

Emma Frost
Born into Boston's wealthy Frost family, Emma Grace Frost discovered she was a mutant when powerful telepathic abilities emerged in adolescence. She eventually rose to become the Hellfire Club's ruthless White Queen before later channeling her omega-level mind-control gifts — and a secondary diamond-form mutation — toward teaching and leading mutantkind.
Few Bronze Age debuts have aged as boldly as Emma Frost's, who first stepped onto the page in The X-Men #129 in 1980, conjured by the legendary team of Chris Claremont and John Byrne. Over 46 years and 773 catalog appearances — 38 of them recognized as key issues — she has grown from a striking antagonist into one of Marvel's most complex and compelling figures, sharing the stage with titans like Wolverine and Cyclops across Uncanny X-Men, New X-Men, and beyond. A proud member of the X-Men, Emma commands the kind of long, layered history that rewards new readers and longtime collectors alike. If you haven't fallen down the rabbit hole of her story yet, consider this your invitation.
Real name. Emma Grace Frost
Powers. Omega-level telepathy (mind reading/control, psychic illusions); secondary mutation grants an organic-diamond form (enhanced strength/durability, telepathy suppressed while transformed)

Trivia
- Emma Frost's first major push outside the core X-Men books was as the title character of Generation X, making her one of the few former villains to anchor a long-running team book as a central mentor figure.bleedingcool.com
- Her diamond form was introduced as a secondary mutation after the Genoshan massacre, a change Marvel later used to redefine her role and battlefield utility in a way casual readers often miss.bleedingcool.com
- Marvel says Emma survived the Genosha Sentinel attack because she exhibited one of the first known examples of secondary mutation, which made her transformation a notable in-universe milestone rather than just a powers upgrade.bleedingcool.com
- Chris Claremont has written more of Emma Frost's comics than any other writer in our catalog — 39 issues.
Top series











Covers through the years — 1980–2024
★ 1980
★ 1984
★ 1989
★ 1991
★ 1994
1997
★ 2001
★ 2003
★ 2009
★ 2012
★ 2013
★ 2019
2020
★ 2024