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I removed the following from the article because I really don't think RPG stats belong in Wikipedia. Since large numbers of these "vital stats" sections have been added to various articles, I'm using Talk:Strength level (comics) to discuss this issue in general. Bryan 08:29, 28 Jan 2004 (UTC)
It seems to me that many people are editing this article and removing information without giving reason as to why they believe their edits are justified. The talkpage is supposed to be where we can all agree as to what the content of the page will be and edit accordingly. Please list or attempt to explain why some content should be added or taken away in future posts. 63.249.112.124 03:18, 17 October 2006 (UTC)
The abilities and powers section was edited by an unknown user. I re-edited it to make it a little cleaner and less rough. They took out references to Storm being an ecopath as well as the time Storm spent in limbo training Illyana Rasputin in white magic. I also changed that "other versions" section header to read "alternate versions" because I feel it's more accurate in the description of the alternate reality versions of Storm who exist in other parts of the marvel multiverse. 63.249.112.124 03:45, 17 October 2006 (UTC)
New discussion topics go at the bottom of the page
Grammar update in the "powers and abilities" section. I changed the phrase, "she was able to calm the planets elements and heal the planets ozone layer" to read "she was able to calm the planet's elements and heal the planet's ozone layer." The former referred to the plural while the latter is possessive. See Rules of Correct Grammar. Also, "( issue see 'Storm front' )" is an improper citation and I could not find the x-men comic with that title. I checked google, the Marvel Website as well as Uncannyxmen.net. I feel it should be removed unless a comic book volume number and issue number can be located. 24.23.177.235 19:12, 17 October 2006 (UTC)
How come there was no mention of the period of time when Storm lost her powers? This was very integral to the relationship she had with Rogue and her role as leader of the X-Men even though she didn't have mutant powers!
I just put in that Halle Berry quite/got fired (??) due to a complaint by her about her little screen time.
The character Storm may have been a derival from actual real-life people called Rain Queens since she controlled the weather as they are believed to do. The Rain Queens of Balobedu are a matrilineal line of women who have reigned over the Balobedu Tribe of the Limpopo Province of South Africa. It is said that Rain Queens have the ability to control the clouds and rainfall. Currently there is no ruling Rain Queen as the previous Rain Queen has recently passed away.
I put up Storm's UXM #449 cover again. Personally, the art is of better quality and shows the character more attractively.
Does anyone know anything about this that would be worth contributing beyond that they met when she was dating Forge? Gambit and Storm shared a kiss in "Intifada," the X-Treme X-Men trade paperback, I think it was volume 6. A romantic link between these two has always been implied, but not typically acted on. Cee 00:13, 24 January 2006 (UTC)
The Ultimate Storm info section is a little lacking, and seems to be cut off..
Classic X-Men#20 has narration stating that "Mother Nature---Mother Earth, the mother of us all---is the only other parent you [Storm] have acknowledged....". So Storm does worship Gaea, who is Mother Earth.
"However, whether people believe her to be real or not, when they refer to Mother Nature or Mother Earth, they are speaking about Gaea."
http://web.archive.org/web/20041021224953/http://www.immortalthor.net/bio-gaea.html
Enda80 20:43, 11 March 2006 (UTC)Enda80
The narration in Classic X-Men#20 has it that Mother Nature/Mother Earth/Gaea came to Storm's rescue.
'She is the aunt of the X-Man, Evan Daniels aka Spyke and a member of the staff at the Xavier Institute. This has confused many fans as to how she could be an orphan and still have a brother or sister in order to have a nephew'
I'm not sure if there's some additional information that's been left out which would explain why Storm having a sibling is confusing for many fans. Either that information should be added to the entry, or the confused fans part should be removed. After all, being an orphan does not mean that you're an only child. Doc Meroe 03:51, 1 May 2006 (UTC)
I agree. The entry should be edited to either give a citation, omit the reference to confusion, or explain why people are confused. Maybe they think if Storm is an orphan, she would have trouble finding/identifying her nephew. WikiFew 05:29, 21 May 2006 (UTC)
The problem with adding information is it would all be speculative to begin with. She's never been seen as possessing a sibling in any alternative universe that I know of. Her story has usually been the same: tragedy resulting in her parent's death, she becomes a thief, she quits being a thief and walks Africa helping (or hurting) people with her powers, Charles finds her eventually and asks her to join the X-Men. Evolution could have added a sibling into the mix, but they also could have given Ororo a group of people that she considers "family" and calls them as such. 68.51.57.237 17:42, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
In the X-Men Evolution universe, Spyke is her nephew, but not in the standard universe. I think the section Notable Relatives needs to be changed either to omit Spyke or to explain that it is in an alternate universe. WikiFew 04:43, 21 May 2006 (UTC)
Storm could also be based on the goddess Oya, who controls storms, tornados, and lightning. Oya and Ororo sound vaguely similar. AncientNova 04:53, 21 May 2006 (UTC)
"The unbelievably beautiful african-american actress Halle Berry plays her in the recent film series." ... ahem. She very well may be, but that's hardly objectively verifiable. Changed to "The well known.." instead. This minor POV stuff nerves on my get. ~kappisto 17:52, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
"She may be the first black, female superhero and remains the most popular." - Can someone find out whether or not she was? Either way, saying she remains the 'most popular' deserves citation. - IstvanWolf 16:18, 29 May 2006 (UTC)
The article claims, without any preamble or citation, that Storm is an Omega-level mutant. She's never been stated to be an Omega in the comics - on the contrary, she's been shown to have serious limits to her control over the weather, and exceeding those limits has been shown to be both harmful to herself and dangerous for the local ecosystem. She's never shown anything like the power levels of maxed-out Iceman or Exodus. How would you justify categorically stating her to be Omega?
All personal feelings and Original Research aside, if she hasn't been called one in the comics then that bit needs to come out of the article. CovenantD 20:56, 30 May 2006 (UTC)
Storm's powers are not limited by atmosphere, on many occasions she has manipulated both "space weather" and ocean currents. Storms abilities are limited by her imagination and awareness of their potential. As she can wield intense control/manipulation of the natural forces of the universe, she may very well be able to surpass even Iceman if she were able to fully control their manifestation. She has the ability to percieve, in a way no one else can, the energy of the universe and manipulate it's "flow." It's kind of arbitrary that her powers manifested in an intense storm, hence her codename, but she has identified with it so strongly that she believes that that is the extent of here domain/control. If you understand physics, then you'd also understand the complex nature of the kind of ability we're talking about (e.g. to "control the weather," you would have to be able to control heat and its distribution, both weak and strong nulear forces, and electromagnetic radiation) that pretty much covers the entire spectrum of physical forces in the natural universe (except for gravity/mass attraction); the same forces that govern everything in the universe.
In Black Panther (4th Series) issue #21 Storm has been confirmed to be a possible Omega-Level Mutant by Iron Man on the last page of the comic. Iron Man made this statement in his instructions to the sentinels to be on guard as Black Panther and Ororo visit the President of U.S. 63.249.112.84 20:46, 1 November 2006 (UTC)
After reviewing the classification stats from the omega-level mutant page, I thought it would be intresting to note here that in an alternate reality, it was Storm and not Jean Grey who merged with the Phoenix Force entity after piloting the space craft from orbit. Storm's body was placed in a healing coccoon and submerged under the Hudson bay. Phoenix-Storm arose from the bay and quickly did away with most super-villains on Earth by freezing them in the atmosphere. When it was realized that the original Storm was in a coccoon, Phoenix-Storm was disperesed and flew off into the galaxy. Storm did not survive the ordeal (similar to Phoenix-Jean Grey). It may be later revealed that Storm was resurected like her counter-part (Jean Grey) in the main marvel universe. (See http://www.uncannyxmen.net/db/spotlight/showquestion.asp?faq=10&fldAuto=76&page=12). One of the requirements of Omega-level was the potential to become a Phoenix. 63.249.112.124 03:19, 17 October 2006 (UTC)
Per the Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Comics#Proliferation of Ultimate character articlesWP:COMIC talk page, Ultimate character entries should be merged into the character's main article.-- Chris Griswold 05:26, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
Merge-- Chris Griswold 05:26, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
Closed with CONSENSUS TO MERGE CovenantD 17:01, 15 July 2006 (UTC)
I thought it best to put this here - as this scan clearly demonstrates, while Storm is indeed immune to the effects of most weather, that immunity is neither total nor unlimited. She can be overcome by the weather, and therefore to state that she's immune to all weather is simply inaccurate.
Why dosen't this page say anything about when Storm was a vampire under Dracula? (The Uncanny X-Men #159 among others.)
Has Storm ever delved into the magic side of her heritage besides in the Magik limited series? I vaguely remember reading something about the "witches" in her family being born with white hair and blue eyes. Artemisboy 21:20, 20 October 2006 (UTC)
Though I don't know exactly how this is related, but she has often used her matrilineal ruby to transport herself and others across dimensions. It is unknown how long the ruby has been in her family, but it was passed down to her from her mother, and to her mother from her grandmother. Also, Ashake is one of Ororo's ancestors shown in the comic series. She was a priestes in Egpyt or Nubia, and helped Excalibur in one of their adventures. She was supposedly the spiting image of Ororo. One basic theory is that as Ororo gets older, her mutant powers will wane. When they wane, she will come to depend on her ancestral life magic ( ecomancy). 63.249.112.149 00:42, 23 October 2006 (UTC)
Her Ancestor didn't appear in Excalibur, she was in the New Mutants (1st Series) #32. She helped Illyana teleport back to the present using her witchcraft powers [1].
The "fictional biography" part -- which is roughly half the article -- is unfortunately poorly sourced, and also treats fiction as fact and gives a firmly in-universe and thus very undesirable account. It is a clear violation of WP:WAF, and it is consensus on WP:CMC that every character profile must be grounded in reality. "Fictional biographies" should be replaced with "publication history", thus starting in the real-life year of 1975 in Storm's case, and not with some fictional account of the Six Day War. This article would be drastically improved if the author(s) could:
For a positive example, see e.g. Superman, especially Superman#Publication_history. I do not expect Storm's article to become THAT good, but I am sure that it could be much better with only a little effort. -- Onomatopoeia 21:01, 17 November 2006 (UTC)
I hacked out this part out of the article, as it violates WP:WAF and the consensus of WP:CMC, and is hopefully made redundant by the new "publication history" section. It is well written, and I hope to merge a good bit into it, it just has to be changed to represent a real-life view. -- Onomatopoeia 10:26, 20 November 2006 (UTC)
Ororo's mother, N'Dare, was the princess of a tribe in Kenya and the descendant of a long line of Africans with white hair, blue eyes and a natural gift for sorcery, which Storm's Egyptian ancestor, Ashake was expert in. N'Dare fell in love with and married African American photojournalist David Munroe.
thumb|150px|left|Cover art for Storm #2 (second limited series), by Mike Mayhew Ororo was born in Manhattan, New York City. When Ororo was six months old, she and her parents moved to Cairo, Egypt.
Five years later, a bomb (or a military plane crashing during a bombing attack) destroyed their home and killed Ororo's parents; although the original version of this story stated that the bomb was dropped by a jet of the Israeli Air Force during the Suez Crisis of 1956, later stories have revised the bombing first to an event of the Six-Day War of 1967 and then to an unnamed military conflict. Ororo was trapped in the collapsed building alongside her dead mother, a traumatic experience that would ultimately leave her with a severe case of claustrophobia.
The orphan Ororo grew up on the streets and became a proficient thief under the tutelage of master thief Achmed el-Gibar. To this day she is an excellent pickpocket and lockpick. One of her most notable victims was Charles Francis Xavier, the later Professor X. He used his mental powers to prevent her escape. He also recognized the child to have a unique mind that would require further examination. However, Xavier was attacked mentally by Amahl Farouk, the Shadow King. The two men were preoccupied enough with their battle to allow the girl to escape. Both however would recall her later.
Shortly after her twelfth birthday, Ororo felt something drawing her to the south of Africa. She left Cairo by hoof and started traveling. She soon attempted hitchhiking. However, the first man who offered her a ride attempted to rape her. Using her knife to protect herself, she killed the man in self-defense. She was horrified by her act and swore to never take another human life. She would come to regret this decision later in life.
150px|left|A young Ororo and T'Challa. Art by Sal Velluto.|thumb
Ororo continued her solitary trek for a year. She nearly died from dehydration while crossing the Sahara. Her journey brought her about 2000 miles south of Cairo. During the journey, new powers emerged within her. Ororo proved to be a mutant with the power to control the weather.
Those powers would prove useful in her first heroic battle. Ororo witnessed Andreas de Ruyter and men of the South African Army in the process of kidnapping a young boy, slightly older than she. Ororo saved the boy and learned his identity. He was Prince T'Challa of Wakanda. The South Africans would have used their hostage to blackmail his father T'Chaka, the Black Panther. The two youths continued their journey together and fell in love. However, they soon had to part ways. Storm wanted to continue her journey of self-discovery. T'Challa felt bound by duty to return to Wakanda and train to succeed his father.
Storm's journey next brought her to the Kenyan portion of Serengeti, the land of her ancestors. There, Ororo called out to the Goddess of her ancestors and was rewarded with a vision of her adult self. Though Storm continues to swear by the Goddess or "Bright Lady" as she sometimes calls her, no name has ever been given to this deity. Current speculation is that this Goddess is Gaea who has made multiple appearances in the Marvel Universe.
Ororo came to use her powers to help the native tribes and their efforts in agriculture. She came to be worshipped by them as their "goddess of life." However her powers came with a price. Because her subconscious mind affected the weather around her, Ororo had to detach herself from passionate emotions to avoid causing needless harm. She spent years exploring her powers with the help of Ainet, a tribal elder who became her surrogate mother.
[[:Image:StormconceptCockrum.jpg|thumb|right|165px|Storm's initial concept design by Dave Cockrum]] Ororo reached her maturity while still in the role of a tribal goddess. There, she was found by her old victim Charles Francis Xavier, who invited her to join his second team of X-Men. Their first mission involved rescuing the original X-Men from the mutant ecosystem inhabiting the Pacific island of Krakoa. Storm was able to combine her powers with those of her teammates and send the entire island to outer space.
Although Storm initially had trouble adjusting to Western culture, particularly the sort represented by her sometimes-vicious teammate Wolverine, she found a home and family among the X-Men such as Jean Grey and Piotr Rasputin who became not only her best friends, but also a surrogate sister and brother. Early battles, however, revealed a significant weakness in her intense claustrophobia, which could be triggered in times of crisis, rendering her panicky and unfocused. She recognized this as a problem and consciously worked on ameliorating her condition. In time, she revealed herself to be confident and pragmatic in battle. She replaced Cyclops, X-Men's longtime leader, when he left the group. When the young Shadowcat joined the X-Men around this time, Storm formed a very close, almost maternal bond with her.
The X-Men spent an extended time in space battling the Brood, an alien race, in which Storm and the others unknowingly became host to future Broods. This left Ororo with a dilemma, to kill the growing Brood within her and break a vow she made when young or to allow it to transform her into another Brood. In the end she escaped out into space deciding to kill herself. This effectively killed the Brood within her but left her vulnerable in space. Fortunately she was rescued by whale-like creatures called the Acanti who could communicate telepathically.
left|thumb|145px|left|Cover to Uncanny X-Men #170. Art by Paul Smith. Spending so much time away from planet Earth, combined with the trauma of having a Brood embryo inside her, severed the deep psychic connection Storm had with her home planet, prompting a period of much soul searching. Storm went through some profound personal changes because of this inner conflict, which resulted in her becoming more aggressive and violent. This led to her cutting her hair in a mohawk and wearing leather clothing - changes that alienated her from Shadowcat for a time. Storm was influenced in this by a lover of Wolverine's, Yukio, who became one of her dearest friends; some fans believe the two were lovers, though given Marvel's policies of the time, this possibility was never more than implied. She also fought Callisto for leadership of the Morlocks and won by stabbing Callisto in the heart. Callisto only managed to survive due to the healing powers of another Morlock. The two remained enemies for awhile, but eventually managed to make up and are now friends. Storm now trusts Callisto enough that she asked Callisto to look after Xavier while he was in Genosha.
However her victory over Callisto would lead Storm to fight another Morlock named Marrow years later. Threatening to kill innocent people with a bombtrigger attached to her own heart, Marrow forced Storm to decide to either kill her or let the innocent people die. She did that in the belief that Storm as an X-man was unable to kill. However, during the fight, Storm ripped Marrow's heart out saving the civilians.
[[:Image:Uxm449.jpg|thumb|150px|right|Storm, in the cover from Uncanny X-Men #449. Art by Greg Land]] Following Operation: Zero Tolerance, Ororo again took sole leadership of a unified—though significantly diminished—group of X-Men while Cyclops and Phoenix semi-retired to tend to Cyclop's recent injuries. It was during this period that the Shadow King returned, and targeted Storm and Psylocke specifically, tricking them into returning to Storm's old village in Kenya, where the events of the Psi-War took place.
After averting the Rise of Apocalypse and spending a couple of months on a leaderless faction of X-Men including Phoenix, Cable, Beast, and Gambit, Storm went on to lead a group of X-Men outside of the mansion in the search for Destiny's diaries, the Books of Truth, inspired at least in part by the events of The Twelve storyline. This team came to be known as the X-Treme X-Men. While searching for the diaries, Storm enjoyed a brief flirtation with a younger man, Slipstream and was kidnapped by the intergalactic warlord Khan who wanted to make her his queen, as several villains over the years were wont to do. Despite being badly injured, struck by Viper prior to being captured and having to fight off Khan's harem, she managed to defeat Khan with the aid of the X-Treme X-Men who came to rescue her. They brought her back to Earth where she spent time recovering with the aid of Wolverine.
Storm continued to lead the group even after Destiny's diaries were rendered inert because she did not approve of the way Xavier was running the mansion. The group returned to help rebuild the Xavier Institute after the mansion was destroyed by a man who was believed at the time to be Magneto, but was later revealed/retconned to be Xorn. From the school, Storm headed the X-Treme Sanctions Executive, a special police task force of mutants policing mutants given worldwide authority. Bishop, at first, was hesitant to join this timeline's XSE, because it worried him that his future as a member of the Xavier's Security Enforcers could still come true.
Due to the Scarlet Witch's magicks, 98% of the mutants lost their powers, but Storm did not lose hers. This is apparently going to make her a more prominent member of the Marvel Universe according to recent interviews.
thumb|150px|right|Storm and Forge. Art by Marc Silvestri. Storm had an on-again, off-again romance with the mutant Forge. She first broke up with him when she discovered that he had created the neutralizer gun used to erase her powers, though she later forgave him. In a battle with the Adversary in Dallas, Storm appeared with her powers—and as a result, her psychic bond to the Earth—fully restored and was able to help her teammates defeat the Adversary.
Believed dead by the world, thanks to the conclusion of The Fall of the Mutants, she and her teammates were resurrected by Roma and transported to Australia, where they encountered and defeated the Reavers, a merciless group of cyborgs. Believed dead along with the X-Men was Madelyne Pryor, Cyclops's first wife. Madelyne held a secret grudge against Cyclops for abandoning her and their infant son, Nathan Christopher for Jean Grey. While she found comfort with Cyclops' brother, Havok, her negative feelings toward her estranged husband and the trauma of losing her son made her vulnerable to persuasion and eventually corruption by N'astirh one of the demons from the dimension of Limbo, leading to the Inferno crossover. After saving the world from being sucked into the hell-like dimension, Storm led the X-Men back to their base in Australia. Following a battle with Nanny and the Orphan Maker, Storm was presumed dead. In truth, though, Nanny had captured Storm and faked her death with the use of a SHIELD life model decoy, which resembled her and was left in the wreckage of Nanny's ship to be found by her teammates. The true Storm, now de-aged by Nanny (approximately at the age of 11-12) was a captive in Nanny's hands. However, she managed to escape and started wandering in Cairo, Illinois, with no memories of the past. Her powers were also diminished, due to her age. The Shadow King decided to use this opportunity to hunt her down, by taking over the body of FBI agent Jacob Reisz and framing Ororo for murder. On the run, Storm returned to thievery in order to survive. The Shadow King's agents ambushed her in one of her capers; luckily, though, she was saved by the intervention of fellow mutant and thief Gambit. The duo formed a partnership, as thieves. Eventually, they battled Nanny and defeated her and during battle, Storm's memories were restored. She and Gambit then travelled to the X-Mansion, where they were reunited with Banshee and Forge. After several tests were conducted, it was clearly shown that Ororo was stuck in her pre-teen form and that the de-aging process was irreversible.
During the X-Tinction Agenda, Storm was captured by Genoshan magistrates and turned into a mutate. After she was blasted in a battle, she regained her personality and was also restored into full adulthood.
Following his battle with the Shadow King on Muir Island, the recently-returned Professor Xavier found himself with the assembled members of both the X-Men and X-Factor. The Professor decided to divide the X-Men into two separate strike forces: the Gold Team, led by Storm and consisting of Jean Grey, Iceman, Colossus, and Archangel, and the Blue Team, led by Cyclops, and featuring Beast, Gambit, Rogue, Psylocke and Wolverine. Moira MacTaggert and Forge lived in residence as well. The marriage of Storm and the Black Panther. Front cover for Black Panther #18 (2006), by Frank Cho.|thumb As their relationship continued to develop, Forge proposed marriage to Storm. Storm was hesitant, however, because accepting Forge's proposal would mean giving up her place with the X-Men in order to lead a more "normal" life. Forge sensed Storm's hesistation, and asked her best friend, Jean Grey, her opinion on Storm's feelings. But due to miscommunication between Jean and Forge, Forge rescinded his offer, leaving a distraught and teary-eyed Storm whispering that she was going to say yes.
Her past relationship with then-Prince T'Challa (the Black Panther) long before she had met Forge later led to a rekindling of their feelings towards each other, and marriage.
When the X-Men journeyed to Niganda to investigate reports of mutant animals, they ran into Black Panther. At the end of the mission, Storm stayed in Niganda to help the mutants affected there. During this time she came into conflict with an African Colonel named Shetani, who was hunting down and killing de-powered mutants in search of Storm. When she finally confronted him, he revealed to her that he was her uncle. Afterward, Shetani told Storm of a hidden village in Northwest Kenya where she met her grandmother for the first time. This finally prompted her to accept the Black Panther's marriage proposal.
The marriage between Storm and the Black Panther is one of the major events of the Civil War tie-in books with characters Iron Man and Captain America showing up for the wedding but leaving before the ceremony because neither of them could stand the sight of each other. Earlier, Charles Xavier makes an appearance, telling Storm that as the queen of Wakanda, she was now the most important mutant in the world, and the living symbol of human/mutant relations. A role, he was quoted as saying, she was born to play. As a gift, Doctor Doom, via a holographic message, invites the newlyweds to his country.
The article says that her relationship with T'Chalia is a retcon, but I remember reading towards the end of Uncanny X-Men Annual 2 or 3 (the one where she is kidnapped by Arkon because of her lightning powers, and they develop feelings for each other - this was sometime in the late 70's) a brief passage about love where she mentions a long-ago relationship with T'Chalia. Am I wrong about that? -- JamesB3 00:08, 27 November 2006 (UTC)
-- SeizureDog 08:51, 30 November 2006 (UTC)
This is a good article so far from what I can see. I plan to review it in full but I'm putting it on hold for several days to sort out one thing: citation method. Citations should go directly after any form of punctuation. I'll give editors time to sort this out. Wiki-newbie 19:27, 30 November 2006 (UTC)
Well, I've read through the article, but I shall continue the hold until we have Present Tense handled. I understand the difficulty of writing a comic book article where the character is discussed fully within the context of 'Publication History', but there are still paragraphs in there with sentences purely about the fiction in past tense. Please correct them. Wiki-newbie 16:03, 1 December 2006 (UTC)
Now neutrality is a problem for the following passage:
In the early eighties, remarkable adventures of Storm written by Claremont included fighting the parasitic Aliens-inspired aliens called the Brood, in which Storm is infected with a Brood egg and contemplates suicide, but then experiences a last-minute save by the benign Acanti aliens.[8] Furthermore, in the Morlocks story line of 1983, in Uncanny X-Men #170 (June 1983), Storm fights super-strong mutant Callisto for the leadership of the disfigured mutants, beats her by impaling her through the heart and almost kills her.[9] Please axe the remarkable, we're not here to praise Claremont.
Once this is done, I shall award the GA. Wiki-newbie 12:33, 3 December 2006 (UTC)
Keep up the good work: and may this become a model for Out-of-universe Comic book character articles. Peer review it first before FAC: I have my own suggestions too. Wiki-newbie 14:32, 3 December 2006 (UTC)
The comment(s) below were originally left at Talk:Storm (Marvel Comics)/Comments, and are posted here for posterity. Following several discussions in past years, these subpages are now deprecated. The comments may be irrelevant or outdated; if so, please feel free to remove this section.
This article on Storm was once peer reviewed when nominated for Feature Article. This article failed nomination due to a combination of issues regarding citation, in-universe style of writing, and grammatical errors. Since the failed nomination, the article has undergone a serious upgrade and revision from various users based upon the notes of the failed FA. This article should, therefore, be considered at least A-Class and be subsequently reviewed for consideration. SluggerBugger ( talk) 00:08, 22 January 2008 (UTC) |
Last edited at 07:37, 9 June 2008 (UTC). Substituted at 22:08, 3 May 2016 (UTC)
![]() | This page is an archive of past discussions. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
I removed the following from the article because I really don't think RPG stats belong in Wikipedia. Since large numbers of these "vital stats" sections have been added to various articles, I'm using Talk:Strength level (comics) to discuss this issue in general. Bryan 08:29, 28 Jan 2004 (UTC)
It seems to me that many people are editing this article and removing information without giving reason as to why they believe their edits are justified. The talkpage is supposed to be where we can all agree as to what the content of the page will be and edit accordingly. Please list or attempt to explain why some content should be added or taken away in future posts. 63.249.112.124 03:18, 17 October 2006 (UTC)
The abilities and powers section was edited by an unknown user. I re-edited it to make it a little cleaner and less rough. They took out references to Storm being an ecopath as well as the time Storm spent in limbo training Illyana Rasputin in white magic. I also changed that "other versions" section header to read "alternate versions" because I feel it's more accurate in the description of the alternate reality versions of Storm who exist in other parts of the marvel multiverse. 63.249.112.124 03:45, 17 October 2006 (UTC)
New discussion topics go at the bottom of the page
Grammar update in the "powers and abilities" section. I changed the phrase, "she was able to calm the planets elements and heal the planets ozone layer" to read "she was able to calm the planet's elements and heal the planet's ozone layer." The former referred to the plural while the latter is possessive. See Rules of Correct Grammar. Also, "( issue see 'Storm front' )" is an improper citation and I could not find the x-men comic with that title. I checked google, the Marvel Website as well as Uncannyxmen.net. I feel it should be removed unless a comic book volume number and issue number can be located. 24.23.177.235 19:12, 17 October 2006 (UTC)
How come there was no mention of the period of time when Storm lost her powers? This was very integral to the relationship she had with Rogue and her role as leader of the X-Men even though she didn't have mutant powers!
I just put in that Halle Berry quite/got fired (??) due to a complaint by her about her little screen time.
The character Storm may have been a derival from actual real-life people called Rain Queens since she controlled the weather as they are believed to do. The Rain Queens of Balobedu are a matrilineal line of women who have reigned over the Balobedu Tribe of the Limpopo Province of South Africa. It is said that Rain Queens have the ability to control the clouds and rainfall. Currently there is no ruling Rain Queen as the previous Rain Queen has recently passed away.
I put up Storm's UXM #449 cover again. Personally, the art is of better quality and shows the character more attractively.
Does anyone know anything about this that would be worth contributing beyond that they met when she was dating Forge? Gambit and Storm shared a kiss in "Intifada," the X-Treme X-Men trade paperback, I think it was volume 6. A romantic link between these two has always been implied, but not typically acted on. Cee 00:13, 24 January 2006 (UTC)
The Ultimate Storm info section is a little lacking, and seems to be cut off..
Classic X-Men#20 has narration stating that "Mother Nature---Mother Earth, the mother of us all---is the only other parent you [Storm] have acknowledged....". So Storm does worship Gaea, who is Mother Earth.
"However, whether people believe her to be real or not, when they refer to Mother Nature or Mother Earth, they are speaking about Gaea."
http://web.archive.org/web/20041021224953/http://www.immortalthor.net/bio-gaea.html
Enda80 20:43, 11 March 2006 (UTC)Enda80
The narration in Classic X-Men#20 has it that Mother Nature/Mother Earth/Gaea came to Storm's rescue.
'She is the aunt of the X-Man, Evan Daniels aka Spyke and a member of the staff at the Xavier Institute. This has confused many fans as to how she could be an orphan and still have a brother or sister in order to have a nephew'
I'm not sure if there's some additional information that's been left out which would explain why Storm having a sibling is confusing for many fans. Either that information should be added to the entry, or the confused fans part should be removed. After all, being an orphan does not mean that you're an only child. Doc Meroe 03:51, 1 May 2006 (UTC)
I agree. The entry should be edited to either give a citation, omit the reference to confusion, or explain why people are confused. Maybe they think if Storm is an orphan, she would have trouble finding/identifying her nephew. WikiFew 05:29, 21 May 2006 (UTC)
The problem with adding information is it would all be speculative to begin with. She's never been seen as possessing a sibling in any alternative universe that I know of. Her story has usually been the same: tragedy resulting in her parent's death, she becomes a thief, she quits being a thief and walks Africa helping (or hurting) people with her powers, Charles finds her eventually and asks her to join the X-Men. Evolution could have added a sibling into the mix, but they also could have given Ororo a group of people that she considers "family" and calls them as such. 68.51.57.237 17:42, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
In the X-Men Evolution universe, Spyke is her nephew, but not in the standard universe. I think the section Notable Relatives needs to be changed either to omit Spyke or to explain that it is in an alternate universe. WikiFew 04:43, 21 May 2006 (UTC)
Storm could also be based on the goddess Oya, who controls storms, tornados, and lightning. Oya and Ororo sound vaguely similar. AncientNova 04:53, 21 May 2006 (UTC)
"The unbelievably beautiful african-american actress Halle Berry plays her in the recent film series." ... ahem. She very well may be, but that's hardly objectively verifiable. Changed to "The well known.." instead. This minor POV stuff nerves on my get. ~kappisto 17:52, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
"She may be the first black, female superhero and remains the most popular." - Can someone find out whether or not she was? Either way, saying she remains the 'most popular' deserves citation. - IstvanWolf 16:18, 29 May 2006 (UTC)
The article claims, without any preamble or citation, that Storm is an Omega-level mutant. She's never been stated to be an Omega in the comics - on the contrary, she's been shown to have serious limits to her control over the weather, and exceeding those limits has been shown to be both harmful to herself and dangerous for the local ecosystem. She's never shown anything like the power levels of maxed-out Iceman or Exodus. How would you justify categorically stating her to be Omega?
All personal feelings and Original Research aside, if she hasn't been called one in the comics then that bit needs to come out of the article. CovenantD 20:56, 30 May 2006 (UTC)
Storm's powers are not limited by atmosphere, on many occasions she has manipulated both "space weather" and ocean currents. Storms abilities are limited by her imagination and awareness of their potential. As she can wield intense control/manipulation of the natural forces of the universe, she may very well be able to surpass even Iceman if she were able to fully control their manifestation. She has the ability to percieve, in a way no one else can, the energy of the universe and manipulate it's "flow." It's kind of arbitrary that her powers manifested in an intense storm, hence her codename, but she has identified with it so strongly that she believes that that is the extent of here domain/control. If you understand physics, then you'd also understand the complex nature of the kind of ability we're talking about (e.g. to "control the weather," you would have to be able to control heat and its distribution, both weak and strong nulear forces, and electromagnetic radiation) that pretty much covers the entire spectrum of physical forces in the natural universe (except for gravity/mass attraction); the same forces that govern everything in the universe.
In Black Panther (4th Series) issue #21 Storm has been confirmed to be a possible Omega-Level Mutant by Iron Man on the last page of the comic. Iron Man made this statement in his instructions to the sentinels to be on guard as Black Panther and Ororo visit the President of U.S. 63.249.112.84 20:46, 1 November 2006 (UTC)
After reviewing the classification stats from the omega-level mutant page, I thought it would be intresting to note here that in an alternate reality, it was Storm and not Jean Grey who merged with the Phoenix Force entity after piloting the space craft from orbit. Storm's body was placed in a healing coccoon and submerged under the Hudson bay. Phoenix-Storm arose from the bay and quickly did away with most super-villains on Earth by freezing them in the atmosphere. When it was realized that the original Storm was in a coccoon, Phoenix-Storm was disperesed and flew off into the galaxy. Storm did not survive the ordeal (similar to Phoenix-Jean Grey). It may be later revealed that Storm was resurected like her counter-part (Jean Grey) in the main marvel universe. (See http://www.uncannyxmen.net/db/spotlight/showquestion.asp?faq=10&fldAuto=76&page=12). One of the requirements of Omega-level was the potential to become a Phoenix. 63.249.112.124 03:19, 17 October 2006 (UTC)
Per the Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Comics#Proliferation of Ultimate character articlesWP:COMIC talk page, Ultimate character entries should be merged into the character's main article.-- Chris Griswold 05:26, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
Merge-- Chris Griswold 05:26, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
Closed with CONSENSUS TO MERGE CovenantD 17:01, 15 July 2006 (UTC)
I thought it best to put this here - as this scan clearly demonstrates, while Storm is indeed immune to the effects of most weather, that immunity is neither total nor unlimited. She can be overcome by the weather, and therefore to state that she's immune to all weather is simply inaccurate.
Why dosen't this page say anything about when Storm was a vampire under Dracula? (The Uncanny X-Men #159 among others.)
Has Storm ever delved into the magic side of her heritage besides in the Magik limited series? I vaguely remember reading something about the "witches" in her family being born with white hair and blue eyes. Artemisboy 21:20, 20 October 2006 (UTC)
Though I don't know exactly how this is related, but she has often used her matrilineal ruby to transport herself and others across dimensions. It is unknown how long the ruby has been in her family, but it was passed down to her from her mother, and to her mother from her grandmother. Also, Ashake is one of Ororo's ancestors shown in the comic series. She was a priestes in Egpyt or Nubia, and helped Excalibur in one of their adventures. She was supposedly the spiting image of Ororo. One basic theory is that as Ororo gets older, her mutant powers will wane. When they wane, she will come to depend on her ancestral life magic ( ecomancy). 63.249.112.149 00:42, 23 October 2006 (UTC)
Her Ancestor didn't appear in Excalibur, she was in the New Mutants (1st Series) #32. She helped Illyana teleport back to the present using her witchcraft powers [1].
The "fictional biography" part -- which is roughly half the article -- is unfortunately poorly sourced, and also treats fiction as fact and gives a firmly in-universe and thus very undesirable account. It is a clear violation of WP:WAF, and it is consensus on WP:CMC that every character profile must be grounded in reality. "Fictional biographies" should be replaced with "publication history", thus starting in the real-life year of 1975 in Storm's case, and not with some fictional account of the Six Day War. This article would be drastically improved if the author(s) could:
For a positive example, see e.g. Superman, especially Superman#Publication_history. I do not expect Storm's article to become THAT good, but I am sure that it could be much better with only a little effort. -- Onomatopoeia 21:01, 17 November 2006 (UTC)
I hacked out this part out of the article, as it violates WP:WAF and the consensus of WP:CMC, and is hopefully made redundant by the new "publication history" section. It is well written, and I hope to merge a good bit into it, it just has to be changed to represent a real-life view. -- Onomatopoeia 10:26, 20 November 2006 (UTC)
Ororo's mother, N'Dare, was the princess of a tribe in Kenya and the descendant of a long line of Africans with white hair, blue eyes and a natural gift for sorcery, which Storm's Egyptian ancestor, Ashake was expert in. N'Dare fell in love with and married African American photojournalist David Munroe.
thumb|150px|left|Cover art for Storm #2 (second limited series), by Mike Mayhew Ororo was born in Manhattan, New York City. When Ororo was six months old, she and her parents moved to Cairo, Egypt.
Five years later, a bomb (or a military plane crashing during a bombing attack) destroyed their home and killed Ororo's parents; although the original version of this story stated that the bomb was dropped by a jet of the Israeli Air Force during the Suez Crisis of 1956, later stories have revised the bombing first to an event of the Six-Day War of 1967 and then to an unnamed military conflict. Ororo was trapped in the collapsed building alongside her dead mother, a traumatic experience that would ultimately leave her with a severe case of claustrophobia.
The orphan Ororo grew up on the streets and became a proficient thief under the tutelage of master thief Achmed el-Gibar. To this day she is an excellent pickpocket and lockpick. One of her most notable victims was Charles Francis Xavier, the later Professor X. He used his mental powers to prevent her escape. He also recognized the child to have a unique mind that would require further examination. However, Xavier was attacked mentally by Amahl Farouk, the Shadow King. The two men were preoccupied enough with their battle to allow the girl to escape. Both however would recall her later.
Shortly after her twelfth birthday, Ororo felt something drawing her to the south of Africa. She left Cairo by hoof and started traveling. She soon attempted hitchhiking. However, the first man who offered her a ride attempted to rape her. Using her knife to protect herself, she killed the man in self-defense. She was horrified by her act and swore to never take another human life. She would come to regret this decision later in life.
150px|left|A young Ororo and T'Challa. Art by Sal Velluto.|thumb
Ororo continued her solitary trek for a year. She nearly died from dehydration while crossing the Sahara. Her journey brought her about 2000 miles south of Cairo. During the journey, new powers emerged within her. Ororo proved to be a mutant with the power to control the weather.
Those powers would prove useful in her first heroic battle. Ororo witnessed Andreas de Ruyter and men of the South African Army in the process of kidnapping a young boy, slightly older than she. Ororo saved the boy and learned his identity. He was Prince T'Challa of Wakanda. The South Africans would have used their hostage to blackmail his father T'Chaka, the Black Panther. The two youths continued their journey together and fell in love. However, they soon had to part ways. Storm wanted to continue her journey of self-discovery. T'Challa felt bound by duty to return to Wakanda and train to succeed his father.
Storm's journey next brought her to the Kenyan portion of Serengeti, the land of her ancestors. There, Ororo called out to the Goddess of her ancestors and was rewarded with a vision of her adult self. Though Storm continues to swear by the Goddess or "Bright Lady" as she sometimes calls her, no name has ever been given to this deity. Current speculation is that this Goddess is Gaea who has made multiple appearances in the Marvel Universe.
Ororo came to use her powers to help the native tribes and their efforts in agriculture. She came to be worshipped by them as their "goddess of life." However her powers came with a price. Because her subconscious mind affected the weather around her, Ororo had to detach herself from passionate emotions to avoid causing needless harm. She spent years exploring her powers with the help of Ainet, a tribal elder who became her surrogate mother.
[[:Image:StormconceptCockrum.jpg|thumb|right|165px|Storm's initial concept design by Dave Cockrum]] Ororo reached her maturity while still in the role of a tribal goddess. There, she was found by her old victim Charles Francis Xavier, who invited her to join his second team of X-Men. Their first mission involved rescuing the original X-Men from the mutant ecosystem inhabiting the Pacific island of Krakoa. Storm was able to combine her powers with those of her teammates and send the entire island to outer space.
Although Storm initially had trouble adjusting to Western culture, particularly the sort represented by her sometimes-vicious teammate Wolverine, she found a home and family among the X-Men such as Jean Grey and Piotr Rasputin who became not only her best friends, but also a surrogate sister and brother. Early battles, however, revealed a significant weakness in her intense claustrophobia, which could be triggered in times of crisis, rendering her panicky and unfocused. She recognized this as a problem and consciously worked on ameliorating her condition. In time, she revealed herself to be confident and pragmatic in battle. She replaced Cyclops, X-Men's longtime leader, when he left the group. When the young Shadowcat joined the X-Men around this time, Storm formed a very close, almost maternal bond with her.
The X-Men spent an extended time in space battling the Brood, an alien race, in which Storm and the others unknowingly became host to future Broods. This left Ororo with a dilemma, to kill the growing Brood within her and break a vow she made when young or to allow it to transform her into another Brood. In the end she escaped out into space deciding to kill herself. This effectively killed the Brood within her but left her vulnerable in space. Fortunately she was rescued by whale-like creatures called the Acanti who could communicate telepathically.
left|thumb|145px|left|Cover to Uncanny X-Men #170. Art by Paul Smith. Spending so much time away from planet Earth, combined with the trauma of having a Brood embryo inside her, severed the deep psychic connection Storm had with her home planet, prompting a period of much soul searching. Storm went through some profound personal changes because of this inner conflict, which resulted in her becoming more aggressive and violent. This led to her cutting her hair in a mohawk and wearing leather clothing - changes that alienated her from Shadowcat for a time. Storm was influenced in this by a lover of Wolverine's, Yukio, who became one of her dearest friends; some fans believe the two were lovers, though given Marvel's policies of the time, this possibility was never more than implied. She also fought Callisto for leadership of the Morlocks and won by stabbing Callisto in the heart. Callisto only managed to survive due to the healing powers of another Morlock. The two remained enemies for awhile, but eventually managed to make up and are now friends. Storm now trusts Callisto enough that she asked Callisto to look after Xavier while he was in Genosha.
However her victory over Callisto would lead Storm to fight another Morlock named Marrow years later. Threatening to kill innocent people with a bombtrigger attached to her own heart, Marrow forced Storm to decide to either kill her or let the innocent people die. She did that in the belief that Storm as an X-man was unable to kill. However, during the fight, Storm ripped Marrow's heart out saving the civilians.
[[:Image:Uxm449.jpg|thumb|150px|right|Storm, in the cover from Uncanny X-Men #449. Art by Greg Land]] Following Operation: Zero Tolerance, Ororo again took sole leadership of a unified—though significantly diminished—group of X-Men while Cyclops and Phoenix semi-retired to tend to Cyclop's recent injuries. It was during this period that the Shadow King returned, and targeted Storm and Psylocke specifically, tricking them into returning to Storm's old village in Kenya, where the events of the Psi-War took place.
After averting the Rise of Apocalypse and spending a couple of months on a leaderless faction of X-Men including Phoenix, Cable, Beast, and Gambit, Storm went on to lead a group of X-Men outside of the mansion in the search for Destiny's diaries, the Books of Truth, inspired at least in part by the events of The Twelve storyline. This team came to be known as the X-Treme X-Men. While searching for the diaries, Storm enjoyed a brief flirtation with a younger man, Slipstream and was kidnapped by the intergalactic warlord Khan who wanted to make her his queen, as several villains over the years were wont to do. Despite being badly injured, struck by Viper prior to being captured and having to fight off Khan's harem, she managed to defeat Khan with the aid of the X-Treme X-Men who came to rescue her. They brought her back to Earth where she spent time recovering with the aid of Wolverine.
Storm continued to lead the group even after Destiny's diaries were rendered inert because she did not approve of the way Xavier was running the mansion. The group returned to help rebuild the Xavier Institute after the mansion was destroyed by a man who was believed at the time to be Magneto, but was later revealed/retconned to be Xorn. From the school, Storm headed the X-Treme Sanctions Executive, a special police task force of mutants policing mutants given worldwide authority. Bishop, at first, was hesitant to join this timeline's XSE, because it worried him that his future as a member of the Xavier's Security Enforcers could still come true.
Due to the Scarlet Witch's magicks, 98% of the mutants lost their powers, but Storm did not lose hers. This is apparently going to make her a more prominent member of the Marvel Universe according to recent interviews.
thumb|150px|right|Storm and Forge. Art by Marc Silvestri. Storm had an on-again, off-again romance with the mutant Forge. She first broke up with him when she discovered that he had created the neutralizer gun used to erase her powers, though she later forgave him. In a battle with the Adversary in Dallas, Storm appeared with her powers—and as a result, her psychic bond to the Earth—fully restored and was able to help her teammates defeat the Adversary.
Believed dead by the world, thanks to the conclusion of The Fall of the Mutants, she and her teammates were resurrected by Roma and transported to Australia, where they encountered and defeated the Reavers, a merciless group of cyborgs. Believed dead along with the X-Men was Madelyne Pryor, Cyclops's first wife. Madelyne held a secret grudge against Cyclops for abandoning her and their infant son, Nathan Christopher for Jean Grey. While she found comfort with Cyclops' brother, Havok, her negative feelings toward her estranged husband and the trauma of losing her son made her vulnerable to persuasion and eventually corruption by N'astirh one of the demons from the dimension of Limbo, leading to the Inferno crossover. After saving the world from being sucked into the hell-like dimension, Storm led the X-Men back to their base in Australia. Following a battle with Nanny and the Orphan Maker, Storm was presumed dead. In truth, though, Nanny had captured Storm and faked her death with the use of a SHIELD life model decoy, which resembled her and was left in the wreckage of Nanny's ship to be found by her teammates. The true Storm, now de-aged by Nanny (approximately at the age of 11-12) was a captive in Nanny's hands. However, she managed to escape and started wandering in Cairo, Illinois, with no memories of the past. Her powers were also diminished, due to her age. The Shadow King decided to use this opportunity to hunt her down, by taking over the body of FBI agent Jacob Reisz and framing Ororo for murder. On the run, Storm returned to thievery in order to survive. The Shadow King's agents ambushed her in one of her capers; luckily, though, she was saved by the intervention of fellow mutant and thief Gambit. The duo formed a partnership, as thieves. Eventually, they battled Nanny and defeated her and during battle, Storm's memories were restored. She and Gambit then travelled to the X-Mansion, where they were reunited with Banshee and Forge. After several tests were conducted, it was clearly shown that Ororo was stuck in her pre-teen form and that the de-aging process was irreversible.
During the X-Tinction Agenda, Storm was captured by Genoshan magistrates and turned into a mutate. After she was blasted in a battle, she regained her personality and was also restored into full adulthood.
Following his battle with the Shadow King on Muir Island, the recently-returned Professor Xavier found himself with the assembled members of both the X-Men and X-Factor. The Professor decided to divide the X-Men into two separate strike forces: the Gold Team, led by Storm and consisting of Jean Grey, Iceman, Colossus, and Archangel, and the Blue Team, led by Cyclops, and featuring Beast, Gambit, Rogue, Psylocke and Wolverine. Moira MacTaggert and Forge lived in residence as well. The marriage of Storm and the Black Panther. Front cover for Black Panther #18 (2006), by Frank Cho.|thumb As their relationship continued to develop, Forge proposed marriage to Storm. Storm was hesitant, however, because accepting Forge's proposal would mean giving up her place with the X-Men in order to lead a more "normal" life. Forge sensed Storm's hesistation, and asked her best friend, Jean Grey, her opinion on Storm's feelings. But due to miscommunication between Jean and Forge, Forge rescinded his offer, leaving a distraught and teary-eyed Storm whispering that she was going to say yes.
Her past relationship with then-Prince T'Challa (the Black Panther) long before she had met Forge later led to a rekindling of their feelings towards each other, and marriage.
When the X-Men journeyed to Niganda to investigate reports of mutant animals, they ran into Black Panther. At the end of the mission, Storm stayed in Niganda to help the mutants affected there. During this time she came into conflict with an African Colonel named Shetani, who was hunting down and killing de-powered mutants in search of Storm. When she finally confronted him, he revealed to her that he was her uncle. Afterward, Shetani told Storm of a hidden village in Northwest Kenya where she met her grandmother for the first time. This finally prompted her to accept the Black Panther's marriage proposal.
The marriage between Storm and the Black Panther is one of the major events of the Civil War tie-in books with characters Iron Man and Captain America showing up for the wedding but leaving before the ceremony because neither of them could stand the sight of each other. Earlier, Charles Xavier makes an appearance, telling Storm that as the queen of Wakanda, she was now the most important mutant in the world, and the living symbol of human/mutant relations. A role, he was quoted as saying, she was born to play. As a gift, Doctor Doom, via a holographic message, invites the newlyweds to his country.
The article says that her relationship with T'Chalia is a retcon, but I remember reading towards the end of Uncanny X-Men Annual 2 or 3 (the one where she is kidnapped by Arkon because of her lightning powers, and they develop feelings for each other - this was sometime in the late 70's) a brief passage about love where she mentions a long-ago relationship with T'Chalia. Am I wrong about that? -- JamesB3 00:08, 27 November 2006 (UTC)
-- SeizureDog 08:51, 30 November 2006 (UTC)
This is a good article so far from what I can see. I plan to review it in full but I'm putting it on hold for several days to sort out one thing: citation method. Citations should go directly after any form of punctuation. I'll give editors time to sort this out. Wiki-newbie 19:27, 30 November 2006 (UTC)
Well, I've read through the article, but I shall continue the hold until we have Present Tense handled. I understand the difficulty of writing a comic book article where the character is discussed fully within the context of 'Publication History', but there are still paragraphs in there with sentences purely about the fiction in past tense. Please correct them. Wiki-newbie 16:03, 1 December 2006 (UTC)
Now neutrality is a problem for the following passage:
In the early eighties, remarkable adventures of Storm written by Claremont included fighting the parasitic Aliens-inspired aliens called the Brood, in which Storm is infected with a Brood egg and contemplates suicide, but then experiences a last-minute save by the benign Acanti aliens.[8] Furthermore, in the Morlocks story line of 1983, in Uncanny X-Men #170 (June 1983), Storm fights super-strong mutant Callisto for the leadership of the disfigured mutants, beats her by impaling her through the heart and almost kills her.[9] Please axe the remarkable, we're not here to praise Claremont.
Once this is done, I shall award the GA. Wiki-newbie 12:33, 3 December 2006 (UTC)
Keep up the good work: and may this become a model for Out-of-universe Comic book character articles. Peer review it first before FAC: I have my own suggestions too. Wiki-newbie 14:32, 3 December 2006 (UTC)
The comment(s) below were originally left at Talk:Storm (Marvel Comics)/Comments, and are posted here for posterity. Following several discussions in past years, these subpages are now deprecated. The comments may be irrelevant or outdated; if so, please feel free to remove this section.
This article on Storm was once peer reviewed when nominated for Feature Article. This article failed nomination due to a combination of issues regarding citation, in-universe style of writing, and grammatical errors. Since the failed nomination, the article has undergone a serious upgrade and revision from various users based upon the notes of the failed FA. This article should, therefore, be considered at least A-Class and be subsequently reviewed for consideration. SluggerBugger ( talk) 00:08, 22 January 2008 (UTC) |
Last edited at 07:37, 9 June 2008 (UTC). Substituted at 22:08, 3 May 2016 (UTC)