As the current Ms. Marvel, Kamala Khan has achieved appreciable popularity across comics culture. Both her initial comics run and MCU iteration have seen her likened to Spider-Man for a new generation. A small difference between these two versions has been the origin of her powers. In the comics, Kamala is a “Nuhuman,” a genetic derivative of the Inhumans. Meanwhile, the MCU has opted to debut the young hero as its first leading mutant. Naturally, the onscreen change to Kamala’s origin left many speculating that her comic iteration might be rewritten to match.With Kamala Khan’s recent death, conjecture around her somehow returning as a mutant only increased. Now, the leaders of Krakoa’s mutant nation have come through on the expectation, resurrecting Ms. Marvel for that explicit purpose. Unfortunately, Krakoa’s so-called “resurrection protocol” is just a fancy way of cloning. Worse still, Kamala’s death and resurrection may not have been necessary to introduce her mutant side at all. Given the X-Men revealed Ms. Marvel’s resurrection was politically motivated, the whole ordeal has left everyone involved worse for wear.As expected, Ms. Marvel has just been brought back to life in the pages of X-Men: Hellfire Gala (2023) #1 (by Gerry Duggan, Adam Kubert, Luciano Vecchio, Matteo Lolli, Russel Dauterman, Javier Pina, R.B. Silva, Joshua Cassara, Kris Anka, Peppe Laraz, Rain Beredo, Ceci De La Cruz, Matthew Wilson, Eric Arciniega, Marte Gracia, Tom Muller, and Jay Bowen). Her Nuhuman powers have remained intact, as has her identity. Yet, Ms. Marvel was revived with no recollection of her final moments. This is because the revived Kamala Khan is a clone.RELATED: Ten Years Ago, Kamala Khan Had One of the Oddest Comic Book Debuts
As the current Ms. Marvel, Kamala Khan has achieved appreciable popularity across comics culture. Both her initial comics run and MCU iteration have seen her likened to Spider-Man for a new generation. A small difference between these two versions has been the origin of her powers. In the comics, Kamala is a “Nuhuman,” a genetic derivative of the Inhumans. Meanwhile, the MCU has opted to debut the young hero as its first leading mutant. Naturally, the onscreen change to Kamala’s origin left many speculating that her comic iteration might be rewritten to match.
With Kamala Khan’s recent death, conjecture around her somehow returning as a mutant only increased. Now, the leaders of Krakoa’s mutant nation have come through on the expectation, resurrecting Ms. Marvel for that explicit purpose. Unfortunately, Krakoa’s so-called “resurrection protocol” is just a fancy way of cloning. Worse still, Kamala’s death and resurrection may not have been necessary to introduce her mutant side at all. Given the X-Men revealed Ms. Marvel’s resurrection was politically motivated, the whole ordeal has left everyone involved worse for wear.
As expected, Ms. Marvel has just been brought back to life in the pages of X-Men: Hellfire Gala (2023) #1 (by Gerry Duggan, Adam Kubert, Luciano Vecchio, Matteo Lolli, Russel Dauterman, Javier Pina, R.B. Silva, Joshua Cassara, Kris Anka, Peppe Laraz, Rain Beredo, Ceci De La Cruz, Matthew Wilson, Eric Arciniega, Marte Gracia, Tom Muller, and Jay Bowen). Her Nuhuman powers have remained intact, as has her identity. Yet, Ms. Marvel was revived with no recollection of her final moments. This is because the revived Kamala Khan is a clone.
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