X-Men #7
In "Der Tod kennt keine Wiederkehr," schickt Xavier die X-Men auf eine mentale Prüfung, bei der sie sich gegenseitig herausfordern, um ihre Loyalitäten zu testen — während der kürzlich verstorbene Wolverine in Wirklichkeit ein Skrull ist. Written by Terry Kavanagh, Alan Davis, and Jürgen Petz, with art by Adam Kubert and inks by Batt and Tim Townsend, this 2001 issue from Panini Deutschland features a striking cover by Adam Kubert, capturing the tension of a team fractured by deception.
In a mind-bending twist, the X-Men are thrust into a psychic trial where allies turn against one another to test their true loyalties—only to confront a shocking secret: the recently deceased Wolverine was never human, but a Skrull in disguise. As tensions rise among the team, the presence of Death herself looms, and the line between friend and foe blurs in this high-stakes psychological battle.
In "Ausgetrickst," the X-Men infiltrate a Skrull base in a desperate search for the missing Wolverine—only to find him reborn as the new Death Angel of the Apocalypse. With Polaris, Havok (Skrull), and Moira MacTaggert at the heart of the mission, the team faces a deception that blurs the lines between ally and enemy.
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↩ Reprints The Uncanny X-Men #375 (1999), X-Men #95 (1999), Cable #75 (2000), The Uncanny X-Men #376 (2000)
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