it N2. After the clone is defeated by Captain America, and seeing that the Nazis will lose the war, Sinister and Greycrow leave to pursue their own agenda. Sinister's research during World War II is later recovered and used by the scientists behind the Weapon X project.[26]

Sometime later during the Vietnam War, Scalphunter brings soldiers and civilians to Sinister for experimentation. Sabretooth, working as a mercenary, is hired to find the truth about the "White Devil" and his connection to reports of missing people, as well as the rumors of "monster men" appearing. Scalphunter tells Sabretooth to leave him and Sinister alone, offering money and teasing that he will let the authorities know the mercenary has been killing prostitutes during his investigation. Sabretooth agrees to leave with the money and Scalphunter indicates that he and Sinister will recruit him in the future.[27]

Many years later, a version of the mutant scientist Hank McCoy arrives on Earth from another timeline where Apocalypse rules. This version of McCoy, called the Dark Beast, is an amoral student and lab assistant of his timeline's version of Sinister. Journeying to New York City, he experiments on several mutants, using the techniques Sinister taught him, in order to see how much he can change or enhance mutation. Several of his surviving test subjects decide to hide from the world, joining the underground community known as the Morlocks. Years later, Dark Beast's experiments indirectly lead to the "Mutant Massacre."

Becoming aware of the mutant teenagers Scott Summers and Jean Grey, Sinister concludes that their combined genetic codes could create a near-perfect mutant, one powerful enough to destroy Apocalypse. Since Jean Grey is already being mentored and watched over by the powerful telepath Professor Charles Xavier, Sinister spends years focusing much of his efforts on manipulating Scott Summers. To aid in this, Sinister brings the orphaned Scott to the Essex State Home for Foundlings in Nebraska, an orphanage he secretly runs and uses to monitor and experiment on mutant children. Eventually, Scott leaves the orphanage and is also recruited by Xavier. However, Sinister retrieves cell samples from them and begins working on perfecting his cloning process. When Scott and Jean become founding members of Xavier's counter-terrorist strike force, the X-Men, Sinister decides to obtain fresh DNA samples from all of them. Rather than use Scalphunter or Sabretooth, he hires Kraven the Hunter and the Blob to get the job done.[28]

Forming the first Marauders team

edit

Years after joining the X-Men, Jean Grey joins with the powerful Phoenix Force. After months of wielding her new cosmic power, Jean is temporarily corrupted, causing the Phoenix Force to warp into a new, murderous persona called Dark Phoenix. To prevent the Dark Phoenix from causing harm, Jean seemingly kills herself. Her death inadvertently activates Sinister's clone of Jean Grey and he decides to use it to further manipulate Cyclops. Named "Madelyne Pryor," the clone encounters Cyclops, and the two fall in love. After marrying and having a child, Nathan Summers, they move to Alaska.

Meanwhile, Sinister decides that the sewer-dwelling mutant community known as the Morlocks represents the worst kind of mutants possible and should not be allowed to risk mixing with the gene pool of other mutants and humans. He is further angered when his studies reveal that several Morlocks bear signs of genetic manipulation based on his own research (due to the fact that many of them were experimented on by Dark Beast). Disgusted that someone has used his "signature" without his permission, Sinister decides to wipe out the Morlocks living in Manhattan's sewers. He hires the mutant thief Gambit to recruit a team of warriors and assassins who will work with Sabretooth and Scalphunter. In exchange, he performs surgery on Gambit to correct a defect that would have ensured the mutant thief would one day lose control of his powers.[29] Recalling the criminals he worked with in London, Mr. Sinister decides to christen his first official team of agents "the Marauders."

Before Sinister sends his Marauders against the Morlocks, Jean Grey is discovered alive and well by the Avengers. Her former X-Men comrades are contacted and a shocked Scott Summers leaves Alaska to see for himself that it's actually her. Rather than return home to his wife and child, Scott remains with his old teammates as they form a new team called X-Factor.[30] It is later said this is because Sinister uses his mental influence over Cyclops to encourage him to leave behind Madelyne and Nathan, making them easy targets.[31] With Cyclops gone, Sinister sends his newly formed Marauders to attack the now undefended Summers house in Alaska. The Marauders kidnap Nathan, leaving Maddie injured and near-death. Unbeknownst to Sinister, she survives the ordeal, is taken to a hospital and slips into a coma.[32]

"Mutant Massacre" and "Inferno"

edit

Returning to New York, the Marauders are sent after the Morlocks. Using his stealth and tracking skills, Gambit leads the group to the secret Morlock community in the sewers but abandons the group when he learns they intend to murder the people living there. The Marauders dismiss Gambit and begin their slaughter, causing the "Mutant Massacre" event, a series of battles that include the X-Men, X-Factor, and other heroes such as Thor. During the fighting, the Marauders Prism,[33] Riptide,[34] and Blockbuster[35] are killed in action. However, Sinister has now perfected his cloning techniques and simply recreates them.[36] He also uses his scientific skill and mental abilities to ensure that the minds of the Marauder clones will shut down if they decide to betray him.[37]

Following the "Mutant Massacre", the remaining Marauders attack the X-Men's base at the Xavier School for Gifted Youngsters (also known as the X-Mansion) in Westchester, New York. Scanning the mind of Sabretooth, the X-Man called Psylocke learns the massacre was ordered by someone called "Sinister", alerting the X-Men to his presence for the first time.[38] The attack fails, but the Marauders later attack former X-Men member Polaris. Malice succeeds in possessing her mind and then becomes the field leader of the team.[39] After it was discovered that Madelyne Pryor was alive and recovered, the Marauders tried and failed to assassinate her. She rejoined the company of the X-Men, traumatized by the loss of her son and convinced Cyclops had abandoned them.[40]

Maddie's resentment and anger start to corrupt her, leading her to make a deal with demons. Transformed into the demonically powered "Goblyn Queen," Madelyne is at the heart of the "Inferno" crossover as Hell-bound forces cross into Earth's dimensions. During this time, the Mauraders face Madelyne again, now joined by Sinister who reveals her true origin as a clone. Many of the Marauders are killed during "Inferno," and Maddie later dies herself, her life force and memories merging with those of Jean Grey. Sinister confronts the X-Men and X-Factor teams, revealing how he manipulated both Maddie and Cyclops. Cyclops unleashes a powerful optic blast that seemingly kills Sinister, leaving only bones. This is later revealed to be a ruse performed by Mr. Sinister, who decided it was best to retreat. Without Sinister, the Marauders Sabretooth, Blockbuster, and Malice continue their own attacks on the X-Men.[41] Not long afterward, Sinister appears again, now with a new group called the Nasty Boys.[42] In later adventures, Sinister works with the Marauders again rather than the Nasty Boys, though at times the group seems to follow its own agenda.

 
The Marauders featured on the X-Men #200 wraparound cover, with art by Humberto Ramos. Several characters include Vertigo, Riptide, Sunfire, Harpoon, Scalphunter, Malice, Gambit and Lady Mastermind.

In the alternate reality called "Age of Apocalypse," the native version of Sinister uses DNA from Jean Grey and Scott Summers to create a powerful mutant called Nate Grey. After Nate transports to the mainstream Marvel reality and makes a home there, Sinister's agent Threnody befriends him. When she refuses to work for Sinister further, he sends the Marauders and they battle Nate Grey. Using his telepathy, Nate causes Arclight to kill Blockbuster, then manipulates Riptide to kill Arclight.[43] It is soon after this that Gambit discovers Sinister keeps clones of all the Marauders, ready in the event of their deaths.[36] He rarely attempts to clone Sabretooth, whose healing abilities and feral nature make even his clones resistant to mental control.[44]

Later teams

edit

A new incarnation of the team emerges years later, consisting of Malice (now possessing Omega Sentinel). Lady Mastermind, Sunfire, Gambit, and Mystique, who have all aligned themselves with the former Acolytes known as Exodus, Random, Frenzy, Tempo, and Unuscione.[5] The team is sent after a list of mutants, many of whom are native to alternate timelines and possible future eras. During this assignment, the team kills Vargas and Dark Mother, and destroys Wohnhaus Strucker, a building with ties to the future. They seemingly kill the mutant teleporter Gateway and the time traveler Cable (a grown-up version of Nathan Summers), but both later turn up alive. Though they try to kill Blindfold, she escapes. The Marauders also seek out the diaries of the dead psychic mutant Destiny, but the books in the X-Mansion are destroyed.

The Marauders play a major role in X-Men: Messiah Complex, sent by Sinister to track down the first mutant child born after "M-Day," an event that stripped most mutants of their X-genes and powers.[45] During a battle on Muir Island, the Marauders Scrambler and Vertigo seemingly die.[46] Mr. Sinister is killed by Mystique, but is able to transfer his consciousness into a host before then growing a new clone body for himself.

Following Sinister's apparent death, a large contingent of Marauder clones awaken and fight the newest team called X-Force, a black ops team. Nearly all the clones are killed.[47]

Da'o Coy Manh, the half-sister of the mutant known as Karma, forms a new incarnation of the Marauders in order to take revenge on her father.[48] The new lineup includes: Arclight, Blockbuster, Harpoon, Prism, and Vanisher, with Chimera as the apparent new leader.[49]

Magneto's Marauders

edit

With the exceptions of Malice and Sabretooth, many clones of the other Marauders still exist. Deciding they are long overdue for vengeance in the name of the Morlocks their predecessors killed, Magneto hunts down and kills these clones, except for one of Scalphunter, whose limbs are dismembered. After tracking a group of remaining clones that have yet to be activated, Magneto decides instead to alter their personalities to obey his own commands in the future.[50]

Following World War Hate, Magneto leads various mutants through the island of Genosha.[51] Magneto later unleashes his loyal Marauder clones against the international intelligence agency S.H.I.E.L.D., using them as a distraction while he destroys much of the organization's collected data on mutants. Magneto and his Marauders then retreat and go separate ways.[44] Magneto kills the Sabretooth clone when he realizes its feral nature and healing abilities make it resistant to his mental loyalty programming.[44] He and the Marauders apparently part ways later on.

All-New, All-Different Marvel

edit

As part of the All-New, All-Different Marvel event, Mister Sinister forms another incarnation of the Marauders in order to capture Nightcrawler. This team includes Aries, Azimuth, Chimera, and Coda.[7]

After being manipulated by Emma Frost, the Marauders reform with Scalphunter, Arclight, Harpoon, Blockbuster, Vertigo, and Malice. The X-Men confronts this group, accusing them of committing a second Morlock Massacre. The Marauders deny this charge, but the X-Man Chamber burns them alive with his psionic flame. As he burns, Harpoon impales Chamber in the back, killing the young mutant.[52]

Dawn of X

edit

In the 2019 Dawn of X event, Xavier and Magneto work with the X-Men, as well as many allies and former enemies, to create a new mutant nation and sanctuary on the living island of Krakoa. Krakoa creates teleport gates around the Earth so that mutants (and only mutants) may be able to travel to its land instantaneously and join the new community. However, some countries do not recognize the sovereignty of Krakoa and block their local gates in order to prevent their own mutant citizens from leaving. To aid these mutants who cannot access the gates, Kitty Pryde forms a new group she calls the Marauders, recruiting her now reformed enemy Pyro as well as former teammates Storm, Iceman, and Bishop.[53]

Mister Sinister, Scalphunter, and Sabretooth join the Krakoa community. The other living former Marauders refuse to come to Krakoa, taking shelter in Sinister's former orphanage base in Nebraska. While Sinister is left alone due to now being a member of Krakoa's ruling Quiet Council, Scalphunter is confronted by Morlocks on the island who inform him it is the anniversary of the Mutant Massacre. Rather than seek to make amends, Scalphunter remorselessly answers with violence and reveals a hidden weapon. He is later grouped with other mutants who are having trouble fitting in with the new community due to aggressive, violent, or villainous attitudes. At Sinister's suggestion, the group becomes a new team of Hellions whom he hopes to rehabilitate through a form of group therapy. The former X-Men member Psylocke joins Sinister as overseer of the group.[54]

For their first mission, the new Hellions go to Sinister's orphanage in order to confront the original Marauders, only to learn they have become zombie-like beings under the control of Madelyne Pryor.[54]

Members

edit

Original roster

edit
Member First appearance Description
Mister Sinister Uncanny X-Men #221 (September 1987) Nathaniel Essex is the original leader of the Marauders.
Arclight The Uncanny X-Men #210 (Oct. 1986) Philippa Sontag is a super-strong mutant. Her mutation allows her to release shockwaves and cause disorientation to her enemies, cause objects to shatter, and to generate earth tremors in limited areas. She served with the American ground forces in the Vietnam War, and is still haunted by memories of that place. She has a romantic interest in Scalphunter.
Blockbuster The Uncanny X-Men #210 (Oct. 1986) Michael Baer is a superhumanly strong mutant who has withstood punches from Thor, though a single hammer blow from an enraged Thor killed him. He did some work with German terrorists before working for Sinister.
Harpoon The Uncanny X-Men #210 (Oct. 1986) Kodiak Noatak is a young Inuit who can charge objects (usually his Slayspears – 20 pound (9 kg) barbed harpoons) with bio-energy for various effects.
Malice The Uncanny X-Men #210 (Oct. 1986) Alice MacAllister is one of Sinister's top lieutenants whose sadistic orders are followed without hesitation or question. She exists as an incorporeal psychic being that possesses others, though she often 'hides' in the person's subconscious and reveals herself in a mirror or as the dark side of the target's consciousness. For much of her public activity with the other Marauders, she used the X-Man Polaris as a host. Malice was apparently killed by Sinister for disobeying orders,[55] but has returned as a digital entity, rather than a psionic one, and possessed Omega Sentinel.[56] Not be confused with the Fantastic Four villain named Malice.
Prism X-Factor #10 (Nov. 1986) Robbie is an overconfident and cold-blooded killer who often overestimates the fragility of his crystalline body, which can deflect/reflect most forms of energy attacks, but not physical impact.
Riptide The Uncanny X-Men #210 (Oct. 1986) Janos Questad is a brutally evil man who can spin his body at superhuman speeds and fling out shurikens (made from a resin his skin secretes) for amazing amounts of damage. He was the first of the Marauders to "die", when his neck was broken by Colossus.
Sabretooth Iron Fist #14 (Aug. 1977) Victor Creed is the longtime enemy of Wolverine.
Scalphunter The Uncanny X-Men #210 (Oct. 1986) John Greycrow is a ruthless ex-G.I., and the group's tactician. His orders are overruled only by Malice or Sinister. Scalphunter is the most cold-blooded of the group. He is capable of "technomorphing" (altering the configuration of any technological device), a power he uses to create a number of weapons from his battle armor. He also has incredible regenerative powers as he survived being executed by his fellow American soldiers in 1944 after having murdered and scalped eight fellow officers.
Scrambler The Uncanny X-Men #210 (Oct. 1986) Kim Il Sung is the youngest Marauder. He is a Korean mutant who can manipulate powers and systems, whether they be biogenetic, electromagnetic, or even technomechanical, such as mutant abilities, upon physical contact. He has been shown to be a psychopath more concerned with looking stylish than with the suffering he inflicts on others.
Vertigo Marvel Fanfare #1 (March 1982) A mutate from the Savage Land who had previously fought the X-Men. She has the ability to psionically induce a sensation of vertigo in others.

Second roster

edit
 
The Marauders in Messiah Complex. Art by Simone Bianchi.

During the Messiah Complex storyline, five former X-Men joined the original roster of the Marauders, and Sabretooth was not among the group.[volume & issue needed]

  • Gambit (Remy LeBeau): Before joining the X-Men, Gambit was hired by Sinister to assemble the Marauders. Feeling responsible for the deaths of hundreds of Morlocks, Gambit kept this a secret from the X-Men until Rogue absorbed his memories and found out Gambit's secret. His brainwashing by Apocalypse and manipulation by Sinister led him to abandon the X-Men, though he has since returned to the team.
  • Lady Mastermind (Regan Wyngarde): An illusion-creating mutant and one of Jason Wyngarde's (the original Mastermind) daughters.
  • Mystique: A shapeshifter, mother of Nightcrawler and the adoptive mother of Rogue. She infiltrated the X-Men in order to betray them from within.
  • Sunfire (Shiro Yoshida): A Japanese mutant and former X-Man with fire generation and manipulation abilities.
  • Omega Sentinel (Karima Shapandar)
  • Exodus (Bennet Du Paris)

Third roster

edit

After the Schism storyline, two enemies of the X-Men joined the Marauders.[volume & issue needed]

  • Chimera: A former interdimensional pirate from an unknown Earth, who can generate dragon-shaped flares of greenish-transparent ectoplasmic energy to strike her enemies on various planes of being (i.e. physical, astral, etc.).
  • Vanisher (Telford Porter): Longtime criminal and former member of the X-Force, he possesses the ability to teleport himself, his clothes, and an as yet undetermined amount of additional mass.

Fourth roster

edit

Magneto eventually tracked the original Marauders' remaining clones, except for Sabretooth and Malice, and killed them all, which activated new clones of them.[volume & issue needed] He prevented the activation of the clones and programmed them to deploy at his command in the future. Scalphunter was also spared, though his arms and legs were severed.[volume & issue needed]

Fifth roster

edit

As part of the All-New, All-Different Marvel event, Mister Sinister has formed another incarnation of the Marauders. Besides Chimera, this membership consisted of:

  • Aries: A mutant with the horns and hindquarters of a ram. Aries has no connections with the Zodiac.
  • Azimuth: A female mutant who can unhinge her jaws to form an oral singularity/black hole that can disrupt even Nightcrawler's teleportation.
  • Coda: A mummified mutant with a forked tongue.

Miss Sinister's New Marauders

edit

Following the rebirth of the Multiverse in the aftermath of Secret Wars, Miss Sinister had made her presence known and assembled several mutants that became stranded from the Ultimate Marvel into the Prime Universe which she personally handpicked and trained to be killers. Those among her New Marauders are:

Miss Sinister kept experimenting on the New Marauders, granting them secondary mutations through a method called the "Mothervine". However, not all attempts were successful, with one of them resulting in Quicksilver's death. Pietro's body was left behind by Miss Sinister in her base once she abandoned it, and it was eventually found by the young X-Men while investigating,[57] nevertheless the New Marauders remained by Miss Sinister's side as she allied herself with Havok, Emma Frost and Bastion to release "Mothervine" globally with the intent to make mutantkind the dominant species.[58] Miss Sinister later attempted to recruit the time-displaced Jean Grey to their cause by making sure she would find a necklace which unbeknownst to her, contained the essence of Malice. However, due to Jean's strong defenses, Malice could not bring herself to possess Jean, instead she was eventually found by Polaris which she immediately possessed. However, because Polaris had already been possessed by Malice, she was able to free herself from the possession, breaking Malice's necklace in the process. Miss Sinister also sent the New Marauders to recruit Xorn to Havok's cause, but Jimmy Hudson and Bloodstorm, intervened and rescued him.[59] Shortly afterwards, the New Marauders were sent to attack Magneto, who had threatened Havok's plans[60] but the master of magnetism evaded them and escaped using his time platform.[61] Following the capture of the young X-Men, Emma Frost finally rejected Miss Sinister's ideal and psychically controlled Mach-II, Armor and Guardian in order to turned them upon their mistress, however, Miss Sinister activated a kill-switch she had implanted in their genetic code, which killed instantly all three.[62]

Other versions

edit

Age of Apocalypse

edit

In the Age of Apocalypse storyline, the Marauders are a band of human terrorists equipped with wrist-armories and air-steppers, serving Apocalypse and consisting of Arcade, Dirigible, the Owl and Red. The group was sent by Apocalypse to destroy the land of Wakanda where Arcade was able to murder Black Panther and together destroy much of the land, the Marauders' life was cut short by Clint Barton and Gwen Stacy.[63]

House of M

edit

In the House of M reality, the Marauders are a covert ops group led by Callisto and consisting of Banshee, Black Tom Cassidy, Blob, Caliban, Mammomax, Sunder, and T-Rex.[citation needed]

Mutant X

edit

In the Mutant X dimension, a group of thieves calling themselves the Marauders are made up of mostly X-Force and Generation X associates, such as an overweight Cannonball, Jubilee, Husk, Sunspot and Wolfsbane.[64]

Ultimate Marvel

edit

In the Ultimate Marvel universe, the Marauders appear in the Ultimate X-Men series and are a white supremacist group led by Arnim Zola.[65]

What If?

edit

The Marauders are featured in What If? vol. 2 #101.[citation needed]

In other media

edit

Television

edit

The Marauders appear in Wolverine and the X-Men, consisting of Mister Sinister, Arclight, Blockbuster, Harpoon, Multiple Man, Vertigo, and Archangel.[citation needed]

Video games

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ DeFalco, Tom; Sanderson, Peter; Brevoort, Tom; Teitelbaum, Michael; Wallace, Daniel; Darling, Andrew; Forbeck, Matt; Cowsill, Alan; Bray, Adam (2019). The Marvel Encyclopedia. DK Publishing. p. 233. ISBN 978-1-4654-7890-0.
  2. ^ a b c Connolly, Spencer (2023-12-27). "X-Men: 10 Ways the Original 1980s Mutant Massacre Shaped the Franchise Today". ScreenRant. Retrieved 2024-06-09.
  3. ^ Webber, Tim (November 18, 2022). "Meet Mister Sinister, the X-Men's Clone-Creating Nemesis". Marvel. Retrieved 2024-06-09. After lurking in the shadows for months, Mister Sinister fully debuted as the mastermind behind the Marauders – the assassins who perpetrated the "Mutant Massacre" – in UNCANNY X-MEN (1963) #221 by Chris Claremont and Marc Silvestri
  4. ^ a b Webber, Tim (2017-07-17). "15 Ways Marvel Changed The X-Men (Without You Noticing)". CBR. Retrieved 2024-06-09.
  5. ^ a b "UXN Presents... The Wolverine Event!". Uncannyxmen.net. Archived from the original on 2013-11-07. Retrieved 2013-08-30.
  6. ^ Richards, Dave (2009-05-18). "Mike Carey's X-Men Gambit". CBR. Retrieved 2024-06-09.
  7. ^ a b Extraordinary X-Men #1
  8. ^ "Marvel Unveils Jonathan Hickman's New X-Men Projects". CBR. 23 March 2019. Archived from the original on 2019-03-31. Retrieved 2019-07-29.
  9. ^ "Hickman Explains Why He Convinced Marvel to Cancel the Entire X-Men Line". CBR. 14 May 2019. Archived from the original on 2019-07-23. Retrieved 2019-07-29.
  10. ^ House of X #1–5. Marvel Comics.
  11. ^ Powers of X #1–5. Marvel Comics.
  12. ^ Polo, Susana (2019-07-24). "Professor X's House of X plan is big, weird, and very, very 'X-Men'". Polygon. Retrieved 2024-06-05.
  13. ^ Schlesinger, Alex (2021-12-23). "X-Men's Inferno Finally Reveals How Krakoan Gateways Were Created". ScreenRant. Retrieved 2024-06-05.
  14. ^ Sava, Oliver (February 15, 2020). "Marauders dominates Dawn Of X with action, treachery, and humor on the high seas". The A.V. Club. Retrieved June 6, 2024.
  15. ^ Foulk, Micheal (May 10, 2022). "Heroes of X: What Did I Do To Piss You Off? On Marauders and The Discreet Charm of Kate Pryde". The Beat. Retrieved June 8, 2024.
  16. ^ a b Harn, Darby (2021-04-19). "10 Best X-Men Team Rosters In Marvel Comics". ScreenRant. Retrieved 2024-06-09.
  17. ^ Tessier, Colin (2020-09-07). "Hellions: The X-Men's Newest Series Takes a Stab at Horror". CBR. Retrieved 2024-06-09.
  18. ^ Lealos, Shawn S. (2020-09-06). "A Classic X-Men Foe Is Planning a New Mutant Massacre". CBR. Retrieved 2024-06-09.
  19. ^ a b "The X-Men Decide Not to Resurrect SPOILER". ComicBook.com. September 16, 2020. Retrieved 2024-06-09.
  20. ^ Dar, Taimur (2021-12-09). "Steve Orlando and Eleonora Carlini set sail in relaunched MARAUDERS series". The Beat. Retrieved 2024-06-09.
  21. ^ a b Schlesinger, Alex (2022-04-03). "X-Men's Marauders Team Pulls Off A Terrifying Rescue In New Preview". ScreenRant. Retrieved 2024-06-09.
  22. ^ Kaplan, Avery (2021-10-04). "MARAUDERS returns with new creative team in January". The Beat. Retrieved 2024-06-09.
  23. ^ Peter Milligan (w), John Paul Leon (p). "Beginnings" The Further Adventures of Cyclops and Phoenix, no. 4 (September 1996). Marvel Comics.
  24. ^ Cable Annual 1999 (Marvel Comics, 1999).
  25. ^ Excalibur vol. 3 #7 (Marvel Comics, 2005).
  26. ^ Weapon X vol. 2 #14 (Marvel Comics, 2003).
  27. ^ Weapon X vol. 2 #27 (Marvel Comics, 2004).
  28. ^ X-Men/Spider-Man #1 (Marvel Comics).
  29. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #350 (Marvel Comics).
  30. ^ X-Factor #1 (1986. Marvel Comics).
  31. ^ X-Factor #39 (April 1989. Marvel Comics).
  32. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #206 (1986. Marvel Comics).
  33. ^ X-Factor #10 (1987. Marvel Comics)
  34. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #211 (1987, Marvel Comics)
  35. ^ Thor #374 (1987. Marvel Comics).
  36. ^ a b X-Men #34 (1994. Marvel Comics).
  37. ^ Gambit vol. 3 #8 (1999. Marvel Comics).
  38. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #213-214 (1987. Marvel Comics).
  39. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #219.
  40. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #221-222.
  41. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #240.
  42. ^ X-Factor #74–75 (1992. Marvel Comics)
  43. ^ X-Man #13 (1995, Marvel Comics).
  44. ^ a b c Magneto vol. 3 #16
  45. ^ X-Men: Messiah Complex #1
  46. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #494
  47. ^ X-Force vol. 3 #9
  48. ^ Astonishing X-Men vol. 3 #50
  49. ^ Astonishing X-Men vol. 3 #48
  50. ^ Magneto vol. 3 #6
  51. ^ Magneto vol. 3 #14
  52. ^ The Uncanny X-Men vol. 5 #18 (2019). Marvel Comics.
  53. ^ Marauders #1 (2019). Marvel Comics.
  54. ^ a b Hellions #1 (2020). Marvel Comics.
  55. ^ X-Factor #105
  56. ^ X-Men #200
  57. ^ X-Men: Blue #12
  58. ^ X-Men: Blue #23
  59. ^ X-Men: Blue #24
  60. ^ X-Men: Blue #26
  61. ^ X-Men: Blue #27
  62. ^ X-Men: Blue #28
  63. ^ X-Universe #1
  64. ^ Mutant X #26
  65. ^ The Ultimates Annual #2
  66. ^ "The Marauders Confirmed for Deadpool Video Game". ComingSoon.net. 8 May 2013. Archived from the original on 2014-02-26. Retrieved 2013-08-30.
  67. ^ "Marvel Strike Force Brings The Marauders Into the Battle". Bleedingcool. 17 November 2019. Retrieved 2020-09-17.
edit