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Random (comics)
View on Wikipedia| Random | |
|---|---|
| Publication information | |
| Publisher | Marvel Comics |
| First appearance | X-Factor #88 (March 1993) |
| Created by | Peter David Joe Quesada |
| In-story information | |
| Alter ego | Marshall Evan Stone III |
| Species | Human mutant |
| Team affiliations | Acolytes Brotherhood of Mutants Dark Descendants Strikeforce X-Factor Utopians S.W.O.R.D. |
| Notable aliases | Alex |
| Abilities |
|
Random (Marshall Evan Stone III) is a fictional character and antihero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character was created by writer Peter David for the series X-Factor. He was originally presented as an opponent of X-Factor, but he later became their reluctant ally.
Fictional character biography
[edit]The complete origin of Random is unclear. It appears that he was created from protoplasm by Dark Beast, making Random the continuation of an experiment that Dark Beast began while he was Mister Sinister's lead scientist in the Age of Apocalypse reality. It is also possible that Random was born normally and then captured and experimented on by Dark Beast. Following Dark Beast's experimentation, the young Random is given the name of Alex, and he uses this name while serving as Dark Beast's helper in the sewers beneath New York City when he worked with the Morlocks.[citation needed]
"Alex" eventually escapes, shifting his appearance to that of a muscle-bound man and creating the identity of bounty hunter Random. It is unknown if the name, Marshall Stone, is his real name or just a name he created for his new Random persona.
In his first encounter with the government-sponsored X-Factor team, Random is called in to bring back a group of Genoshan renegades called the X-Patriots, who refuse to leave a hospital where one of their comrades is being treated. Random and X-Factor clash and, wanting to end the fight quickly, team leader Havok buys out Random's contract.[1]
Because of his success as a bounty hunter, Random is contracted to go after X-Factor member Polaris. During their battle, Random tells Polaris that her employers also hired him to kill her. Polaris does not believe him, but he assures her that there are mutant haters in the government. After a brief scuffle, Polaris leaves. She later confesses to Havok that she felt Random was holding back during the fight, as if he wanted her to win.[2]
Joining X-Factor
[edit]After X-Factor encounters the religious fanatic Haven, Random visits X-Factor members Wolfsbane and Strong Guy, confessing to them that the government agents who had previously hired him are now after his life as well. In exchange for protection, he agrees to tell X-Factor who hired him to kill Polaris. The team sets out to find Haven, and Forge hires Random's services against Haven for $15,000 and a new car, so he tags along. When they locate Haven, she transports Random and the rest of X-Factor to a pocket dimension where she shows them how much they really need her. In this world, Random begins to revert to his protoplasmic state, causing Haven to point out that she knows the truth behind his bloodthirsty façade. When she returns the team to the real world, Random is completely gelatinous, but he quickly pulls himself together and refuses to talk to the team about it.[3]
Following Haven's defeat, Forge pays Random and offers him a permanent job on the team, which he declines. Shortly thereafter, Random, Forge, and Polaris track down Colonel Malone, who had hired Random to kill Polaris. The trio find him, but he commits suicide before they can question him. However, Malone's assistant informs them that the government never planned on killing Polaris—they only wanted to test her limits as part of their plan to use her as a failsafe against Magneto. If Random had defeated her, she would have been brought in and brainwashed to become the government's weapon.[4]
The Brotherhood
[edit]Random returns after Havok re-forms the Brotherhood of Mutants with Dark Beast, Fatale, and Aurora, among others. He and Havok clash until Havok reveals to him the true nature of his mission: He is attempting to undermine the Brotherhood from within. The duo then help liberate the subjects of Dark Beast's experiments.
Random is next hired by Exodus (along with Feral, Pyro, Avalanche, the Fenris twins, and Omega Red) to assist the Acolytes. Exodus promises to help his new operatives find a cure for the Legacy Virus if they capture the Knights of Wundagore, but when they fail, Exodus leaves them stranded in the Savage Land.[5]
Random resurfaces on Genosha during Magneto's rule and is quickly dispatched when the ad hoc Genoshan Assault X-Men squad attacks the island to rescue Professor X.[6]
Weapon X
[edit]
Random is later captured by the refurbished Weapon X Program in their attempt to exterminate mutants. He is placed in Neverland, a mutant concentration camp, and attempts a coup with the help of Diamond Lil. However, the inmates do not realize that their powers are being negated by Leech, and they are both severely punished for their actions.[7]
Post M-Day
[edit]Random is one of the few mutants who retain their superhuman powers after M-Day.[8] Alongside Tempo, Unuscione, and Frenzy, Random again works with Exodus, joining his new team of Acolytes and participating in an attack on the S.H.I.E.L.D. Helicarrier.[9]
Random and the Acolytes later attack the Xavier Institute on a mission from Mister Sinister to retrieve Destiny's diaries. However, the diaries they find are fake. After a battle with Colossus, Shadowcat, and several students, the Acolytes are forced to return to Sinister without completing their mission.[10]
X-Men: Legacy
[edit]When Professor X returns to New Avalon to confront Exodus, Random is still among the Acolytes. Xavier convinces Exodus to disband the group and find a new way to help mutantkind. Random, Amelia Voght, and Omega Sentinel decide to relocate to San Francisco in response to the X-Men's call for all mutants to relocate there.[11]
Random is next seen on Utopia during Bastion's attack on the island. Random, along with Scalphunter, Sack, Litterbug, and others, is rallied to Utopia's defense by Cyclops, who declares, "Today you are all combatants. You are all X-Men".[12]
Following the battle, Random attends Cable's funeral.[13] Random is among the squad assembled by Cyclops to help with reconstruction efforts in San Francisco.[14]
Random later appears as a member of the Utopians alongside Elixir, Karma, Masque, Madison Jeffries, and Tabitha Smith.[15]
House of X
[edit]Random is among the villainous mutants invited to come live on the newly established mutant island of Krakoa, provided he no longer holds any grudges towards his fellow mutants.[16]
Powers and abilities
[edit]Random's body is made of morphing protoplasm which can change into almost any shape he can imagine and commonly changes his forearms into weapons that fire hardened protoplasm projectiles from his own biomatter. He is able to randomly counteract any force or mutant ability directed at him, alter his mass and strength and rapidly regenerate damaged or detached/severed biomatter and limbs.
Reception
[edit]In 2014, Entertainment Weekly ranked Random 91st in their "Let's rank every X-Man ever" list.[17]
In other media
[edit]Random makes non-speaking cameo appearances in X-Men: The Animated Series.
References
[edit]- ^ X-Factor #88 (March 1993)
- ^ X-Factor #95 (October 1993)
- ^ X-Factor #100 (March 1994)
- ^ X-Factor #102 (May 1994)
- ^ Quicksilver #8–9 (June–July 1998)
- ^ X-Men (vol. 2) #112 (May 2001)
- ^ Weapon X (vol. 2) #5 (March 2003)
- ^ X-Men: The 198 Files (January 2006)
- ^ X-Men (vol. 3) Annual #1 (March 2007)
- ^ X-Men (vol. 2) #202 (October 2007)
- ^ X-Men: Legacy #225 (August 2009)
- ^ The New Mutants (vol. 3) #14 (August 2010)
- ^ X-Men: Second Coming #2 (September 2010)
- ^ X-Men: Legacy #242 (January 2011)
- ^ All-New X-Men #40 (June 2015)
- ^ House of X #5 (November 2019)
- ^ Franich, Darren (June 9, 2022). "Let's rank every X-Man ever". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved January 26, 2023.
External links
[edit]- Random at Marvel.com
- Random at The Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe
Random (comics)
View on GrokipediaPublication history
Creation and first appearance
Random, a mutant bounty hunter in the Marvel Comics universe, was created by writer Peter David and penciler Joe Quesada, with inks provided by Al Milgrom on the debut issue.[2][3] The character's design emphasized his shape-shifting abilities and violent tendencies, positioning him as a foil to the X-Factor team during the early 1990s era of mutant-centric storytelling.[4] Random made his first appearance in X-Factor #88, cover-dated March 1993 and published by Marvel Comics.[3][2] In the story titled "Random Violence!", he is depicted as a freelance operative contracted by U.S. government agents to neutralize the mutant separatist group X-Patriots, who had seized a hospital in Manhattan to demand medical aid for their injured leader.[4] This debut showcased Random's protoplasmic physiology, allowing him to absorb and mimic organic matter, as he clashed with X-Factor members including Strong Guy and Quicksilver amid the hostage crisis.[2] The issue's plot highlighted themes of mutant extremism and bounty hunting, with Random's unpredictable nature driving the conflict toward a brutal confrontation.[4]Major story arcs and appearances
Random's first major appearance occurred in X-Factor vol. 1 #88 (March 1993), where he acted as a mutant mercenary contracted to resolve a hostage crisis at Cedar Sinai Hospital involving Genoshan X-Patriots, only for team leader Havok to buy out his contract after a clash.[5] He subsequently fought alongside X-Factor against the Acolytes during the Project: Wideawake operation in issue #92 (July 1993).[6] In issues #94-95 (September-October 1993), Random was hired by Colonel Malone to assassinate Polaris but ultimately spared her life following their confrontation in Washington, D.C.[6] Random aided X-Factor against the techno-organic entity Haven in issues #96-103 (November 1993-June 1994) and X-Factor Annual #9 (1994), providing combat support but declining a full-time membership offer due to his mercenary nature.[5] Later, under Dark Beast's manipulation via neural implants, he betrayed the team by capturing Havok in #118 (January 1996) and infiltrating as a spy in #124-126 (July-September 1996), leading to his apparent death while resisting Onslaught's psychic control during the larger Onslaught crossover event.[5] Post-resurrection, Random joined Pyro's Strikeforce in Quicksilver #8 (June 1998) to pursue a cure for the Legacy Virus.[6] He worked as an enforcer for Magneto in Genosha during X-Men vol. 2 #112 (August 2001).[6] In X-Men: Legacy #225 (August 2009), he relocated to Utopia after the Acolytes' disbandment.[6] Random co-founded the Utopians vigilante group with Spider-Man and others in the aftermath of the Phoenix Five crisis, as depicted in All-New X-Men #40 (April 2015).[6] He later aligned with the Brotherhood of Mutants in Uncanny X-Men vol. 5 #16 (April 2014) and assumed a security sub-director role for S.W.O.R.D. in its vol. 2 #1 (October 2020).[6]Fictional character biography
Early life and joining X-Factor
Marshall Evan Stone III, who adopted the codename Random, was born in Albany, New York. His X-gene activated during his youth, manifesting as uncontrolled protoplasmic shape-shifting that caused his body to destabilize and risk complete dissolution.[5][7] To regain control, Stone enlisted the aid of Dark Beast, a sinister alternate-universe counterpart of Beast, who stabilized his physiology through experimental interventions in exchange for Stone's service as a superhuman bounty hunter targeting mutants and other enhanced individuals.[5][7] Based in Albany, Random built a reputation capturing high-value quarry, including a commission to seize Polaris, then affiliated with the U.S. government-backed mutant team X-Factor.[5] This pursuit escalated into a direct clash with X-Factor on March 1993, as depicted in X-Factor #88, where Random's attempt to extract Polaris drew intervention from teammates Havok, Strong Guy, and Multiple Man. During the battle, Random shielded Polaris from Havok's lethal plasma discharge, absorbing the energy but sustaining severe damage that left him seemingly lifeless; his mutable form, however, facilitated regeneration.[5] Random resurfaced after X-Factor's confrontation with the cult leader Haven, approaching Wolfsbane and Strong Guy to disclose that Haven's childhood experiments on him had exacerbated his power instability. Motivated by this revelation and a desire for amends, he integrated into the X-Factor roster as a reluctant ally, contributing his combat prowess to government-sanctioned operations.[5][7]Affiliation with the Brotherhood of Mutants
Following his tenure with the government-sponsored X-Factor team, which ended amid internal conflicts and shifting mutant-human relations in the mid-1990s, Random was recruited into a reformed Brotherhood of Mutants led by Joseph, a Magneto clone masquerading as the original mutant supremacist to consolidate power.[7] This version of the Brotherhood, active around 1998-1999, comprised mutants including Avalanche, Toad, Pyro, and Juggernaut, united in advancing mutant dominance through aggressive actions against human institutions.[2] Random's adaptive physiology and weapon-generation abilities made him a valuable combat asset, enabling the group to counter X-Men interventions effectively.[7] The Brotherhood under Joseph's direction targeted high-profile anti-mutant figures, notably attempting to assassinate Graydon Creed, a prominent politician and leader of the Friends of Humanity, during his presidential campaign in X-Men (vol. 2) #54 (August 1996).[7] Random participated in these operations, leveraging his powers to generate countermeasures against pursuing heroes, though the plot ultimately failed due to X-Men interference. Subsequent clashes escalated in Uncanny X-Men #365 (November 1999), where Random battled the X-Men alongside his Brotherhood allies, showcasing his shape-shifting defenses tailored to specific threats like optic blasts or telepathy.[7][2] Joseph's leadership unraveled when his true identity as a clone was exposed, leading to the Brotherhood's dissolution amid infighting and external defeats; Random survived these events but drifted from organized villainy thereafter.[2] Later, in a separate incarnation, Random briefly affiliated with a Brotherhood reformed by Havok, incorporating Dark Beast, Fatale, and Aurora, during a period of mutant factionalism post-X-Factor disbandment, though details of his role remain limited to peripheral support in skirmishes against X-Teams.[8] This opportunistic alignment reflected Random's pattern of joining groups offering stability or combat outlets, rather than ideological commitment to Magneto's original supremacist vision.[7]Involvement in Weapon X
![Random and Diamond Lil attempting revolt in Weapon X's Neverland][float-right]Following the destruction of Genosha in 2001, where Random had aligned with Magneto's forces, he was captured by the reorganized Weapon X program led by Malcolm Colcord.[1] This iteration of Weapon X, operating covertly to exploit and eliminate mutants, transported Random to Neverland, a Canadian concentration camp functioning as both a detention facility and recruitment hub for super-soldier experiments.[9] Neverland, established around 2002, processed captured mutants by classifying them for integration into Weapon X operations or subjecting them to lethal genetic testing.[10] In Neverland, Random collaborated with fellow inmate Diamond Lil (Lillian Crawley) to incite a prisoner revolt against the guards separating detainees for processing.[11] Their resistance escalated into direct confrontation, but Weapon X forces, including Sentinels, swiftly subdued the uprising, reinforcing the camp's control mechanisms.[1] This event highlighted Random's combative nature amid the program's systematic mutant subjugation, though specific outcomes for participants varied amid broader facility disruptions.[12]
