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X-Force was a comic book series, published from 1991 until 2002, one of many titles spun-off from Marvel Comics’ mega-popular X-Men. Like the X-Men, the first X-Force, the team most often associated with the name, was a team of mutant superheroes defending a world that hates and fears them. X-Force was significantly more aggressive than the X-Men, however. A common analogy compared the X-Men to a family and X-Force to a platoon. The team consisting mostly of former members of the X-Men’s 1980s era junior team The New Mutants, under the leadership of the war hawk Cable.

In 2001, Marvel introduced a new, sardonically-toned X-Force, resembling the original only in name. That team was made up of teenage mutants gathered together and publicized to be media stars by a corporation. That team changed its name to X-Statix in 2002 and it better known by that name.

In August 2004, Marvel plans to revive the original version of the team.

1 The Liefeld Period

X-Force was concocted by illustrator Rob Liefeld, who started penciling The New Mutants in 1987. The immense popularity of Liefeld’s art allowed him to grapple creative control over the book, introducing Cable and several over hard-edged characters in the late 1980s. With help from writer Fabian Nicieza , who provided the dialogue for Liefeld’s plots, Liefeld transformed The New Mutants into X-Force in 1991. The line-up of the early team included:

The main opponents of X-Force during its first year were the terrorist Mutant Liberation Front , lead by Stryfe, a masked mutant with a mysterious link to Cable. Early issues also featured a new version of The Brotherhood of Evil Mutants, the X-Men’s oldest enemy group, Deadpool a wise-cracking mutant mercenary with an infatuation with Siryn, and the Externals , a group of power-hungry immortal mutants.

Propelled by the wildly popular art of Liefeld, X-Force became one of Marvel’s best-selling comic books almost immediately after its debut. The series rivaled Amazing Spider-Man and its own parent Uncanny X-Men in popularity, particularly with the adolescent demographic. Toy Biz responded by introducing an X-Force action figure line, along with its X-Men line, a rarity for a comic book property not adapted into a television program or movie.

Many comic book fans were critical of the series, though, complaining that it relied on big guns, big muscles and big explosions rather than plot (a criticism that would be made of latter Liefeld comic books as well). Many also noted similarities between the Externals and the immortals featured in the television series Highlander and between Deadpool and Deathstroke, an assassin featured in DC Comics' Teen Titans.

Unfortunately for these fans, the success of Liefeld and X-Force lead to a slew of hard-edged, action-orientated super hero teams in the early 1990s. In 1996, writer Mark Waid and painter Alex Ross parodied the trend in the popular DC Comics mini-series Kingdom Come which portrayed a future where a generation of violent anti-heroes had replaced the familiar DC battalion. Their leader Magog bore an intentional resemblance to Shatterstar and Cable.



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