Dark X-Men Proves a Villainous Spider-Man Clone Can Still Find Redemption

During the course of Orchis’ ongoing war against mutants, the villainous organization has called upon a number of villains to aid in their cause. Surprisingly, there are a few who have elected to not create an alliance with the powerful group. Such is the case with one of Spider-Man’s original clones, Ben Reilly, and this small act suggests that there may yet be a chance for the former Scarlet Spider to find redemption.With a twisted, alternate reality version of the Goblin Queen leading Orchis’ charge against Madelyne Pryor’s Limbo Embassy in New York City, it is only a matter of time before the villains breach the walls of the infernal sanctuary. Dark X-Men #4 (by Steve Foxe, Jonas Scharf, Frank Martin, Tom Muller, Jay Bowen, and VC’s Clayton Cowles) reveals that the Goblin Queen isn’t just interested in death and destruction, but also in turning Reilly, one of Madelyne’s worst enemies, against the rest of the mutants. While the villains are successful in freeing Ben (who is now known as the villainous Chasm) from his confinement within the walls of the embassy, his reaction to their gesture is not what they had hoped for. Rather than blindly joining them in their fight, Ben immediately recognizes Orchis for what they are, and this alone tells him everything he needs to know about which side of their war he wants to stand on.First introduced as a nameless Spider-Man clone in 1975’s Amazing Spider-Man #149 (by Gerry Conway and Ross Andru), Ben was the creation of the malevolent geneticist known as the Jackal. Initially, the Spider-Clone was a one-time menace that met a tragic demise and was subsequently forgotten. It wasn’t until 1994’s Web of Spider-Man #114 (by Terry Kavanagh, Joey Cavalieri, Alex Saviuk, Don Hudson, Fred Fredericks, and Kevin Tinsley) that Ben reappeared following the discovery of his mortal remains 19 years prior. Even then, he wasn’t identified as such for another three issues, kicking off a trend of him struggling to not only find his place in the world, but a real sense of personal identity.Marvel’s Uncanny Spider-Man is Falling For a Dangerous EnemyX-Men: Jean Grey’s Greatest Tragedy Was Not Caused by the Phoenix Force

During the course of Orchis’ ongoing war against mutants, the villainous organization has called upon a number of villains to aid in their cause. Surprisingly, there are a few who have elected to not create an alliance with the powerful group. Such is the case with one of Spider-Man’s original clones, Ben Reilly, and this small act suggests that there may yet be a chance for the former Scarlet Spider to find redemption.

Marvel’s Uncanny Spider-Man is Falling For a Dangerous Enemy

With a twisted, alternate reality version of the Goblin Queen leading Orchis’ charge against Madelyne Pryor’s Limbo Embassy in New York City, it is only a matter of time before the villains breach the walls of the infernal sanctuary. Dark X-Men #4 (by Steve Foxe, Jonas Scharf, Frank Martin, Tom Muller, Jay Bowen, and VC’s Clayton Cowles) reveals that the Goblin Queen isn’t just interested in death and destruction, but also in turning Reilly, one of Madelyne’s worst enemies, against the rest of the mutants. While the villains are successful in freeing Ben (who is now known as the villainous Chasm) from his confinement within the walls of the embassy, his reaction to their gesture is not what they had hoped for. Rather than blindly joining them in their fight, Ben immediately recognizes Orchis for what they are, and this alone tells him everything he needs to know about which side of their war he wants to stand on.

X-Men: Jean Grey’s Greatest Tragedy Was Not Caused by the Phoenix Force

First introduced as a nameless Spider-Man clone in 1975’s Amazing Spider-Man #149 (by Gerry Conway and Ross Andru), Ben was the creation of the malevolent geneticist known as the Jackal. Initially, the Spider-Clone was a one-time menace that met a tragic demise and was subsequently forgotten. It wasn’t until 1994’s Web of Spider-Man #114 (by Terry Kavanagh, Joey Cavalieri, Alex Saviuk, Don Hudson, Fred Fredericks, and Kevin Tinsley) that Ben reappeared following the discovery of his mortal remains 19 years prior. Even then, he wasn’t identified as such for another three issues, kicking off a trend of him struggling to not only find his place in the world, but a real sense of personal identity.

#Dark #XMen #Proves #Villainous #SpiderMan #Clone #Find #Redemption

Note:- (Not all news on the site expresses the point of view of the site, but we transmit this news automatically and translate it through programmatic technology on the site and not from a human editor. The content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.))