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@LukeTozzJatoba @andylessa @jamersontiossi @andrefaccas @alcofay2k @MarkusPhillipe @codespoti @FabianoSouza191 @fnovaesf @BeccoLourenco Kirbizaço influenciou tb:
Erik Larsen
John Romita Jr.
Steve Rude
Bruce Timm.
Isso ficando nos óbvios.
KIRBY É O REI!
@Ancestralpotato I got a couple. Nattie the Rattie, Anna the Tasmanian Devil and Erik the Hell hound.
Happy pride! 🏳️🌈
Here you have Damien and Erik, my two most unapologetically gay characters, each one in their own unique way. Have fun and riot!
#pride
This saw the return of Glory (by Joe Keatinge and Sophie Campbell), Bloodstrike (by Tim Seeley and Franchesco Gaston), Supreme (by Erik Larsen, first expending the last of Moore's leftover scripts) and Prophet (by Brandon Graham).
Liebe Pan, lieber Erik,
Ich möchte einfach danke sagen.✨
Danke für euren tollen Content, eure tolle Art, dass ihr uns auch Mal (wenn auch unbewusst) durch schwere Zeiten begleitet und einfach, dass ihr da seid.❤️🥰
Bleibt so wie ihr seid☺️✨
@xPandorya @Gronkh
...to facilitate his final transformation into Magneto.
Classic X-Men #19 suggests that it isn't just his inhumane treatment by humans that cements his "madness", but a rebound effect of the untrained use of his powers.
Earlier, Erik mused over Charles' dream as he read of...
...hoping to impart an important lesson on power to Erik.
No differently than their willingness to work with Nazis to advanced their goals are they willing to use mutants as weapons, undermining Erik's own humanity while providing him the distance from it necessary...
...stories. That fear of rejection has tempered his passion in other relationships, even putting pause to his developing relationship with Isabelle as he's reminded of his earlier loss of wife and child.
Her acceptance–and amazement–of Erik's abilities and "clearly superior"...
...also an exploration of his guardedness and resistance to vulnerability in his relationships.
Even beyond of his traumatic childhood in the camps, Erik's relationships–both platonic and romantic–have been characterized by fear and loss, a beat introduced in earlier backup...
...the once-evil Master of Magnetism but for the attention and care it pays its antecedents, beautifully culminating the first decade of Claremont's Run on Uncanny X-Men.
The past, present, and future all bore witness to Erik's trial; now they'll all bear witness to his promise.
...deaths at the flood's hands.
Erik manages to make it to the surface with Charles in tow, landing them in a garden–important symbolically as a place of restoration, healing, and personal growth–where a dying Charles begs Erik to take up his dream.
The intimate moment shows...
...the floor beneath him and the judges.
The personal nature of the revenge scheme starts to come into view for the trapped mutants as they announce their combined hatred of Erik, Charles, and Gaby.
Erik still has trouble putting a name to the faces but prepares to sacrifice...
...would no sooner see him burn for his crimes.
It is an important turn for Erik–this is the first time in continuity he's fought not just to preserve human life, but some of the highest symbols of their dominion over his species.
His defenses are broken as the twins shatter...
...for their attempts to survive their oppression by whatever means necessary.
It's Erik's testimony–and full, out loud admission of his long alluded to motives to defend his people against another genocide–that hits this nail on the head and best predicts the statesman we'll...
...next attack.
All of these threads can make it feel like the problems faced by mutantkind are the result of Erik's and Xavier's mistakes, but UXM #200 makes clear that the responsibility lies in the lap of the oppressor–and that the marginalized should not be condemned for...
...glance directed toward the question of what might come next for mutantkind in the aftermath of Xavier's death.
The idea of inheritance is the center of UXM #200's narrative, with Erik's entire redemption arc based in the knowledge that his actions have harmed, rather than...
...the international stage, Claremont's recap of the moments in Erik's life that have brought us to this point help reground the issue after our Asgardian adventure.
UXM #200, by design of its trial, is a book that looks directly at both the past and toward the future, paying...
Gay flag Erik icon for today ♡♡
#OriginalCharacter #pride #PrideMonth
...and while they're soon due in London for Erik's upcoming trial, they suit up and spring into action to rescue the kids and Ororo from Loki's machinations.
In our last issue of Uncanny X-Men, Rachel had found some small degree of closure, resolving to both amend her past...
"Refractive Portraits" by Erik Nardai
https://t.co/MR7JeAIGfq via @ArtStationHQ