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Wolverine's Healing in Civil War

CharcoalNinjaCharcoalNinja Registered User regular
edited June 2007 in Graphic Violence
Hey all, just a question about Wolvie's ability to regrow from next to nothing in Civil War.

Most people express a lot of bitter anger over this by saying that he regrew in minutes, but I've been lookthing through the book (I've got the graphic novel thing that has all of Wolvie's Civil War arcs and Wolverine #48 in it) and I've found nothing that would support this timeline for his regeneration after being immolated by Nitro.

Nothing in the book even remotely suggests that he grows back that fast from what I can tell so I'm just curious as to why so many people mention that he regrew in minutes and what they found in the book to support that claim?

The only timeframe for his regeneration I could find was him taking 3 hours to growback after being immolated in the planecrash.

CharcoalNinja on
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Posts

  • Kris_xKKris_xK Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    I think one of the main complaints people had about this regeneration was not so much the time in which it took him to heal, but the fact that he healed at all.

    His entire body had its flesh burned off, with the pretense that his brain survived which allowed for the regeneration. However, as many have noted, the inside of his skull would have been more than hot enough to bake his brain.

    I sorta agree with that thinking... I like wolvie, but come on...

    Kris_xK on
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  • SentrySentry Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    granted... but those complaints should have been voiced before Civil War, as there have been a few comics (not many) showing Wolverine recovering from having his flesh burned off.

    Sentry on
    [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
    wrote:
    When I was a little kid, I always pretended I was the hero,' Skip said.
    'Fuck yeah, me too. What little kid ever pretended to be part of the lynch-mob?'
  • animaleanimale Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    So does Wolvie eat like a whole cow after regenerating or even possibly during the regenration process?

    animale on
  • BogartBogart Streetwise Hercules Registered User, Moderator mod
    edited June 2007
    Sentry wrote: »
    granted... but those complaints should have been voiced before Civil War, as there have been a few comics (not many) showing Wolverine recovering from having his flesh burned off.

    I can't think of any that show him reduced to a skeleton (aside from What The?! #2, which obviously doesn't count). Bits of him might have been burned off, but not everything.

    About the brain stuff - it might well be safe inside his skull, but presumably his skull isn't a completely closed shell, as this would mean it couldn't attach itself to his spine, other nerves, etc. Thus, the fire would have found a way in to vaporize his brain.

    Bogart on
  • SentrySentry Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    Read Mark Millar's Wolverine #32

    Or, read the end of Planet X where he walks into the sun. Although most people say that was the Phoenix, he is regenerating on his own from it... take what you want from it.

    Sentry on
    [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
    wrote:
    When I was a little kid, I always pretended I was the hero,' Skip said.
    'Fuck yeah, me too. What little kid ever pretended to be part of the lynch-mob?'
  • randomguyrandomguy Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    Bogart wrote: »
    Sentry wrote: »
    granted... but those complaints should have been voiced before Civil War, as there have been a few comics (not many) showing Wolverine recovering from having his flesh burned off.

    I can't think of any that show him reduced to a skeleton (aside from What The?! #2, which obviously doesn't count). Bits of him might have been burned off, but not everything.

    About the brain stuff - it might well be safe inside his skull, but presumably his skull isn't a completely closed shell, as this would mean it couldn't attach itself to his spine, other nerves, etc. Thus, the fire would have found a way in to vaporize his brain.

    I agree with the brain issue on the regeneration. There is no way his brain would not have been burned asunder along with his flesh, unless it was regenerating on the fly within milliseconds.

    The only other serious regeneration that he has ever experienced was X-Men #25 . This is the issue where Magneto separates the adiantium from Wolverine's skeleton bone. Leaving wolverine with bone claws and the realization that his claws were always part of his mutant power as well.

    randomguy on
    "i ate your babies princess."
  • SentrySentry Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    randomguy wrote: »
    Bogart wrote: »
    Sentry wrote: »
    granted... but those complaints should have been voiced before Civil War, as there have been a few comics (not many) showing Wolverine recovering from having his flesh burned off.

    I can't think of any that show him reduced to a skeleton (aside from What The?! #2, which obviously doesn't count). Bits of him might have been burned off, but not everything.

    About the brain stuff - it might well be safe inside his skull, but presumably his skull isn't a completely closed shell, as this would mean it couldn't attach itself to his spine, other nerves, etc. Thus, the fire would have found a way in to vaporize his brain.

    I agree with the brain issue on the regeneration. There is no way his brain would not have been burned asunder along with his flesh, unless it was regenerating on the fly within milliseconds.

    The only other serious regeneration that he has ever experienced was X-Men #25 . This is the issue where Magneto separates the adiantium from Wolverine's skeleton bone. Leaving wolverine with bone claws and the realization that his claws were always part of his mutant power as well.

    Please refer to the issues I listed above.

    Sentry on
    [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
    wrote:
    When I was a little kid, I always pretended I was the hero,' Skip said.
    'Fuck yeah, me too. What little kid ever pretended to be part of the lynch-mob?'
  • ScooterScooter Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    I'm pretty sure the timeframe given is about 5 minutes. Nitro basically just nuked everyone, pulled out his phone, started talking, turned around, and there was Wolverine.

    Edit: And surviving the sun thing was definitly the Phoenix, I can't see how there's any debate on that.

    Scooter on
  • randomguyrandomguy Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    Torture in a camp < Seperating metal from bone and rebuilding his entire body.

    randomguy on
    "i ate your babies princess."
  • SentrySentry Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    randomguy wrote: »
    Torture in a camp < Seperating metal from bone and rebuilding his entire body.

    Being cremated (i.e. entire body being turned to ash) would tax his healing factor as much, if not more, then your example.

    Sentry on
    [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
    wrote:
    When I was a little kid, I always pretended I was the hero,' Skip said.
    'Fuck yeah, me too. What little kid ever pretended to be part of the lynch-mob?'
  • CojonesCojones Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    There's been a good degree of variation in how strong wolverine's healing factor is. There've been a ton of occasions where he's fought and was wounded to the point where he could no longer recover while other incidents (like the civil war oddity) have seen him regenerate spectacularly with no explanation as to how it improved so miraculously. It's not mentally linked like that of other characters so it just needs to be assumed that the writer/artist thought that it'd be really cool if he grew back from just a brain.

    meh

    Cojones on
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  • ScooterScooter Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    Apparently he once grew back from a drop of blood with the help of a magic crystal, and the writer of the CW story read it and thought he did that all on his own and that was normal for him.

    Scooter on
  • CharcoalNinjaCharcoalNinja Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    Scooter wrote: »
    I'm pretty sure the timeframe given is about 5 minutes. Nitro basically just nuked everyone, pulled out his phone, started talking, turned around, and there was Wolverine.

    Edit: And surviving the sun thing was definitly the Phoenix, I can't see how there's any debate on that.

    In the very same arc though it's revealed that Nitro actually passed out from the effort of exploding again, this is in Wolverine #42 where they detail what happens to Wolverine every time he "dies", wolvie spends a great deal of time watching Nitro and by the time Nitro awakens to actually pull out the cellphone Wolverine already has eyes, his brain and enough of his ears to hear Nitro mention that's his idea of a hat trick.

    We're given no concrete period of time for how long Nitro was passed out before he pulled out his cell, and Wolverine says in a healing monologue that his nervous system and circulatory take the longest and once the "plumming" is installed everything else, muslce and skin come back fast.

    I'm not sure how much later that issue was released compared to all the reviews and talk about Wolverine coming back in 5 minutes or whatnot. If the Nitro passing out thing was merely damage control or if it was released close enough to the actual Nitro event for it to be taken into account.

    Edit: Likely this issue came considerably later in an effort to explain away the whole *Fwoosh* regrow thing, so that's probably the answer to my question about why people seem upset about the 5 minute thing, aside from the very justified question of how he grew back at all. One odd thing about Wolverine's healing factor during the whole Magneto thing was that he healed up completely, and then the wonds reopened. If Wolverine's healing worked simply on a biological level why would the wounds reopen after healing completely? I recall most of the Xmen watching him as he was healing on a table or something and there being a few panals where he would heal, heal then break open in wounds again.

    CharcoalNinja on
  • randomguyrandomguy Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    Sentry wrote: »
    randomguy wrote: »
    Torture in a camp < Seperating metal from bone and rebuilding his entire body.

    Being cremated (i.e. entire body being turned to ash) would tax his healing factor as much, if not more, then your example.

    The example led to a double digit comic segway until Wolverine #100 where he got the metal back. The entire bridge dealt with Wolverine trying to cope with the entire reconstruction and rebuilding of his life. Where he was constantly flipping back and forth from human to animal instincts.

    randomguy on
    "i ate your babies princess."
  • DouglasDangerDouglasDanger PennsylvaniaRegistered User regular
    edited June 2007
    James would be much more interesting if his healing factor was greatly toned down. As it is now, there is no sense of danger with the character, because he can survive pretty much anything.

    DouglasDanger on
  • Kris_xKKris_xK Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    Scooter wrote: »
    I'm pretty sure the timeframe given is about 5 minutes. Nitro basically just nuked everyone, pulled out his phone, started talking, turned around, and there was Wolverine.

    I think in one of the following issues when hes talking to the atlantian chick it outlines the time line... which includes Logan regrowing his eyes and seeing Nitro still passed out. Mind you, I do also remember seeing a scene where Nitro was standing over Wolvie's shiny skeleton, so he must have regenerated the rest of his flesh pretty fast.

    I dunno, all I can say is that it wasn't very believable, even for a comic book. Shit, wolverine's practically invincible now.

    Kris_xK on
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  • PendegastPendegast Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    Didn't the Punisher run Wolverine over with a steamroller, once? If he can regenerate from that, burning up seems like a walk in the park. :) (Trying to remember if they showed how MUCH of Wolvie got run over, though -- if his head was left, that would go back to the whole "if the brain's intact, he can regenerate" idea.)

    Pendegast on
  • BogartBogart Streetwise Hercules Registered User, Moderator mod
    edited June 2007
    Sentry wrote: »
    randomguy wrote: »
    Torture in a camp < Seperating metal from bone and rebuilding his entire body.

    Being cremated (i.e. entire body being turned to ash) would tax his healing factor as much, if not more, then your example.

    Yes, it would. Unfortunately that 'Wolverine in a Nazi camp story' is either out of continuity or blatanty ignorant of Logan's healing abilities. The whole 'heal from anything' power is a recent development. Before it he could be killed by pretty much anybody if they tried hard enough. I remember a fight with Callisto where he worries that a 'throat shot' from one of her knives is going to kill him.

    Yeah, the sun thing was the Phoenix.

    EDIT: Although, thinking about it, WWII would pre-date the adamantium skeleton, which would mean his healing factor is way powerful without the skeleton holding it back. Still, even with this, the idea of him reconstituting himself from ashes is just Mark Millar being dopey.

    Bogart on
  • CharcoalNinjaCharcoalNinja Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    James would be much more interesting if his healing factor was greatly toned down. As it is now, there is no sense of danger with the character, because he can survive pretty much anything.

    I agree only in the sense that having his healing factor be so out of control means that the writers and artists are bringing his fighting abilities down to crap just for the sake of seeing him get evicerated all the time. I mean he gets his throat slit by a bunch of freakin flunkies in civil war for crying out loud. He's supposed to be this badass martial artist, I mean the guy manages to fight the hulk for a while dodging everything he threw at him most of the time but some moron in a suit with a saw attached to it gets a killing shot?

    you see this a lot in the New Avengers, all the other characters never get seriously wounded but wolverine gets mortally hit like every other issue.

    Though there have been times in the past where his healing factor being awesome made for some great fun. Like the time the Punisher blows his face off with a shotgun and Wolvie keeps cutting him up. Leaving the punisher no other choice but to smack him in the nuts with a baseball bat and try to light him on fire... great freakin fight.

    CharcoalNinja on
  • XaquinXaquin Right behind you!Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    it's just artistic liscense. In one part of Execitioners Song he said he'd shattered a few ribs and his healing factor was kicking in. He couldn't have gotten shattered ribs because of the adamantium. No big deal.

    Xaquin on
  • CharcoalNinjaCharcoalNinja Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    Xaquin wrote: »
    it's just artistic liscense. In one part of Execitioners Song he said he'd shattered a few ribs and his healing factor was kicking in. He couldn't have gotten shattered ribs because of the adamantium. No big deal.

    well you could still shatter his ribs since they're just contained within adamantium not made out of it, so while the adamantium would still be intact and spiffy on the inside his bones could be mush from the force.

    CharcoalNinja on
  • BogartBogart Streetwise Hercules Registered User, Moderator mod
    edited June 2007
    Xaquin wrote: »
    it's just artistic liscense. In one part of Execitioners Song he said he'd shattered a few ribs and his healing factor was kicking in. He couldn't have gotten shattered ribs because of the adamantium. No big deal.

    well you could still shatter his ribs since they're just contained within adamantium not made out of it, so while the adamantium would still be intact and spiffy on the inside his bones could be mush from the force.

    No, it's been explicitly said time and time again that breaking his bones while they're bonded with adamantium is impossible. That one issue of Executioners Song resulted in a bunch of mail from angry fanboys and a 'whoops, anyone care to win a no-prize'-type apology from Marvel.

    Bogart on
  • FuruFuru Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    Pendegast wrote: »
    Didn't the Punisher run Wolverine over with a steamroller, once?

    Garth Ennis.

    Furu on
  • SentrySentry Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    Bogart wrote: »
    Sentry wrote: »
    randomguy wrote: »
    Torture in a camp < Seperating metal from bone and rebuilding his entire body.

    Being cremated (i.e. entire body being turned to ash) would tax his healing factor as much, if not more, then your example.

    Yes, it would. Unfortunately that 'Wolverine in a Nazi camp story' is either out of continuity or blatanty ignorant of Logan's healing abilities. The whole 'heal from anything' power is a recent development. Before it he could be killed by pretty much anybody if they tried hard enough. I remember a fight with Callisto where he worries that a 'throat shot' from one of her knives is going to kill him.

    Yeah, the sun thing was the Phoenix.

    EDIT: Although, thinking about it, WWII would pre-date the adamantium skeleton, which would mean his healing factor is way powerful without the skeleton holding it back. Still, even with this, the idea of him reconstituting himself from ashes is just Mark Millar being dopey.

    That's the whole point though... the whole thing is bullshit. Either you buy it or you don't... but setting arbitrary rules on what his healing factor can and can't do is just stupid, since it doesn't seem anyone at Marvel knows, let alone a bunch of people reading it.

    Sentry on
    [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
    wrote:
    When I was a little kid, I always pretended I was the hero,' Skip said.
    'Fuck yeah, me too. What little kid ever pretended to be part of the lynch-mob?'
  • JakesteraholicJakesteraholic Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    Luckily Whedon has the sensical reader's back, what with that recent scene of him needing time to meditate post-crash to grow back his face.

    Jakesteraholic on
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  • AlgertmanAlgertman Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    He's Cell from Dragon Ball Z

    Algertman on
  • GuekGuek Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    Scooter wrote: »
    I'm pretty sure the timeframe given is about 5 minutes. Nitro basically just nuked everyone, pulled out his phone, started talking, turned around, and there was Wolverine.

    Edit: And surviving the sun thing was definitly the Phoenix, I can't see how there's any debate on that.

    In the very same arc though it's revealed that Nitro actually passed out from the effort of exploding again, this is in Wolverine #42 where they detail what happens to Wolverine every time he "dies", wolvie spends a great deal of time watching Nitro and by the time Nitro awakens to actually pull out the cellphone Wolverine already has eyes, his brain and enough of his ears to hear Nitro mention that's his idea of a hat trick.

    We're given no concrete period of time for how long Nitro was passed out before he pulled out his cell, and Wolverine says in a healing monologue that his nervous system and circulatory take the longest and once the "plumming" is installed everything else, muslce and skin come back fast.

    I'm not sure how much later that issue was released compared to all the reviews and talk about Wolverine coming back in 5 minutes or whatnot. If the Nitro passing out thing was merely damage control or if it was released close enough to the actual Nitro event for it to be taken into account.

    Edit: Likely this issue came considerably later in an effort to explain away the whole *Fwoosh* regrow thing, so that's probably the answer to my question about why people seem upset about the 5 minute thing, aside from the very justified question of how he grew back at all. One odd thing about Wolverine's healing factor during the whole Magneto thing was that he healed up completely, and then the wonds reopened. If Wolverine's healing worked simply on a biological level why would the wounds reopen after healing completely? I recall most of the Xmen watching him as he was healing on a table or something and there being a few panals where he would heal, heal then break open in wounds again.

    some things you should keep in mind with the whole magneto ripping out his skeleton thing:

    1. Jean Grey held him together so he wouldn't literally fall to pieces while he healed
    2. Wolvie's healing factor is supposed to be severely limited by adamantium poisoning
    3. His healing factor was on the fritz for awhile after magneto took out the adamantium. it was supposed to be because it taxed his body too much. That's why, if I recall, he bled quite a bit for awhile whenever he unsheathed his bone claws and had to constantly bandage his hands.

    That said, his healing factor blows ass right now. The character is nothing more than a walking piece of a meat that gets blown to bits and put back together. Whedon's run on Astonishing is kind of an exception but the lack of badass wolverine fighting still upsets me. I mean, isn't he more or less the greatest martial artist and combatant on earth?

    Guek on
  • Mai-KeroMai-Kero Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    Guek wrote: »
    Scooter wrote: »
    I'm pretty sure the timeframe given is about 5 minutes. Nitro basically just nuked everyone, pulled out his phone, started talking, turned around, and there was Wolverine.

    Edit: And surviving the sun thing was definitly the Phoenix, I can't see how there's any debate on that.

    In the very same arc though it's revealed that Nitro actually passed out from the effort of exploding again, this is in Wolverine #42 where they detail what happens to Wolverine every time he "dies", wolvie spends a great deal of time watching Nitro and by the time Nitro awakens to actually pull out the cellphone Wolverine already has eyes, his brain and enough of his ears to hear Nitro mention that's his idea of a hat trick.

    We're given no concrete period of time for how long Nitro was passed out before he pulled out his cell, and Wolverine says in a healing monologue that his nervous system and circulatory take the longest and once the "plumming" is installed everything else, muslce and skin come back fast.

    I'm not sure how much later that issue was released compared to all the reviews and talk about Wolverine coming back in 5 minutes or whatnot. If the Nitro passing out thing was merely damage control or if it was released close enough to the actual Nitro event for it to be taken into account.

    Edit: Likely this issue came considerably later in an effort to explain away the whole *Fwoosh* regrow thing, so that's probably the answer to my question about why people seem upset about the 5 minute thing, aside from the very justified question of how he grew back at all. One odd thing about Wolverine's healing factor during the whole Magneto thing was that he healed up completely, and then the wonds reopened. If Wolverine's healing worked simply on a biological level why would the wounds reopen after healing completely? I recall most of the Xmen watching him as he was healing on a table or something and there being a few panals where he would heal, heal then break open in wounds again.

    some things you should keep in mind with the whole magneto ripping out his skeleton thing:

    1. Jean Grey held him together so he wouldn't literally fall to pieces while he healed
    2. Wolvie's healing factor is supposed to be severely limited by adamantium poisoning
    3. His healing factor was on the fritz for awhile after magneto took out the adamantium. it was supposed to be because it taxed his body too much. That's why, if I recall, he bled quite a bit for awhile whenever he unsheathed his bone claws and had to constantly bandage his hands.

    That said, his healing factor blows ass right now. The character is nothing more than a walking piece of a meat that gets blown to bits and put back together. Whedon's run on Astonishing is kind of an exception but the lack of badass wolverine fighting still upsets me. I mean, isn't he more or less the greatest martial artist and combatant on earth?

    He really isn't. I mean, he's one of the best, but there are several people that outclass him:

    People who are as good or better, martial arts/fighting wise: Captain America, Daredevil, Shadowcat, Taskmaster, maybe Deadpool, Black Panther, and a bunch of others, I'm sure.

    Mai-Kero on
  • BlankspaceBlankspace __BANNED USERS regular
    edited June 2007
    Well Deadpool is better than Taskmaster


    so yeah, Deadpool.

    Blankspace on
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  • HooraydiationHooraydiation Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    blankspace wrote: »
    Well Deadpool is better than Taskmaster


    so yeah, Deadpool.

    Despite the healing factor, Deadpool has actually died a few times. I'd put him in the same league as Wolverine.

    Hooraydiation on
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  • Psychotic OnePsychotic One The Lord of No Pants Parts UnknownRegistered User regular
    edited June 2007
    I almost prefered Wolvie in the Punisher storylines as far as regeneration goes. He can absorb alot of punishment but can still be laid out by 'normal' means. A steamroller or a RPG to the gut can lay him out forcing him to heal and taking him out of the fight. I have no problem with Wolvie comming back from looking like he lost a fight with meat grinder, but the skeleton thing from civil war was a bit much.

    Psychotic One on
  • BlankspaceBlankspace __BANNED USERS regular
    edited June 2007
    blankspace wrote: »
    Well Deadpool is better than Taskmaster


    so yeah, Deadpool.

    Despite the healing factor, Deadpool has actually died a few times. I'd put him in the same league as Wolverine.
    He fought Taskmaster and won.

    With his hands tied behind his back I believe. He was restrained somehow.

    Blankspace on
    SIG.gif
  • HooraydiationHooraydiation Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    blankspace wrote: »
    blankspace wrote: »
    Well Deadpool is better than Taskmaster


    so yeah, Deadpool.

    Despite the healing factor, Deadpool has actually died a few times. I'd put him in the same league as Wolverine.
    He fought Taskmaster and won.

    With his hands tied behind his back I believe. He was restrained somehow.

    Taskmaster started the fight by stabbing him in the heart with a sword! That would have been enough against anyone else.

    Exactly how was Taskmaster supposed to beat Deadpool using just a sword and guns?

    Hooraydiation on
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  • BlankspaceBlankspace __BANNED USERS regular
    edited June 2007
    blankspace wrote: »
    blankspace wrote: »
    Well Deadpool is better than Taskmaster


    so yeah, Deadpool.

    Despite the healing factor, Deadpool has actually died a few times. I'd put him in the same league as Wolverine.
    He fought Taskmaster and won.

    With his hands tied behind his back I believe. He was restrained somehow.

    Taskmaster started the fight by stabbing him in the heart with a sword! That would have been enough against anyone else.

    Exactly how was Taskmaster supposed to beat Deadpool using just a sword and guns?
    The dude is a master with them, he could have disabled Deaddy long enough to get away.

    Chop off his legs, eviscerate him, hell chop of his precious cargo. There's a lot of ways he could have won.

    Blankspace on
    SIG.gif
  • HooraydiationHooraydiation Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    blankspace wrote: »
    The dude is a master with them, he could have disabled Deaddy long enough to get away.

    Chop off his legs, eviscerate him, hell chop of his precious cargo. There's a lot of ways he could have won.

    It's one thing to be better than someone and quite another to be so much better that you can eviscerate them or cut their legs clean off in a fight. Taskmaster's better, but he's not a fucking god.

    Come to think of it, Deadpool never fights hand to hand, so why would he even be considered among the top Martial Artists? He doesn't even use a sword, except for when his ammo runs out.

    Hooraydiation on
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  • MuddBuddMuddBudd Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    Considering Scarlet Witch recently rewrote large chunks of reality, it's possible she made his healing better than it used to be.

    MuddBudd on
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  • HooraydiationHooraydiation Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    MuddBudd wrote: »
    Considering Scarlet Witch recently rewrote large chunks of reality, it's possible she made his healing better than it used to be.

    AndturnedIronManintoadick.

    Hey kids, everything wrong about the last year or so is her fault. Yup!

    Hooraydiation on
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  • LockeColeLockeCole Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    MuddBudd wrote: »
    Considering Scarlet Witch recently rewrote large chunks of reality, it's possible she made his healing better than it used to be.

    AndturnedIronManintoadick.

    Hey kids, everything wrong about the last year or so is her fault. Yup!

    Also, she is a skrull.

    LockeCole on
  • AlgertmanAlgertman Registered User regular
    edited June 2007
    LockeCole wrote: »
    MuddBudd wrote: »
    Considering Scarlet Witch recently rewrote large chunks of reality, it's possible she made his healing better than it used to be.

    AndturnedIronManintoadick.

    Hey kids, everything wrong about the last year or so is her fault. Yup!

    Also, she is a skrull.

    Skrull Kill Krew returns for more ass whoopings

    Algertman on
  • FencingsaxFencingsax It is difficult to get a man to understand, when his salary depends upon his not understanding GNU Terry PratchettRegistered User regular
    edited June 2007
    LockeCole wrote: »
    MuddBudd wrote: »
    Considering Scarlet Witch recently rewrote large chunks of reality, it's possible she made his healing better than it used to be.

    AndturnedIronManintoadick.

    Hey kids, everything wrong about the last year or so is her fault. Yup!

    Also, she is a skrull.
    She was also augmented somehow.

    Fencingsax on
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